Weekly S&P500 ChartStorm - 15 January 2023
This week: technicals, sentiment, flows, market cycles, stockmarket stats, (smaller)Big tech, global vs US equities, and a new bull market signal for global equities...
Welcome to the Weekly S&P500$S&P 500(.SPX)$ #ChartStorm— a selection of 10 charts which I hand pick from around the web and post on Twitter$Twitter(TWTR)$ .
These charts focus on the S&P500 (US equities); and the various forces and factors that influence the outlook, with the aim of bringing insight and perspective…
1. Make or Break Time
Yes that’s right it’s everyone’s favorite downward sloping trendline chart updated again to the latest price developments. At this point it is literally right on the cusp of a potential breakout (…or fakeout! -- not a done deal, and not meaningful until a clean+clear break is established).
(also n.b. the symmetrical triangle at the end there — the textbook says symmetrical triangles are continuation patterns, so in this case it would be continuation of the largely bearish price action that preceded it)
2. Earnings as a Catalyst?
With earnings season set to kick into full-swing inthe next few weeks(concentrated around the last week of Jan + first week of Feb), it's interesting to note how deeply pessimistic earnings sentiment has become.
Bull take: easy to surprise against (even if mediocre).
Bear take: if confirmed = bad news, recession, bear down.
3. Retail Sentiment
On a similar note, retail have already come to terms with the bear market... The TD AmeritradeInvestor Movement Indexis plumbing the lows of 2020 (sentiment indicator based on retail trader account activity).
4.Retail Round Trip
Seems like retail have dumped everything they bought during the heady pandemic stimulus bull/bubble(s). It goes to show, that without a decent process or overarching strategy it often ends up a situation of "buy high, sell low". A timely reminder to take a step back and think about what you’re actually trying to do and how you’re going to go about it (set up well thought-out rules and policies in advance vs just chasing the latest fad and running with the crowd).
5.Sentiment Cycles
This chart shows the combined Bulls vs Bears readings from theInvestors IntelligenceandAAIIsurveys, with 12-month smoothing — it let's you see the longer-term cycles in sentiment at play.
If you looked at this chart and nothing else, you'd probably have to say we are getting "close" (at least based on how the market moved following similar conditions in the past e.g. 1991, 1995, 2009).
6. Speaking of Cycles
The stylized textbook market cycle says bonds rally first, then stocks, then commodities (and so-on). So far markets have been following that script near perfectly in this chart — so you know what that means right? (textbook would say: bonds down (tick), then stocks down (in progress), then commodities down (also in progress)… and then back to the start!)
7. Double Down?
Last year was down so this year will be up, right?”
Not so fast, there are multiple examples of stocks falling 2 or more years in a row... Not a forecast as such, but a reminder that while yes stocks go up most of the time and over the long-term (historically) — they don’t go up in a straight line!
8. Big Tech Bubble
Big Tech is smaller now.
(but still big)
9. US vs Global Equities
Global equities are gaining the upper hand vs US equities — is this *the* turning point for US vs global? (…after about a decade-long run of US beating the rest of the world, by almost 3x!)
10. Deep (relative) Value
Important context to add to the previous chart — Rest Of World is trading at the deepest discount vs the US since around the heights of the dot com bubble.
https://chartstorm.substack.com/p/weekly-s-and-p500-chartstorm-15-january
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