It‘s Only Tech that‘s Sold – Not S&P 500, Gold, Or Silver
S&P 500 is getting under modest pressure, and technology is to blame. Is the correction about to turn nasty from sideways? Still, no signs of that, even as investment grade corporate bonds are being sold off as hard as long-term Treasuries. Yet, these corporate instruments have only now broken below their late Oct lows – unlike long-dated Treasuries, whose price action resembles free fall.
These government debt instruments are arguably the key asset class for every precious metals investor to watch. What used to be gentle decoupling signs over the latest weeks and months got thoroughly tested the prior week. Yet, I stood firm in not calling gold down and out. The support zone at late Nov lows generated a rebound that was oh so likely to materialize.
Silver naturally outperformed, both copper and oil had a strong day, and agrifoods are making new highs. The inflation dynamics described in Friday‘s article aptly called Why the Sky Is Not Falling in Precious Metals continues unabated, and the pressure keeps building inside the metals and commodities.
Not even the dollar managed to benefit from the rising yields – the resumption of its bear market I called on Feb 08 is one of the 2021 themes. Money keeps flowing from the Treasuries market, and plenty is sitting on the sidelines (corporate or private) to still deploy and power stocks and precious metals higher. Those ready to withstand Bitcoin volatility (hello, the weekend Elon Musk tweet follow through) stand to benefit – cryptos are behaving like a store of value, a hedge against currency debasement. I wrote in my very first 2021 analysis that the Bitcoin correction wouldn‘t get far.
Powell Testimony
Powell‘s testimony is about to bring volatility, but does it have the power to change underlying trends? Not really – while his latest high-profile assessments brought about a downswing, stocks recovered despite the GameStop (contagion?) drama too. Should we see a replay of the above, new highs are coming – and, they are, in both stocks and precious metals. We‘re in a commodities supercycle on top!
Let‘s get right into the charts (all courtesy of www.stockcharts.com).
S&P 500 Outlook
The daily chart shows yesterday‘s turn of events clearly. The volume increased, indicating that the bulls will need to grapple with more downside.
Both the advance-decline line and advance-decline volume have curled noticeably, yet new highs, new lows continue higher. That‘s a confirmation of the broad-based nature of the stock market advance, further illustrated with the following chart.
What if all the constituent shares in the S&P 500 had equal weight (i.e., there is no $NYFANG)? The above chart is the reflection – and it‘s challenging the latest highs. The rotation theme I‘m discussing so often means, in this case, taking the baton from tech and seeing it pass to value stocks. Such broad advance is a healthy characteristic of bull runs far from making a top.
Technology
Here is the culprit behind yesterday‘s decline – on increasing volume, technology (XLK ETF) has plunged. Yet, it‘s the semiconductors (XSD ETF) that I am looking at for clues about how reasonable the decline has been. And given how the tech is holding up, it‘s a bit accentuated.
Credit Markets
High yield corporate bonds to short-term Treasuries (HYG: SHY) ratio is still behaving reasonably – the overlaid S&P 500 prices (black line) aren‘t accelerating to the downside. Thus far, everything keeps pointing to stocks behaving a bit more sensitively than throughout 2021 mostly, yet far from crashing or showing their readiness to. The real correction has to wait still – this is not the real deal.
Gold, Silver, and Treasuries
Gold price action indeed proved not to be as bearish. Finally, we see a clear refusal to move down even as Treasury yields continue to plunge. How long will these new dynamics stick, where would it take the yellow metal? I treat it as a valuable first swallow.
The scissors between gold and silver keep widening, and the white metal again outperformed yesterday. That‘s exactly the dynamics of the new precious metals upleg that I‘m expecting.
Both depicted miners to gold ratios show a clear pattern of post Nov resilience. GDX: GLD is not breaking to new lows, while $HUI:$GOLD rejected them. Bobbing around, searching for a local bottom before launching higher? That‘s my leading scenario.
Summary
The unfolding correction got a new twist with yesterday‘s downswing in stocks, and unless tech gets its act together, it appears the set will run further. Emerging markets fell harder than the Russell 2000 yesterday, which is proof that the correction isn‘t yet over.
Gold and silver price action remain encouraging, and the same can be said about oil and many other commodities. Once the stimulus bill is passed, the positive fundamentals will turn even more so, given the Fed‘s accommodative policies. Will these work to stave off the rising Treasury yields as well? If so, then gold‘s fundamentals got a crucial boost, which would soon be seen in the technicals too. As I wrote yesterday, the metals didn‘t get a knock-out blow – the medium-, and the long-term outlook remains bright, and too many market players on the short side in the short run means a high likelihood of a reversal – which is precisely what we saw.
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Thank you,
Monica Kingsley
Stock Trading Signals
Gold Trading Signals
www. monicakingsley. co
[email protected]
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