Weekly S&P500 ChartStorm - 17 October 2021
This week: technicals check, seasonality, bitcoin, sales surprises, consumer discretionaries vs staples, emerging markets risk, global equity valuations
Welcome to the Weekly S&P500 #ChartStorm (by email!)
The Chart Storm is a weekly selection of 10 charts which I hand pick from around the web (+some of my own charts), and then post on Twitter.
The charts focus on the S&P500 (US equities); and the various forces and factors that influence the outlook - with the aim of bringing insight and perspective.
Hope you enjoy!
p.s. if you haven’t already, subscribe (free) to receive the ChartStorm direct to your inbox each week, so you don’t miss out on any charts (you never know which one could change the whole perspective!)
1. The Levels: As I noted on Twitter with regards to the daily price chart:
-price back above the 50 day moving average ✓
-back above the 4450 level ✓
-RSI back above 50 ✓
(and therefore) Odds of more upside?
-probably better than 50/50 ✓
For a while there the price action was looking very messy and distinctly unconvincing. But these latest developments are quite promising, albeit we do need to see all of those milestones hold...
Source: @Callum_Thomas
2. Seasonality Update: Like clockwork, just as the worst of the seasonal headwinds ended, and the Q4/Year-End/Santa Claus rally comes into play, the market starts to turnaround. But I would again highlight (as mentioned a couple of weeks ago), the dispersion of returns in October can be particularly wide-ranging, and while Nov/Dec tend to be positive on average - they’re “only” positive about 70% of the time historically (in other words, exceptions do exist!). Factor seasonality in, let it help build your investment thesis, but don’t let it be the only thing!
Source: @topdowncharts
3. Bitcoin Seasonality: Speaking of seasonality, as I updated the chart above this one caught my eye. Now I will say I don’t really cover crypto currencies in much detail at all, but I do know market patterns when I see them. Also, unlike the previous chart, this one has obviously a shorter history. That all said, there seems to be a Q4 ramp in crypto-currencies too …perhaps it is just all risk assets!
Source: @topdowncharts
4. Bitcoin vs Stocks: Now obviously we are dealing with two entirely different scales when it comes to Crypto vs Stocks… in this case both figuratively and literally! The key point with this chart is that the two assets walk a somewhat familiar path - and are both heavily influenced by speculative appetite and monetary conditions. It’s an open question as to whether the two are self-reinforcing, but they at least dance to similar music, so in that respect if we see a breakout in Bitcoin, then stocks probably join in the fun too.
Source: @topdowncharts
5. Sales Beats: This interesting chart from BlackRock shows the degree to which actual revenues are exceeding analyst expectations. As you can see sales are outperforming vs expectations like never before. This is an important macro development, particularly in the context of rising inflation - as the authors note: “This suggests to us that even as inflation has been driving an increase in input costs, companies have the pricing power to offset it. They have been able to raise prices and push higher costs on to the end consumer, a reflection of pent-up demand and consumer willingness to pay.“
Source: BlackRock
6. Consumer Discretionaries vs Staples: I thought this was an interesting one because of the way the relative performance line of discretionaries vs staples had been locked in a multi-month trading range, but as of last week appear to be in the process of resolving to the upside. To the extent that this reflects improved risk appetite/macro, this development likely reinforces the upward bias going into Q4.
Source: @honeystocks1
7. Bottom-Up Price Targets for the S&P500: We’ve all seen the top-down estimates, so here’s a look at how the bottoms-up outlook is tracking. As FactSet note: “The bottom-up target price is calculated by aggregating the median target price estimates (based on company-level estimates submitted by industry analysts) for all the companies in the index“. Basically they’re picking 10-15% up in 2022 (which compares to just under 20% YTD in 2021).
Source: FactSet
8. Advance Emerging Markets: This chart provides a timely look at the advance/decline line for emerging market equities - I think this is a fairly positive sign given that EM equities have come under quite a bit of pressure lately.
Source: @granthawkridge
9. EM Risk to DM Equities: Indeed, the risk is that the said weakness in EM spills over to developed market equities. So the above chart is promising, but so too is this one. The EM cyclicals vs defensives relative performance line has bounced from where support might logically be found, and the US cyclicals vs defensives line looks to be resolving to the upside. So perhaps a bullish resolution to what was otherwise a bearish divergence.
Source: @topdowncharts
10. Global Equity Valuations: Last but not least is a look at how PE10 (price vs trailing 10yr average earnings) ratios are tracking for US vs rest of the world. It also shows how it looks if you adjust for sector skews (doesn’t change the conclusion). The conclusion is: US looks very expensive vs its own history and vs the rest of the world. Will this chart matter this year? probably not. Next year? maybe. Next 5-10 years? almost certainly. In other words, valuations take on greater importance with greater timeframe (patience), but also greater extremes. So definitely interesting, and definitely important insight for longer-term investors.
Source: Global Equity Valuations
Thanks for following, I appreciate your interest!
oh… that’s right, almost forgot!
BONUS CHART >> got to include a goody for the goodies who subscribed.
Investor Sentiment Shakeout: investor sentiment has received a resolute rinsing-out over the past few months, despite a relatively minor sell-off (in the scheme of things).
The indicator tracks the bulls minus bears score for the AAII and Investors Intelligence surveys to present a combined perspective on investor sentiment.
The indicator was tracking around +3 S.D. vs long-term average, but dropped briefly to -1 S.D. vs long-term average, and the most recent readings show a rebound. This is a very interesting development - quite a significant swing in sentiment, and the fact that it has begun an initial rebound basically puts in play one of the basic rules of sentiment analysis... When a sentiment indicator drops significantly and then turns up, that’s basically a contrarian bullish signal.
To be fair, compared to previous instances, this is not deeply contrarian by any means. But then again, when you are in the middle of a raging bull market arguably you don’t actually need that deep a reset in sentiment to clear the path higher.
Healthy correction in sentiment?
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Best regards,
Callum Thomas
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