Stocks Coil As Q3 Earnings Take The Stage

 | Oct 07, 2016 12:30AM ET

As Q3 came to a close, investors continued to show cautious optimism and the S&P 500 posted a gain for the fourth straight quarter. After a lengthy period of time in which markets were buffeted by the daily news about oil prices, jobs reports, Fed rate hike intentions, China growth, Brexit, US economic expansion/contraction, Zika virus, and ISIS inspired attacks, the focus has switched back to improving fundamentals.

In particular, as Q3 earnings reporting season gets started, there remains a broad expectation that the corporate “earnings recession” has bottomed and that companies will start showing better earnings growth (hopefully driven by revenue growth), particularly in the beaten-down market segments like Energy and Materials. I think the only thing holding back stocks right now is investor uncertainty about market reaction to two things: a potential Trump presidential victory and to the next Fed rate hike (expected on December 14). From a technical standpoint, the spring is coiling tightly for big move.

In this periodic update, I give my view of the current market environment, offer a technical analysis of the S&P 500 chart, review our weekly fundamentals-based SectorCast rankings of the ten U.S. business sectors, and then offer up some actionable ETF trading ideas. Overall, our sector rankings look relatively bullish, although the sector rotation model still suggests a neutral stance.

h3 Market Overview/h3

I was in New York City for the past week, including attending the ETF Boot Camp conference, for which Tom Lydon and his team at ETF Trends deserve major kudos. This is Tom’s annual gathering for those involved in creating, managing, and selling exchange-traded products, and it was an outstanding event with great content and networking opportunities … not to mention phenomenal food!

Of course, the presidential election debates have been dominating the airwaves, and the candidates haven’t disappointed with the fireworks, as they lived up to what most were expecting of each of them (including the VP candidates). Unfortunately, the populist sentiment that both sides have been courting (albeit from different angles) may threaten rather than stimulate economic growth and opportunity. Whether we are talking about protectionism that reduces global trade, or price and wage controls that are out of step with the true market values, the likely outcome for many of the proposals is a little relief for the struggling masses at the expense of a reduction in long-term economic growth.

In an effort to court Bernie’s restless millennials, Hillary recently pointed out “basement dwellers,” who ostensibly are college grads who have been forced to work as baristas, Uber drivers, and retail clerks rather than as social media managers, investment banking associates, management consultants, and corporate sales trainees. But I cringe when I see aspiring young professionals turn to “democratic socialism,” with its short-term comfort but long-term shackles, rather than to demand of our government greater freedoms and fewer constraints on business formation and capital investment. After all, in a nation and world with growing populations, the only way to expand opportunities for greater individual wealth is to grow the economy faster than the population is growing. On the other hand, forcing wealth redistribution and “fairness” by soaking the rich, expanding entitlements, and increasing business regulation is a path to economic stagnation.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

As I often discuss in this article, what we all must focus on is the underlying cause of our sluggish growth and dearth of career opportunities rather than the symptoms. It is much like the doctor who only prescribes drugs to offset a patient’s poor health rather than demand the critical lifestyle changes in diet and exercise that would allow the patient to not only survive but strengthen and thrive. We have relied far too long on the Federal Reserve for accommodative monetary policies that have only helped alleviate some of the symptoms of the struggling economy without including anything in the way of aggressive fiscal stimulus (e.g., reduced individual and corporate tax rates) and regulatory reform (i.e., removing business-unfriendly obstacles). The result has been a slow-growth economy, asset inflation (which has only benefited those who actually own assets), and a widening wealth gap that continues to leave behind more and more of the population. But, as usual, I digress.

Looking at Q3 performance, emerging market equities were up +7% during the calendar quarter, with Asia countries (e.g., China, Japan, Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan) up more than +10%. Here in the US, S&P 500 was up +3.3%, with Technology leading the way at a robust +13%, and other economically sensitive sectors like Industrial, Financial, Energy, Materials, and Consumer Discretionary up in the +2.5-4.5% range. Laggards during Q3 were dividend-paying safe havens like Utilities (down -6.6%), Telecom, Consumer Staples, and REITs.

Notably, during Q3, US-listed ETFs gathered $92 billion during Q3 to push total assets to about $2.4 trillion, according to MarketWatch. Of these, 76% are equity ETFs. Moreover, 12% are categorized as “smart beta,” and 1% are considered actively managed. MarketWatch commented that the growth trend in ETFs is on track to surpass $200 billion for the full year, which would be the third straight year for this level of solid capital inflows.

Crude Oil has held the critical $40 support level since its February breakout, and it finished Q3 up 33% since its January 11 closing low, as OPEC has agreed to limit production and US stockpiles fall. There is also a realization that China seems to be avoiding the hard landing that many feared as it somewhat surprisingly has shown stellar profit growth. Also notable is that UK consumer confidence is back to where it was before the Brexit vote.

Year-to-date through Q3, Gold is up +24% (although it was flat during Q3), emerging markets +16%, S&P 500 large caps +6%, and Russell 2000 small caps +10.3% -- with R2000 Value +14% and R2000 Growth +7.8% as value investing perks up. As for individual sectors this year, Energy is +15%, Utilities +14%, Telecom +12%, Technology +12% Materials +12%, and Industrial +11%.

Interest rates spiked over the past week back to mid-September levels. The 10-year Treasury yield closed Wednesday at 1.72% and the 30-year at 2.44%, while on the short end the 2-year is 0.83% and the 5-year is 1.26%. The spread between the 10-year and 2-year is 89 bps, and the spread between the 30-year and 5-year is 118 bps, as the yield curve remains relatively flat despite a slight rise in rates across the board. Also, CME fed funds futures place the odds of a rate hike in November at only 15%, but then it jumps to 60% for the December FOMC meeting. In any case, I still don’t see any drivers for longer-dated yields to go up in a significant way.

The CBOE Market Volatility Index (VIX), aka fear gauge, closed Wednesday at 12.99, which is back below the 15 threshold between fear and complacency, after spiking above that level during the mid-September volatility.

Given the extremely low yield environment, the elevated P/E of the S&P 500 is not surprising, or even out of whack. After all, the dividend yield alone of the S&P 500 is greater than the 10-year Treasury, and the earnings yield makes stocks even more attractive relative to bonds. However, most observers think that yields have bottomed and the likely direction is higher, and because of the historical inverse relationship between P/E ratios and Treasury bond yields, a rising rate environment would be expected to put a lid on further multiple expansion. This might portend a resurgence in value stocks, which have been lagging growth stocks during the long liquidity-driven market advance. Value historically tends to perform well in a rising rate environment. With their lower P/Es, value stocks finally may be poised to outperform after the news-driven, risk-on/risk-off market behavior that tends to favor the higher market caps and by extension large-cap growth stocks.

Keep in mind, we at Sabrient believe that the most important indicator is not so much trailing or forward P/E but rather forward PEG ratio, i.e., the ratio of forward P/E (current stock price divided by the Wall Street analyst consensus estimate of earnings per share for the next 12 months) to the expected growth rate (analyst consensus estimate of year-over-year EPS percentage growth for the next 12 months). Despite the elevated multiples of the cap-weighted indexes, we have identified a number of solid companies, particularly in the “smid-cap” space, with excellent growth prospects trading at much lower forward PEG ratios than the broader market indices.

I continue to believe that the US stocks will move even higher this year and into at least the early part of 2017, with double-digit return for the S&P 500 by year-end, and even better return for small caps. Also supportive is the vast amounts of cash on the sidelines and the elevated short interest among institutional investors, which could lead to a significant short squeeze.

SPY (NYSE:SPY) chart review:

The SPY closed Wednesday at 215.63, and remains stuck in a tight trading range bounded by its 50-day and 100-day simple moving averages. However, it appears to be in the midst of forming a bullish ascending wedge pattern with an overhead lid at 217 – just coiling and awaiting an upside catalyst. After breaking out of a symmetrical triangle pattern leading into the Fed’s rate decision, which I wrote about on September 21, it couldn’t break resistance at previous support-turned-resistance at 217 (which coincides with the 50-day SMA), and thus started to form the ascending wedge. Above that, the bearish gap down from 218 on September 8 will serve as a magnet to be filled, but I’m not sure that SPY is quite ready (given the news cycle) to challenge 220. Solid support can be found at 100-day SMA (near 214) and prior resistance-turned support at 210, followed by 208, the 200-day SMA (near 206), and then a prior bullish gap from 204. Oscillators RSI, MACD and Slow Stochastic are all coiling in tight neutral positions and giving no directional indication. Overall, however, I continue to like the technical picture. Note that small caps in particular look promising, as they are in a rising rather than sideways channel.