Skip to main content

Displaying 301 - 312 of 637

Breadth Thrusts & Bread Crusts: A Big Test For Passive Investors

February 17, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

I’m reading the book “Trillions” by Robin Wigglesworth right now. It’s about the rise of passive index investing – or, according to its sub-title, “How a band of Wall Street renegades invented the index fund and changed finance forever.” 

It’s been an enjoyable read so far. I’m about halfway through the book and am excited to see how it finishes. 

While Wigglesworth’s book has been written and published, the story of passive investing overall remains unfinished. If it is like other investing fads that have come and gone, some of the most exciting times (for better or worse) may lie ahead. History is littered with investment approaches that move from novelty to seemingly foolproof only to end in heartbreak and tears for those left holding the bag.

[PLUS] Weekly Sentiment Report

February 16, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaway: Speculative excesses have been unwinding for a year and that has taken its toll on investor sentiment. The overall mood is characterized by a lack of optimism rather than rampant pessimism. This is consistent with the grind lower in many areas of the market since new highs peaked in February 2021. The damage done beneath the surface has only in recent months impacted the indexes, but if that impact intensifies a further expansion in pessimism would not be surprising. Benchmark 60/40 portfolios have gotten off to their worst start in a quarter century and our strategic positioning indicators continue to point to a high risk backdrop. If there isn’t much of a reward at the end of the volatility rollercoaster, passive participants may start to actively question whether the ride was worth it.          

[PLUS] Weekly Macro Perspectives - Will Fed’s Plans Stress Market?

February 15, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaways:

  • Flat-footed Fed hurrying to get policy in harmony with reality
  • German yields paving the way for US yields to exceed expectations
  • Higher yields adding volatility, but Fed to focus on evidence of stress

Developments in and around the Ukraine are dominating the headlines, but history shows that market turmoil brought on by geopolitical events tends to be short-lived. More meaningful and lasting developments are coming from the bond market as it adjusts to a Federal Reserve that appears intent to aggressively bring policy more in line with inflation. The Fed needs to catch up to inflation (and economic fundamentals generally) and the bond market needs to catch up to the Fed.

[PLUS] Weekly Market Notes & Breadth Trends

February 14, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaways:

  • US equities churn as new lows out pace new highs.
  • Bond market is taking notice that the flat-footed Fed is trying to get ahead of inflation.
  • 60/40 portfolio off to its worst start in a generation could have “passive” investors looking for greener pastures.

[PLUS] Weekly Observations & One Chart for the Weekend

February 11, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

There are no magic indicators that are right 100% of the time, no silver bullets, no “one Ring to rule them all.” That’s why we spend so much time talking about weighing the evidence and looking at the behavior of risk on and risk off indicators. That being said, there are times when one indicator or another seems particularly relevant. That is now the case with the number of stocks making new highs and new lows on the NYSE+NASDAQ. The spread between new highs and new lows peaked in early 2021 and was fading (though stayed positive) for much of the year. The situation deteriorated in November and new lows started to outnumber new highs. Even as the indexes moved off of their January lows, we’ve continued to see more stocks making new lows than new highs. Since 2000 all of the net gains in the major US indexes (S&P 500, NASDAQ Composite, Russell 2000, Value Line Geometric Index) have come when the cumulative net new high list has been expanding. The bottom line is that history suggests the indexes could continue to struggle so long as new lows are outnumbering new highs. 

Breadth Thrusts & Bread Crusts: Fed Up With Inflation

February 10, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

There is plenty of chatter today about inflation, the bond market, and the Fed. 

I have a couple charts to share – and a couple key points worth making. 

Inflation continues to run much hotter than a year ago and the Fed is still playing catch-up. The yearly change in the median CPI was at its highest level in a decade going into COVID, and is now at its highest level in 30+ years. Pressure is not letting up, and the 3-month change in the median CPI has surged to its highest level on record.

[PLUS] Weekly Sentiment Report

February 9, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaway: Sentiment has unwound to a point that it’s now seen as an opportunity rather than a risk. Pessimism runs high, investors are cranky, and we have had the most bears since 2016. On top of that, our universe of risk-on/risk-off ratios continues to lean toward the risk-off side of the scale. There are signs of budding pessimism (Consensus bulls have risen for the second week in a row and the NAAIM exposure index fails to register excessive pessimism) after the recent bounce in the major equity indexes. But without a strong enough reaction to produce meaningful breadth thrusts it’s difficult to be bullish on the broader market.       

Sentiment Report Chart of the Week: Sentiment Composite Points To Opportunity

[PLUS] Weekly Market Perspectives - Ranging Toward Risk Off

February 8, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaways:

  • Risk pairs moving toward risk off extremes
  • Risk On is weakening more than Risk Off is strengthening
  • Risk indicators point to risk off environment across multiple time frames

After highlighting our Risk Off - Risk On Range-O-Meter last Friday, I want to do a deeper dive into what we are seeing from a risk perspective. A majority of our Risk Off vs Risk On asset pairs (13 of 20) have seen more strength out of the Risk Off component than the Risk On Component in recent weeks. Over the past month the average pair has dropped below the 50% threshold and is now in the bottom half of its recent range. Financial sector pairs (Broker Dealers vs S&P 500, Regional Banks vs REITs) stand out as exceptions - areas where Risk On assets are showing strength and working toward new highs).

[PLUS] Weekly Observations & One Chart for the Weekend

February 4, 2022

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

By looking at various ratios relative to where they have been over the past year, we get a sense of investor risk appetite from an intermarket perspective. The pairwise comparisons in our risk off - risk on Range-O-Meter show a decisive tilt toward risk off assets over the past month. A few (Staples vs Discretionary, Large-Cap vs Small-Cap, Yen vs Aussie Dollar) are nearing new 52-week extremes favoring the risk-off side of the ratio. We could get some near-term relief from the intense selling of January, some of that has been seen this week already. But if we are seeing broad and sustainable strength, I expect it will be evident by a decisive move toward the risk-on side of our range-o-meter.