The Renewed Upswing In The S&P 500

 | Jul 08, 2020 10:41AM ET

The S&P 500 recovered from yesterday's premarket slump and tried reaching for Monday's highs again before losing altitude. Have we seen a daily reversal, and if so, how serious is this?

Given for example the weak showing in high-yield corporate bonds yesterday, I think that it's now the bears who have the opportunity to show us what they're made of. The price action before the closing bell certainly validated my earlier decision to take the nice long profits off the table.

So, stocks have declined below the mid-June tops, yet are kissing that line again in today's premarket trading. A little breather following the string of five consecutive days of solid gains wasn't really unimaginable, but isn't close to over now?

Birthing troubles or not, I still think the unfolding rally has legs enough to confirm this breakout shortly.

Such were my reasons why yesterday:

"(…) I say so despite the uptrend in new US COVID-19 cases that has many states stepping back from the reopening, rekindling lockdown speculations. I say so despite the Fed having its foot off the pedal in recent weeks, which makes for more players looking at the exit door as the rising put/call ratio shows."

The summer months will be one heck of a bumpy ride, and the bullish picture is far from complete as the lagging Russell 2000 shows. But emerging markets are on fire, not too far from their February's lower high already – Monday's boon in the China recovery story keeps doing wonders. That's wildly positive for world stock markets, including the US ones.

V-shaped recovery being real or not, corona vaccine hype or not, stocks love little things more than the central banks standing ready to act. And the punch bowl isn't about to be removed any time soon. Let's take the most recent Fed policy step, which was the decision to start buying individual corporate bonds. So far, less than half a billion dollars has been deployed to this purpose – but the corporate bond market is firmly holding up nonetheless, with the Fed waiting in the wings."

With the exception of emerging markets consolidating gains yesterday, the above points remain valid also today – and likely throughout this data-light week too.

But let's check upon yesterday's market performance so as to form a momentary, spot-on picture.

S&P 500 In The Short-Run/h2

I’ll start with the daily chart perspective (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com ):