Global Market Trends Continue To Push U.S. Dollar And U.S. Assets Higher

 | Apr 21, 2022 11:41AM ET

Every day seems filled with some new comment or data point that suggests the global market or the Fed will aggressively attempt to burst the inflation bubble. Global central banks continue to warn that COVID, and other issues, persist. Traders seek some clarity and understanding of what’s going to happen next.

Will U.S. Stock Market Continue To Rally Higher?/h3

Allow us to help you understand what is happening behind all these data points and news posts. We can understand key market components better by using specialized modelling systems that aim to distill market events into relatable trigger events within our strategies. This, in turn, helps us to better understand what may come next for the US markets.

We’ll focus on some of our custom indexes to better illustrate current market trends and conditions. These are examples of our Custom Smart Cash Index (a more global market custom index), our Commodity Price Index,and our Custom US Index (a focused US Custom Index).

h3 Comparing Global Market Index Versus The U.S. Market Index/h3

Looking at this custom Weekly Smart Cash Index vs. the US Index, it is evident that the Smart Cash Index (in RED) has fallen very sharply over the past 14+ months. We can interpret this downward trend as a sharp shift in inflationary, deleveraging, and economic trends in Asia and much of Europe. We find this shift interesting because it took place after a substantial rally in both U.S. and global market assets from November 2020 to early February 2021.

After the February/March 2020 COVID-19 event, the global markets entered a period of extensive economic recovery. The rebound in global stock market price levels prompted a strong wave of consumer engagement, rising asset prices, and robust demand for commodities, raw materials, homes, autos and other core assets. As a result, consumers were flush with cash, and inflation levels were still timid (at best) – resulting in a +56% rally in the NASDAQ from October 2020 to the recent highs.

In February/March 2021, something shifted rather dramatically to push the global markets into this new downward trend. What happened?