NY Manufacturing Finally Reaccelerating

This morning’s release of the New York Fed’s February manufacturing report handily topped expectations. Whereas the report was expected to see the headline number rise from 3.5 in January to 6, instead, it more than doubled those forecasts coming in at 12.1. That is the first m/m increase in the headline index since September and also brings the index to the highest level since July. Although the past few months have been consistent with decelerating activity, February did mark an eighth consecutive month of growth for the region’s overall manufacturing sector.

Although the index for General Business Conditions has finally risen and now sits at multi-month highs, it is still in the middle of its historical range. On the other hand, there are several categories in the top deciles of their historical readings as every category showed growth in February. In the case of the indices for Unfilled Orders and Inventories, these positive readings were the first since March of last year.  The only index that was lower in February was for Shipments which fell 3.3 points to 4.  The indices for expectations six months from now were similarly strong as there were only two indices (Shipments and Number of Employees) that were lower month over month.

Overall order growth accelerated in February. The New Orders Index rose 4.2 points to 10.8 which is the highest level since October.  Given the further growth in New Orders, Unfilled Orders also grew.  As previously mentioned, this month’s 8.1 point month over month increase led to the first positive reading in this index in 10 months. Despite the growth in demand, Shipments experienced some deceleration albeit they are still growing.  The index was also the only one in the report to fall month over month. Its 3.3 point drop leaves it in the bottom quartile of historical readings. Part of the reason for the slowdown in shipments could be supply-chain related given manufacturers in the region reported longer lead times as evident through the higher reading in the Delivery Time index.  Rising 3.6 points to 9.1 in February, the index is at the highest level since August of 2018.  The index for expectations six months out was even higher in the top 1% of all monthly readings as it reached 11- the highest level in three years.

Not only are products taking longer to reach their destination but manufacturers are also paying more for them.  The index for Prices Paid rose to the top 3% of all readings reaching the highest level since May 2011.  Those higher prices appear to be getting passed along to customers as well with the index for Prices Received also rising to the highest level since May 2011.

With firms generally remaining optimistic for the future, expectations for Capital Expenditures and Technology Spending have picked up.  The latter has reached its highest level in two years while the index for Technology Spending is at the highest level since December 2019. Click here to view Bespoke’s premium membership options for our best research available.

Small Cap Growth Taking the Lead

One of the topics we covered in last Friday’s Bespoke Report was the outperformance of small caps over the past year. Even on a much shorter time horizon, that outperformance has been evident. As shown in the snapshot of our Trend Analyzer below, in the five days ending last Friday and on a year to date basis, both Small Cap Growth (IJR) and Small Cap Value (IJS) have been two of the top-performing ETFs in our US Styles screen while large-cap counterparts have also been higher but with more modest gains.  With a particular focus on growth stocks, while the S&P SmallCap 600 Growth (IJT) ETF was up the most of these ETFs last week with a 3.96% gain, the S&P 500 Growth ETF (IVW) was the second-worst performer after ‘only’ rising 1.05%.  That continued a trend that has been in place YTD with the performance spread between the two ETFs topping ten percentage points.

We are coming up on the one-year anniversary of the last highs on February 19th, 2020 just before the COVID crash. For most of the past year since then, large-cap growth (IVW) had actually been outperforming small-cap growth (IJT), but since the new year began, small-cap growth has jumped ahead. Now, the S&P Small Cap Growth ETF (IJT) is up 35.31% since the 2/19/20 high compared to a 28.16% gain for the S&P 500 Growth ETF (IVW). As shown in the second chart below, IJT had been catching up on IVW for some time now though. The relative strength line of IJT versus IVW had been in a downtrend for most of the past five years meaning large-cap growth had been generally outperforming the small-cap counterpart.  Since the lows last March, the line trended sideways meaning neither one saw significant outperformance, but come the fall, the line has taken off in favor of small caps.  With more outperformance in the past week and a half, that line has turned sharply higher once again reaching the highest level since December of 2019 last week.  Click here to view Bespoke’s premium membership options for our best research available.

Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 2/16/21 – While You Were Out

See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup.  Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day.  Read it now by starting a two-week free trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your free trial.

“Finance is not merely about making money. It’s about achieving our deep goals and protecting the fruits of our labor. It’s about stewardship and, therefore, about achieving the good society.” – Robert J. Shiller

While you were on vacation over the long weekend, global risk assets continued to rally around the world.  The most notable of these advances may have been bitcoin, which rallied right through this morning and briefly touched $50K before pulling back a bit in the time since.  While it may have been nothing more than a coincidence, we couldn’t help but notice seeing headlines from St. Louis Fed President Bullard saying that the FOMC isn’t even thinking about thinking about raising interest rates interspersed with headlines regarding Bitcoin’s topping of $50K.  In economic news this morning, the only data point was the Empire Manufacturing report which came in at twice the consensus forecast (12.1 vs 6.0), so the manufacturing sector appears to remain strong.

Be sure to check out today’s Morning Lineup for updates on the latest market news and events, earnings reports from around the world, economic data out of the UK, an update on the latest national and international COVID trends, and much more.

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It was another strong week for global equities last week.  While small caps led the way in the US, every US index ETF that we track in our Trend Analyzer tool posted positive returns.  Micro-Caps, as measured by IWC surged 3.85%, but large and mega-cap ETFs were all up less than 1.5%.  While the gains are fun if you’re long, market rallies inevitably cause short-term overbought conditions, and that’s exactly the environment we find ourselves heading into the holiday-shortened week.  Every index ETF we track is currently at least at overbought conditions and seven are at ‘extreme’ levels. These types of overbought conditions ultimately need to be worked off through either a correction in time or price, and that’s why seven of the ETFs have timing scores that rank as ‘Poor’ while the rest are all neutral.

Bespoke Brunch Reads: 2/14/21

Welcome to Bespoke Brunch Reads — a linkfest of the favorite things we read over the past week. The links are mostly market related, but there are some other interesting subjects covered as well. We hope you enjoy the food for thought as a supplement to the research we provide you during the week.

While you’re here, join Bespoke Premium with a 30-day free trial!

Thinking Ahead

How airships could return to our crowded skies by Mark Piesing (BBC)

Airships are something of a perpetual “10 years away” technology, but new developments and experimentation are creating a real possibility of long-haul airship cargo. [Link; paywall]

Mini Nuclear Reactors Off Promise of Cheaper, Clean Power by Daniel Michaels (WSJ)

Nuclear power creates no carbon emissions, but radiation is something of a bummer. But new approaches and technologies offer the chance to spin up small scale nuclear plants that could support local power girds or private campuses. [Link; paywall]

Electric Vehicles

The Biden Team Wants to Transform the Economy. Really. by Noam Scheiber (NYT)

The new administration is focused on manufacturing and has settled on electric vehicles as a way to invest in American factories and the jobs they offer. [Link; soft paywall]

New battery tech to have major impact on EVs by Dom Tripolone (News.com.au)

An Israeli company claims that it’s developed a lithium-ion battery that can be recharged in 5 minutes, offering the possibility for extremely fast recharging that would eliminate one of the only downsides for electric vehicles. [Link; auto-playing video]

Policy Analysis

Inflation: The Good, The Bad, and The Transitory by Skanda Amaranth and Alex Williams (Employ America)

An interesting review of three possible scenarios for the economy this year, specifically focused on the trajectory of inflation and the steps policymakers take to respond to it. [Link]

Unemployment insurance, job search, and spending during the pandemic by Fiona Greig, Daniel M. Sullivan, Max Liebeskind, Peter Ganong, Pascal Noel, and Joseph Vavra (JP Morgan Chase Institute)

This research brief studies the impact of the supplemental $600/week unemployment insurance benefits enacted in the CARES Act as a way to provide stimulus and keep households afloat. The authors conclude that the payments played “little role” in discouraging people from finding work. [Link]

GameStop

Exclusive: How GameStop missed out on capitalizing on the Reddit rally by Jessica DiNapoli, Svea Herbst-Bayliss, and Joshua Franklin (Reuters)

GameStop was unable to issue stock to capitalize on the ramp in its share prices, mostly because it thought it would attract regulatory scrutiny for doing so before its earnings update. [Link]

28% of Americans bought GameStop or other viral stocks in January: Yahoo Finance-Harris Poll by Ethan Wolff-Mann (Yahoo!)

A new survey from Harris commission by Yahoo! Finance showed that over one-quarter of the country reported buying “meme” stocks during the surge in retail interest that drove a series of catastrophic short squeezes during the month. [Link; auto-playing video]

Earnings

Coleman Leads $23 Billion Payday for 15 Hedge Fund Earners by Tom Maloney and Hema Parmar (Bloomberg)

The fifteen largest hedge fund paydays in 2020 were worth a total of $23.2bn, mostly due to gains on investment in the funds that large investors manage. [Link; auto-playing video, soft paywall]

Health Care

N.Y.’s Vaccine Websites Weren’t Working. He Built a New One for $50. by Sharon Otterman (NYT)

With different levels of government rolling out the vaccine in different ways, technological fixes kludged together can sometimes make a big impact on access. [Link; soft paywall]

How Much Does a C-Section Cost? At One Hospital, Anywhere From $6,241 to $60,584. by Anna Wilde Mathews, Tom McGinty and Melanie Evans (WSJ)

Hospital procedures are a complete black box, with costs varying by tens of thousands of dollars. A Trump Administration rule is forcing hospitals to disclose pricing and the results are a complete mess. [Link; paywall]

Real Estate

Best week since 2019 for Manhattan luxury market by Sylvia Varnham O’Regan (The Real Deal)

Properties asking $4mm or more saw the largest volume week since November 2019 last week, with a total of 30 contracts signed (21 of which were condos). [Link]

‘Za

Pizza Was the Restaurant Hero of 2020 by Julie Creswell (NYT)

With the pandemic keeping millions at home, pizza is a cheap, easy, and familiar option as either delivery or pickup. The two largest delivery chains saw sales rise by millions of pies. [Link; soft paywall]

Read Bespoke’s most actionable market research by joining Bespoke Premium today!  Get started here.

Have a great weekend!

Presidents’ Day Seasonality

The US equity market will be closed on Monday in observance of the Presidents’ Day holiday.  Since 1971 when the Uniform Monday Holiday Act set the third Monday in February, rather than on George Washington’s birthday (February 22nd) as the Federal holiday, equity market performance during the week of Presidents’ Day has been pretty mixed.  From the Friday before President’s Day through the Friday after, the S&P 500 has traded higher half the time for an average decline of 5 bps.  Taking a closer look, in the chart below we show the median returns by day for each trading day in Presidents’ week.  Tuesday and Thursday have both averaged declines of 13 bps and 7 bps, respectively.  Wednesday averages flat performance but the S&P 500 has only been higher 40% of the time.  Despite weakness throughout most of the week, equities have tended to catch a bid by week’s end with an average 6 bps gain on Friday with a move higher 58% of the time.

In the charts below, we show the average intraday performance of the S&P 500 during Presidents’ Day week since 1983 when our intraday data begins. We also include looks for years when the S&P 500 was up and down YTD headed into the holiday.  Again, the general pattern has been a steady drift lower until Friday when the S&P 500 has tended to rebound.  We would note that the Friday rebound is not an all-day event.  As shown, performance is pretty flat in the first several hours of trading with the biggest ramp higher occurring in the final of hours of tradings. That pattern is also consistent for both up and down years, though, in years that the S&P 500 was down YTD headed into the holiday there was a bit of a rebound midweek which was reversed by the end of the week.   Click here to view Bespoke’s premium membership options for our best research available.

Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 2/12/21 – A Global Tide

See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup.  Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day.  Read it now by starting a two-week free trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your free trial.

“Wherever we look upon this earth, the opportunities take shape within the problems.” – Nelson A. Rockefeller

It’s another quiet morning in the equity markets as futures are little changed ahead of the three-day weekend.  There’s also little on the data calendar today besides Michigan Confidence at 10 AM.  The key data point to watch in this release will be inflation expectations to see how sentiment towards prices is trending among consumers.

Be sure to check out today’s Morning Lineup for updates on the latest market news and events, earnings reports from around the world, economic data out of the UK, an update on the latest national and international COVID trends, and much more.

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This market rally that started at the beginning of February has been a global tide lifting all boats.  As shown in the chart below, the Bloomberg World Index has seen all green in its daily candlesticks and through Thursday was up nine days in a row taking the index to new highs.

At nine days and counting, the current winning streak for the Bloomberg World Index is the longest since early 2018 and one of only a few that have lasted this long since 2004.

Bull-Bear Spread Spiking

Equities have been on a hot streak recently with the Dow and S&P 500 snapping six-day winning streaks earlier this week and the Russell 2,000 ended a seven-day winning streak on Wednesday. As a result, sentiment has understandably followed price action. The percentage of investors reporting as bullish in the AAII’s weekly survey has risen to 45.5% from 37.4% this week. That is a return back to similar levels to the end of 2020.  The 8.1 percentage point jump this week was the largest for bullish sentiment since a 17.88 point increase on November 12th.

Inverse to bullish sentiment, bearish sentiment collapsed by 9.3 percentage points coming in at 26.3%. That is the lowest reading since the week of December 24th when less than a quarter of respondents were bearish.  This week’s decline was in the bottom decile of weekly changes since the beginning of the survey and was also the largest drop in bearish sentiment since the week of October 17th when it fell by 12.91 percentage points.

The large moves in opposite directions of bullish and bearish sentiment led the bull-bear spread to leap from a barely positive reading of 1.8 all the way up to a five-week high of 19.2.  That comes after it was actually negative only two weeks ago.  The 17.4 point increase stands in the top 10% of all weekly changes in the spread and was the largest move higher in roughly three months since the week of November 12th when it rose 24.5 points.

Across the history of the AAII survey dating back to 1987, there have been 224 weeks including the most recent in which the bull-bear spread has risen by at least 15 points in a single week. Only 39 of those have occurred without another occurrence in the previous 3 months. Whereas historically, the AAII survey has been more of a contrarian indicator meaning more bullish sentiment has been followed by weaker returns and vice versa for more bearish readings, in terms of the second derivative of the bull-bear spread, big jumps have preceded stronger than normal returns.  As shown below, past times that the bull-bear spread has risen at least 15 points in one week without another occurrence in the past 3 months, the S&P 500 has consistently traded higher over the next few weeks and months with average gains larger than the norm for each period.  Moves higher have also been very frequent. One year after these past occurrences, the S&P 500 has traded higher better than 90% of the time.

While overall sentiment tipped bullish in a big way this week, neutral sentiment has also continued to rise. For the third week in a row, a greater share of respondents reported neutral sentiment. That reading rose to 28.3%, the highest since the week of Christmas. Click here to view Bespoke’s premium membership options for our best research available.

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