Bulls Reclaim Their Mojo As Healthcare Leads

 | Apr 11, 2013 03:20AM ET

Bulls have regained their footing and recruited some reinforcements, as the S&P 500 on Wednesday powered right through its 5.5-year intraday high of 1576 on increased trading volume to set a new record of 1589. Catalysts appeared to be a promising start to earnings season and the early release of the March FOMC minutes, which indicated to investors that the Fed will continue to inject liquidity until the economy and labor markets display sustainable improvement.

Last week, we saw the “hot money” from end-of-quarter institutional buying of the prior week quickly exit the market after some uninspiring economic reports came out, culminating in a big gap down to open trading on Friday. But stocks have been steadily recovering ever since.

Not surprisingly, the higher-beta Russell 2000 small caps and Nasdaq were Wednesday’s big leaders with 1.8% gains, but it’s notable that equity correlations remain quite high on strongly bullish days, as all boats are lifted in the rising tide. The S&P 500 large caps rose 1.2%.

One of the exceptions to the bullish behavior was Titan Machinery (TITN), which fell 14% on an earnings miss. Sabrient subsidiary Gradient Analytics, which publishes in-depth forensic accounting research and a quantitative Earnings Quality Rank, has been negative on the stock.

Among the 10 U.S. business sectors, Telecom and Technology were the big winners on Wednesday, although Healthcare was also strong yet again and still stands above the rest of the field as the leading sector in year-to-date performance. The iShares Healthcare Sector Fund (IYH) is up nearly 19% YTD, while the iShares Basic Materials Sector Fund (IYM) is only at breakeven after some recovery this week.

However, it’s notable that the top three performers so far this year among the 10 U.S. sector iShares are all considered defensive sectors: Healthcare, Utilities, and Consumer Goods. And this general investor conservatism is also reflected in the general outperformance of value-oriented mutual funds over growth funds over the past four quarters. Furthermore, we can’t ignore the fact that the past three years saw early gains give way in April to significant market pullbacks.

But each of those pullbacks saw the market rise again later in the year. And an underlying conservatism among stock investors with a preference for value and dividends is not necessarily a bad thing. It might suggest that stocks are being led higher by longer-term investors rather than by hot-money “junk rallies.” If earnings season continues to be strong, investors might be treated to sustained market strength this year rather than the usual yo-yo.

Looking at the charts, the S&P500 SPDR Trust (SPY) closed Wednesday at 158.67 and has broken out strongly above the sideways channel between about 153.5 and 157 that has been in place since the gap up on March 5. The 20-day simple moving average has been providing short-term support, and the 40-day SMA has provided reliable secondary support. Oscillators RSI, MACD, and Slow Stochastic are all pointing up. The breakout is letting the Bollinger Bands spread apart after pinching together about as tight as they ever get, and now price might need to consolidate for a day or two to allow the upper band catch up.

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