By Prieur Du Plessis | 16 June 2009
The predictions of the members of the Barron’s mid-year Roundtable discussion over the weekend were in agreement that the March lows of the stock markets would not be broken. This reminded me of one of the famous "Investment Rules" of Bob Farrell, legendary former chief stock market analyst at Merrill Lynch. Rule # 9 stated: "When all the experts and forecasts agree, something else is going to happen."
Meanwhile, many stock markets [June 15] registered their worst single-session percentage losses in a month. [[Didn't do so well on June 22, either. : normxxx]] Commodities also faced heavy profit-taking, but government bonds rallied and the US dollar strengthened against a basket of currencies. "We could be seeing one of those occasional all-change signals in short-term trends," said David Fuller (Fullermoney).
Richard Russell, veteran writer of the daily Dow Theory Letters, commented on Monday:
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As mentioned Sunday, 14 June, the S&P 500 had recently been mapping out a trading range between 925 and 950, as shown in the chart below. The 15 of June's close of 924 [[895 on close of 23 June: normxxx]] took the Index below the bottom of the range. As stock markets have started to show exhaustion (also seen from the low volume characterizing the last few days’ increases), the odds are that this could be more than a "false alarm".
Source: StockCharts.com
An analysis of the moving averages of the major US indices shows all the indices still trading above their respective 50-day moving averages, but the Dow Jones Industrial Index has again fallen below the key 200-day line, rejoining the Dow Jones Transport Index. With the exception of the Nasdaq Composite Index, all the indices are below the early January peaks. Importantly, the levels from where the rally commenced on March 9 should hold in order for base formations to remain in force.
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
Based on pronouncements at last weekend’s meeting of the Group of Eight finance ministers, "green shoots" seem to be wilting somewhat, leaving investors questioning whether the recent reflation trade has not been getting ahead of itself. The "less-bad-than-expected" school of thought is largely based on survey data such as the Purchasing Managers Indices (PMIs). It therefore makes for interesting reading to revisit the historical relationship between the PMI and stock market movements. The example below shows the US composite (services and manufacturing) PMI plotted together with the 12-month percentage change in the S&P 500.
Source: Plexus Asset Management and I-Net Bridge
For some fun with numbers, I have done a regression analysis of the two series, resulting in an R2 coefficient of 0.76. Applying the regression results to a range of PMI assumptions, the expected changes in the S&P 500 are as shown in the table below.
Click Here, or on the image, to see a larger, undistorted image.
The figures show that a "pessimistic" scenario of a stagnant PMI would result in a decline of 23.4% in the S&P 500 (i.e. an index level of approximately 700). Even a "realistic" scenario of gradually increasing the PMI by 1% per month between now and November would still result in the S&P 500 being 8.7% lower by the end of November. Interestingly, the stock market seems overpriced under all scenarios over the next few months and only reaches positive territory again in August under the "very optimistic" scenario and in November under the "optimistic" scenario.
And lastly, John Murphy (StockCharts.com) concurs, remarking:
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Normxxx
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The markets are range bound right now between 8000 - 8500 its a good trading range and investors and buy on dips and short on rise of the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
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