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[PLUS] Weekly Sentiment Report

February 16, 2021

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaway: There is ample evidence of investor complacency, optimism, and aggressive risk-taking.

The behavior of the broad market (another breadth thrust last week and the weekly NYSE + NASDAQ new high list is at its highest level ever) suggests some of this may be justified.

Sentiment is likely to become a more acute headwind when rally participation narrows and/or optimism remains elevated in the face of market volatility.

For now, optimism has been revealed as a mile wide but only an inch deep, with concern rising the moment the market stops rallying.

[PLUS] Weekly Market Notes & Breadth Trends

February 16, 2021

From the desk of Willie Delwiche.

Key Takeaway: Financials & bond yields finished last week at new recovery highs.

They were joined by the most stocks ever on the NYSE + NASDAQ making new 52-week highs.

Small-cap leadership is intensifying as stocks reflect better than expected earnings and optimism about the path of economic growth.

[PLUS] Weekly Momentum Report

February 13, 2021

From the desk of Steve Strazza 

Don't miss this weeks Momentum Report; our weekly summation of all the major indexes at a Macro, International, Sector and Industry Group level. As a reminder, we analyze this shorter-term data within the context of the structural trends at play.

Willie tweeted this morning and made reference to some of the staggering median stock performance numbers off the 52 week lows. Again, not a lot of context here but some of these numbers are very eye opening. IWC (Micro caps) are +175.8% off the 52 week lows!

Looking Inside The Indexes To Find Trends & Identify Leadership

January 28, 2021

Years ago, early in our marriage, my wife and I went to a car dealership with her dad to make one of those all important, young couple purchases: a new car.

While my wife and her father were chatting with the salesman, I was all over the car pushing every button, pulling every lever and opening every compartment. I wanted to know what was what, where things were, and how it all fit together. The three of them were a bit taken aback as I moved from the front seat to the back, methodically finding knobs and uncovering compartments that the salesman didn’t even know existed.

Our marriage survived that episode and I've got a great relationship with my father-in-law but we didn't buy the car.

I am a tinkerer by nature. My dad once rebuilt a motorcycle engine in the living room of the small apartment he shared with my mom shortly after they were married. The point is, I like to know how things work. I'm not afraid to pull something apart, look at the insides, and then put it back together. I always use all the screws and only rarely does a spring or ball bearing go missing.

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Global Market Breadth Approaching Critical Levels

January 27, 2021

The Percent of global markets trading above their 50-day average is faltering. It's dropped to 78% (83% for Developed Markets & 74% for Emerging Markets). Below 70% is a warning for the market, below 40% is usually bad news.

Check out the Chart:

You can download this week's full Sentiment here:

Please let me know if you have any questions.

JC

Breadth Thrusts & Bread Crusts: Don't Ask for Asparagus in January

January 24, 2021

It's late-January. We've rung in the New Year. Christmas decorations are put away. We're settling into the late winter slog of cold & snow.

In my reading on this morning (a cold & snowy one in Milwaukee), I came across the following passage:

"You see, Rodya, to make a career in the world , it's enough, in my opinion, if you always observe the season; don't ask for asparagus in January, and you'll have a few more bills in your purse; the same goes for this purchase. The season now is summer, so I made a summer purchase. . ."

It's from "Crime and Punishment" by Dostoevsky. Since it's a Russian novel, explaining exactly who is talking, who is being spoken to, and the overall context would take too much time. But I'm quite sure that we can look at what is being said on its own and glean some wisdom.

Breadth Thrusts & Bread Crusts: C.R.E.A.M.?

January 21, 2021

It's not a new chart - in fact it makes the rounds on a fairly regular basis.

The iteration I saw this week showed the relationship between global money supply, stocks and high yield bonds over the past five years. The trend for all three was the same - up and to the right, with early 2021 bring a fresh round of new highs.

For whatever reason, my first thought on seeing this version was that Wu-Tang Clan had it right all along.

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Stocks Are Historically Expensive. So What?

January 14, 2021

In case you missed it this week, our team just got a whole lot better. Willie Delwiche is officially part of the Allstarcharts Team. We couldn't be more excited to have someone with his experience adding to the conversations we're already having every day.

To no surprise to any of us, Willie is already hitting the ground running with some excellent perspective on current market sentiment, valuations and breadth.

Here's what he had to say today,

Stocks are historically expensive, but this is offset by ample liquidity being provided via monetary policy (and to a lesser extent the hope of additional fiscal stimulus). Investor sentiment is heavily tilted toward optimism and complacency. This becomes a more acute concern when market momentum is faltering and/or rally participation is narrowing. That is not currently the case, as an increasing number of markets have broken out of bear markets that stretch back to 2018 or earlier"