Week Ahead: Stock Rally To Endure But Beware 3 Red Flags, Sector Rotation

 | Sep 06, 2020 07:36AM ET

  • Various narratives aim to explain the tech rout
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  • Though US equities rebounded somewhat on Friday, after a sharp, tech sector-led mega cap selloff on Thursday, the S&P 500, NASDAQ, Dow Jones and Russell 2000 still all finished in the red for a second day, ending trade at a two-week low. As well—and not surprising—volatility returned to Wall Street as the week came to a close.

    It was the wildest ride for investors since June, across a broad variety of asset classes, but technology shares provided the most brutal roller coaster drop.

    h2 Tech Sector Plunge With No Obvious Trigger/h2

    While the S&P 500 Index trimmed a 3% drop to an 0.8% loss on Friday, the NASDAQ indices fell more than 5% after just the first two hours of trade. Both the Composite and the NASDAQ 100 each pared the drop to -1.27%.

    Holders of the biggest technology companies required the strongest nerves. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) plunged as much as 8.1%, yet managed to finish in the green, up 0.07%. Those trading other big names weren’t as lucky. Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) closed 3.1% in the red, followed closely by Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), which lost 2.9% of value.

    Financials continued to outperform, even amid the tech rout, offsetting losses on the broader index. The sector climbed 0.75%, providing a boost to the benchmark along with Industrials, (+0.25%) and Materials, (+0.06%). However, the remaining sectors all closed lower, with Communication Services the laggard, (-1.8%), followed by Technology (-1.4%).

    Narratives vary regarding what triggered the selloff. There's no obvious catalyst, but suspected culprits range from algos, to options, to simply good old-fashioned profit-taking for stocks that have been stretched out.

    This makes sense to us since prior to last week, the SPX climbed for four weeks in a row, buoyed by tech equities to new records.

    A possibile explanation: sector rotation, where investors shift out of an overbought segment, in order to take their profits and bet on an oversold segment of the market. Should that prove true, it could be the best thing for the equity market—by driving a healthy, sustainable uptrend as participants adapt to cyclical trends. Otherwise, the market will simply form a bubble, which will eventually burst.

    That's not to say that after weak hands have been shaken out technology stocks can’t keep advancing. After all, we're living in a work-from-home environment which should be highly positive for tech. In fact, even when the pandemic is eradicated, it's likely the world we once considered normal will have changed forever, with jobs restructured to allow employees to work from home more frequently, or even regularly. 

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    As readers know, we have been stubbornly bearish, notwithstanding the exuberant rally. We continue to believe it was disconnected from economic fundamentals. After all, during the same quarter when the best returns in decades were posted, US GDP came in at an abysmal -32%, the largest quarterly decline on record, more than triple the previous worst US quarter, post World War II, (Q1 1958) and four times larger than the worst quarter seen during the 2008/2009 financial crisis.

    We continue to argue that investors have been reading too much into future growth after the wildly better-than-expected data. And we keep reminding everyone that just recently we also saw the fastest bear market drop and rebound and the worst recession since the Great Depression.

    Coronavirus worries—which remain ongoing, at least until a vaccine or cure has been found—may have fueled the descent, but what drove the seeming recovery is equally clear, aggressive fiscal and monetary stimulus by governments and central banks. And since it's unprecedented, no one can know how far we can rely on factors for a continued uptrend.

    Still, technicals signal the S&P 500's rally may not be over just yet.