Signs of market bottom elude investors after steep selloff
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[May 14, 2022] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors are studying
an array of indicators for clues on how much further a brutal slide in
U.S. stocks could run, with some signs suggesting the tumble in equities
may not be over.
The S&P 500 extended its decline to nearly 20% from January’s record
peak on Thursday before an end-of-week bounce, approaching the cusp of a
bear market amid concerns that persistently high inflation will prompt
more aggressive Federal Reserve interest rate increases that could
undermine the economy. Declines have been even steeper in the tech-heavy
Nasdaq Composite, which is down 24.5% year-to-date.
Despite those losses, many widely followed indicators do not yet show
the pervasive panic, supercharged volatility and outright pessimism that
have emerged in past market bottoms - a potentially worrisome signal for
those looking to step in and buy on the cheap after the most recent
selloff in stocks.
Indeed, stocks ripped higher on Friday, with some pandemic era favorites
such as the ARK Innovation ETF showing double-digit percentage gains,
albeit from depressed levels.
"I don’t think we are out of the woods yet on a near-term basis," said
Mark Hackett, chief of investment research at Nationwide. "That being
said, investor expectations have been reset dramatically."
For instance, the Cboe Volatility Index, known as “Wall Street’s fear
gauge,” now hovers around 30 compared with a long-term median of nearly
18. Past market bottoms, however, have coincided with an average level
of 37, and the VIX climbed above 80 in March 2020 during a
COVID-19-fueled market plunge after which the S&P 500 more than doubled
from its lows on the back of unprecedented Fed stimulus.
Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivatives for Charles
Schwab in Austin, Texas, is looking for a one-day spike to a level of at
least the mid-40s as likely "where you actually see panic."
"If I don’t see panic ... it might mean we are not at the bottom yet,"
he said.
Hackett, of Nationwide, is watching options trading for a spike in the
ratio between puts, which are typically bought for downside protection,
and calls.
"Most of these indicators, put/call being one of them, are already very
bad historically," Hackett said. However, he said, "we haven’t seen that
capitulation where everything is flashing red."
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"Stock Exchange" is seen over an entrance to the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) on Wall St. in New York City, U.S., March 29, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Meanwhile, analysts at BofA Global Research on Friday shared their
“capitulation” checklist, which showed that while some indicators, such as
investor cash amounts, have hit critical territory, others have not met levels
attained during the peak of past selloffs.
“Fear & loathing suggest stocks prone to imminent bear market rally but we do
not think ultimate lows have been reached,” they wrote.
Next week, investors will focus on earnings results from major retailers
including Walmart Inc and Home Depot Inc as well as a report on monthly U.S.
retail sales.
Whether clear signs of a bottom emerge or not, stock sentiment could also be
swayed by market expectations of how aggressively the Fed will need to raise
interest rates in the remainder of the year. The central bank has already raised
rates by 75 basis points since March and has signaled that a pair of 50
basis-point increases may be coming in its next two meetings.
"I think you are going to have to at least wait for two or three 50 basis-point
rate hikes before you start to see any real signs of people coming back in,”
said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth Management.
Rather than looking for signs of a bottom, Willie Delwiche, an investment
strategist at market research firm All Star Charts, is focused on clearer
indications that stocks can mount a sustained rally.
Among the factors he watches is whether the net number of 52-week highs versus
lows on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq combined turns positive, from
current negative levels. Another is the percentage of S&P 500 stocks making
20-day highs rising to at least 55% from less than 2% at last count.
“Too many people right now are trying to pick a bottom and that’s proving to be
futile and expensive,” Delwiche said. “This is a risk-off environment ... Moving
to the sidelines, letting the volatility play out, makes a lot of sense for
investors.”
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Matthew Lewis)
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