Jun 17, 2024
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“I’m afraid there are no replays or second chances in amateur or professional golf, and that’s the way it should be.” – Rory McIlroy

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S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures are off to an ever so slightly positive start to the week as the Dow underperforms with modest declines, and in other news, the sun also came up this morning. The underperformance of the Dow and smaller cap stocks relative to Nvidia (NVDA) the S&P 500 won’t last forever, but it hasn’t shown any signs of stopping either.
The only economic indicator on the calendar today is the New York Fed’s Empire Manufacturing report which was less negative than expected (-6.0 vs -10.0) after a reading of -15.6 last month. It’s a quiet week for earnings, and the only earnings reports after the close are La-Z-Boy (LZB) and Lennar (LEN). Overnight, Asian stocks were mostly lower with Japan leading the way as the Nikkei dropped nearly 2% as BoJ Governor Ueda suggested that a July rate hike is possible and that the pace of bond purchases would slow. In Europe, equities attempted to rebound from last week’s declines early on but erased all of those early gains, and the STOXX 600 is now marginally lower.
In the realm of strange weeks, last week fit the mold. The S&P 500 rallied 1.58% for the week, yet just 183 stocks in the index finished the week in positive territory, and only 99 stocks outperformed the index. That’s the definition of a top-heavy index. At the sector level, the disparities were just as pronounced. With the Technology sector surging more than 6%, it was the only sector that outperformed the S&P 500, and the only other sector that finished the week even up 1% was Real Estate. On the downside, two sectors – Energy and Financials- were down 2%, another two were down at least 1%, and three more finished down for the week. How often do you remember a week when the S&P 500 was up over 1% but twice as many sectors were down at least 1% than up 1%?

Digging down another level, of the 24 S&P 500 industry groups, only three managed to outperform the S&P 500, and they were all part of the tech sector (Semis, Tech Hardware, and Software). Here again, nearly twice as many industry groups finished the week down at least 1% (nine) as up 1%, and three times as many finished the week lower (18) as higher (6). It may have been an up week, but if your portfolio underperformed or was even down for the week, you were not alone.

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Jun 14, 2024
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“Common sense is seeing things as they are; and doing things as they ought to be.” – Harriet Beecher Stowe

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The S&P 500 has been up for each of the last four trading days this week, and each of those closes has been a record high, but the streak is unlikely to continue today based on where futures are trading. Import Prices were just released and showed a larger than expected m/m decline (-0.4%), but in the ranks of economic reports, Import Prices isn’t at or even near the top. The only other report on the calendar is the Michigan Sentiment report at 10 AM. Interest rates have continued to decline this week, so even if the Fed doesn’t feel like cutting rates at the moment, the market is lowering long-term rates. The 10-year yield traded to its lowest level since late March this morning while the 2-year yield was at its lowest since early April.
The haves vs the haves nots market trend continued yesterday as the S&P 50 closed at a record high and the Dow was down. If that sounds familiar, it’s because it was the fifth straight day that the S&P 500 outperformed the DJIA. That may sound somewhat extreme, but just back at the end of May, the S&P 500 outperformed the DJIA for eight days in a row, and besides that, there have been three other streaks this year where Wall Street’s equity benchmark outperformed the Main Street equity benchmark for at least five days.

Over the last month, there have been 16 trading days where the S&P 500 outperformed the DJIA daily, and looking at the post-financial Crisis period, these streaks haven’t been rare, but they’re also not particularly common. The last time there were as many days of S&P 500 outperformance over a 21-trading day period, was in May 2023, and there have only been four other periods when there were more days of S&P outperformance in a month.

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Jun 13, 2024
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“You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say can, and will, be used against you in a court of law.” – Every Episode of every Law & Order series

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Whether through firsthand knowledge or watching any TV show or movie involving an arrest, every American is familiar with Miranda rights. While it seems like a basic principle of US law enforcement, it wasn’t until this day in 1966 that the Supreme Court ruled that every person arrested in the United States must be informed of their basic right to remain silent and have an attorney before any police interrogation can take place. Now if only a lot of other people would exercise their right to remain silent.
Futures aren’t silent this morning, and they just got a pop higher as both jobless claims and PPI came in weaker than expected. Initial jobless claims surged to the highest level since last August. PPI came in weaker than expected at both the headline and core levels. On a y/y basis, they are up 2.2% and 2.3% respectively relative to expectations for a level of 2.5%. Based on this morning’s PPI and yesterday’s CPI, the Fed’s statement is less than 24 hours old, but it’s turning stale quickly.
With Apple’s (AAPL) move back near the top of the market cap leaderboard, we wanted to highlight the continued divide between the top three stocks in the S&P 500 and the rest. The snapshot below of our Trend Analyzer shows where each of the top three stocks in the S&P 500 – Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Nvidia (NVDA) – as well as the S&P 500 Equalweight ETF (RSP) closed yesterday relative to their short-term trading ranges. While all three of the top three closed at ‘extreme’ overbought levels (2+ standard deviations above their 50-DMAs), RSP remains in neutral territory and is down slightly over the last five trading days. Besides that disparity, the YTD performance and 50-day moving average spreads of the top three stocks look nothing like the YTD performance and 50-DMA spread for RSP.

The charts of the top three also look much different than RSP (and it’s not just because we shaded RSP in gray). As shown below, all three of the largest stocks hit all-time highs yesterday while RSP has been stuck in a range since the peak in March.




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Jun 12, 2024
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“Mr. Gorbachev, open this gate. Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.” – Ronald Reagan, 6/12/1987

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Today is the biggest day of the week for data, and the “first act” just hit the stage as CPI came in weaker than expected. At the headline level, CPI was unchanged while Core CPI increased 0.2% versus forecasts for a gain of 0.3%. Year/year Core CPI came in at 3.4%, the lowest level since April 2021. Futures have surged in reaction. It’s hard to believe that a week ago this morning, the market was all worried about stagflation with weaker economic data (Chicago PMI and ISM Manufacturing) and stubborn inflation. After last Wednesday’s ISM Services report, a strong headline employment report, and today’s CPI report, stagflation has been pushed off the stage as Goldilocks cries, “Make room for me!”
It’s not a Presidential election, but for the first time in four years, the Federal Reserve will announce an interest rate decision on the same day as a monthly CPI report. Since 1998, there have only been 17 other days where both events happened on the same day, and in the chart below, we show the S&P 500’s performance each time. Overall, returns have been positive with a median gain of 0.56% and gains just over three-quarters of the time. The best day for the S&P 500 on these days was in December 2008 when the S&P 500 rallied 5.14% while the worst performance was the most recent occurrence on 6/10/20 when the S&P 500 declined 0.53%. Ironically, the best day came in the middle of one of the deepest bear markets in a generation while the worst day was in the early stages of the post-Covid surge.

The table below shows the performance of the S&P 500 and all eleven sectors on each of the 17 prior days. We also show the Fed’s interest rate decision for each meeting. Of the 17 occurrences shown, the Fed cut rates twice, raised rates four times, and kept rates on hold eleven times. On the eleven days when the Fed left rates on hold, the S&P 500’s median gain was also 0.56% with gains just over 80% of the time. The two best-performing sectors on these days were Technology (1.10%) and Materials (1.01%) with gains of 91% and 82% of the time, respectively.

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Jun 11, 2024
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“Government has no wealth, and when a politician promises to give you something for nothing, he must first confiscate that wealth from you” – John Wayne

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After record highs for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq yesterday, there’s a negative bias this morning as European stocks are lower given the political uncertainties most notably in France where there were even rumors overnight that Macron would resign. The only economic report on the calendar today was small business sentiment from the NFIB which came in better than expected. However, given tomorrow’s CPI report and the Fed Decision in the afternoon, we wouldn’t expect too much conviction today.
Apple (AAPL) finally unveiled its AI strategy yesterday and judging by the stock’s reaction, investors weren’t impressed. While the stock was down marginally just before the conference started, it sold off even more once it started and more details started coming out. When the closing bell rang, the stock was near its lows and down just under 2% for the day.

The chart below shows the performance of AAPL on the first day of its WWDC conference each day since 2007 when the iPhone was first launched. Yesterday’s 1.9% decline ranks as tied for the third-worst performance on the first day of the WWDC conference during that span. The only two years where the first-day performance was worse was in 2007 (3.5%) and 2008 (-2.1%). While that ranking sounds ominous, we would also note that the stock has almost always traded lower on the first day of its WWDC conference (just four positive days in the last 18 years). Longer-term, from the close on the first day of the conference through year-end, the stock has been higher 70% of the time, and from the close on the first day of the conference to the start of the next year’s conference, AAPL stock has been higher more than 75% of the time. In other words, first impressions of the WWDC conference haven’t usually been correct.

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Jun 10, 2024
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“Being the richest man in the cemetery doesn’t matter to me. Going to bed at night saying we’ve done something wonderful… that’s what matters to me.” – Steve Jobs

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Today’s the day Apple (AAPL) investors have been waiting for as the company will finally announce a detailed AI strategy. The company has been criticized for being slow to the game, but, as has been widely pointed out by analysts for months now, it has a reputation for being late to the game regarding new technologies. Where they succeed is by watching everyone’s first bets at a technology and then raising the stakes.
Futures are lower to kick off the week, and the economic calendar is sparse today with the NY Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations the only report on the calendar. The weak tone in futures originated in Europe, where EU election results showed significant gains for the populist far-right parties. Between the elections in Mexico and India last week and the EU elections over the weekend, politics has been making its way to the headlines lately. Thankfully, we won’t have to deal with that here in the US this year…
Last week was tough for commodities as just about all of the commodity-related ETFs in our Trend Analyzer declined at least 1% and in many cases much more. The one notable exception was the US Natural Gas Fund (UNG) which surged nearly 15% making it the only ETF in the group that finished the week at oversold levels. Before we all go getting on the UNG bandwagon, though, even after last week’s gain, it is still one of just two ETFs in the group that’s down on the year.

Over the last year, UNG has been a long painful ride lower. A year ago, the ETF was trading in the high 20s/early 30s, and earlier this year it was in the low teens before rallying back to $20 on Friday. Even after that gain, though, the ETF remains stuck below its 200-DMA which is a boundary line that it has been comfortably residing for the last year.

Over the last year, there have only been six trading days where the ETF has closed above the 200-DMA. As shown in the chart below, this is a very low level, but it’s hardly unprecedented. There have been multiple times where the ETF spent years below its 200-day moving average.

From a long-term perspective, UNG has been burning money for 15 years. On a reverse split-adjusted basis (there have been two 1-4 reverse splits since 2017), the ETF was above $3000 versus $20 today- a decline of more than 99%!

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