Topping Patterns Popping Up Everywhere

 | Mar 02, 2021 05:25AM ET

As I worked through this past weekend’s newsletter, I noticed that multiple markets are starting to exhibit topping patterns. It will be crucial for markets to reverse these patterns in the short-term if the bullish advance continues.

As we discussed yesterday:

“The good news is that the S&P 500 held its 50-dma during its recent selloff. With the market getting back to more oversold levels, we are likely to see a counter-trend rally for a few days that could get us back above the 20-dma. It will be necessary for the rally to set new highs to negate the “head and shoulders” pattern. If the market rallies, fails, and breaks the neckline, we could well see a deeper correction ensue.”

There is an important caveat to this analysis.

The start of “head and shoulder” patterns occurs with quite some regularity during an advancing market. However, they are quite often not completed as the market moves to new highs negating the pattern. Therefore, while we are pointing this pattern out, we are not saying the market is about to go lower. Such will only be if the pattern completes with a break of the “neckline” support.

However, it is important not to dismiss this pattern entirely as it often preceded more substantial declines, as we saw in March of 2020.

Notably, we see this pattern elsewhere.

h2 Same Pattern Popping up Everywhere/h2 h3 NASDAQ Index/h3

The “head and shoulder” pattern is defined better in the NASDAQ. Currently, the neckline support needs to hold, or we will see a more significant correction in the technology sector. With the index more oversold than the S&P 500, I suspect we will see a rally shortly in these stocks, which we will use as a “selling” opportunity to reduce exposure.

h3 Emerging Markets/h3

Like the NASDAQ, we see a very well-defined “head and shoulders” pattern developing here as well. Emerging Markets are very oversold at current levels, so a counter-trend bounce is likely. A failure at the 20-dma is an excellent point to reduce exposure to these cyclical sensitive areas. If economic growth weakens in the U.S., we could see a much deeper correction in Emerging Markets. Watch for a break of the neckline as a “stop-loss” for now.

h3 International Markets/h3

Industrialized International Markets look much the same as the S&P 500. Watch the rising neckline as a trailing “stop-loss.” A failed rally should get used as an opportunity to reduce risk to international markets. Both international and emerging markets are well ahead of any expected growth in the U.S. economy, so the risk of disappointment is high.

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h2 Dollars & Rates Continue To Be The Key/h2

Currently, the market is betting on perfection. With valuations high, the bullish rationalization why prices can go higher is a bet on explosive economic growth, a falling US dollar, low-interest rates, and a consumer spending surge, all while inflation remains muted.

In other words, there is a LOT of room for something to go wrong. In our view, the two key issues that have the most significant potential to undermine market confidence remain the dollar and rates.

As noted previously, everyone expects the dollar to continue to decline, and the falling dollar has been the tailwind for the emerging market, commodity, and equity-risk trade. Whatever causes the dollar to reverse will likely bring the equity market down with it.

The dollar has started building higher bottoms and is currently triggering buy signals suggesting there may be more to this rally. Given the highly negative correlation of stocks, we need to pay close attention to what happens next.

The second risk, of course, is rates. As we saw last week, the entire market complex (including small and mid-cap markets) is sensitive to sharp increases in rates. With inflationary pressures rising, input costs will have to be passed along to cash-strapped consumers or absorbed by companies with already razor-thin margins in many cases. The outcome is not acceptable in either case.

Furthermore, the spike in rates, as shown below, which corresponds with higher inflationary pressures, quickly reaches the point that something tends to break in a debt-laden economy.

With the dollar and rates both rising, it is just a function of time until something breaks. Such is why, for now, we continue to suggest using rallies to reduce exposure to equities.

h2 Month End S&P Technical Review/h2

With February now closed, we can review our longer-term charts for better clarity as to overall portfolio risk and allocations.

On an intermediate-term basis, using weekly closing data as of Friday, the market is trading well into 3-standard deviations above its long-term mean. It is incredibly overbought on a weekly basis. At the same time, there is a negative divergence in relative strength (RSI), which is also a cause of concern.

Since weekly charts are slower moving, such does not mean the markets will crash immediately. Long-term charts indicate that price volatility will likely be higher in the months ahead, and investors should monitor their risk accordingly. While momentum-driven markets can remain irrational much longer than logic would predict, eventually, a reversion has always occurred.

The chart below shows the price deviation from the one-year weekly moving average. Given the divergence is almost 20%, deeper price corrections have always been nearby. (Such does not mean a market crash. A correction of 10-20% is well within norms.)