What Does History Tell Us About Weak Profiles Near The 200-Day?

NOT ALL MOVES ABOVE THE 200-DAY ARE CREATED EQUAL

As the historical examples below clearly demonstrate, after a plunge in the stock market and within the context of a still weak long-term trend profile, seeing the S&P close above its 200-day moving average is far from an “all clear” signal. As covered in recent CCM weekly videos and shown below, the S&P 500 traded above its 200-day after making a low in October 2011.

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WEAK TRENDS AND MOVES ABOVE THE 200-DAY

The CCM Trend Strength Model is major component of the CCM Market Model. Trend strength scores are based on 207 binary questions using data from multiple timeframes. In late October 2011, the S&P 500 closed above a flattish 200-day moving average. However, the trend strength (TS) score was only 9 on a scale of 0 to 100, with 100 being the strongest. With a TS score of 9, the S&P 500 failed to hold above the 200-day and subsequently dropped 9.84%. The TS score of 9 told us the market’s longer-term trend still had some work to do before allowing for a more favorable risk-reward setup. When the market was ready to put together a sustained rally, the TS score was sitting at 82 in late December 2011.

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TRENDS TYPICALLY NEED TIME TO FLIP

A similar situation occurred following a plunge in 2015; the S&P 500 rallied sharply back to the 200-day moving average.

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CLOSER LOOK AT 2015 CASE

The initial push above the orange 200-day in 2015 was marked by eight trading days of gains before the market started to drop back toward the moving average cluster (chart below). The S&P 500 closed 2.41% above the point where it crossed the 200-day, telling us short stays and relatively tame moves above the 200-day are not necessarily “everything is fine” signals. Price stayed near the 200-day for seventy-one calendar days.

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Similar to the 2011 case, the initial push above the 200-day occurred within the context of a relatively weak TS score of 17. From the highest close above the 200-day in early November 2015, the S&P 500 dropped 13.30% and exceeded the previous plunge low that was made in 2015. Notice how the S&P 500 was trading near 2100 in November 2015.

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WEAK PROFILES CAN LEAD TO SIDEWAYS MOVEMENT

While it would have been easy to say “we are going to be left behind” as the S&P 500 rallied sharply off the initial plunge low in 2015 and made it all the way back to 2100, the market was still trying to clear 2100 in July of the following year. When the market was in a position to put together a more stable and sustainable rally (right side below), the TS score was sitting at 100, which is quite a bit more attractive from a risk-reward perspective relative to the TS score of 17 after the first push above the 200-day in 2015.

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FAVORABLE RISK-REWARD SETUPS vs. UNFAVORABLE SETUPS

TS scores cannot predict the future; they simply help us assess the odds of good things happening on a longer-term basis relative to the odds of bad things happening on a longer-term basis. Does the 2019 TS score look more like the “take a measured approach” scores of 9 and 17 that were present before rallies failed in 2011 and 2015 or does the present score look more like the “this is a much more attractive risk/reward profile” scores of 82 and 100 that were present before satisfying and sustained moves higher in the stock market? The S&P 500’s TS score during the trading session on Monday, February 11, 2019 was 7, which is much more in line with the “take a measured approach” scores.

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UPDATING SIMILAR HISTORICAL SETUPS

This week’s stock market video updates recent historical cases covered in previous videos. The video opens with a review of some of the most significant corrections and bear markets, allowing us to better understand what is in the realm of possibility over the next twenty years.

LOW PROBABILITY IS FAR FROM ZERO PROBABILITY

When using probability models to assess any situation, humans tend to equate very low probability outcomes with something that cannot or will not happen (see 2016 U.S. presidential election).  Therefore, it is important to understand a low probability outcome is radically different from a zero probability outcome, and thus, the need for maximum flexibility going forward.

SPEAKS TO NEXT FEW MONTHS RATHER THAN NEXT FEW DAYS/WEEKS

Q: With a TS score of 7, is it possible the market continues to rally sharply and confidently moves above the 200-day moving average?

A: Yes, anything is possible in the markets and we are prepared for all outcomes from wildly bullish to wildly bearish. The TS score speaks to risk-vs.-reward. A recent similar breadth thrusts piece covered a V-bottom that occurred in 1971. In the 1971 case, the S&P blew through the 200-day and never looked back. The TS score after clearing the 200-day was 38, which is still considerably higher than the score of 7 we are seeing today. The moral of the 1971 story is we should be open to and prepared for bullish outcomes near the 200-day in 2019.

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Q: Will the 2019 rally fail soon?

A: Under our approach, it is best to take it day by day with an open mind and see how the data evolves over time. Even in a giveback or retest scenario, the 2011 and 2015 cases remind us the market could trade near the 200-day for several weeks before anything is resolved.

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Q: What is the key point relative to our approach to the markets?

A: The key takeaway for us is making prudent risk-reward decisions with our hard-earned capital. The S&P 500’s 200-day moving average is sitting at 2743. Anecdotally, an S&P 500 push 2.41% above the 200-day, similar to 2015, would land at 2809. From that point in 2015, the S&P 500 dropped 13.30%. Even a 50% retracement of the V-move off the December 2018 low would mean a giveback of 6.2%; a move back to the 61.8% level would mean an S&P 500 drop of 7.90%. A full retest of the December 2018 low could mean a drop somewhere in the neighborhood of 13%.

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With a TS score below 10 and a still yet-to-be determined outcome near the S&P 500’s 200-day, we will continue to take a prudent, patient, and measured approach. We will continue to scale in at a rate in line with the rate of improvement in the hard data. If the data begins to improve at a faster rate, we will begin to take larger incremental steps.

This post is written for clients of Ciovacco Capital Management and describes our approach in generic terms. It is provided to assist clients with basic concepts, rather than specific strategies or levels. The same terms of use disclaimers used in our weekly videos apply to all Short Takes posts and tweets on the CCM Twitter Feed, including the text and images above.

Stock Market Crosscurrents

MANY WEEKLY CHARTS LOOK CONSTRUCTIVE

A very substantial number of growth-oriented weekly charts have three similar and bullish characteristics:

  1. A break of downward-sloping trendlines.

  2. MACD cross showing improving momentum.

  3. Similar look to 2016 bottoming process.

The weekly chart of emerging markets (EEM) is one example of the widespread “we should be open to adding to the growth side of the portfolio in the coming days/weeks” look. Most breakouts and MACD crosses occured last week after the Fed meeting (see S&P 500 chart here).

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WEAKER OR STRONGER THAN 2016?

As numerous historical examples illustrate, when markets try to rally from a very weak trend profile, bottoms are typically a give-and-take process that occurs over several weeks or months. Momentum is one thing; trends are another.

The 2016 S&P 500 chart below shows generic daily moving averages to illustrate basic concepts. Notice how it takes time for the moving averages to turn from a concerning look (far left side below) to a more constructive look (far right below). The S&P 500 rallied sharply off the February 2016 low and momentum improved significantly. However, 115 days of gains were fully retraced before the longer-to-intermediate-term moving averages turned up near point B.

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In 2019, the S&P 500 is 27 trading days removed from the December 2018 low. The S&P 500 ETF (SPY) chart below shows the look of the same moving averages near the low (red box) and 27 trading days after the low (blue arrow). Thus far, SPY’s moving averages do not even have the early stages of a “trying to flip back to a bullish trend” look.

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Since numerous 2019 weekly charts have a similar bullish look to what was seen near the 2016 S&P 500 lows, it might be helpful to understand how the trends looked 27 trading days after the 2016 low. Notice how the moving averages had a flattish/bottoming look literally days after the S&P 500 low. Bullish moving average crossovers were present 27 trading days after the low. None of those improving characteristics are evident yet on the 2019 chart above.

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We should also keep in mind, the trend off the 2016 low was stronger than present-day trends, and even with the more constructive profile, stocks ended up retracing 115 days worth of gains in 2016 before resuming the bullish trend. Our purpose is not to forecast any outcome in 2019, but rather to highlight the uncertainties associated with weak market profiles.

ASSET CLASS BEHAVIOR

The broad array of ETFs we currently hold, along with a substantial cash position, reflect the market’s current mixed state, which was noted via the tweets below:

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The S&P 500 Low-Volatility ETF (SPLV) overweights more defensive-oriented sectors. The chart of SPLV relative to SPY looks quite a bit better than the SPY chart in isolation. Two weeks ago, SPLV beat SPY by 0.57%. Last week SPLV beat SPY by 0.87%. The chart below may roll over soon, but right now we have not even seen much in terms of change.

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Even after the big rally off the December 2018 lows, many of the leading ETFs still have a defensive/income bias, including REITS.

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The strength in emerging market bonds (PCY) is due, in part, to the market’s expectation the Fed is done or nearly done raising interest rates.

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The “turning up” look on the chart of emerging market stocks relative to the S&P 500 also reflects shifting expectations relative to the Federal Reserve.

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Fed actions also impact expectations related to a weaker U.S. dollar, which can be a driving force behind increasing relative demand for gold-mining stocks (GDX).

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MIXED CONVICTION MARKET

The market’s profile and the still mixed messages coming from asset class behavior do not allow for high conviction regarding any option at this stage, which is reflected by (a) the small % stakes in each of our positions and (b) the high cash position we still hold. On the other end of the spectrum, the data in hand does not warrant a 100% cash position.

As the data evolves, some additional clarity should emerge, allowing us to add to the successful positions and trim any laggards in the coming days, weeks, and months.

Today’s profile is weaker than at a similar point following the February 2016 low. Many of the initial 2016 “rush to get in” gains were fully retraced months down the road.

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A common question might be, “doesn’t Brexit skew the 2016 case?” The answer is no; the market was pricing in expectations for all events in 2016, just as it is pricing in expectations for all future events in 2019. It is quite possible we will not know the reasons for the still-weak profile in 2019 for many months; it may be that economic data will begin to deteriorate noticeably between now and spring. All TBD.

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MANY REASONS TO BE BULLISH

In addition to the improving momentum look on a substantial number of growth-oriented weekly charts, this week’s video covers numerous data points telling us to remain open to better than expected outcomes in the days, weeks, and months ahead.

Bullish and bearish crosscurrents have a way of working themselves out over time for those that can remain patient and proceed at a prudent, measured, and data-dependent pace. For now, we have some still-concerning data points…

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…and some very bullish and encouraging data points. Emerging markets were one of the first markets to seriously roll over in 2018; it is possible they are trying to lead again, but in a more constructive manner. All TBD.

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