Momentum Monday – The End of Negative and Zero Interest Rates?

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The S&P 500 came close to its 50-day moving average and reversed. The Nasdaq 100 tested its 200-day moving average and pulled back lower. Finding some resistance after going up for several days in a row is not a big surprise. It’s how markets move – every rally and every selloff have counter-trend reactions. What matters is what happens afterward. The bearish scenario for next week is clear – anything that loses its lows from Friday (Feb 4th) can be shorted for a quick trade. For example, if SPY loses 444, it will probably fall to 440. If QQQ loses 352, it is likely to test 340. If those breaks happen, most individual stocks will follow.

Now that we covered the bearish scenario, we can focus on the alternative. Last week brought new bullish arguments. We finally saw some recent IPOs like BROS and HOOD wake up and push higher. This is a clear sign of improving risk appetite. In the meantime, quite a few oil & gas stocks broke out to new 52-week highs. Commodity-related names are currently the only momentum stocks left. Financials are quickly catching up with the spike in interest rates. XLF is back above its 50-day moving average.

The era of negative bond rates is coming to an end and this has led to a repricing of all risk assets. Is the repricing over? Probably not for everything but plenty of software, Internet, biotech stocks and crypto fell 50% to 80% in the past three months. That’s not a bear market; that’s a crash. The silver lining last week was that the spike in interest rate didn’t lead to further downside in those risk assets. On the contrary, they bounced. This could be the proverbial dead-cat bounce that just goes nowhere fast or an acknowledgment that even if rates go from 0% to 2.5% quickly, some businesses will grow into their valuations, eventually. Don’t get complacent. Many of those stocks are not going to go back to their all-time highs for many years if ever. That’s how financial markets work. A constant cycle of booms and busts and new trends.

We are still in the midst of earnings season. If Facebook, Amazon, and Snapchat can trade like small-cap biotech stocks, you know that anything is possible. No stock is safe, no bet is a sure thing. My keyword for 2022 was higher volatility and this is exactly what we have been seeing so far. Adjust to the new market reality because it can last much longer than you expect.

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Momentum Monday – High Volatility and High Correlations

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The Nasdaq 100 had a 7% range last week but it finished flat. Correlations have been extremely high as they usually are during corrections or bear markets. Lately, stocks have been moving in tandem regardless of fundamentals or sector belonging. Just look at the intraday charts on Friday – everything is looking very similar.

Unless your view is longer-term and you are slowly accumulating an index or a strong business at progressively lower prices, the most common-sense way to make money in this environment is intraday trading. This type of market behavior usually doesn’t last too long, except if it’s a new long bear market which is clear only in hindsight. Eventually, things calm down and multi-day swings become easier.

The new earnings season is just warming up. So far, the market has been fading every strong earnings report (minus Apple) and slamming any remote weakness. This is the first earnings season in a long time where we haven’t seen a breakout and a proper follow-through in the next few days. It’s still early but the price action so far speaks volumes about the current sentiment. 

Last week, the Fed confirmed what they have been saying for a while – bond purchases will end in early March and then they will start to gradually increase interest rates. The market initially sold off after the FOMC meeting, only to bounce towards the end of the week. Let’s see if it can follow through next week. Quite a few earnings reports are on tap and they will have a major impact on the market’s direction – GOOGL, AMZN, FB, QCOM, PYPL, AMD, XOM, etc. It’s important to remain flexible and open-minded to different scenarios. If there’s follow-through, SPY can test 450 where it will encounter resistance. If Friday’s low is lost, SPY is likely to tet 420-400.

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Momentum Monday – Relentless Selling

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The stock market was only open four days last week but it managed to do selling for eight. There was non-stop selling everywhere. All brief intraday rallies were faded towards the end of the day. Anything that had held relatively well before last week, was hit with a hammer – semis, industrial metals, financials. Oil and gas stocks are the last standing Mohicans but even they are starting to crack. Anything that was already weak, was completely destroyed – biotech, software, Internet retail. I will give you just one example to get an idea of the ongoing selloff – Shopify is down 50% in the past two months. This is not obscure small-cap biotech. It’s a high-growth mega-cap tech stock.

The new earnings season has begun. We judge market sentiment by the reactions to earnings. I haven’t seen so scared and pessimistic market reactions in a long time. Semis were clobbered despite record earnings from TSM and Micron. Financials were hit hard despite rising interest rates and improving margins. NFLX was annihilated because it suggested that future growth might be a bigger challenge. Don’t they always do that anyway? So what gives? One of the bull market’s major characteristics is multiples expansion where due to FOMO and complacency, people are willing to pay higher and higher multiples for most companies’ earnings and sales. The markets are currently in a multiples compression mode. Everything is getting repriced and receiving a lower multiple. The challenge and also the magic of markets is that they tend to overshoot – first to the upside and then to the downside. They don’t just stop in the middle and settle for “fair” prices.

There’s an FOMC meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday. In previous months, we would see a selloff ahead of the FOMC meeting only to experience a big short-term rally afterward if it becomes clear that Fed’s actions don’t align with their hawkish words. Something similar might happen next week. All major indexes are down significantly multiple days in a row. A big snap-back bounce, even if for a day, is very likely. Some of the most fierce rallies happen within downtrends – recognize them as such, take advantage of them but don’t overstay your welcome. The trend remains lower. Stay nimble or stay on the sidelines.

Try my subscription service which includes a private Twitter feed with option and stock ideas, emails with concise market commentary and actionable swing, intraday, and position trade ideas, the Momentum 40 list of market leaders, and much more. See some of the recent testimonials.

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Here’s a Google spreadsheet tracking all closed options and stock ideas shared on my private Twitter stream and emails for subscribers.

Check out my free weekly email to get an idea of the content I share with members.

Disclaimer: Everything I share is for educational and informational purposes only and it should not be considered financial advice.