Bespoke Stock Scores — 5/31/22
Chart of the Day – 5% Weeks Relative to Moving Averages
Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 5/31/22 – Back to the Grind
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“We can draw lessons from the past, but we cannot live in it.” – Lyndon Johnson
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After major US equity indices broke what were the longest weekly losing streaks in decades, it’s back to reality again this week as futures are lower across the board. Yesterday’s announcement that Europe would ban imports of most Russian oil has crude trading up over 3% this morning leading to further concerns of potential inflationary pressures. China reported PMI figures for May overnight, and while both the Manufacturing and Services sectors remain in contraction, the magnitude of the weakness wasn’t as bad as expected.
It’s a busy day of economic data this morning as we’ll get Case Shiller Home Price Data at 9 AM along with the Chicago PMI at 9:45 and then Consumer Confidence at 10 AM (all times eastern).
In today’s Morning Lineup, we recap key events in the Russia-Ukraine war (pg 4), activity in Asian and European markets (pg 4), and key economic data from Europe (pg 5).
As mentioned above, the EU embargo of Russian oil raises concerns of further inflationary pressures, which at the moment aren’t showing any signs of getting under control. Just this morning, headline inflation in the region rose more than expected rising to a record high of 8.1% y/y. That’s up from a y/y reading of negative 0.3% just 17 months ago. It’s only a 20-year history, but the fact that headline inflation in Europe has gone from close to record lows and then easily to record highs is pretty extreme.

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Bespoke Brunch Reads: 5/29/22
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.
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Sentiment Check
Stock Selloff to Intensify as Fresh 10% Plunge Looms, Survey Finds by Benjamin Purvis (Yahoo!/Bloomberg)
A survey of Bloomberg Terminal users reckon the US equity market bottom is around 10% lower near 3500, a brutal 27% decline from last year’s peak. At the very least, that’s a serious insight into the sentiment of institutional investors here. [Link; auto-playing video]
The Market Is Melting Down and People Are Feeling It. ‘My Stomach Is Churning All Day.’ by Justin Baer (WSJ)
Stock market bulls have started to panic with a bear market for the S&P 500 in sight, as concerns over everything from retirement security to availability of down payments and other spending gets dragged down by the market’s plunge. [Link; paywall]
Scarcity
The Trouble With Lithium by Annie Lee (Bloomberg)
Lithium has once again reared its head as a critical bottleneck and cost pressure for everything from energy storage to electric vehicles, with recent price increases working out to more than $1,000 per vehicle of additional costs. [Link; soft paywall]
Global food crisis looms as fertilizer supplies dwindle by Joel K. Bourne, Jr. (National Geographic)
War, sanctions, weather, and export restrictions have fueled an evaporation of global fertilizer supply that is adding new cost pressures to agricultural commodities amidst a global food shortage. [Link]
The Average Age of Vehicles on U.S. Roadways Hits a Record 12.2 Years by Nora Eckert (WSJ)
With car sales beaten down by semiconductors shortages and ever-longer lifetimes for modern vehicles, the average age of US cars continues to grind higher. [Link; paywall]
Real Estate
Paradise Burned to the Ground. Now It’s Another Hot Housing Market by Aaron Gordon (Vice)
After a California town burned to the ground in 2018, residents feared they would never be able to rebuild. But the COVID housing market has flipped the script and new residents are piling in to buy up every property in sight, regardless of the fire risk. [Link]
All My Apes Gone
They spent a fortune on pictures of apes and cats. Do they regret it? by Pranshu Verma (WaPo)
The NFT market has taken a serious leg lower, with a big decline in both prices and volumes amidst a re-think of one of the most over-the-top speculative markets on record. [Link; soft paywall]
Someone Stole Seth Green’s Bored Ape, Which Was Supposed To Star In His New Show by Sarah Emerson (BuzzFeed)
An NFT was set to star in a new show produced by actor Seth Green, but the Bored Ape token was stolen recently and with it the commercial rights required to produce the show. [Link]
Portfolios
Investors Dare to Dip Back Into Bonds by Matt Wirz (WSJ)
With stocks pounded this year, investors are desperate for stability and are seeking it in good old fashioned bonds despite soaring yields year-to-date. [Link; paywall]
The Stock Market’s Drop Is Hitting Many 401(k)s Harder This Time by Anne Tergesen (WSJ)
While target date funds are designed to reduce exposure to equity markets as they approach a hypothetical retirement date, they retain large exposures to stocks…something that investors may not have been aware of or prepared for during the recent stock drop. [Link; paywall]
Demographics
Fragile Job Gains for Black Workers at Stake in Inflation Fight by Matthew Boesler, Jonnelle Marte, and Catarina Saraiva (Bloomberg)
The share of the Black population between 25 and 54 years old who are currently employed hit a 22 year high in April, with the gap in that measure between Black and white Americans at the lowest levels on record. But the FOMC’s focus on inflation may derail all that progress. [Link; soft paywall]
U.S. Births Increase for First Time Since 2014 by Janet Adamy and Anthony DeBarros (WSJ)
After a collapse during the first year of the pandemic, US births rose for the first time since 2014. In the background, births among teenagers (15-19) hit the lowest levels on record and have almost fallen below the 40-44 bracket. [Link; paywall]
Space
Here’s How NASA Plans to Keep the Power on for a Future Moon Base by Kelsey D. Atherton (The Daily Beast)
Long-term lunar habitation is going to require power, and NASA is designing a trio of micro-grids that will sustain the habitat, power mining operations, and support materials processing; there’s also a detailed discussion of lunar sovereignty concerns in this story among other tidbits. [Link]
End of An Era
New York City Removes Last Public Pay Phone in End of an Era by Ginger Adam Otis (WSJ)
The last of NYC’s public street payphones was removed from 7th between 49th and 50th this week, headed to the Museum of the City of New York. [Link; paywall]
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Have a great weekend!
The Bespoke Report — Fools Rush In?
This week’s Bespoke Report newsletter is now available for members.
Finally! After seven consecutive losing weeks for the S&P 500, the index managed to close higher this week. And it was quite the move with SPY up more than 6% for its best one-week gain since the first week of November 2020 (Election Week).
Looking for further insights into the move, we noticed that the market also traded higher during regular trading hours (from the open to the close) on all five trading days this week as well, which signifies a sentiment-driven rally with buyers rushing into stocks intraday due to FOMO (fear of missing out). In SPY’s history, there have actually been 50 other weeks since the ETF began trading in 1993 where it gained from the open to the close on all five trading days from Monday through Friday. But this was the first time we’ve seen SPY post intraday gains all five days during the week with at least four of those gains being 1% or more.
For the month now, the S&P 500 is up 0.65%, and the bond market is also up more than 1%, which means that if we can make it one more trading day (Tuesday) without falling apart, all of those “60/40” investors out there will be able to open their May statements without a spike in blood pressure!
The snippet above is pulled from a page from this week’s Bespoke Report newsletter. If you’re not a Bespoke subscriber and you want to read this week’s full Bespoke Report (and access everything else Bespoke’s research platform has to offer), start a two-week trial to one of our three membership levels.
Daily Sector Snapshot — 5/27/22
It’s Over
Spring is meant to be a season of growth, but that’s the last way to describe what’s been going on in financial markets for the last several weeks. The S&P 500 came into April with a three-week winning streak on Friday, April 1st, but in what has been one of the cruelest April Fools pranks we’ve ever seen, the S&P 500 was down for seven straight weeks in what was the longest weekly losing streak since March 2001. For the DJIA, the streak was even more extreme with eight straight weekly declines for the longest run of consecutive declines in 99 years. 99 years is a long time.
As shown in the chart below, the streak that ended this week was one of just three other periods where the S&P 500 was down for seven or more straight weeks. The other three were in May 1970 (8 weeks), March 1980 (7 weeks), and March 2001 (8 weeks). Besides relentless selling over several weeks, the other factor these three periods have in common is that they all occurred during recessions. May 1970 was right in the middle of a recession, March 1980 was two months into the first of the ‘double-dip’ recessions in the early 1980s, and March 2001 came just as the economy was starting to roll over from the dot-bomb fueled contraction. Economists have assured anyone who will listen that the economy isn’t close to a recession yet, but then again, in Q1 the economy contracted by 1.5%, and the latest projection from the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model currently has a forecast of just 1.9% growth for Q2.
As an investor, whether we’re in a recession or not at this point is almost irrelevant. Equities have already fallen sharply. The more important question is where the economy is going. Anyone who has that kind of crystal ball has a distinct advantage. Think about it. When a recession begins, no one watching just the economy ever knows what is about to unfold. They may be thought of as periods of economic weakness and high unemployment, but the start of a recession also coincides with the point at which the economy is at its strongest and firing on all cylinders. The last thing on anyone’s mind at that point is a recession.
In terms of the prior streaks where the S&P 500 declined for seven or more weeks in a row, forward performance was mixed but generally positive. Three is admittedly a small sample size, but one, three, six, and twelve months later, the S&P 500 was higher at least two out of three times, and three months later (13 weeks) it was higher all three times. 2022 has been a lousy year so far. Wouldn’t it be nice, though, if six months from now at Thanksgiving, instead of everyone worrying about a new emerging strain of COVID (like we did last year), we were all thankful that stocks and bonds stabilized and maybe, just maybe, even partly dug themselves out of the hole they’ve already put themselves into? Click here to learn more about Bespoke’s premium stock market research service.
Bespoke’s Matrix of Economic Indicators – May 2022
Our Matrix of Economic Indicators provides a concise summary analysis of the US economy’s momentum. We combine trends across the dozens and dozens of economic indicators in various categories like manufacturing, employment, housing, the consumer, and inflation to provide a directional overview of the economy.
To access our newest Matrix of Economic Indicators, start a two-week free trial to either Bespoke Premium or Bespoke Institutional now!
Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 5/27/22 – Up. Finally?
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.
“You take an educated gamble. If you don’t occasionally make a mistake, you’re not doing your job.” – James Sinegal
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.
Is this the week markets finally manage to scratch out a rally? Barring an absolute collapse into the three day weekend, US stocks are poised to finish off the week significantly higher, but before we get to the closing bell, there’s a bunch of economic data to get through, including Wholesale Inventories, Personal Income and Spending, the PCE Core Deflator, and Michigan Confidence.
Treasuries are modestly higher, equities are flat, crude oil is slightly lower, and bitcoin is down heading into the final session before a three-day weekend.
In today’s Morning Lineup, we recap major market moves out of Asia and Europe as well as the comparison in the performance between US and European stocks so far this year.
Memorial Day weekend marks the unofficial start to the summer driving season, and prices heading into the period have surged both this month and on a YTD basis. The national average price of a gallon of gas, according to AAA, sits at $4.60 per gallon, which is up just under 10% this month (third-largest increase since 2005) and 40% YTD (second largest YTD increase since 2005). The 40% YTD increase is more than twice the historical average and follows what was a 35% YTD increase last year. There’s pain at the pump.

Gas prices have no doubt surged, but if there’s any potential silver lining, it is that from a seasonal perspective, we’re at the point in the year where prices tend to peak. Whether prices follow that seasonal pattern this year, though, remains to be seen.

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