Stocks Back In Rally Mode Even Without Tech Leadership

 | Oct 18, 2012 05:19AM ET

Five years ago this month, the S&P 500 hit an all-time high of 1576. It closed yesterday, Wednesday, at 1461. Can the market make a run at that all-time high? Well, the biggest threat at the moment to bullish sentiment is the Fiscal Cliff, but both presidential candidates have a plan for dealing with it, and Congress is unlikely to want to take the fall for defying the new President and sending the country back into recession.

Harvard professor and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers wielded a cattle prod by saying, “…it would be an act of huge irresponsibility that would make a return to recession very likely." But he added that “…sometimes when the need is sufficiently great, the transition [in Washington] from inconceivable to inevitable can actually be fairly quick.” For its part, the IMF is quite worried about the Fiscal Cliff, not to mention the EU’s lackluster handling of the eurozone debt crisis.

Earnings season is in full swing. Multinational Industrials like Chevron (CVX) and Alcoa (AA) reduced guidance, while big banks like Citigroup (C), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), and Bank of America (BAC) beat expectations along with Consumer Services leaders like Yum! Brands (YUM) and Walmart (WMT). However, the one sector that hasn't participated in the recent rally is Technology, and this is confirmed in the Sabrient Bear scores.

Tech bellwethers like IBM (IBM) and Intel (INTC) gave reports that indicated a weakening of global demand. In fact, the iShares Technology Sector Fund (IYW) is the only iShares sector ETF below its 50-day simple moving average, as is the PowerShares QQQ Trust (QQQ)—dragged down by recent weakness in Apple (AAPL). Tech is usually a leader in bull markets, so investors are justifiably concerned.

As I write this, Asian stocks are trading at a seven-month high on indications that China’s economy is stabilizing, as their GDP grew 7.4% year-over-year (although this makes the seventh straight quarter of slower growth). Also, they are encouraged by upside surprises on EU Industrial Production, rising U.S. consumer sentiment, solid U.S. housing data, and falling Spanish bond yields.

Just a quick comment on Presidential Debate #2. Of course, it’s always harder on an incumbent to defend his record during trying times while the challenger is free to stay on the attack. However, it doesn’t really matter who “won” the debate—what matters is whether a candidate can fashion a message that resonates with a given voter. And there were two messages from Romney that really resonated with me. One is the notion that we don’t have to “settle” for the circumstances we are in as inevitable. The other is that it doesn’t matter how caring and likeable a leader might be if he doesn’t have an effective plan to make things better and the proven ability to successfully execute it.

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The S&P 500 SPDR Trust (SPY) closed Wednesday at 146.20. Looking at the chart, it got strong support last week from its 50-day simple moving average and the bottom of the same bullish rising channel that has been in place since the rally started at the beginning of June. Price has made some attempts to break out or break down (including one false breakout in mid-September), but it just keeps falling back within the rising channel. Now there appears to be a sideways trading channel (or perhaps a bull flag) forming between closing lows near 143 and closing highs near 147.