Sentiment Swings Higher Despite Declines

Equities have rolled over in the past week with selling hitting a pinnacle when the US government’s credit rating was downgraded by Fitch on Wednesday.  In spite of this, sentiment has not taken a hit. The latest survey from the AAII showed 49% of respondents reported bullish sentiment which compares to 44.9% the prior week. With nearly half of respondents reporting as optimists, bullish sentiment sits handily above its historical average of 37.5%.  In fact, this week marked the ninth in a row with a bullish sentiment reading above the historical average for the longest such streak since one that ended at 13 weeks long in May 2021.

The increase in bullish sentiment resulted in bearish sentiment to drop down to 21.3% which marks a 2.8 percentage point decline on the week and resulted in the lowest bearish reading since June 10, 2021 when it was 20.7%. Similar to bullish sentiment, that is the ninth week in a row with a reading below its historical average, and that is the longest streak since July 2021.

As a result to the increased optimism, the bull-bear spread ticked up from 20.8 last week to 27.7.  That is still below the recent high of 29.9 from two weeks ago, but reiterates how investors have an elevated degree of optimism.

Not all of the gains to bulls came from bears.  Neutral sentiment also declined this week falling from 31% to 29.7%.  That is in the middle of the past few years’ range.


Have you tried Bespoke All Access yet?

Bespoke’s All Access research package is quick-hitting, actionable, and easily digestible. Bespoke’s unique data points and analysis help investors better visualize underlying market trends to ultimately make more informed investment decisions.

Our daily research consists of a pre-market note, a post-market note, and our Chart of the Day. These three daily reports are supplemented with additional research pieces covering ETFs and asset allocation trends, global macro analysis, earnings and conference call analysis, market breadth and internals, economic indicator databases, growth and dividend income stock baskets, and unique interactive trading tools.
Click here to sign up for a one-month trial to Bespoke All Access, or you can read even more about Bespoke All Access here.

Small Dent to Claims

Initial jobless claims have been trending lower over the past couple of months, reaching a nearly six month low of 221K last week.  This week, claims rebounded rising 6K to 227K.  Albeit off the strongest readings from last fall, that remains a healthy reading on joblessness.

On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, claims are at historically solid levels even if they have come off their best levels. This week, claims dropped to 205K.  That is slightly above the readings from the comparable weeks of the year of the past few years (excluding 2020 and 2021 when claims were much more elevated).

At this point of the year, claims falling is normal as shown in the second chart below.  The current week of the year has only seen claims rise week over week 10.7% of the time. That is the sixth most consistent week of declines of the year. Claims will continue to face seasonal tailwinds in the weeks ahead, but that will begin to reverse as summer turns to fall.

Continuing claims also ticked higher in the latest week’s data, reaching 1.7 million. Although higher than 1.69 million the previous week, continuing claims have much more consistently been trending lower recently, and this week’s reading did in fact come in below forecasts of 1.705 million.

Have you tried Bespoke All Access yet?
Bespoke’s All Access research package is quick-hitting, actionable, and easily digestible. Bespoke’s unique data points and analysis help investors better visualize underlying market trends to ultimately make more informed investment decisions.
Our daily research consists of a pre-market note, a post-market note, and our Chart of the Day. These three daily reports are supplemented with additional research pieces covering ETFs and asset allocation trends, global macro analysis, earnings and conference call analysis, market breadth and internals, economic indicator databases, growth and dividend income stock baskets, and unique interactive trading tools.
Click here to sign up for a one-month trial to Bespoke All Access, or you can read even more about Bespoke All Access here.

The Closer – Household Formation Holds Up, Crude Inventory Collapse – 8/2/23

Log-in here if you’re a member with access to the Closer.

Looking for deeper insight into markets? In tonight’s Closer sent to Bespoke Institutional clients, we kick off with a look into tonight’s major earnings reports (page 1) followed by a look into homeownership rates (page 2).  We then show a heatmap of state unemployment rates (page 3) before finishing with a look into the record draw in crude inventories (page 4).

See today’s full post-market Closer and everything else Bespoke publishes by starting a 14-day trial to Bespoke Institutional today!

Downgrades Overlooked

The bottom has dropped out for the major US indices today with the Nasdaq down over 2% and S&P 500 down 1.25% as of this writing. The catalyst has been the downgrade of the United States’ credit rating by Fitch from AAA to AA+ .  That is the first downgrade of U.S. sovereign debt in almost twelve years and just the second ever. In the charts below, we show the performance of the S&P 500, government debt, commodities, and the US dollar in the year before and the year after the 2011 downgrade.

The S&P 500 has been rallying in the months leading up to this downgrade, however, back in 2011 the S&P 500 had already begun rolling over by the time S&P downgraded US debt.  In the wake of that downgrade, the S&P 500 went on to fully erase all of the prior year’s gains. Fortunately, all of those losses were quickly recouped within three months of the downgrade.

As for Treasuries and other US agency debt, performance over the past few months has been the complete opposite of 2011.  Of course, the interest rate environment is also completely different now with Fed Funds 500 bps higher than it was at the time of the last downgrade. That being said, in 2011, Treasury yields were on the decline in the months headed into the downgrade, but contrary to what might have been expected, the downgrade itself did not change that trend. This time around has seen yields on US government debt moving in the opposite direction.

Bloomberg’s broad commodity index has been in a similar boat with the past few months seeing a decline compared to the steady uptrend back in 2011 that was uninterrupted by the downgrade.

Finally, we would note the downgrade only acted as a longer-term turning point for the dollar.  As shown in the bottom right hand chart, both this year and in 2011, the trade weighted dollar was in a downtrend in the year before the downgrade. But right as S&P changed its rating, the dollar turned higher and continued to rise throughout the following year. In fact, one year out it had erased the entirety of the previous year’s decline.

Have you tried out Bespoke’s premium equity market research yet?  Take a look at our three membership levels below and then choose a checkout link to start a one-month trial for $1 today!  You can also join our free mailing list first to see more content.

Bespoke Newsletter — one month trial for $1 then $395/year

Bespoke Premium — one month trial for $1 then $99/month

Bespoke Institutional — one month trial for $1 then $195/month