Momentum Monday – Bearish Market Action

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The price action in most stocks has been notably bearish in the past few weeks. We saw quite a few green opens (gaps up) and red closes – the morning gains faded throughout the day and the indexes closed near their lows of the daily range. SPY and QQQ slashed through their 50dma very easily; then bounced back and found resistance right under their 50dma. In the meantime, correlations among most stocks have increased and they started to move together – something we typically see during corrections. The market reaction to earnings has completely changed – only a few weeks ago, stocks were rallying on missed estimates and lowered guidance. Lately, the market has been selling both positive and negative earnings surprises. Sentiment has changed since Powell’s remarks at Jackson Hole. Now, the market is worried that the Fed will keep tightening until inflation or job numbers fall significantly, whichever comes first. As a result, most stocks are under pressure. Nothing is safe. Even energy and metals that held relatively well until last week, are starting to sweat a bit.

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Momentum Monday – The Inflation Trade Is Dominating the Tape

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The main premise behind the summer rally was that the Fed is going to pivot because of the possibility of overdoing it and causing a severe recession. This was the market’s bet. As a result the stocks that were hit the hardest since February 2021 due to rising interest rates – like biotech, were among the best performers in the past couple of months. On Friday, Fed’s chairman was very clear that the Fed is not ready to change its tightening policy just yet, and bringing down inflation continues to be the main concern. It seems his words sobered the market up fast and caused a major selloff across the board – biotech, semis, software, retailers, financials, industrials, consumer discretionary, etc. 

Last week was the second down week in a row for the main indexes. Both, the large-cap S& P 500 (SPY) and the small-cap Russell 2k (IWM) tested their 50-week moving average two weeks ago and have pulled back about 6-7% since then. The next potential zones of support are their 50-day moving average: about 398 for SPY and 181 for IWM.

The only market areas that have handled the selling in the past couple of weeks relatively well are commodities – energy like oil & gas, coal, uranium, solar; fertilizers, and industrial metals. Those groups were clear leaders in the first half of the year but then underwent a deep 30-50% drawdown during the summer only to bounce back later. The inflation trade is back on. The question is for how long? If the market is really worrying that the Fed’s tightening policy will lead to a severe recession, then those groups will start to crumble as well.

Typically, future market leaders build new bases while the indexes correct. It’ll be interesting to see if the current leaders like ENPH, FSLR, LNTH, SWAV, EVH, GFS, ON, WOLF, TMDX, CELH, and others will simply remain above their 20 and 50-day moving averages while the indexes potentially sell off further. From a strictly seasonal perspective, stocks tend to be weak ahead of the mid-term elections and strong after. Obviously, there are many other factors currently at play. I will remain nimble and take things one week at a time.

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Momentum Monday – The Indexes Might Be Stalling

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After a few up weeks in a row, the stock indexes finally had a down week. Interest rates are slowly rising again, and so is the US Dollar. Those factors have been big headwinds for stocks this year. The big question is if this is just another pullback to a rising 20-day moving average or the beginning of a new leg lower. The groups that led the market higher in the summer – biotech and software, are already below their 20-day moving average and the indexes are starting to stall near areas of technical resistance. 

The good news for the bulls is that there are still plenty of decent-looking long setups and the market continues to react positively to most earnings reports. Even last week when most stocks were under pressure, we saw companies beating earnings estimates like GLBE, WOLF, and BILL breaking out in big volume. 

From a short-term psychological perspective, we know that the stock market tends to zig when most people expect it to zag. After a few up days in a row, most are getting FOMO and turning wildly bullish. Then, the market pulls back for a few days and all of a sudden, everyone is getting bearish. This sentiment cycle repeats over and over again in both bull and bear markets and in different time frames. We will see if next week will be any different.

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.

PERFORMANCE

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.