Sector Rotation Points To Higher Stock Prices
This doesn't happen overnight either. Think of it like a cruise ship. It takes a long time for it to do a 180 and turn around. By observing this rotation, it is obvious what the ship is doing. We treat the market the same way.
This is a chart of the Consumer Discretionary Sector Index Fund relative to the Consumer Staples Fund $XLY vs $XLP. We are now breaking out to new all-time highs, which is evidence of risk appetite for stocks, not risk aversion:
Look back to the highs in 2007 for the S&P500. Notice how the Discretionary/Staples ratio had already peaked and was putting in lower highs while S&Ps were still making higher highs. This bearish divergence was evidence of a shift in positioning from the long only community. It was a heads up, among many other things at that time, that something was changing.
Fast forward to early 2009 and the Discretionary/Staples ratio was putting in a higher low while S&Ps were still making lower lows. Although the index itself, or the "stock market", was still in a downtrend, the "market of stocks", was already improving. We were seeing money flowing into Discretionaries and out of Staples, indicating that the long-only PMs were already putting money to work to take advantage of higher stock market prices. The rotation was clear.
I have been in the camp that stocks are going higher and we want to be buyers. This chart above is further confirmation that we are on the right track. I see a lot more good than bad out there, and we can chalk up new highs in the XLY/XLP ratio as another feather in the hat for the bulls.
Cheers,
JC