5 Reasons To Lower Your Allocation To Riskier Assets

 | Jul 31, 2015 01:21AM ET

For months, I have been discussing the likely implications of deteriorating market breadth. For instance, fewer and fewer components are holding up the Dow, the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ. Only a small number of industry sectors are keeping the popular benchmarks in the plus column. Similarly, half of the stocks in the S&P 500 currently demonstrate bearish downtrends. And declining stock issues are significantly pressuring advancing stock issues for the first time since July of 2011.

Historically, when a handful of stocks like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), Gilead (NASDAQ:GILD), Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and Walt Disney Co (NYSE:DIS) account for all of the gains for a major index like the S&P 500 – when 250 of the index constituents show bearish patterns – the narrow breadth tends to drag the benchmark’s price downward. To be fair to the bull case, the major indices have held up so far. Nevertheless, U.S. equities in the Dow and the S&P 500 have been churning sideways for the better part of seven months.

What about the prospect for underperforming sectors of the economy contributing to widespread market gains? I wouldn’t hold my breath on the possibility of wider breadth in the near term. Materials and resources-related companies continue to be plagued by slumping oil and weak commodity demand around the globe. Most economists believe that while the rout in commodities may conceivably abate, a significant increase in global demand or a sharp decline in global supply is unlikely. In the same manner, the manufacturing segment’s pullback may be structural, not cyclical. Miners, industrial conglomerates and utilities probably won’t be getting wind at their back anytime soon.

For better or worse, the primary hope for continued appreciation in the U.S. indices rests atop the shoulders of the healthcare juggernaut, dot.com usage and the iPhone-oriented consumer. Indeed, investors have been remarkably willing to pay almost any price for the growth of the “Facebooks” and “Gileads” of the world.

On the flip side, can the market-cap behemoths do any wrong? Of course they can. It wasn’t so long ago that Facebook shares face-planted for a 50% loss out of the IPO gate. Similarly, Apple tumbled 45% at the tail-end of 2013. Even at this moment, questions about the viability of the iWatch and the corporation’s ability to grow at a rapid pace in future quarters is keeping the shares of the largest company on the planet from breaking through resistance.