Chart Of The Day: S&P 500 Weakness Suggests Possible Top

 | Sep 06, 2017 10:02

By Pinchas Cohen

Yesterday, in our Opening Bell post we discussed the confusion among investors regarding risk. While Asian shares declined on renewed tensions between the U.S. and North Korea, European shares advanced and European bonds fell, even while U.S. equity futures were declining and U.S. Treasuries were rising, all at the same time. Later, after the U.S. market open, U.S. shares resumed the decline that began with futures – the Dow fell 234 points and the S&P 500 fell the most since August 17, ending a six-day rally, and Treasuries extended their earlier declines.

In short, the global market openers and closers (Asia and the U.S., respectively) traded risk-off, while the middle market (Europe) traded risk-on.

h3 Why The Global Market Divergence?/h3

There are four possible explanations:

  1. Europe displayed classic Middle Child Syndrome and bucked the trend.
  2. While Asian and U.S. risk-off sentiment were influenced by tensions with North Korea (due to geographic proximity in Asia's case and being North Korea's enemy in the U.S.'s case), Europe may have felt like a neutral zone.
  3. Global traders started the day yesterday with the recent escalation fresh in their minds and traded risk-off, but by the time European trade opened investor fears subsided. When US markets opened, traders got news of Hurricane Irma’s follow-up to Harvey, and returned to risk-off.
  4. Global traders couldn’t make up their minds – they started the day with risk-off, sheltering in safe havens, then shifted to risk-on and came out of hiding, only to get scared and return to risk-off and sheltering havens again.

So, which is it? Risk-on or risk-off? While no one can know for sure, we can extrapolate.

While point #1 was written with some humor, a comprehensive study of trading during European hours yesterday compared to the Asian and U.S. sessions may reveal something on Middle Child Syndrome.

The second reason, namely exposure to the North Korean threat, is plausible, but shouldn’t that be moot in a global market? If Asian and/or U.S. shares fall they will inevitably drag European shares down with them.

How about the third reason, a second hurricane? It makes sense, but market reaction — namely rising oil and declining gasoline — was the opposite of what occurred during Harvey when oil declined due to offline refineries and shifting energy demands sent gasoline soaring 27 percent.

The current rise in oil and decline in gasoline seems to be a correction of the previous moves rather than a shift in the trend as the major fundamentals remain the same. Fundamentally, oil is rising to three-week highs as refineries restart after Harvey, while Irma spells trouble for gas as it heads toward Florida. There are no obvious signs of market reactions specifically to the hurricane. Rather, the narrative focuses mostly on North Korea and a bit on the looming U.S. debt ceiling.

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Could it possibly be the fourth reason, traders’ inability to make up their minds due to a lack of leadership? If that’s the real reason, it is a telltale sign of a market top. Let’s look at the balance of supply and demand, as represented on the chart.