The Bulls Regain Composure

 | Jan 13, 2016 05:07AM ET

Generally I am one to follow the money flow and ride the trend, but the market internals in the S&P 500 and other developed markets had become so oversold that the risk to reward trade off had become quite compelling.

This view seems to be playing out and one questions whether the ‘sell everything’ call marks the low point in risks assets. Note to the bears, your time will come again.

On a positive note we’ve seen the S&P 500 futures print the first higher high this year, so this has thrown some backing to my short-term bullish call. It’s hard to be bullish with any real conviction though in this market, as that really requires commodities to rally. Until this ferocious speculative attack abates and the leveraged funds start covering short positions, then one of the key pieces of the bullish puzzle is missing.

This speculative attack is unlikely to unwind (specifically in the oil market) until these funds get a sniff that supply will be reduced and that doesn’t look likely even at current levels. WTI and Brent futures are being sold on any rally and the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (a basket of 26 actively-traded commodity futures) is being guided lower by the five-day average.

In a strong downtrend you will see markets respect this average and, until oil can break above the five-day average (the blue line on the chart below), those calling for $20 oil should still be optimistic. Personally, I want to put my contrarian hat on in suggesting we could see a move into $32.50 to $33 a barrel, which seems to be more aligned with IG’s client base (79% of our client base are long oil). Obviously, if we see a lower low today and a break into the 20s I would be wrong.