Could FANG Stocks Take A Bite Out Of The Nasdaq?

 | Jun 13, 2017 10:34

Last month we saw the biggest one day fall in US markets since September last year as concerns about a possible impeachment of US President Trump prompted a bout of significant market nerves.

For some time now there has been concern that the lack of volatility in global markets pointed to a general feeling of complacency amongst market participants about the potential for a big market sell off.

I share this concern, particularly since volatility indicators are at multi year lows, and as an analyst I tend to be a believer in mean reversion.

What this tends to mean is that prices or values generally return towards their long term historical average, given time. When these values deviate away by a large enough variable then the more likely they are to snap back aggressively.

This is where we are now with respect to the VIX stock market volatility average in the US, which saw its lowest value since 1993 earlier this month.

While US company earnings have been fairly positive, a lot of the gains seen in the past few months have been predicated on a significant number of promises about US fiscal and tax reform that have as yet been unfulfilled. The risk is that these promises may never come to pass, which means that a readjustment in market expectations could prompt a reassessment of asset valuations.

We’ve already seen the valuation in other asset classes start to reassess the likelihood of what the current US administration is likely to deliver and this has created a significant divergence between these markets and the stock market in particular.

The US dollar index, which at one point this year was up over 5% on an expectation of a significant fiscal stimulus has given up all of those gains. While US bond markets have seen long term yields do the same thing.

The US 10 year yield was at one point at 2.6% when the Federal Reserve hiked rates in December, but is now back around the 2.2% level where it was prior to President Trump’s win, while gold prices that fell sharply after Trump’s win have also bounced back.

The only asset class to have kept the faith in the Trump rally so far has been the stock market, which is up over 10% and still near all-time highs, despite recent sharp sell-offs.

h3 US Nasdaq 100 - daily/h3