November 1, 5:00 pm EST

We talked about the potential bottom in stocks on Monday, based on this big trendline we had been watching.  That, of course, also coincided with a similar line in the Dow, which represented a 10% correction on the nose.

That indeed does look like the bottom.

You can see in the chart of the S&P 500 above, this big line dating back to the oil price crash lows of 2016 held beautifully, and we are now up more than 5% from just Monday of this week.

And today we have this …

We’re getting a break of this sharp downtrend of the past month (circled).

And we have a very similar pattern in Japanese stocks (the Nikkei).

Most importantly, the biggest mover of the day in global stock indices (and nearly all markets) was emerging market stocks.  The MSCI Emerging Markets Index was up 3.3% today.  And the strength in emerging markets was well underway before the news today that the U.S. (Trump) and China (Xi) has some constructive talks on trade.

What gets hit first and hardest when global risk elevates?  Emerging markets.  EM was down 21% on the year earlier this week.  But this is also where the biggest gains can come as the dust settles, and people realize that a hotter U.S. economy, will translate into hotter growth in emerging markets.  As I’ve said, this market decline has been a gift to get involved.

October 31, 5:00 pm EST

As we discussed yesterday, it’s very dangerous to let political views influence your perspective on markets and investing.

And I suspect we are seeing plenty of people make that mistake.

That means many will be left behind on a stock market recovery, again.  That probably means the bull market for stocks still has a ways to run.  John Templeton, know to be one of the great value and contrarian investors of all time, said “bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.”

Incredibly, after a more than four-fold run from the financial crisis bottom, the stock market continues to have a LOT of skepticism. Does this mean we are only half way through this cycle?  Maybe.

The arguments for the stock market bears and pessimists on the economy have many holes, but the biggest is the lack of context.  That context:  the global economic crisis, and the aftermath (up to present day).

You can’t evaluate anything about this economy without taking into account where we’ve been over the past decade, the role central banks have played throughout, the coordinated intervention that has taken place globally (along the way) to avoid a global depression, and the interconnectedness of global economies that continues.

Without this context, the skeptics like to call it “late in the cycle” for an economy that (on paper) is in the second-longest expansion in U.S. history.   With context, we’re probably closer to “early cycle,” given that the decade of ultra-slow growth was manufactured by central banks.

October 30, 5:00 pm EST

This violent repricing of the tech giants came with clear warnings (i.e. the tightening of regulatory screws).

Now that we have it.  And it is very healthy, and needed.

As we discussed yesterday, I would argue we are seeing regulation priced-in on the tech giants, which can create a more level playing field for businesses, more broad-based economic activity, and a more broad-based bull market for stocks.  This is a theme we’ve been discussing in my daily note here for quite sometime.

And I suspect now, we can see the areas of the stock market that have been beaten down, from the loss of market share to the tech giants, make aggressive comebacks.

On that note, here’s another look at the big trendline we’ve been watching in the Dow …

Again, this line holds right at the 10% correction mark.  And we’ve now bounced more than 700 dow points.

As I’ve said, it’s easy to get sucked into the daily narratives in the financial media, and it’s especially easy and dangerous (to your net worth) when stocks are declining.  They tend to influence people to sell, when they should be buying.

And as someone that has been involved in markets more than 20 years, I can tell you that it’s also very dangerous to let political views influence your perspective on markets and investing.  And I suspect we are seeing that mistake made in this environment (by pros and amateurs alike).

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October 25, 5:00 pm EST

Yesterday we looked at this big trendline support in stocks (the yellow line).

 

We had a good bounce today, but experience tells me that we will make a run at that trendline, and things will look a little messy before we bottom.

We still have seven trading days before the mid-term elections.  A stock market in correction is not as easy to promote as one at record highs (as we had just earlier this month).  With that, I suspect there are plenty of interests (China among them) to keep the pressure on stocks in hopes of dividing U.S. Congress come November 6th.

When the dust clears from the elections, market folks will realize that stocks are incredibly cheap at 15 times next year’s earnings estimates, in an economy growing better than 3%.

On that note, we have our first look at third quarter GDP tomorrow.  The market is looking for 3.6% growth, which would give us 3.22% annualized growth averaged over the past four quarters. That would be the best growth since 2006.

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October 24, 5:00 pm EST

As we’ve discussed the past two days, the catalyst for a stock market correction is rarely, if ever, one of the concerns that are “top of mind” in the market.

In this case, a China slowdown has been the target of a market fallout for eight years.  Stocks have gone up.  An implosion of the European Monetary Union has been predicted since 2011.  Stocks have gone up.  Currency and trade wars have been underway throughout the post-Great Recession environment.  Stocks have gone up.  A “hard Brexit” has been going to crush markets and the global economy since 2016.  Stocks have gone up.  A huge spike in inflation and interest rates has been guaranteed to be the punishment, for the decade of “irresponsible” money printing.  Stocks have gone up.

And with these things to obsess about, people have been steadily convincing themselves that a recession was coming (the opposite of what the data tells us) and that earnings were deteriorating or “peaking” (peaking earnings growth at 20% y-o-y is very different than peak earnings).   The recession and exhausting economic momentum stories are non-sense.

Short of a major economic blow-up, things are as good as they’ve been in more than a decade and getting better.  And for people that think another Lehman like moment could be coming (Europe, China, Brexit…), remember, part of the Lehman moment/global credit freeze, was driven by uncertainty about how governments and central banks would respond.  But we now know, very clearly, how they will respond to shocks.  There is no uncertainty.  They will do whatever it takes to maintain stability (re-write rules, whatever it takes), as they have over the past decade (post-Lehman) to avert further systemic shocks.

Still, all of the “what could go wrong” scenarios are what exacerbates the fear, after a decline in stocks gets started.  And in this case, as we’ve discussed, it looks very clear that both this decline, and the correction earlier this year, were triggered by Saudi liquidations (for fear of asset seizures).  And now we have panic-driven selling by uninformed investors.

Remember, most average investors are NOT leveraged.  And with that, they should have no concern about U.S. stock market declines, other than to ask themselves, “do I have cash I can put to work at cheaper prices?”

So with that, let’s take a look at the chart and see where this shake out might stop?  I think we’re close.

 

The above is the chart of the S&P 500 futures.  And you can see the big trendline that comes in from the 2016 lows.  Remember, in early 2016, the crash in oil prices were threatening the global economy (causing bankruptcies, and threatening sovereign defaults and financial system trouble).  Global central banks responded in coordination with a number of measures (with likely outright buying of oil).  Oil prices turned on a dime the day the Bank of Japan intervened in the yen.  The crisis was averted.

This is a big trendline, and it comes in just 1.4% lower from today’s low.  That would be an 11% correction in the S&P futures.

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October 23, 5:00 pm EST

As we discussed yesterday, despite all of the drama about China, Italy,
Brexit, rates and the elections, what seems more likely to have driven the recent correction in stocks is Saudi selling.

In fact, I think it’s clear that there has been a Saudi liquidation (of U.S. and global assets) which was the catalyst for the correction in stocks earlier this year, and this recent decline.

Remember, in November of last year, the Saudi Crown Prince Salam, successor to the King, ordered the arrest of many of the most powerful Saudi Princes, country ministers and business people in Saudi Arabia on corruption charges.  Over $100 billion in assets were claimed to be under investigation (a third frozen) in what was called the “Saudi purge.”

These subjects were detained for nearly three months.  The timing of their release and the market correction of early this year is where it all begins to align.

They were released on Saturday, January 27.  S&P futures open for trading on Sunday night.  Stocks topped that night and proceeded to drop 12% in six days.  And rallies in stocks were sold aggressively for the better part of the next seven months.

Fast forward to this month, and we have the murder of the journalist that was a public critic of the Crown Prince Salam.  As the details of story pointed back to Salam, on Oct 3, U.S. bond markets got hit (to the hour of news hitting the wires) and stocks topped that day, and have proceeded to drop by more than 8%.

Clearly, the destabilization in Saudi Arabia has put considerable assets in jeopardy.  With that, those in control of those assets have likely been scrambling to protect them, as U.S. Congress pushes for sanctions, which could include freezing Saudi assets.

October 22, 5:00 pm EST

As the events surrounding Saudi Arabia continue to unfold, it is beginning to look more and more like the market shakeup of the past three weeks was triggered by Saudi selling.

The top in stocks and the heavy selling came just as news was hitting wires that Khashoggi never exited the Saudi consulate in Turkey – disputing the story of the Saudi government.

Stocks put in a top that day.

 

And that was the day the bond market also made it’s move — the 10-year yield spiked from 3.08% to 3.18%.
Here’s what hit the news wires that triggered the selling in bonds/rise in market rates – to the hour.

So, was the catalyst for this market correction triggered by money from Saudi Arabia moving to escape a potential asset freeze?  It looks possible.

We constantly hear predictions of impending corrections, pointing to all of the clear evidence that should drive it, but corrections are often caused by events that are less pervasive in the market psyche. The Saudi story would qualify.

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Since stocks dipped last week, I’ve heard the chatter (again) about how a 3% 10-year note has suddenly created a high appetite for Treasurys over stocks (i.e. people are selling stocks in favor of capturing that whopping 3% yield).

But in this post-crisis environment, a rise toward 3% promotes the exact opposite behavior. If you are willing to lend for 10-years locked in at a paltry rate, you are forgoing what is almost certainly going to be a higher rate decade than the past decade. If you need to exit, you’re going to find the price of your bonds (very likely) dramatically lower down the road.

Coming out of a zero-interest rate world, bond prices are going lower/not higher. Here’s the chart of the 10-year Treasury note (price). You can see we’ve now broken the three and a half decade bull market in bonds (yields go up, as bond prices go down) …

stocks

Bottom line: The bond market is the high risk-low reward investment in this environment. And there continues to be plenty of fuel for stock prices as money exits bonds.

 

October 16, 5:00 pm EST

Stocks are racing back, just as everyone is turning gloomy. 

This squeezes the shorts that have been looking for reasons to believe a big trend change is coming for stocks, depite the fundamentals that suggest the opposite.

We now have this chart on the S&P 500 ….

 

Which is beginning to look like this (below) V-shaped move in stocks back in late 2014. And it was right around the same time of year.

This 2014 correction was 17 days, and -9.8%.  It was all recovered in 13 days.  Now we have a 7.8% decline over 14 days, and bouncing aggressively.

The more important chart for the benchmark S&P 500 index, is the longer term one below – which shows the big “Trump-trend” continues to hold.  The yellow trendline represents the ascent of stocks following the Trump election, which has been driven by pro-growth economic policies.

And with this above chart in mind, remember as we discussed yesterday, from a valuation perspective, Wall Street is estimating stocks on next year’s estimated earnings to be as cheap as we’ve seen only two times in the past 26 years.

Again, if we take the 2019 estimate earnings on the S&P 500 of $176 and multiply it by 23, we get 4,048.  That’s 47% higher than Friday’s close.  Today we closed at just 2,810.

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October 15, 5:00 pm EST

On Friday we talked about the opportunity presented by this recent dip in the broad stock market.

We’re beginning to see more clearly today the rotation out of tech and into value.  That is translating into a continued slide in the Nasdaq, while the Dow is rising.

Now, even though this looks like a re-pricing of the high-flying tech stocks, as we often see the “baby gets thrown out with the bathwater.”  In this case, because the big tech giants have been so widely held, when they crack, everything has cracked.  That’s an opportunity to buy broader stocks on sale. And stocks are indeed cheap.

Take a look at historic valuations (P/E on the S&P 500) …

 

From a valuation perspective, Wall Street is estimating stocks on next year’s estimated earnings to be as cheap as we’ve seen only two times in the past 26 years.

You can see where stocks were valued on the S&P going into 2012.  Stocks finished up 16% that year.  The other year was 1995 (a P/E of 14.89). Stocks finished that year up 37.6%.

Still, many have continued to harp on valuation, always pointing to the long run average P/E on stocks, which is around 16.  That’s a long history.  If we look back at the past twenty years, the average valuation is MUCH, MUCH higher. It’s 23 times earnings!

If we take Wall Street’s estimate on S&P 500 earnings of $176 and multiply it by 23, we get and S&P at 4,048.  That’s 47% higher than Friday’s close.

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