Stocks Retrench For Another Assault On Round-Number

 | Nov 22, 2013 01:51AM ET

“Stocks fall on Fed taper discussion.” That’s the gist of what you heard in the media on Wednesday to account for the market’s late-day pullback. There’s always some sort of attempt to explain daily market action. But the reality is that investors simply must take a periodic breather to regroup and retrench, particularly when making an assault on round-number resistance for a major index. And in this instance, there are multiple indexes encountering such resistance simultaneously, including the S&P 500 at 1800, Dow Jones Industrials at 16,000, and NASDAQ at 4000.

There was an article Wednesday on CNBC.com about short-selling hedge funds seeing the current equity “bubble” as a once-in-a-lifetime short-sale opportunity. They see inflated valuations and P/E multiples as completely out of line and driven solely by the Fed’s quant easing programs, whose days they see as numbered.

No doubt, the trend away from lower-quality companies, i.e., “junk stocks” like Tesla Motors (TSLA), which tend to lead during the speculative phase of bull markets, is starting to give way to more appropriate leadership from higher-quality companies. So, I agree that shorting opportunities should abound going forward. In fact, there already has been a noticeable divergence in the underperformance of small caps, many of which are indeed highly speculative. As the bull run matures and junk stocks become extended, institutional investors (“smart money”) tend to focus more on earnings and fundamentals such that capital shifts away from the lower-quality, high-P/E stocks and into higher-quality companies with strong, steady earnings growth and reasonable multiples.

Nevertheless, I still expect the eagerly anticipated year-end rally to materialize. First of all, the trend is your friend. Second, don’t fight the Fed. (Do those adages sound familiar?) Fed tapering, despite what the media is reading into the Fed minutes, is still a long ways off, particularly given the slowness of the economic recovery and the historically low M1 Multiplier (MULT). Also, the Eurozone is looking more solid every day, and stocks in the PIIGS nations have been performing extremely well. Ireland and Spain have announced that each will soon exit the economic assistance programs. In fact, Ireland’s success with the dreaded austerity path has been quite impressive to witness.

The SPY chart:
The SPDR S&P 500 Trust (SPY) closed Wednesday at 178.52, which is right about where it closed last Wednesday and not too far below its all-time intraday high of 180.50 set on Monday. It has continued to enjoy support from its 20-day simple moving average, which has held as strong support during this consolidation period. The long-standing bullish rising channel remains in play, and in fact SPY has pulled back from resistance at the top of the channel as it set its new high, after breaking out of a minor neutral sideways channel last Wednesday. Now it has turned back to test resistance-turned-support from the top of the previous sideways channel around 177.50, which has converged with the 20-day SMA.

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