Breadth Thrusts & Bread Crusts: Market Environments: Participation > Labels
Rather than looking at thresholds, I choose to look at participation when it comes to identifying market environments. Specifically, if more stocks (across the NYSE & NASDAQ) are consistently making new 52-week highs than lows, that seems like a bull market. If we are seeing more new lows than new highs, that is bear market behavior. All of the net gains in the indexes (looking particularly at the S&P 500 and the Value Line Geometric Index) over the past 2+ decades have come when our net new high A/D line has been trending higher. In other words, when new 52-week highs have persistently outnumbered new 52-week lows, stocks have tended to move higher.
This isn’t rocket science. It’s a reality that index-level strength will struggle to persist if more stocks are moving lower and making new lows than moving higher and making new highs.
This dynamic has been playing out in recent months. Over the past 100 trading days, new highs have outnumbered new lows just 11 times. During that period, the S&P 500 is down 5.5%. In the 100 trading days prior to that, new highs outnumbered new lows 77 times and during that period the S&P 500 was up 9.6%. This is not a historical anomaly. It’s the rule, not the exception.
From early January to late March, we experienced 57 consecutive days of more stocks making new lows than new highs. By the time the conventional questions about bear markets were being asked in late-February and early-March, we were already in the longest consecutive stretch of more lows than highs since the financial crisis (in 2008/2009).
That streak has since ended, but we are still seeing more new lows than new highs. The net new high A/D line, which has been moving lower since November, continues to fall. When we start to accumulate more new highs than lows on a consistent basis, this A/D line will turn higher and we can take a more constructive view on the market. Until then, it pays to be active and adaptive. Passive exposure right now brings more risk and less opportunity.
In either case, we can listen to the market, lean on the data and let the evidence write the headlines.