Reward & Punishment

February 6, 2022

Weekly Market Outlook

By Keith Schneider and Donn Goodman


Another wild week and fast moves in the stock market indices as we are in the middle of earnings season.

This past week some of the largest stocks, including Google, Amazon, Qualcomm, Exxon Mobil, Visa, Comcast, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley Snap, and Nike are a few that reported an earnings beat. Most not only increased revenue on the top line but had significant net earnings per share beats on the bottom line and rosy guidance going forward.

There were also quite a few disappointments, including Meta (Facebook), Honeywell, McDonalds, Ford, Bed Bath & Beyond, Pitney Bowes, Kellogg’s, Clorox, Walgreens, Adobe, Salesforce, and JP Morgan.

Interestingly, the National Media did not care to comment on all the positive beats but instead decided to highlight the largest one-day loss of approximately $230 billion in Meta (FB) stock, a historical first.

Similar industry stalwarts reported vastly different earnings (Bank of America & JP Morgan or Facebook & Snap). What gives?

Most of the companies with earnings disappointment cited a few meaningful reasons summed up in two areas:  supply chain disruptions and increasing labor costs (wage inflation).

A Ruthless Market

So why such large rewards (GOOG, AMZN to name two) for earnings beats and why such decimation (FB, F to name two losers).

We have mentioned it in our previous Market Outlooks, that the market dynamics began changing in the 4th quarter, 2021. There has been much sector rotation and leadership changing in the markets.

Most of this is due to a number of factors including a) rising inflation which has spawned rising labor costs; b) rising raw material costs making the output of products more expensive; c) global supply chain interruptions; d) rising energy costs which factor into rising production expenses; e) remaining covid infections and a disruption of human capital available to work; f) geopolitical turmoil and tension causing business anxiety and enhanced cyber security risk; g) rising interest rates; h) recalculation of multiples assigned to stocks.

Another contributing factor is money flows. There is still a tremendous amount of investor capital including retirement funds deeply entrenched in the stock market. However, as an indication to the fragility of the market, this past Monday (January 31) the $407 billion SPY ETF saw its biggest redemption since launching in 1993 according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Approximately $7 billion exited Monday alone, the largest daily outflow in 4 years.

The January exit was not contained to the S&P 500 fund. The $191 billion QQQ ETF (which follows the NASDAQ 100 of tech names) posted its largest exodus since the dot-com collapse (2000-2002) as about $6.2 billion departed the ETF during the month.

All of this enhances the frailty and liquidity of the stock markets and its components. In fact, the amount of money to move key US stock indexes 1% is extremely low.

When US Treasuries rates are exceptionally low (negative real returns for investors after accounting for inflation), investors reward the high Price to Sales and Price to Earnings stocks and expand multiples even further, a self-reinforcing dilemma …until the easy money stops.

This environment is shifting and the end of a 40-year cycle of lower rates supporting highly speculative tech companies might be finished for quite some time.

Hence Growth Stocks (VUG) are underperforming Value (VTV) this year, reversing a decade long plus trend. Do not get me wrong here as there could be some serious rallies that can fool one into believing growth is still the right play.

This type of market causes “impatience” and quality consistent long-term earnings begin to be blessed by the market and investor punish the ones that disappoint.

Such is this earnings season.

What Might We Recommend Now?

Surprisingly even though we are getting plenty of companies disappointing on earnings, there are enough earnings surprises and beats that it will prop up the market and keep a floor underneath.

Our own Mish, in several recent National TV appearances, believes that we are caught in a trading range that could expand and last for some time. The S&P 500 could be building a solid floor (4200) and a hard to break through ceiling (4700) and we may find ourselves oscillating between these two numbers for a while until there is some catalyst one way or the other to break through these ranges.

We continue to urge you, our valuable and loyal subscribers, to stay in touch closely. Watch the Risk Gauges, monitor the investment models closely and be attentive to the frequent changes we are initiating. Be ready to shift perspectives quickly.

If you are a follower to Mish or our ETF Complete, you may have noticed the exposure to energy and agricultural commodities. Do not get too wrapped up in, and be very selective, in technology issues or small-cap stocks which right now  are in bear phases.

 

Here are this week’s market highlights:

Risk On/Bullish

  • The SPY and DIA regained their 200-day moving averages, while all 4 key indices continued to mean revert and all up on average +1.5% on the week.
  • TSI went positive for both the DIA and SPY but not QQQ or IWM
  • For the first time in over a month the number of accumulation days in the 4 indices exceeded distribution days, a meaningful improvement.
  • Speculative sectors led the rally this week which included Consumer Discretionary (XLY) and Semiconductors (SMH), while Risk-Off plays like Consumer Staples (XLP) and Utilities (XLU) lagged.
  • Energy related stocks including Energy (XLE) +5%, Clean Energy (PBW) +5.2%, and Solar (TAN) +4.8% on the week
  • The Nasdaq Composite ($COMPX) is showing marginally positive market internals across the board.
  • The New High/New Low ratio for both SPY and QQQ shows signs of bottoming out.
  • Risk Gauges improved, currently showing neutral levels
  • Volatility Ratios (one month versus three month) bounced off extremely oversold levels and set up for more upside action.
  • The number of stocks above their 10-day moving average are bouncing from oversold levels.

 

Risk Off/Bearish

 

Neutral Metrics

  • Gold (GLD) closed just below its 10 and 200-day moving averages in a sideways compression range and looks poised on a longer-term basis to break out either way. Monthly charts are most telling
  • Despite the rise in rates, the US Dollar (UUP) got hit pretty hard this week and went into a Warning phase against the Euro (FXE)
  • Market Internals worked off oversold readings and are in slightly negative territory still according to the 10-Day Advance/Decline and the McClellan Oscillator for SPY
  • TSI went positive for both the DIA and SPY but not QQQ or IWM

 

Crypto Corner
By Holden Milstein

  • On Friday, Bitcoin (BTC) saw its largest daily percent gain since February 2, 2021, jumping +11.5% and surging back above the $41,000 level with only the 50-day moving average as resistance before further price exploration.
  • While we did see a rally in the key stock market indices all up +1.5% on average this week, the cryptocurrency market clearly outperformed across the board with other major coins significantly outperforming even the best stocks.
  • This week we’ve seen reports from international Binance exchange users of phishing scams directly targeting their login credentials, while major blockchain-bridge provider Wormhole was hacked and exploited for over $320 million worth of ETH.


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