Equities and cyclicals have seen some modest gains off the lows, while growth areas and crypto markets have waned. In fact, by our calculations, this year has seen one of the greatest disparities in performance between growth and value.
You can see it when you compare something like Bitcoin or Ethereum against the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
Sure, crypto markets have been dragged down by the FTX contagion. Still, perhaps the bigger driver of this price action has been the macro flow out of long-duration growth assets (crypto included) and into traditional value areas.
We're talking industrials, materials, and, of course, energy stocks.
Let me ask you this: In bear markets does it historically get easier and easier to find stocks making new all-time highs?
Where I grew up, new all-time highs, yet alone more and more of them every day, are not something that we normally see in bear markets.
And here we are. I can't remember the last time it was this easy to find stocks breaking out to new highs. And not just new 3-month highs or even 52-week highs.
Stocks are breaking out to new ALL-TIME Highs.
And not just in one or two sectors.
We're seeing it in Financials, Industrials, Technology, Energy, Healthcare, Staples, Telecom and more.
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Alfonso Depablos @AlfCharts
Our Hall of Famers list is composed of the 150 largest US-based stocks.
These stocks range from the mega-cap growth behemoths like Apple and Microsoft – with market caps in excess of $2T – to some of the new-age large-cap disruptors such as Moderna, Square, and Snap.
It has all the big names and more.
It doesn’t include ADRs or any stock not domiciled in the US. But don’t worry; we developed a separate universe for that which you can check out here.
The Hall of Famers is simple.
We take our list of 150 names and then apply our technical filters so the strongest stocks with the most momentum rise to the top.
Let’s dive right in and check out what these big boys are up to.
Here’s this week’s list:
Click table to enlarge view
We filter out any laggards that are down -5% or more relative to the S&P 500 over the trailing...
As the dollar was peaking in late-September, 4% of world markets were above their 50-day average and 4% were above their 200-day average. The dollar now is 8% of that peak (and below its 200-day average for the first time since June 2021). More than two-thirds of ACWI markets are now above their 200-day averages (the most in over a year) and nearly 95% are above their 50-day average (the most in nearly 2 years).
Why It Matters: Dollar weakness may be the catalyst (or one of several catalysts), but the important development is improving global breadth. That is typically supportive of US stocks. Beyond that, dynamics in the current environment are actually pointing to a changing of the guard in terms of global leadership. The US has seen its relative strength wane while Europe and other developed markets have taken the lead. For US investors, this means abandoning home country bias and embracing global diversification.