Bulls “Rush In” With More Stimulus On The Way

 | Mar 14, 2021 12:45AM ET

h2 Market Review And Update

Over the last several weeks, we have repeatedly discussed the “money flow” sell signal that suggested “weakness” in prices. Such was a point we reiterated in last weekend’s newsletter:

“Currently, the money flows remain positive, but ‘sell signals’ are firmly intact. Such suggests downward pressure on prices currently. We do expect that market will likely muster a short-term oversold rally next week. However, the risk of a continued correction in March is likely if money flows deteriorate further.”

Well, the markets did indeed rally as Congress passed the mammoth $1.9 Trillion “pork fest” stimulus package. While this bill is nowhere close to being “reformative,” as touted by the Democrats, it does inject a lot of capital into the economic system. Given that the Federal Reserve will have to monetize the bill’s entirety, it is not surprising the markets get a lift.

In our recent 3-Minutes On Markets and Money video, we discussed the triggering of the short-term “buy signal.”

The good news is the rally took the S&P back to all-time highs reducing concerns about a more significant decline in the near term. However, with money flows still trending negatively, we may see some recent advance consolidation next week. Such is consistent with the previous breakouts we have seen over the last several months where money flows were trending negatively.

Unfortunately, as shown, the money flow signals do not distinguish between consolidations and corrections. Such makes risk management a crucial part of the portfolio management process.

h3 A Brief Dichotomy/h3

While the short-term indicators for the S&P (via SPY) are undoubtedly positive, suggesting more upside near-term, the longer-term index remains on a confirmed sell signal. Such indicates that downward pressures may continue to limit upside now.

Such was the point made last week, which is worth reiterating:

“The dichotomy between the daily and weekly charts suggests we may well see a rally in the short-term, but another correction following. The last time we had the current setup with our indicators was in September and October of 2020, which provided two 10% corrections before the consolidation process was over.”

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Chart updated through Friday

Currently, that seems to be the likely scenario. With valuations still extended, the recent correction didn’t reduce speculative fervor. Furthermore, prices remain well deviated above long-term means, particularly in the small and mid-cap space.

While more stimulus will likely support prices over the next few weeks, the threat of rising inflation and interest rates could undermine growth expectations. As we will discuss in our positioning update below, we did increase our exposures this week. However, we also continue to suggest some caution for now.

h2 Speculation Still Alive And Well/h2

My colleague Doug Kass made a critical observation this week:

“In my decades of investing experience, I have not seen such mindless and uninformed speculation as I have witnessed recently. Indeed, in nominal dollar terms (and led by retail traders, see chart below) it is far in excess of the dot.com boom.”

He is correct. The interesting thing about this chart is that it explains the astronomical surge in “small-cap” stocks recently, which is far above any logical expectation of future earnings and economic growth. The reality is that retail traders have been speculating in very low-priced stocks where they can buy more shares versus large traders, who buy higher-priced shares with more liquidity. Such shows up in the deviation of the volume traded.

There is no fundamental basis to support the chart below of the SPDR® S&P 600 Small Cap Value ETF (NYSE:SLYV). Small-cap “value,” of which I would argue there is little value considering valuations are at historical extremes, is currently trading at near 4-standard deviations of the 1-year moving average. Such is a level never seen before and one not likely to resolve well.

As Doug notes:

“The Bible says (Proverbs 16:18) that ‘pride goes before destruction, a haughty spirit before a fall.’ Even William Shakespeare warned that ‘dreams are the children of an idle brain, begot of nothing but vain fantasy.’

Adopting a YOLO mentality (“you only live once”), speculation begot initially by analphabetic retail traders with little historical market perspective, and even less micro (individual company) knowledge. Using Robinhood and other commission free platforms and ‘Reddit’ as their investment research and communities, such is now spreading and is morphing into an institutional experience and phenomenon.