Chart Advisor | Focus on the Price
By John Jagerson, CFA, CMT Thursday, May 16, 2019 1. Walmart's (WMT) report confirms consumer spending 2. Dollar and interest rates continue to signal caution 3. Fundamental trends should identify this quarter's winners Major Moves I mentioned in yesterday's Chart Advisor that despite many headlines to the contrary, retail sales are still looking very good in the US. Spending naturally ebbs and flows but the US consumer still seems relatively strong. I also said that we can get some good confirmation for that assumption from Walmart's (WMT) earnings report this morning.
WMT reported that total sales were up in the first quarter, and same store sales were up 3.4% on a year over year basis. The company is a good proxy for consumer behavior because of its dominant position across the country and is especially sensitive to inflation issues or a weakening job market.
Some of WMT's positive performance is the result of growth in online sales including delivery and pickup features from physical locations. This has allowed the company to encroach further into other retailer's market share but it's not significant enough to hide a lack of growth or significant weakness among consumers. I think this is solid confirmation that consumer spending is still supportive for economic growth in the US.
As you can see in the following chart, the stock bounced up off its $100 pivot support level following its release. In my view, one of the negatives in the report (declining operating income) will increase the odds that the stock stops at resistance near $104 per share. WMT's report was representative of what we have seen a lot this earnings season; topline sales are rising, but profitability growth has started to ebb. S&P 500 The S&P 500 continued its bounce off support near 2,820 and recovered all of Monday's losses which shouldn't be much of a surprise if we look at history. There have been 72-days since the bull market began in 2009 that the S&P 500 has dropped -2% or more. Nearly 72% of the time, the market is higher 30-days following those declines than it was on the day of the drop.
Although I have a generally bullish bias, there are enough unknowns to warrant some caution as the S&P 500 approaches the resistance level of its prior highs near 2,940. For example, China warned today that the Trump Administration's move to sanction Huawei Technologies could damage ongoing trade talks. The Chinese telecommunications firm is prohibited from buying technology from US companies without special government approvals, which sent US semiconductor stocks lower. Qualcomm (QCOM) was down over 4% and Micron (MU) was down over 3% at one point today.
Risk Indicators - Dollar and interest rates signal caution From a risk perspective, most indicators either improved or remained stable today, except one: the US dollar is rising again. Besides the drag a rising dollar places on earnings growth and US exports, I have an additional concern about the dollar's gains today.
Protectionist strategies like tariffs tend to increase the value of the net-importing nation's currency. In this case, that means investors have been responding to the trade-war by driving up the value of the dollar. What jumps out to me is that investors are buying the dollar despite positive performance in the stock market.
Are currency traders more nervous about resurging trade tensions tomorrow or next week than stock investors? A divergence like that has happened before. The big drop in the S&P 500 in October 2018 was preceded by a rapid buying frenzy in the dollar that began in late September.
What would put my mind more at ease would be confirmation that longer-term interest rates are rising with stocks. Typically, long-term interest rates rise when stocks do because they are both driven by the same underlying fundamental factors. However, since the stock market began to rally on December 24th, 2018, that correlation has broken down.
The interest rate on 10-year Treasury bonds rose with the market today, but it is still extremely low. As you can see in the following chart, the 10-year yield is at potential support, but below the depths it fell to after the bear market last December. The dollar's strength and low long-term interest rates are both reasons for exercising caution right now. Bottom Line - It's a stock picker's market I understand that the way I have been describing market conditions lately may come off as a little contradictory. The bull market is still intact, spending is positive, and topline growth is still robust. But on the other hand, trade-war risks are high, emerging economies are slowing, and interest rates are falling.
In my experience, the benefits of trading in a split market like this is that it favors stocks with strong underlying fundamental growth trends. Sometimes referred to as a "stock picker's market" it is easier to identify the likely outperforming stocks when investors have to pay more attention to the fundamentals because the market won't keep "lifting all boats," like it does when risk is very low.
This kind of market provides an edge for those investors who understand value and why fundamentals can improve their chart analysis. How can we improve the new Chart Advisor? Tell us at chartadvisor@investopedia.com
Enjoy the Chart Advisor? Copy and share the link below to invite friends to sign up
Email sent to: mondemand.forex@blogger.com If you wish to update your newsletter preferences or unsubscribe, please click here
114 West 41st St, floor 8 New York NY 10036 © 2019, Investopedia, LLC. All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy |
Thursday, May 16, 2019
Stocks Rise but Yields Remain Low
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment