S&P 500: Fears Over “Peak Growth” Abound

 | Nov 15, 2018 03:26PM ET

Brexit developments continue to draw all the headlines, with my colleague Fawad Razaqzada characterizing Thursday’s cabinet resignations as a disaster for PM May. While the updates from the UK continue to come in hot and heavy, we’re aware that some readers may be suffering from “Brexit fatigue”; thankfully, there are plenty of other market opportunities to highlight, including in major US stock indices.

After gapping lower Thursday morning, the S&P 500 fought back to breakeven after losing sessions the past five days. To put it politically, we’re highly skeptical of President Trump’s claim that the selloff is due to fears of “Presidential Harassment” in the wake of Democrats taking control of the House of Representatives. Instead, forward-looking equity traders are increasingly worried that the economy may be reaching peak growth.

h3 Earnings Outlook/h3

According to the earnings mavens at FactSet, the “blended” earnings (using actual results for the 90%+ of the companies that have reported and estimated earnings for the companies that have yet to report) for the S&P 500 are expected to grow at 25.2% year-over-year, which would represent the highest growth rate since 2010. While the strong tax-cut-fueled growth is expected to carry over into next quarter, the outlook for earnings growth starting in Q1 2019 is more mediocre.

The biggest theme from this earnings season has been traders’ extreme skepticism to just about any earnings report. As FactSet noted:

companies that have reported positive earnings surprises for Q3 2018 have seen an average price increase of +0.6% two days before the earnings release through two days after the earnings. This percentage is below the 5-year average price increase of +1.0% during this same window for companies reporting upside earnings surprises. Companies that have reported negative earnings surprises for Q3 2018 have seen an average price decrease of -2.9% two days before the earnings release through two days after the earnings. This percentage decrease is larger than the 5-year average price decrease of -2.5% during this same window for companies reporting downside earnings surprises.

In other words, traders are not rewarding strong earnings reports and are punishing earnings misses more than usual, indicating elevated concern about future growth in corporate profits.

Technically speaking, the S&P 500 is in the midst of a brutal week, with the index trading nearly 4% lower than last Friday’s close. Prices have now completely “filled” the bullish gap from the end of October. Given the relentless selling pressure so far this week, we could certainly see a bounce into the weekend as bears take profits. That said, the longer-term structure is ominous for bulls, especially after the false breakout to record highs in August/September, a move that was accompanied by a bearish divergence in both the weekly (not shown below) and daily RSI indicator.

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In the short term, bulls will need to see rates break above last week’s high near 2815 before growing more constructive on the index. Meanwhile, bears will look to take the pair down toward previous support levels at 2595, 2553 and the yearly low at 2533 heading into the holiday season.