Chart of the Day: S&P’s Weakness Could Be a Classic Bear Trap

 | Dec 10, 2018 08:38AM ET

Stocks are taking it on the chin from all corners.

In geopolitics, the ever-present U.S.-China trade worries and slowing growth in Europe and China are weighing on the broader market. Fundamentally, rising interest rates could slow growth, while a flattening Treasury yield curve signals an impending recession.

Some of these drivers are more psychological than fundamental and therefore fluid, such as trade tensions. Should President Donald Trump decide to take a sharp turn, a sudden agreement would almost certainly reawaken animal spirits in the markets. The Federal Reserve has signaled it would slow down its path to higher interest rates, which we have been arguing is the primary driver among institutions, not the overhyped trade war. Finally, an agreement in which Trump can boast of his negotiating prowess may take stock prices to new heights.

It's true that we're late in the business cycle and that the arguably most extended bull market in history is already pushing it, as signaled by the flattening yield curve. But it historically takes a year or two for a recession to rear its ugly head, suggesting there is still life in the current bull market.