Will The S&P 500 Top Out Or Go Parabolic?

 | Sep 01, 2020 07:15AM ET

The S&P (NYSE:SPY) has hit two of three upside targets outlined a few weeks ago in MarketBeat. The market has shunned off any skepticism as optimism for a COVID-19 vaccine and dovish Federal Reserve drives markets to new all-time highs. Breadth is starting to catch up as 50% of the S&P component stocks are still negative on the year.

As we head into a seasonally bearish calendar period from September to October, the question is whether the melt-up bubble will pop or accelerate higher driven by FOMO? Time will reveal the answer, but key price inflection levels are quickly approaching which point to $353.73 to $354.44 range as a potential near-term top or a launching pad for a parabolic spike towards $362.26.

h2 Sprint/h2

The QQQ has been the lead benchmark index ever since it surpassed its pre-COVID-19 February all-time highs of $237.47 on June 5. The QQQ continues to make new all-time highs accelerated by the momentum from the upcoming 4-for-1 stock split in Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) shares and 5-for-1 stock split in Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) shares effective Aug. 31. Unlike the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Nasdaq 100 is a market-cap-weighted index (not price-weighted) with no financial stocks. The impact of AAPL and TSLA stock splits will only impact the QQQs if the market cap falls rapidly on profit-taking. Incidentally, the QQQ is trading above its monthly upper Bollinger Bands®(BBs) at $289.08, so a reversion is in the cards once it falls back under the upper BBs.

h2 Disconnect With Reality? /h2

As pointed out many times before, the markets tend to move based on which narrative it chooses to embrace, which impacts sentiment, which moves price. However, when price accelerates to extreme levels in either direction, it has the power to control the narrative and sentiment. In other words, collapsing stock prices controlled the narrative and sentiment during the February to March pandemic plunge. Rising stock prices are once again controlling the narrative and sentiment to justify the melt-up.

h2 Sell The News Or Spread The Breadth/h2

The SPY is composed of most of the pandemic losers and epicenter industries including financials, travel, leisure, dining, and consumer discretionary. As money flows out of the QQQ, will it spread into the SPY and its laggard sectors? Even within the SPY, there are deeper laggards that may get money flow even as leaders peak out. We are seeing (possibly premature) rallies in laggard industries as the market assumes that no matter how ugly 1H 2020 results were, the worst is behind them (barring bankruptcy). Companies that reported year-over-year (YoY) revenues exceeding (-50%) drops are seeing an acceleration in share prices as money is looking for bargains. Is the SPY putting the cart in front of the horse in anticipation of laggards recovering on a COVID-19 vaccine approval? If so, then a sell-the-news reaction is a likely, but breadth may improve as money flows into the deep laggards. Either way, here are the price trajectories to monitor moving forward.

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