Bulls Wrest Control Of Market Direction

 | Nov 24, 2015 05:00AM ET

Some weeks when I write this article there is little new to talk about from the prior week. It’s always the Fed, global QE, China growth, election chatter, oil prices, etc. And then there are times like this in which there is so much happening that I don’t know where to start. Of course, the biggest market-moving news came the weekend before last when Paris was put face-to-face with the depths of human depravity and savagery. And yet the stock market responded with its best week of the year. As a result, the key issues dominating the front page and election chatter have moved from the economy and jobs to national security and a real war (rather than police actions) against a blood-thirsty orthodoxy that, as the world now seems to universally understand, cannot be simply contained. It is suddenly better to risk being wrong but strong than to be right but weak.

In any case, the major market indexes have remained undeterred -- by either the Fed’s apparent foregone decision to raise the fed funds rate next month or the sudden wave of violence sweeping the globe -- as seasonality and a strong technical picture continue to stoke bullish conviction in U.S. stocks. Moreover, our fundamentals-based sector rankings are mostly unchanged.

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In this weekly update, I give my view of the current market environment, offer a technical analysis of the S&P 500 chart, review our weekly fundamentals-based SectorCast rankings of the ten U.S. business sectors, and then offer up some actionable trading ideas, including a sector rotation strategy using ETFs and an enhanced version using top-ranked stocks from the top-ranked sectors.

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Market overview:

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First a planeload of Russian tourists is bombed out of the sky. Then Paris is attacked by suicidal murderers. Then Mali gets the same. Now Brussels is in lockdown. This is not just a containment problem any longer (not that it ever really was). The civilized world seems to be coming together in the conviction that we are at war with a blood-thirsty ideology bent on religious and ethnic cleansing that would sooner see the entire world annihilated than allow infidels to inhabit it. There can be no peaceful coexistence with this line of thinking, and yet it is spreading like a cancer around the world.

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At the same time, the world is coming to realize that after seven years (since the financial crisis) of global monetary policies designed to stimulate growth and inflation, there has been very little of either. It is becoming evident that different strategies are needed, if any are really needed at all. Perhaps the best idea is to normalize interest rates and focus instead on policies that take the heavy hand of government out of the picture and allows market forces to work with greater freedom.

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For its part, the Fed is trying to signal as clearly as possible that they are on track for their first rate hike, come hell or high water. The fed funds futures (which tend to be quite prescient) are now forecasting a 74% chance of a quarter-point rate hike at the December 16 meeting. The 10-Year Treasury yield closed Friday at 2.26%, which is up significantly from 2.06% just two weeks ago. However, there is an interesting observation about the yield curve’s response since the low in yields on October 14. The 2-year/10-year spread has flattened from 1.43% (2.33-0.90) on November 6, to 1.34% (2.26-0.92) on Friday; while the 5-year/30-year spread has flattened from 1.56% (2.84-0.56) on October 14, to 1.35% (3.09-1.74) on November 6, to 1.33% (3.02-1.69) on Friday.

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Investors seem to be becoming more comfortable in the idea that the Fed will go slow, and that a small rate hike is a sign of a strengthening US economy and consumer. Retail stocks in general have shined for the past week, although the leaders have been discounters like Walmart (N:WMT), Ross Stores (O:ROST), and TJX Companies Inc (N:TJX), while higher-end mall-based stores like Nordstrom (N:JWN) and Macy`s Inc (N:M) and Williams-Sonoma Inc (N:WSM) have faltered. Nike (N:NKE) announced it was raising its dividend, buying back $12 billion in stock, and splitting its stock, to boot.

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Commodities across the board continue to weaken, making anything and everything in this broad space (including oil) highly correlated and difficult to diversify. Moreover, the entire Industrial sector is struggling as China growth remains uncertain and global liquidity is used more for investing in Treasuries, real estate, and stock buybacks than in capital equipment and new projects. As a result, breadth is poor, leadership is narrow, and the Street continues to reduce forward estimates on sales and earnings across all sectors. But an earnings recession does not imply an economic recession, and low energy prices and strength in the dollar has not held back an improving labor market, consumption, innovation, and productivity gains.

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Indeed, this year has been a trader’s market rather than an investor’s market, which means it has been driven more by the latest headline than by attractive forward valuations. Certainly there are many smart and highly-successful investors and hedge fund managers who have been hurt by the news-driven market winds this year, including the likes of Warren Buffett and Bershire Hathaway (BRK-B), William Ackman, David Einhorn, and Carl Icahn. Perhaps the biggest example of the news-driven climate this year has been in the Healthcare sector, which until mid-year had been providing reliable leadership and outperformance for a long time.

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Firms in the Healthcare sector have been weak across the board since June as the formerly invincible sector has absorbed bad press and election-year populist criticism, particularly in the biopharma segment. Former powerhouses like Valeant Pharmaceuticals (N:VRX), Horizon Pharma PLC (O:HZNP), and Mallinckrodt (N:MNK) have been targeted as this segment with its strong organic growth and robust cash flow suddenly changed from a long-term investor darling into a highly-volatile trader’s paradise. In addition, health insurers like UnitedHealth Group (N:UNH), Anthem Inc (N:ANTM), Aetna Inc (N:AET), and Molina Healthcare Inc (N:MOH) were at first simply caught up in the broad downdraft, but now have taken it on the chin due to difficulty working within the constraints of Obamacare in offering individual exchange-compliant plans. Nevertheless, the future is bright for the sector, and in fact it still leads the pack in our fundamentals-based sector rankings.

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Furthermore, if you haven’t been in the so-called FANG stocks -- i.e., Facebook (O:FB), Amazon (O:AMZN), Netflix (O:NFLX), and Google aka Alphabet (O:GOOGL) -- then you are likely underperforming. And hedge funds that have been burned by the Healthcare sector appear to be concentrating their positions even more into a narrower group of stocks, with consumer-facing Tech companies now de rigueur. So, broad GARP models (growth at a reasonable price) that seek attractive forward valuations across a diversified portfolio are generally underperforming -- especially since the summer peaks. In this trader’s market, compelling forward valuations simply aren’t so appealing.

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Moreover, the poor breadth is reflected in the relative performance of the cap-weighted indexes versus the equal-weighted, and the large caps versus the small caps. To illustrate the extremes, just look at the performance difference since June 22 of the cap-weighted SPDR S&P 500 Trust (N:SPY) versus the Guggenheim Invest Russell 2000 Equal Weight (N:EWRS). There is about 13 percentage points difference -- but all of that divergence has occurred since June, as the first half of the year displayed very similar performance across indexes.

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It has been a challenging time, to say the least. But we still believe very strongly in GARP as the way to invest (as opposed to trade) in stocks. After all, that’s what investing is supposed to be about -- buying future earnings and dividend streams for an attractive price.

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The CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX), a.k.a. fear gauge, closed Friday at 15.47 after spiking to 20 (the panic threshold) on the previous Friday.

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SPY chart review:

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The SPDR S&P 500 Trust (SPY) closed Monday at 209.31 and remains above its 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day simple moving averages. After breaking below the 200 and 100, it found support just above the 50-day. The bullish ascending wedge I saw forming two weeks ago instead turned into a bull flag pattern, with a bounce occurring at the 202.50 price level that should serve as strong support if it is tested again. The strong rally of the past week has created another ascending triangle pattern with solid resistance just above at around 211-212, which was the level of the August highs that stopped the October rally. Oscillators RSI, MACD, and Slow Stochastic all appear to have some room to go higher before looking overbought. I expect that one of these breakout attempts will resolve to the upside. If so, next resistance is the May (and all-time) high near 214, followed by blue skies. Support resides at the 200-day SMA (around 207) and 100-day SMA (around 204), last week’s bounce point at 202.50, and then the 50-day SMA, which is rising rapidly in an attempt to cross up bullishly through the 200-day SMA.

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