Sector Detector: Bulls Run With A Temporary Green Flag From Congress

 | Oct 18, 2013 04:04AM ET

As most everyone expected, Congressional brinksmanship gave way to an eleventh hour agreement that will put the government back in business and raise the debt ceiling. However, it’s only a temporary measure that merely defers another knock-down/drag-out for a few months. The question is, how will investors react after an initial bullish burst of relief?

There remains a vocal minority that is not at all happy with this country’s ongoing fiscal irresponsibility during times that they believe call for austerity rather than profligacy. And make no mistake; they are simply exercising the Constitutional power that was deliberately bestowed by the country’s founding fathers. Yes, the Affordable Care Act became law through all the appropriate channels and challenges. But the unhappy campers still have not been placated. They don’t believe their views on entitlement reform have been heard at all. Instead of instilling self-reliance in the populace to help us emerge from our lethargy, they believe we are only breeding more dependency. They acquiesced this time solely to avoid an economic meltdown. But they will be back.

Another question is, even if the bulls run like Pamplona through year-end, will it be a resumption of the junk rally and overall outperformance of lower quality stocks that has persisted during much of this year? These are the companies with weak analyst ratings and questionable earnings quality. Or will it be a more thoughtful flight to carefully selected high-quality companies, i.e., those that fundamentals-based models look upon favorably? One can hope. And there are signs that a reversion to quality already has begun.

Since last Thursday’s bullish reversal, the top performing sectors have been Financial, Energy, and Healthcare. With earnings season now underway, we’ve seen some positives from the likes of Yahoo (YHOO) American Express (AXP), and Intel (INTC), and some misses as well, including IBM (IBM) and eBay (EBAY).

The SPY chart: What a difference a week makes. Last Wednesday, the SPDR S&P 500 Trust (SPY) closed Wednesday at 165.60, just below the important 50-day simple moving average, testing support at 165, and sitting on the lower Bollinger Band. This Wednesday, SPY is above all the major simple moving average, including the 20-day, and it is fast approaching the upper Bollinger Band. I suggested last week that a go-signal from Congress would like cause a rally without much hesitation at prior resistance levels, and indeed we got a V-bottom that cut right through the moving averages and 170, as well as the uptrend line of support connecting the various lows since last November’s V-bottom. Although Slow Stochastic is a bit overbought from the big rally, RSI and MACD could move much further before looking overbought.