1704 On SPX? Not So Far-Fetched

 | Jan 13, 2016 01:17AM ET

How does a favorable bullish uptrend become an unfavorable bearish downtrend? Does the transition happen overnight? Do commentators, analysts, money managers and market participants simultaneously concur that the environment for risk-taking is exceptionally poor?

The transition from “good times” to “bad times” is far more gradual than many realize. Granted, prices on the Dow or the S&P 500 may fall apart in a matter of days, changing the narrative from “no reason to worry” to “don’t panic.” That said, there are a wide variety of indications that forewarn mindful investors six to twelve months in advance, including consecutive quarters of corporate profitability declines, economic deceleration, and waning participation in price gains across the majority of assets and asset types.

1. Corporate Profits Have Been Breaking Down For Quite Some Time. Peak profitability for the S&P 500 occurred with the third quarter results of 2014 (9/30). Operating earnings that exclude “non-recurring” charges like one-time losses and loan write-downs came in at $114.5; reported, or actual earnings, came in near $106. Not only will operating earnings decline for two consecutive quarters on a year-over-year basis for 12/31/2015, but reported earnings will decline for three consecutive quarters on a year-over-year basis (i.e. Q2, Q3 and Q4 in 2015).

An earnings recession – two consecutive quarters of year-over-year declines is a bad omen regardless of the earnings type that one looks at. According to one researcher, Keith McCullough, two consecutive quarters of declining profits always result in bearish price depreciation for the S&P 500 in the subsequent year.

Similarly, I have pointed out in past articles that a relationship between a manufacturing recession via erosion of the Institute for Supply Management’s PMI strongly correlates with declining earnings per share (EPS). In other words, as much as cheerleaders look to play up ex-energy (EPS) or the 65%-70% service-oriented (ex-manufacturing, ex industrials, ex transports) economy, overall S&P 500 profitability weakness goes hand-in-hand with overall economic weakness.