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[PLUS] One Chart For The Weekend

September 2, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

The late-July breadth thrust provides a breadth thrust regime that lasts for a year (or more if we get additional breadth thrusts between now and mid-2023). In such an environment, near-term oversold conditions tend not to persist and, in fact, reverse quite quickly. One way of measuring this is to look at the percentage of world markets trading above their 50-day average. Anything above 70% is pretty good participation, whether we are in a bullish breadth thrust regime or not. Below 40% is a different story. Without a breadth thrust as support, the S&P 500 struggles to make headway when the percentage of world markets above their 50-day average collapses. But within breadth thrust regimes, it signals an oversold condition that leads to strength. 

The percentage of world markets above their 50-day average was at 90% in mid-August and is now down to just 25%. The recent breadth thrust suggests that rather than a red light arguing for caution, the signal now is a greenlight encouraging exposure.  

Yes, That Is Arthur Laffer of "Laffer Curve" Fame

September 2, 2022

Bryant R. Riley, chairman and CEO of B. Riley Financial Inc $RILY, and director Randall E. Paulson both filed Form 4s reporting purchases for a combined $3.7 million. Both executives have been frequent buyers all year.

Arthur Laffer, the former Reagan administration economic adviser known for the Laffer Curve, filed a Form 4 revealing a share purchase in NexPoint Residential Trust $NXRT.

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Are Bonds a Bust, Again?

September 1, 2022

From the Desk of Ian Culley @Ianculley

Heading into Q3, we wanted to play a mean-reversion bounce in US treasury bonds. A long list of reasons supported this position:

  • US Treasuries experienced their worst H1 in history (or close to it).
  • Bonds were finding support at their previous-cycle lows from 2018.
  • Commodities and inflation expectations peaked earlier in the spring.
  • Assets that benefit from rising rates (financials) were making fresh lows.
  • Global yields were pulling back.

And, quite frankly, our risk was well-defined. We can’t ask for much more. For us, the greater risk was not taking a swing at this trade in the event bonds ripped higher…

Two months later, bonds across the curve are taking out their 2018 lows. The market has proven our mean-reversion thesis wrong. But we can live that because we manage risk responsibly.

It’s the most important part of playing this game.

Easily, the second-most important is to remain flexible.

As investors and traders, we have to be able to change our opinion on any given...

Breadth Thrusts & Bread Crusts: Worst Month Of The Year?

September 1, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

The first eight months of the year have been a grind. 

A mid-month reversal in August took the S&P 500 from a 4% gain to 4% loss for the month and the early breadth and momentum thrusts now seem like a distant memory. Two-thirds of the way through the year and we are on track for the fewest days of more new highs than new lows observed in the past two decades, and 2022 is just ahead of 2020 (and lagging only 2009) in terms of daily swings of 1% or more on the S&P 500. Weakness in stocks this year has been exacerbated by weakness in bonds, as yields have climbed to new multi-year highs. The 60/40 stock/bond benchmark portfolio is down 14% through August.

Welcome to September. If you haven’t heard, it’s the worst month of the year for stocks. Since 1950, only two months (February and September) have been down on average. This is a case were we don’t really need to focus on the exact numbers – the large red bar for September says it all:

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When Energy Creates Wealth

September 1, 2022

From the Desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza 

Regardless of the time frame, we continue to see leadership and relative strength from energy stocks.

Outside of utilities, it is the only sector flaunting positive returns on a year-to-date basis.

Even over the past several weeks, with the broader market coming under increasing pressure, energy stands out as the most resilient group.

When we look at the structural trend for energy stocks, this makes a lot more sense.

While most sectors and indexes are facing downward sloping or sideways 200-day moving averages, indicating that the path of least resistance is lower, energy stocks remain in a strong primary uptrend.

While the corrective action of the past few days has not left energy unscathed, the Energy Sector SPDR $XLE remains above our risk level of 79.

As long as this is the case, the bias is higher for energy, and we want to be looking for the strongest stocks to buy as a way to express our bullish thesis.

This brings us to today...

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Make Hay While the Sun Shines?

September 1, 2022

Getting a fresh batch of monthly candlesticks has to be one of our favorite elements in our process.

Being forced to zoom out provides us with the insightful context of what truly matters -- the primary trend.

Remember, a lot of the work we do is simple trend identification. Instead of trying to catch the uncertain market top/bottom, we're always looking to position ourselves in the path of least resistance.

Trying to catch and time market extremes is difficult and it comes with a great deal of uncertainty.

Understanding market structure, on the other hand, will give you a great deal of conviction in your overall outlook.

 

Cevian Boosts ALV Stake to 10%

September 1, 2022

The largest insider transaction on today's list is a Form 4 filing by Cevian Capital II GP LTD.

The hedge fund reported a purchase of roughly $9.1 million in the automotive safety supplier Autoliv $ALV. It now has a total stake of 10%.