US stocks may not be in a bubble, but a pullback could be near
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[March 13, 2024] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Some market participants believe the relentless
U.S. stock rally is poised for a breather, even if it remains unclear
whether equities are in a bubble or a strong bull run.
The benchmark S&P 500 index is up over 25% in the last five months, a
phenomenon that has occurred just 10 times since the 1930s, according to
BofA Global Research. In an advance led by stunning gains in chipmaker
Nvidia, the S&P has already made 16 record highs this year, the most in
any first quarter since 1945, CFRA Research data showed.
Bullish investors argue those gains stem from solid fundamentals, rather
than the type of rampant speculation that has accompanied past bubbles.
Oft-cited reasons include a strong U.S. economy, expectations the
Federal Reserve will cut interest rates this year, and excitement over
the business potential of artificial intelligence.
Yet some investors believe the market's nearly uninterrupted ascent
means a pullback is due. The last time the S&P 500 slid more than 5% was
in October, though BofA data shows such sell-offs historically occur
three times per year on average. The index is up 8.5% this year.
"A lot of good news is priced into the market," said Michael Arone,
chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors. "From my
perspective that just suggests that the risks are skewed to the
downside."
It is not immediately clear what could cause a market sell-off. While
stronger-than-expected inflation has dented expectations for how deeply
the Fed will cut rates this year, many believe borrowing costs are still
heading lower. Elevated consumer prices have also been seen as evidence
of economic strength.
Investors have largely dismissed other concerns, from pockets of
instability in U.S. regional banks to China's lackluster economy.
Nevertheless, some indicators are flashing a warning. The S&P 500's
weekly relative strength index (RSI) - which gauges whether stocks are
overbought or oversold - has climbed to just over 76, a level it has
rarely topped since 2000, Miller Tabak data showed.
Significant sell-offs followed the last two times the index exceeded
those levels: a 10% drop in the S&P 500 in January 2018 and a 30% plunge
as COVID-19 emerged after the index topped that level in January 2020.
"None of this means we're looking at a major long-term top," said Matt
Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak. "However, it does tell
me that we're getting ripe for a material pullback."
Growing investor optimism has also raised concern. The percentage of
investors expressing a bullish view about the six-month outlook for
stocks rose to 51.7% in the latest weekly survey from the American
Association of Individual Investors, only the fourth time the bullish
level has topped 50% in nearly the past three years.
High optimism is often viewed as a contrarian indicator because it means
the bar for positive surprises is elevated.
"The sentiment backdrop right now ... makes the market vulnerable to a
turn lower," said Kevin Gordon, senior investment strategist at Charles
Schwab.
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., March 7, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/file
photo
History shows the current advance may be primed for a pause. The S&P
500 erased losses from the prior bear market when it hit a record
high on Jan. 19, and has advanced about 7% since then.
That is in line with past rallies, when stocks kept climbing after
breaching new highs. Those moves, however, were followed by declines
of at least 5% in the 12 times such a situation occurred, said Sam
Stovall, CFRA's chief investment strategist.
BUT IS IT A BUBBLE?
For some, the market's optimism - coupled with parabolic moves in
shares of Nvidia and other AI-focused companies - has evoked
comparisons with past periods when asset prices soared to
unsustainable heights only to come crashing down, such as the meme
stock rallies of 2021 and the dot-com surge of 1999.
Nvidia's shares are up over 80% this year after tripling in 2023,
making it the third most valuable U.S. company. Other AI-linked
stocks have posted tremendous year-to-date gains, including Super
Micro Computer, which has soared 300% and is set to join the S&P
500.
Nvidia has shown a strong relationship with S&P 500 performance,
JPMorgan strategists wrote.
"We caution investors that this relationship is likely to work in
reverse when the AI euphoria peaks," the strategists said.
Others, however, note differences with bubbles of the past.
Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist, wrote that the
S&P 500 technology sector's three-year outperformance against the
broader S&P 500 stands at about 30%.
That is roughly in line with the 30-year average and far from the
peak of just above 250% in March 2000, Lerner said.
And there seems to be little indication of euphoria in the new issue
market, where initial public offerings have been comparatively
muted.
Only 54 companies had IPOs in 2023, compared with 311 in 2021,
before the S&P 500 peaked in January 2022, said Nicholas Colas,
co-founder of DataTrek Research.
"Sentiment has warmed up on equities since mid-2023 ... but is
nowhere near bullish levels of prior market peaks," wrote Savita
Subramanian, equity and quant strategist at BofA Global Research.
The bank recently raised its year-end target on the S&P 500 to 5,400
from 5,100. The index closed at 5,175.27 on Tuesday.
"In our view, this bull market has legs," she said.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Richard Chang)
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