Week Ahead: Equity Correction Likely Over; Stocks, Yields, Oil To Rise

 | Oct 14, 2018 13:40

  • Markets back to normal; Treasurys return to negative correlation with equities
  • Volatility bets, the biggest driver of the equity selloff, expected to be mostly over
  • Major Indexes, except Russell 2000, remain in clear uptrends
  • Based on Friday's Treasury sell-off and the rotation back into equities during the final day of trade last week, we believe the financial markets are recalibrating. The stock market selloff seen earlier in the week is probably a correction that has mostly run its course.

    In our view, stocks are now set to retest recent all-time records and yields will challenge seven-and-half-year highs. The dollar is likely to top-out while oil will resume its upward ascent, taking on its near-$77 recent high.

    h2 Rising Rates, Roiling Trade War Or Something Else?/h2

    Stocks posted their best performance in six months on Friday—the S&P 500 and Dow each gained significantly. However, it was the NASDAQ Composite that outperformed, as traders rotated back into tech shares, taking advantage of the deepest dip in technologies since March.

    Equity market trade was particularly volatile, as stocks gave up early gains. According to JPMorgan estimates, stocks finally tracked higher, and kept their profits, only after 70 percent of the computer-driven trading strategies were played out. While the market narrative dictated that last week's steep declines—the most extended sell-off in six months—were fueled by concerns about rising interest rates, with ongoing trade war concerns which would act to stifle growth as a backdrop, the reality was probably something different. The biggest selling pressure on markets this past week came from options related to changes in volatility levels.

    Put simply, the equity sell-off was provoked by traders unwinding positions as they restructured their portfolios, recalibrating along with the sudden shifts in the market dynamic, rather than because of a loss of faith in growth. This contradicts Morgan Stanley, whose analysts reported Wednesday that the market might have reached a "tipping point," with spiking yields likely to prompt a sector reallocation, from growth to value assets.

    Morgan Stanley went even further, predicting a market correction as early as 2019, sooner than most analysts anticipate. This pessimistic view followed the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) outlook. The organization cut its expectations for US growth partly due to the US-Sino trade dispute and the fact that some companies issued profit warnings.

    How, then, should traders proceed? We try to avoid second-guessing the market. We're cautious but remain alert to reversal signals. When both the fundamentals and the technicals support a continued bull market, we believe that should be taken at face value.

    h2 Sudden Volatility, Conflicting Technicals/h2
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    The S&P 500 Index gained 1.42 percent on Friday, paring its weekly selloff to 4.1 percent. Technology (+3.21 percent) and Communication Services (+2.23 percent) were the clear outperformers. Utilities (-1.11 percent) underperformed. While all 11 sectors were deep into red on a weekly basis, down at least 1 percent, Materials (-6.73 percent) and Industrials (-6.37 percent) led the benchmark's losses for the week. Utilities (-1.27 percent) outperformed for the week.