Bulls Back Off

This month’s negative tone continued in the past week as the S&P 500 collapsed through its 50-DMA. Not susprisingly, the weakness has put a dampener on sentiment.  The latest investor sentiment survey from AAII showed only 35.9% of respondents reported as bullish. That is down for a second week in a row from 49% two weeks ago, and the 13.1 percentage point drop during that span ranks as the largest since the back half of February when bullish sentiment fell by more than 15 percentage points.  It is an even more pronounced drop from 50%+ reading that was put in place the week of July 20th.

Bearish sentiment picked up some of the difference this week, rising 4.6 percentage points to 30.1% and is the highest reading since the first week of June.

With inverse moves in bullish and bearish sentiment, the bull bear spread has fallen sharply to 5.8 after ten consecutive weeks of double digit positive readings (what had been the longest such streak in over two years as shown in the second chart below). In other words, sentiment continues to favor bulls, but by a much narrower margin than what has been seen in the past few months.

In the table below, we show every other instance in the AAII survey’s history in which streaks of at least ten weeks or more of bulls outnumbering bears by at least ten percentage points have come to an end. As shown above and below, these sorts of streaks tend to happen every few years and typically when they end, bullish and bearish sentiment are not far off from their overall historical averages.  As for how the S&P 500 has tended to perform going forward, short term performance has been weak with an average decline one week later.  However, performance one month to one year out is much more consistently positive. That being said, average/median returns six months to one year out have been smaller than the norm.

Finally, we would note that the AAII survey was not the only sentiment indicator to have taken a bearish turn in recent weeks. Other weekly sentiment gauges like the Investors Intelligence survey of newsletter writers and the NAAIM Exposure Index have also turned lower.  In the case of the former, the percentage of respondents reporting as bullish is back below 50% for the first time since the end of May. The latter similarly shows active managers are the least exposed to equities since the end of May.  Combined with the AAII survey, our sentiment composite shows investors are only slightly more bullish than what has historically been normal.


Claims Seasonal Strength Fading

Jobless claims have continued to occupy the past several months’ range between a low of 221K in late July and a high of 265K from a month earlier. This week, claims came in slightly below expectations of 240K falling to 239K. That compares to last week’s reading of 248K which was at the higher end of the aforementioned range.

As we close in on the one year mark of last September’s post pandemic and multi-decade low of 182K in initial claims, they have plateaued and are merely trending sideways. Of course, that is not to say claims are in a bad spot. Although claims have come well off that low, they have yet to move back above 300K. In fact, it has almost been 100 weeks since initial claims last printed a level of more than 300K which ranks as the third longest streak of sub-300K prints on record.

On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, claims actually dipped slightly in the latest week’s data which is somewhat unusual from a seasonal perspective. As shown below, historically the past two weeks have marked modest seasonal bumps in claims before reaching a seasonal low in late August/early September. Worth noting, next week has been one of the most consistent weeks of the year to see unadjusted claims fall with a week over week drop 98% of the time.

Continuing claims are lagged an additional week to initial claims and the latest reading for the first week of August showed claims ticked back above 1.7 million.  As shown below, that is only a modest turn higher as the overall trend of falling continuing claims appears to still be in place for the time being.

GLD: Heavier Than It Has Ever Been

If it seems to you like most financial assets have done nothing but go down this month, you’re right.  A perfect example of this pattern is the price of Gold. The SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) has had an intraday high and low that was lower than the intraday high and low of the previous day on each of the last eight trading days (shaded area in chart), and there has only been one day this month (8/4) when GLD had a higher high and higher low relative to the previous day.  August has been a one-way street, and the direction has been south.

What makes the current streak notable is that in the trading history of GLD dating back to late 2004, there has never been a longer streak of daily lower highs and lower lows.  There have been three prior periods where GLD had lower highs and lower lows for seven straight days, but with yesterday’s decline, GLD’s current streak is now in a league of its own.

 

 

Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/17/23 – Looking Over Their Shoulders

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 trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.

“The only way to get ahead is to find errors in conventional wisdom.” – Larry Ellison

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of content from today’s Morning Lineup for Bespoke Premium members. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium now to access the full report.

Investors are trying to muster an up day as futures trade modestly higher an hour ahead of the opening bell.  Jobless claims and the Philly Fed Manufacturing report were just released.  The former was basically right in line with expectations while the Philly report unexpectedly increased.  One potential negative of the Philly report was the fact that like its Empire counterpart, the Prices Paid component showed a notable increase.

With the flip of the calendar into August, the general tone of the market shifted on a dime.  Look no further than the chart of Apple (AAPL).  The stock closed at an all-time high on July 31st, but since then it’s been all downhill as the stock has corrected more than 10%, erasing more than $300 billion in market cap in the process.  That’s greater than the market cap of all but 20 US publicly traded companies!

At the sector level as well, the tide has gone out.  The image below is a snapshot of sector ETFs from our Trend Analyzer as of the end of July.  At that point, all but one sector was overbought (1+ standard deviations above its 50-DMA), and two sectors – Communication Services and Energy – were at ‘extreme’ overbought levels.

The sector picture has changed significantly in just over two weeks, though.  As of yesterday’s close, only one sector – Energy – remains at overbought levels, and three have moved into oversold territory (Utilities, Technology, and Real Estate). Also notable is the fact that every sector has traded lower over the last week with all but Health Care posting declines of more than 1%.

Just as there’s nothing like a rising market to improve investor sentiment, all it usually takes is a market pullback to get investors nervous.  This week’s sentiment survey from the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) looks as though we may be starting to see that play out.  Over the last week, bullish sentiment dropped from 44.7% down to 35.9% which is down over 15 percentage points from the recent peak back in late July. Certainly not a panic, but bulls are starting to look over their shoulders.

Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to read today’s full Morning Lineup.

Stable Housing

The latest reads on Housing Starts and Building Permits for the month of June were released earlier this morning and showed mixed results relative to expectations (starts slightly better than expected, permits modestly weaker).  The table below breaks down the report by single and multi-family units as well as on a regional basis.  Two notable trends that stand out in the table concern single-family vs multi-family and regional trends.  First, for both starts and permits, single-family was stronger than multi on both a m/m and y/y basis. Single-family units have more of an economic impact, so it’s good to see strength on that score.  On a regional basis, we found it interesting to see that while most regions of the country experienced double-digit y/y increases in starts, permits in all-four regions were down by at least 9% on a y/y basis which would suggest that the pipeline for future starts is getting smaller.

Below are a couple notable charts worth highlighting from the report. On a 12-month average basis, both Housing Starts and Building Permits are down sharply from their early 2022 peaks, but the last few months have seen some stabilization in the pace of starts. Permits, meanwhile, remain stuck in their trend, and based on the current pace and where they were last fall, we’re unlikely to see any stabilization in this reading over the course of the next few months.

Last but not least, the chart below compares the trend in Housing Starts over a three-month rolling basis to the performance of homebuilder stocks as tracked by the iShares Home Construction ETF (ITB), and it provides a great example of how the market is always looking past the headlines.  Even as Housing Starts continued to crater in the middle of 2022, homebuilder stocks began what looked like an inexplicable rally, but just as stocks in the group peaked ahead of the peak in Housing Starts in April 2022, they also bottomed well before the February low.

 

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