Fast And Furious Selloff Provides Important Market Cleansing

 | Apr 14, 2014 04:49AM ET

The sudden bearish turn last week in the market -- after hitting new highs the prior week -- has come fast and furious as selloffs are wont to do. And the pullback might have further still to go. But there are several reasons to expect a stabilization or bounce during this holiday-shortened week, and in any case I still expect that it eventually will turn out to be a great buying opportunity leading to higher prices later in the year. The major indexes are at or near round-number support levels, including NASDAQ at 4,000, Dow Jones Industrials at 16,000, S&P 500 at 1,800, and Russell 2000 at 1,100. And from a technical standpoint, despite violating support at the 50-day simple moving average, the S&P 500 remains well within the bounds of its long-standing bullish rising channel.

Among the ten U.S. business sectors, defensive sector Utilities stands alone as the year-to-date leader, up about +9% and hitting a new intraday high on Thursday. Healthcare had been keeping up for a while, but it has fallen back into the pack with the big selloff in biotech and biopharma.

No doubt, investors have been protecting capital, and there has been a rotation into the blue chips as the momentum darlings have been slaughtered. Experienced traders know that, although the glamour stocks can outperform value stocks over short periods of time, history shows that ultimately the tortoise beats the hare, i.e., value wins out.  As such, I would not suggest jumping back into stocks like Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) or 3D Systems (NYSE:DDD) that have poor earnings quality and still display high forward valuations even after their massive selloffs.

So, yes, a market cleansing like this is both important and inevitable. However, as I observed last week, the market will often throw out the proverbial baby with the bathwater, which is a boon for savvy investors. For example, Sabrient favorites Jazz Pharmaceuticals (JAZZ.O) and Actavis plc (NYSE:ACT) remain fundamentally sound, and their previously fair valuation is now even much more attractive.

Although we will likely see positive returns in the U.S. market, many market commentators are predicting those returns to be modest in the U.S. and other developed economies this year, but better for emerging markets and potentially outstanding for frontier markets. Indeed, the IMF reported at their meeting on Saturday that the global economy appeared to have turned a corner into a “strengthening phase” that can make inroads into persistently high unemployment after a disastrous 2008-2010 timeframe. Certainly the high price of crude oil suggests global demand due to economic growth.

Some of the extreme market weakness recently might be due to shorting for “delta hedging” by put sellers, and total short interest on S&P 500 stocks has risen to its highest levels since 2012. Furthermore, many traders may have been exiting positions or cashing in gains so that they can take time off this week in observance of Passover, or perhaps to pay taxes on capital gains. If so, we might not see much more downside.

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Of course, in any market climate there will be a bull case and a bear case. Bears are complaining that the forward P/E valuation of the S&P 500 (about 15x) is still historically expensive, corporate profit margins are at record highs and due for a reversion to the mean, the Federal Reserve’s tightening of monetary policy (i.e., tapering of quantitative easing) will prove recessionary, and growth slowdown and credit tightening in China along with Russia’s incursion into Ukraine will spook international investor and stunt global demand. Many are expecting a weak earnings season and few expressions of optimism.

This week, 54 S&P 500 companies are scheduled to report Q1 earnings, including bellwethers like General Electric (NYSE:GE), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and IBM (NYSE:IBM). Also, we’ll hear economic reports like retail sales on Monday, CPI on Tuesday, housing starts and industrial output on Wednesday, and the Philly Fed business activity index and initial jobless claims on Thursday, before the Good Friday holiday.  

The CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX), a.k.a. “fear gauge,” closed Friday at 17.03. So, there has been a notable jump in investor trepidation, but it is still below 20 and lower than one might expect for the prevailing conditions.

h3 SPY chart review:/h3

The SPDR S&P 500 Trust (ARCA:SPY) closed Friday at 181.51. After the previous Friday’s action ended with a nasty bearish engulfing candle on high volume, we saw some follow-through last Monday, a brief bounce from the 50-day simple moving average, and then the week finished with a scary selloff that stopped only briefly at the 100-day SMA. Oscillators RSI, MACD, and Slow Stochastic are all at or near oversold territory. It appears that bears might struggle to push price much lower in the near term. Remaining support levels start with round-number support at 180, the bottom of the rising channel (near 179), and finally the 200-day SMA (near 177).