Rare Equity Fund Outflows

STOCK PERFORMANCE FOLLOWING SIMILAR MOVES

Retail investors have erred on the side of caution in 2019. From a recent MarketWatch article:

Analysts said the “extremely cautious stance” of retail investors this year had been puzzling and acted as a drag for equity markets… Years of high bond inflows, such as 2012 and 2017 — and now 2019 — have typically been followed by weak bond fund inflows the following year.

Not only have bond inflows been strong, but outflows from equity mutual funds and ETFs have come at a six-month pace similar to December 2002, March 2009, December 2011, and July 2016. The BNP Paribas chart below was posted on Mark Ungewitter’s Twitter feed.

ciovacco-equity-fund-outflows.png

Given unusually high rates of equity outflows align conceptually with unusually high rates of pessimism, it would not be surprising if stocks performed well walking forward from the four periods highlighted in the BNP Paribas graph above. The table below shows S&P 500 performance was quite attractive in all four cases.

ciovacco-short-takes-chris-outflows-table2.png

The yellow portions of the table above help keep us grounded relative to how markets operate in the real world.

TODAY vs. SIGNIFICANT MARKET TOPS

It might be helpful to compare present-day equity fund flows to fund flows seen prior to the major stock market peaks in 2000 and 2007. As shown in the chart below, 2019 looks significantly different from March 2000 and October 2007.

ciovacco-equity-fund-outflows2.png

REALISTIC EXPECTATIONS

After showing weak ISM Manufacturing Survey data was not necessarily a showstopper on October 1, the S&P 500 found its footing and made an intraday low of 2855 on October 3; from that low, the S&P 500 rallied 299 points, hitting the recent intraday high of 3154 on November 27. Some giveback or retracement after a 299 point move would not fall into the shocking category. Our focus is on longer timeframes.

ciovacco-short-takes-blog-2019-spxy.png

VOLATILITY IS NORMAL, RATHER THAN ABNORMAL

In the historical cases shown above, was it a cake walk after fund flows reversed? No, walking forward from the end of December 2011, stocks rallied for over three years, but that move had plenty of normal-and-to-be-expected volatility between point A and point B. It is easy to look at the chart below and say, “Yes, we all know markets have red days and corrections during an uptrend”. It is a little bit harder to respect normal volatility when the market is open and your screen is covered in red.

ciovacco-short-takes-blog-2019-spxy4.png

WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE

The fund flows analysis above aligns with a recent study of stands near the 200-week, relatively high cash balances, and recycled DeMark counts.

WEEKLY VIDEO

The Thanksgiving week video opens with the possible significance of the monthly MACD cross that was nailed down after the Dow’s close on Friday, November 29.

DAY BY DAY

All of the above speak to probabilities, which is significantly different from certainty. We will continue to take it day by day with an open mind about a wide range of outcomes, from wildly bullish to wildly bearish.

This Signal Points To More Upside In Stocks

NEW MONTHLY SIGNALS

The MSCI World Index tracks over one thousand large and mid-cap stocks in twenty-two developed countries, covering 85% of the market capitalization in those regions. As shown via the chart below, a positive monthly MACD cross was just nailed down on the chart of the MSCI World Index, which speaks to improving perceptions of future economic outcomes outside of the United States.

ciovacco-capital-short-takes-chris-kathy-msworld2.png

Since the inception of the MSCI World Index, there have been five similar monthly MACD crosses. Subsequent S&P 500 performance was favorable in every case looking out one month to two years. The median S&P 500 gain one year after the previous signals was 19.42%.

ciovacco-capital-short-takes-chris-kathy-msworld.png

SIMILAR SIGNAL IN THE UNITED STATES

The opening segment of this week’s stock market video covers a similar bullish signal completed at the end of November on the monthly chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Unlike the limited data set of the MSCI World Index, the Dow allows us to see how the stock market performed following similar monthly signals dating back to 1948.

THE WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE

The signals covered above align with the signals covered on November 17 and November 24, telling us to keep an open mind about better than expected outcomes in the months ahead, while maintaining a healthy respect for normal volatility.