Stocks To Decline Before They Rise At The Week's End

 | Mar 23, 2019 02:55PM ET

h3 Summary:
  • The S&P 500 (SPX) fell 21 points last week to 2801, a decline of 0.7%.
  • This occurred as the Fed pointed to slower economic growth and the yield curve confirmed something was awry.
  • Our projection this week is for stocks to decline for a couple of days and then rise towards the end of the week.


Stocks began the week relatively calmly, bumping around and waiting for the Fed. While the market did pop, it closed the week lower, as I pointed out in the latest Market Week show.

The Federal Reserve announced this week that was lowering its GDP forecast from 2.3% to 2.1%. It also confirmed that it would not raise interest rates this year and would reduce, then end the roll off of its balance sheet. This was a surprisingly dovish Fed meeting, in the face of some very rosy economic comments from Chairman Powell.

Meanwhile, President Trump interjected that “If we didn’t have somebody raising interest rates and doing quantitative tightening we would have been over 4% (GDP growth),” referring to the Fed’s 2018 policy.

Sadly, that suggests a poor understanding of the Fed's actions over the past two decades, and how that created the challenging condition in which central banks now live.

In support of the weakening conditions, both FedEx (NYSE:FDX) and Nike (NYSE:NKE) pointed to grumbling in the global economy during their earnings calls. While the US economy appears to be outperforming others, it’s unlikely it will remain unaffected.

Later in the week, the yield curve inverted, meaning that short term interest rates rose above long term rates. Specifically, the yield on 3-month treasuries was 2.46% compared to 2.44% for 10-year treasuries.

This is the first time this has happened since 2007 and is considered by many to be an indicator that a recession is on the horizon. This puts some fund managers in the condition of being mandated to lower risk.

Looking further at the macroeconomic picture, some indicators looked good while others pointed to cracks in the glass. For example, while the Philly Fed and existing home sales exceeded market expectations, US services PMI and German manufacturing PMI fell short.

Stepping back, our analysis of longer-term market cycles indicates bearish price action over the coming 18 months. Looking at the daily chart for the S&P 500 (SPX), we believe the coming weeks may produce an intermediate term top.

h3 S&P 500 (SPX) Daily Chart/h3