Chart Of The Day: Russell 2000 Fundamentals Bright But Traders Are Cashing Out

 | Apr 22, 2021 09:33

At time of writing, European stocks were tracking US shares higher, after yesterday's Wall Street session showed the reflation trade is alive and well and all four major indices rallied.

What seems to have been overlooked in all the bull market rumpus are value stocks—companies whose profits suffered during lockdowns brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic, when growth stocks in the tech and communications sectors in particular outperformed. The recent narrative indicated that now, with economic growth back on track, value shares would begin to move higher.

Indeed, Bloomberg, as of yesterday, forecast sector revenue growth for 2021 going forward. In their model (visible here) value stocks are anticipated to increase revenues in Q1 by as much as one-third, while growth stocks' revenue is forecast to fall by one fifth YoY. 

Boosting that outlook are strong earnings results from Europe, most recently from Swiss food and beverage giant Nestle (SIX:NESN), which said, "organic sales should grow more than expected this year" citing strong growth in Q1 for its coffee and dairy products divisions. The increase was sparked by additional delivery services to consumers stuck at home during pandemic lockdowns as well as restaurants stocking up in preparation of reopening as lockdown restrictions begin to lift across the US and parts of Europe.

That would mean the outlook for a broader array of small and domestic businesses listed on the Russell 2000 should be rosier as they benefit from the reflation trade. In fact, analysts believe this earnings season may be the catalyst for the small cap index to fly. But the technicals for the Russell are the weakest among the major US benchmarks. The small cap index has been moving sideways even as peer indices—the Dow, S&P and NASDAQ—have been posting record after record.