Buy S&P 500, Sell Oil

 | Jul 11, 2016 11:18AM ET

Why are bonds up 20% and the S&P futures (ESU16:CME) up over 4.5% for the year? Has crude oil disconnected from the the S&P 500? With the Fed unable to raise interest rates and Europe bracing for more quantitive easing, the S&P 500 has been taking things in stride and moving higher. Ahead of Monday's open, the front month E-mini S&P 500 futures were trading 2119.25, up 27.25 handles (points), or 1.29%. That's the same price the S&P future traded up to the evening of the Brexit vote. At that price, the (ESU16) is up 137.50 handles, or +6.80%, from the 1981.50 Brexit low.

There was a lot of disconnect last week; from the large drop in the S&P, to the big rally and a -6% drop in oil prices in one day, to the the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield hitting an all-time, multi-century record low. There have been few times that traders have seen oil prices dropping sharply and the S&P making new contract highs and we think this is another great example of how even the most prominent patterns do not last forever. How many times do we buy the S&P and stare at crude oil? Or for that matter, when have we seen the 10-year yield at multi-century record lows?

While I understand the overall price action, I also like to hear what other traders are thinking that understand the technical side and came from the trading floor.

To answer the questions above, we asked Dave Wienke from www.point786.com, who began his career at the CBOT in 1985, why the bonds were up with with the S&P sharply higher? His analysis begins below and I’ll close with “Our View”. Thank you to Dave!

h3 Dave Wienke/h3

Stocks were firm into the end of the week ahead of the Japanese election where Prime Minister Abe’s coalition won more seats in the upper house on Sunday, giving two-thirds majority. The election result is now expected to pave the way for more, fresh stimulus from Abe. The Japanese press is reporting that his government will announce a new fiscal stimulus package of up to 20 trillion Japanese yen ($199 billion) for the current fiscal year early this week. Dutch 10-year yield falls to zero for the first time and now nearly a third of global outstanding government debt is at or under 0%. June was a big winner for fixed income ETF flows (according to Factset) with $5.7B in net new asset and $47B in new money for 2016. Some of last week’s early weakness in treasuries was due to corporate deal rate-locking, which may have been a reason for bonds to firm later in the week along with equities. Curve flattening trades were in focus last week as well as search for yield and key technical break in 10/30 curve (shown below) was a reason for bonds to lift along with equity indices.

TYU6 nearly touched its breakout target area of 134-10 from the triangle formation.

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