"It will be interesting to see if the area around the SPY's Fed-day closing level continues to mark resistance on the heels of last week's rate hike, as the 'wild card' factor of pending tax reform legislation didn't impact the stock market action around prior rate hikes in the current tightening cycle. Traders should keep this region on their radar in the days ahead...
"When and if signed into law, how the market responds relative to the key SPY and SPX levels discussed above may give you a hint as to the market environment over the next month. Bulls will hope that the pattern of weaker-than-normal equity performance in the immediate days and weeks following a rate hike is broken."
-- Monday Morning Outlook, December 18, 2017
$SPY $266.75-$266.78 (pre FOMC day and FOMC day closes) are key levels for days and weeks ahead.Tendency for #Fed day closes to act as resistance immediately following rate hike in current cycle. $SPX
- Todd Salamone (@toddsalamone) December 14, 2017"The Russell 2000 Index (RUT - 1,530.42), after being engaged in a retreat since its end-of-November peak at 1,544, found support just above the round 1,500 level last week ... But note that this group has underperformed in 2017, and more retests of RUT 1,500 may be on the horizon -- especially if the passage of a tax bill becomes a 'buy the rumor, sell the news' event, as the 1,550 half-century mark resides just above current levels."
-- Monday Morning Outlook, December 18, 2017
As the SPY sparred with resistance levels last week, the Nasdaq Composite (IXIC - 6,959.96) and Russell 2000 Index (RUT - 1,542.93) followed suit, experiencing their own respective closing highs on Monday, too. The IXIC failed to take out the round 7,000 millennium mark, with Monday's close just 6 points shy of this psychologically important level. The RUT achieved an all-time closing high; however, it was 2 points shy of the 1,550 half-century mark discussed last week, before modest selling pushed the index back to its previous November all-time closing high in the 1,544 area.
Seasonality favors stocks. However, after a mid-December Fed rate hike, a lackluster response to the passage of a tax bill that slashed corporate tax rates, key benchmarks failing at resistance levels, and a bearish divergence in the Relative Strength Index (RSI) of the SPY, RUT, and IXIC, signs point to a grind for both bulls and bears in the immediate weeks ahead. While bears may be happy to see a lackluster reaction to the tax bill headlines, it is also important to note that there was not nearly enough selling pressure to push key benchmarks below support -- such as IXIC 6,850, RUT 1,500, or SPY 250.
Additionally, after taking a glimpse into the equity options market, a period of short-term weakness would not be a major surprise. For example, per the chart immediately below, note how the 10-day ratio of equity put buying to call buying reached a multi-year low recently and is moving higher (albeit only slightly). Historically, when this ratio turns higher from an extreme low, the market is vulnerable to a pullback at worst, or choppy, sideways environment at best.
"Fund flow data indicates that investors in the US are not at all bullish: domestic equity ETFs and mutual funds have had outflows for 8 months in a row. Notable peaks in the S&P in 2010, 2011 and 2015 were accompanied by fund outflows; this time, investors seem to be selling these funds as price rises..."
-- The Fat Pitch, December 15, 2017
"Fund investors have favored overseas markets all year as long-dormant economic growth kicked into higher gear in Europe, Japan and across emerging markets. Investors have added $221 billion into international equity funds in 2017, on pace to be the biggest one-year haul since at least 2000, according to the Investment Company Institute. Meantime, some $35 billion has exited U.S. stock mutual and exchange-traded funds in 2017."
-- The Wall Street Journal [subscription required], December 22, 2017
"Everyone's got a bull case nowadays.... Credit crisis savant Gary Shilling says deregulation is driving equities. Even Jeremy Grantham, venerated advocate of buying cheap, says it'll be a long wait....'I've temporarily broken ranks with the general tone of the value community.'...Bears that once roared at any sign of trouble now seldom make a peep. Too many dire predictions failed to come true...Bearish bets as a percentage of total U.S. shares available for trading is hovering around 4 percent, higher than the average of 3.8 percent, according to exchange data compiled by Bloomberg that goes back to 2008."
-- Bloomberg, December 21, 2017
Even though the market has tended to struggle in the immediate days and weeks after a Fed rate hike during the current tightening cycle, Fed rate hikes have been taken in stride from a bigger-picture perspective. I would expect the same to continue in the months ahead, as there are currently no major signs of technical deterioration in the market, despite short interest increasing and fund investors perceiving better opportunities elsewhere.
I hope the holiday season has been a joy for you and your families. Thank you for reading Monday Morning Outlook in 2017, and I hope to provide you valuable insight in the coming year.
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