Did Global Markets Roll Over In April-May 2021? What Next? Part II

 | Sep 21, 2021 03:55PM ET

In the first part of this research article, I highlighted a number of factors and technical charts that suggest the true peak in the U.S./global markets happened in April-May 2021. Although the U.S. markets continued to trend higher after that peak, the global markets, as well as a number of key indicators, suggested the bullish price trend had reached a peak and started to weaken after the April-May 2021 peak.

My assumption is this data shows the markets entered a highly speculative phase of trading after the November 2020 elections. History shows us that the 12+ months prior to a U.S. Presidential election are usually filled with uncertainty and sideways market volatility. Then, just after the presidential election is completed, the markets usually enter into a trending phase related to the expectations and promises of the newly elected president. Last year was no different in this process. What was different was the fact that the Federal Reserve was still pouring trillions into supporting the post-COVID global economic recovery. So this post-presidential election rally may have become a super-charged speculative rally phase with the Fed backing the trends.

The one key chart this highlights the April-May 2021 peak is the weekly NYSE New Highs. The data on this chart suggests the New York Stock Exchange moved into a period of hyper-bullish trending near the end of 2020 and continued to push to extreme highs in April-May 2021. After the peak level on this chart, in early May 2021, the NYSE new highs collapsed by more than 80% in less than 15 days. This represents an incredible reversal of sentiment for investors at a time when the U.S. stock market had just completed Q1:2021 earnings updates. Almost as if traders/investors decided “that's it, the party's over” and started pulling assets away from the markets to protect profits.