Market Direction: BULLISH alert
issued 6/2/2016
The initial alert that investors should consider taking
profit was posted 10/12/2016. Since that post the stock market has not had a convincing
trend either up or down. Our proprietary model has not yet indicated a bearish
alert, but it continues to be under pressure.
If we continue to have days like today, there is definitely
no doubt a change in the stock market’s direction will occur. Stay tune and
check the website daily for a possible market direction change ALERT.
David
Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff, believes both the
bull market and economic recovery are nearing an end, winding down though not
at the point yet of becoming completely undone.
"Most
of the patterns, both in the realm of financial assets and the real economy,
are flashing this signal — one of a very mature market," Rosenberg wrote
Wednesday in his daily note to clients. "Now I am not sure if this is the
seventh inning, or the ninth, it is likely somewhere in between."
For
investors, that means reducing risk. While Rosenberg doesn't see an imminent
collapse coming like the financial crisis in 2008, he does believe the focus
should be on preserving capital rather than focusing on returns.
"Having
cash on hand, reducing the beta of the portfolio, focusing on the running
yield, and stepping up in quality across the capital structure are all going to
pay off in terms of preserving capital, generating decent mid-single digit net
returns at the very least, with a view towards allocating the dry powder at
better price levels that will allow for a return to high-single digit or even
double-digit returns once the dust settles," he said.
Long
one of Wall Street's most-noted bears, Rosenberg turned bullish about five
years ago as the U.S. escaped the shackles of the financial crisis and the bull
market kept chugging along. Lately, though, he's become at least a skeptic,
worried that multiple signs are pointing to a slowdown:
- The yield curve is flattening as economic data weakens.
- Tight credit spreads and low capitalization rates are showing the real estate sector's cycle is in its own late stages.
- Valuation metrics for stocks are around 2007 peaks before that bull market ended.
- The recent surge in corporate deals is typical of peak levels not seen since 1999, just before the dot-com bubble popped.
- Consumer confidence, while elevated, is declining.
- Business condition surveys are sliding.
- Bullish sentiment in the market is dwarfing the bearish side, a contrarian side that stocks are losing steam.
Rosenberg
worries that at a time when growth appears to be sputtering, the Fed is contemplating a rate hike.
The U.S. central bank last increased its rate target in December 2015, the only
tightening since June 2006. Traders currently assign a 74 percent chance that
the Fed will raise again in December.
"We'll
see how brave the Fed will be — we know what happened last year after the Fed
went and for two or three months, it wasn't a pretty picture," he said.
To
be sure, some of the economic indicators have been improving after a lackluster
first half that saw gross domestic product average just a 1.1 percent
gain. Several Wall Street economists upped their third-quarter growth
expectations after economic data showed positive surprises Wednesday. Notably,
the U.S. trade deficit was smaller than expected and inventories grew.
However,
the Atlanta Fed has been cutting its Q3 expectations steadily, most recently
projecting 2 percent growth, a steep cut from a peak of 3.6 percent in August.
However, that number hasn't been updated since Oct. 19. CNBC's Rapid Update
tracker now expects the quarter to show 3 percent growth when the first GDP
estimate comes out Friday.
Stocks,
meanwhile, have held up, with the S&P 500 up about 4.8
percent for the year, though trading in a pretty right range since July.
Rosenberg
said the signals are showing that growth is "late in the game."
"That is precisely where we are," he said. "And it's not even an opinion anymore. It is a market fact."
$tockMarketDirection proprietary model is currently sign-up and subscribe. We strongly encourage you to monitor positions closely, exercise proper money management strategies and follow us at $tockMarketDirection for ALERTS we may issue advising a change in the current market direction. Stay tuned and follow us. If you have a testimonial or comment of how this website has helped you we would like to know, email us. Share with a friend.
The all-time highs since our initial
recommendation to go LONG
this market. Here is how the markets have performed:
Stock Market
Direction Recommendation (6/2/2016)
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Dow
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up 884.05 points a 4.95% gain
|
8/15/16
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Nasdaq
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up 371.52 points a 7.47% gain
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9/22/16
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S&P 500
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up 88.55 points a 4.21% gain
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8/15/16
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Related Link: http://www.stockmarket-direction.com/
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