Prospects For Rocky S&P 500 Recovery

 | Sep 30, 2020 10:11AM ET

Quite an eventful period since the last Stock Trading Alert on Sept. 11 – stocks rose on Sept. 14 and Sept. 15, validating the short-term bullish outlook presented in the alert. Next, the S&P 500 made two downswings before rebounding from the 3200 level proximity on Sept. 24. Friday's session brought us a daily upswing, and so did Monday. Where does yesterday's stumble fit in?

Volatility has been moving generally lower after making a lower high days ago. Technology plunged but didn't make a new low on Thursday. Otherwise, there have been few sectoral bright spots, with financials and energy still looking precarious. On the bright side, consumer discretionaries, utilities and consumer staples (the latter two are defensives) have held up reasonably well – better than healthcare.

But what moved the markets when it comes to headlines? Political uncertainties remain, the first presidential debate is over, and there is still no stimulus bill, while the coronavirus is getting worse overseas. New lockdowns are hanging in the air, with the U.K. and Israel leading the way. Then, the Fed hasn't done all that much lately, leaving the credit markets relatively unfazed. Continuing claims are trending lower only painfully slowly, and U.S. tensions with China haven't seen a turnaround.

So, are we witnessing a typical pre-election correction? I think that's most likely the case. September brought us a bigger storm than October based on the 2016 experience would, and it's reasonable to expect the remaining S&P 500 downside (unless the current upswing turns into a dead cat bounce) to be relatively modest.

Let's check the charts' messages.

h2 S&P 500 In Medium and Short-Run/h2

I’ll start with the weekly chart perspective (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com ):