A Long Overdue Correction!

It was a spooky time for the equity markets in October as stocks experienced a long overdue correction. You have to go back seven years to have a month that sold off in the way the markets behaved in October. Yes, historically October has been one of the most volatile months of the year. The problem with historical data over the past several years is most of the time history has NOT repeated itself. Stocks have been on a tear for years breaking record after record. In fact not that long ago all of the major indexes had set all time record highs. Fast forward to today and we find the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) down almost 7% from its recent all-time high, the S&P 500 (chart) actually fell at one point over 10% from its all-time high finishing the month of October down 8%, the Nasdaq Composite (chart)Β  is down over 10% from its recent all-time high and the small-cap Russell 2000 (see chart below) is off over 13% from its all-time high recorded on August 31st of this year. So I think it is safe to say most of the market is in correction mode.

Next question, is this a healthy correction for the markets and will stocks find their bottom here or could this be the start of our first bear market in a decade? I guess the answer depends upon who you ask. I think it is too early to call out that a bear market is in the making, but one thing is for sure, we have not seen sustained volatility as we have witnessed recently in a very long time. As long as the trade war rhetoric continues to spew out of Washington and as long as the Federal Reserve keeps its foot on the gas pertaining to interest rates, I think the wild swings and volatility will continue. Oh yea, there is also this small event next week called the “mid-term elections” which should also play a key role in continuing vol. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

~George

Russell 2000 - Paula Mahfouz

Finally A Market Selloff!

In my last blog, I eluded to a market selloff that just did not happen and I was referring to how stocks typically behave in the August and September. Instead of markets selling off at the end of summer, stocks were setting records. Well the bears got what they had been anticipating over the summer and that is an eye-popping market drop last week. Over the course of two days the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) fell over 1300 points. Of course the S&P 500 (chart), the Nasdaq Composite (chart) and the small-cap Russell 2000 (chart) all fell in harmony as well. What’s more these bellwether indexes all breached their 200-day moving averages for the first time in months with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) recapturing and closing above its 200-day on Friday, the Nasdaq Composite (chart) just closed shy of its 200-day, the S&P 500 (chart) literally closed right at its 200-day however, the small-cap Russell 2000 (chart) closed out last week meaningfully below its 200-day moving average looking to find some sort of support. The 200-day moving average is widely regarding by market technicians and institutional investors as a key metric of support and or resistance.

What does all this mean? First, a market that constantly goes up with no retracement to speak of can never be healthy long term. There must be backing and filling along the way so that the risk of a sudden and potentially drastic drop doesn’t occur as what we witnessed last week. I mean c’mon going up in the way that we have over the past decade is not only unheard of but the risk that can come forward from this can spark a nasty correction. I am not suggesting that this will be the case but for the first time since earlier in the year, investors and traders felt the selloff last week.

Earnings reporting season kicks in this week with hundreds of companies set to report. Let’s see if corporate earnings can buoy the market here during this long anticipated selloff. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

George

A Market Selloff That Just Did Not Happen…

As summer ended where was the market selloff? Instead of conforming to what historically are the weaker months of the year whereas stocks at the very least should of paused with lighter volumes, the major averages hit all time highs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart), the S&P 500 (chart), the Nasdaq Composite (chart), the small-cap Russell 2000 (chart) and even the Dow Jones Transportation AverageΒ (see chart below) all hit record highs in the third quarter. In fact the broad based S&P 500 (chart) turned in its best quarterly performance in five years. In my previous blog, I spoke to how traders and investors alike are awaiting a September selloff but seemingly nothing can stop this perma-bull market! Not trade wars, not interest rates, not the threat of inflation, not the daily chaos out of Washington, not historic seasonality, I mean nothing has stopped this bull market. Without a doubt this has been a close your eyes and a “go long” market. If you just did that over the past decade, you would of been part of 100% plus gains and whoever did do that, congratulations!

So now begs the question of what now? What now is fourth quarter earnings reporting season and oh yes the mid-term elections! October will not only be loaded with corporate earnings reports but there is also this little event call mid-term elections. I think it is safe to say that at the very least volatility shouldΒ  rear its head up. As the summer trading months were unfolding vol went back to its “low vol” standard as we have witnessed for past decade. There is just no fear in the markets. The volatility index aka the VIX (chart) is a measure of investor fear and in this case, lack thereof. I have got to believe that volatility will increase as we head into earnings reporting season and especially as we approach mid-term elections. Good luck to all! πŸ™‚

~George

Dow Jones Transports - George Mahfouz Jr

Traders And Investors Are Awaiting A September Selloff…

Traders and investors are awaiting a September selloff that actually may not come. Stocks continue to demonstrate strength and resiliency despite the political turmoil in Washington DC, rising interest rates and a seasonality headwind that just isn’t happening. August and September are typically weaker months for the stock market, instead the S&P 500 (see chart below), the Nasdaq Composite (chart) and the small-cap Russell 2000 (chart) hit all-time record highs and the end of August and despite a mini pullback shortly thereafter, the markets appear to have stabilized near all time highs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) did not make an all-time high in August, however, this index remains within striking distance of its all time high. The pundits are speaking to the strength of corporate America where earnings and profits are at their highest levels in decades as to the reason why the markets are not selling off. What is undeniable is that any time stocks have experienced a pull back it has been met with support from institutional investors and retail investors alike.

Speaking of support, let’s take a closer look at the technical shape of the aforementioned key indexes. Let’s start with the S&P 500 (chart). After pulling back to its 20-day moving average the S&P is right back at a breakout point. Next week we should see if the S&P can indeed breakout or fail and head back to its 20-day. The Nasdaq Composite index (chart) has similar chart pattern although it traded a bit below its 20-day support line for a few days before recapturing its 20-day and is now trading above it. A look at the Russell 2000 (chart), it too closed above its 20-day moving average and last but not least the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) also closed above its 20-day and this index is also right at a breakout or breakdown point. These bellwether indexes are also not in an extreme overbought condition according to the Relative Strength Index. The RSI tracks overbought or oversold conditions and is a momentum indicator that measures the degree and velocity of recent price changes to determine what is overbought and what may be oversold. We are simply not in any extreme condition according to the RSI principle.

Let’s see how the back half of September plays out and we will revisit the technical set-up of the markets in October. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

~George

S&P 500 - George Mahfouz Jr

 

 

 

Bellwether Indexes Surge To All Time Highs!

Bellwether indexes surge to all time highs as the S&P 500 (chart) closed the month of August at 2901, the Nasdaq Composite (chart) closed at 8109, the small-cap Russell 2000 (chart) closed at 1740 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) is within striking distance of its all time high. I thought August is supposed to be a tough month for stocks? Not this year! New highs are happening while the political environment in our country is at a seemingly all-time low, the word impeachment surfaces daily now, tariffs are in the headlines daily, interest rates have been on the rise and now it seems that any type of progress made over the summer with North Korea may be in jeopardy. One would think that the aforementioned risks would be enough for an outright 10-20 percent market correction. Add in the seasonality factor and we should indeed be going red, not making all-time highs.

Now I am afraid to even mention that the month of September is historically the weakest month of the year for stocks right alongside with August. Do I dare say that September will be the month that our markets correct in a meaningful way? Do I have the courage to predict that this will be the month where the markets recognize and adjust for all of the risks that are present in our current environment? I don’t know people, I am as baffled as the next guy as to how these markets keep shrugging off real market issues. Oh by the way I forgot to mention we have mid-term elections forthcoming, the markets are not pricing in any risk there either. These markets are priced and acting like there is no absolute risks at all out there. Ok enough banter already!

How to play the markets now? I am a fan of the old adage “the trend is your friend” but folks I just can’t hop on this train at this point in time. I am heading to the sidelines until I see any type of technical breakdown to possibly consider implementing a short thesis or just wait for the inevitable pullback/sell-off to identify any potential long set-ups. Until then, Paula and I wish everyone a very safe and Happy Labor Day weekend πŸ™‚

~George

Trading Between The Lines…

Trading between the lines is how this August is playing out so far. In what is supposed to be a seasonal volatile period, August seemingly has been playing right to the tune of this almost decade long bull market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart), the S&P 500 (chart), the Nasdaq Composite (see chart) and the small-cap Russell 2000 (see chart below) to my surprise have all traded in a tight range this month. Furthermore, the 20-day moving average and even more so the 50-day moving average have played a major role in supporting the indexes whenever any selling does come in. Now we have had a couple days here in August where it looked like these support lines would be breached and in fact in some instances they were. However, whenever these support lines were touched or breached, buying came right in and placed a floor beneath the selling pressure.

I am not sure how the rest of the month will play out but August at least from a seasonality perspective still has the potential to demonstrate volatility and experience meaningful selling pressure. I really do believe that the bear camp expected to see August as their month, but from the looks of things the bears may have to wait until September or beyond. Corporate earnings for the most part have been topping expectations, the economy is seemingly firing on all cylinders and rising interest rates are not that big of a factor yet to be weighing heavily on stocks.

My plan for the rest of the month is simple. Pay attention to the support and resistance zones of the aforementioned indexes and for that matter any stock that I am considering to trade. Secondly, I need to see the trading volume pick up before any definitive trend can be trusted. The market volume just has not been here this month which is also typical of the dog days of summer. Patience is the keyword between now and month end. That said, I expect after the labor day holiday we will be having a much different conversation. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

~George

Russell 2000 - Paula Mahfouz

Did Apple Just Save Tech?

Tech stocks have been battered lately but as in the past Apple just might of saved tech stocks, at least for the time being. After the close, Apple reported an astonishing $53 billion in revenues growing at a 17% clip. What’s more is Apple’s profits rose more than 30% coming in at a whopping $11.5 billion in profits. I thought there is a thing called the law of large numbers? Apparently not at Apple! People don’t realize how hard it is to grow a company of this size in the way Apple continues to grow. Year after year, quarter after quarter, simply amazing. The question now becomes is yesterday’s earnings beat by Apple enough to put a floor in tech stocks. Technology stocks have been taken out to the woodshed as of late with seemingly no end in sight, until yesterday. What I will be looking for today and for the rest of the week is whether or not companies continue get sold off after their earnings release which has been the trend this particular earnings reporting season.

In my last blog I eluded to the possibility of a breakout of the S&P 500 (chart) or a triple top fade in the index.Β  Quite honestly neither really happened, at least not yet. The S&P 500 (see chart below) essentially has been trading in a range between 2800 and 2850. Earnings reporting season has yet to be the catalyst for such a breakout or breakdown for that matter. Triple tops are very powerful to the technical set-up on any given index or stock for that matter. Apple’s earnings could very well be the catalyst for the markets to once again challenge the current triple top formation. Now that we are in August I do think we will get that answer soon enough. I do expect volatility to pick up a bit here in August which is not uncommon for this time of year. The SPY’s (chart) which tracks the S&P 500 (chart) has demonstrated support at its 20-day moving average which is essentially $279.50 and the overhead resistance is essentially the $285.00 zone. Let’s see if the S&P can break away from either line. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

~George

S&P 500 - George Mahfouz Jr.

Triple Top Or Breakout?

After chopping between the 2700 and 2800 zone for the past couple of months, is the S&P 500 (chart) at a triple top, or is it ready to breakout? I think we are going to find out this week in which second quarter earnings reporting season kicks into high gear. Although volatility has reared its head in first half of 2018, vol now has come back to what the markets have been accustomed to over the past few years (see chart below). Whether we breakout and test all time highs is a head scratcher. Of course earnings will play a key role in which way the markets will go, but there are other market moving factors in the mix. Any minute President Trump could put out a tweet on trade which could kill the most recent rally in stocks or propel it to new highs. On Tuesday and Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will speak in front of the Senate Banking Committee and the House Financial Services Committee. Without a doubt investors will be paying close attention to the tone and context of Chairman Powell’s testimony in front of both committees. Oh yes, we must not forget the Trump/Putin summit and I can’t even guess what comes out of that meeting and how the markets will react. So as you can see, chance are we will breakout of the triple top we are in or pullback within the trading range as mentioned above.

This week kicks off with high flying Netflix (NasdaqGS:NFLX) which reports their quarterly results tomorrow after the close, followed by Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) on Tuesday along with Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ), T-Mobile (NYSE: TMUS) and rounding the week out we will hear from the likes of Alcoa Corp (NYSE: AA), American Express (NYSE: AXP), eBay Inc. (NasdaqGS: EBAY), International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM), Etrade Financial Corp. (NasdaqGS: ETFC), Intuitive Surgical (NasdaqGS: ISRG), Microsoft Corp. (NasdaqGS: MSFT), General Electric (NYSE: GE) and Honeywell International Inc. (NYSE: HON) just to name a few. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

~George

VIX - George Mahfouz Jr.

First Half Of 2018 In The Books…

The first half of 2018 is in the books and where in the world did that go? Year to date the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) is off about one percent, the S&P 500 (see chart below)Β is up a couple of percentage points but the Nasdaq Composite (chart) and the small-cap Russell 2000 (chart) are way outperforming the other benchmark indexes closing the first half of the year up almost 10% each.

Let’s take a look how the second half of the year is shaping up. We start off the second half of the year with of course the fourth of July holiday which this year happens to be in the middle of the week. I don’t expect too much market action this upcoming week especially with a shortened trading session on Tuesday followed by the markets closing on Wednesday in recognition of the 4th of July. There could be some positioning going on both Thursday and Friday after the holiday. but all in all I am expecting lighter volume throughout the week with not too much volatility. Now the following week and the second half of the year is a whole different story. Q2 earnings reporting season will begin in earnest the week of July 9th and this my friends will be the true beginning of the second half of the trading year. I expect volatility to kick in once again as corporate America unveils their most recent quarterly results. Furthermore, we will be getting ever closer to the midterm elections that promises to be filled with about as much drama and rhetoric one can imagine. Also, historically stocks have witnessed meaningful corrections at some point during the year leading up to the midterms and I do not expect this year to be any different. I also expect corporate America to report impressive growth to their top and bottom lines; however, these results may already be priced in.

Technically speaking the aforementioned indexes all remain above their respective moving averages with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) hovering right around its 200-day. Paula and I wish everyone a very safe and Happy 4th of July πŸ™‚

~George

S&P 500 - Paula Mahfouz

 

The Economy Is Booming, But…

There is no question the economy is booming but what does this mean long term for stocks? When the economy is firing on all cylinders like it is now here in the United States one may think the stock market must be ready for its next leg up! Not so fast. Historically when the economy heats up and the unemployment rate becomes so low, that does not typically bode well for stocks. Why you ask? Simply put, the Federal Reserve does not want inflation to rear its head up and their main tool to avert inflationary pressures is to raise interest rates. As counterintuitive as it may seem, a strong economy and low unemployment may be the catalyst to put the brakes on this almost 10 year bull market run. That said, the major averages continue to show extraordinary resilience no matter what comes at it. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart) closed the week above 25,000, the S&P 500 (chart) finished the week at 2779, the Nasdaq Composite (chart), finished near its all time high and the small-cap Russell 2000 (see chart below) closed the week out a few points away from it’s all time high as well.

It is quite remarkable how the aforementioned indexes are behaving with all things considered. This past week the Federal Reserve raised interest rates again and signaled two more hikes this year and the trade war chatter and action with China and our own allies for that matter is accelerating. Just these two events alone show be putting selling pressure on stocks not setting new record highs as is the case this past week with the Nasdaq Composite (chart) and the Russell 2000 (chart). These indexes also remain well above key moving averages which at some point in time reversion to the mean should occur. I will be looking for opportunities on the short side but will continue to respect the fact that this years-long bull market remains intact at least from a technical standpoint. Good luck to all πŸ™‚

~George

george mahfouz jr - Russell 2000