Patient Bulls Are Getting Their Buyng Opportunity

 | Jun 13, 2013 04:55AM ET

Stock investors are protecting gains and holding off on deploying cash as concerns abound about central banks, including the Federal Reserve, tapering off on their stimulus programs, i.e., money printing. Low-interest policies and quantitative easing have been the driving force for economic recovery while pushing return-hungry investors into equities by default. And now worries are resurfacing that China’s growth is slowing -- and threatening to derail global economic recovery. Thursday trading in Asia is seeing shares making new 2013 lows.

The Utilities sector continues to take it on the chin after dividend-hungry investors took valuations a little too high while interest rates crept up. The iShares US Utilities Sector ETF (IDU) has fallen nearly 9% from its peak over the past six weeks. Capital has rotated into the cyclical sectors, which by nature are higher beta and more volatile, and indeed we are seeing higher market volatility.

But U.S. stocks still have a lot going for them, and new bulls who have patiently awaited a larger pullback before putting their money to work are being rewarded for their patience. Stock valuations are still good, assuming the economy keeps improving and corporate earnings continue to hold up.

Although U.S. stocks remain within a 6-month uptrend, emerging markets and China have not fared so well, and their charts look downright scary. Just pull up a chart of the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index Fund (EEM). Some commentators are worried about a contagion of global worry impacting U.S. equities, as well, but I expect many global investors who are pulling money from emerging markets ultimately will redeploy their equity capital into the U.S. Plus, the markets are benefiting from the fuel of plentiful corporate cash for buybacks and acquisitions.

In new M&A activity, Cooper Tire & Rubber (CTB) jumped more than 40% on Wednesday after agreeing to be acquired by Apollo Tyres for about $2.5 billion in cash. And then in the afterhours, shares of Safeway Inc (SWY) jumped 30% when Empire Company Ltd (EMP-A.TO) of Canada announced an unsolicited offer to acquire Safeway's Canadian assets for $5.7 billion in cash, which was more than the whole market cap of SWY before the announcement, even though it includes only about 200 of their 1600 stores. A great deal for SWY shareholders. Safeway will use the cash to pay down $2 billion in debt, buy back stock, and invest in new opportunities, which is all good.

Looking at the chart of the SPDR S&P 500 Trust (SPY), it closed Wednesday at 161.75, which is just about where it was last Wednesday. The technical consolidation continues, and I have drawn a neutral symmetrical triangle, which I expect will ultimately turn out to be a continuation pattern for the rising channel that has been in place since November. The oscillators are continuing to churn around during this consolidation, and could go either way from here. The 50-day simple moving average (SMA) converged with the lower line of the rising channel, and along with psychological support at 160 (corresponding with 1600 on the S&P 500 Index), offered strong support last week as I suspected it would, although the big bounce has been turned back for the moment.