S&P 500: Is the Rally Over?

 | Feb 27, 2023 07:34

  • Michael Wilson predicts a 26% fall in the S&P 500 this year, causing concern in the market.
  • Fed's preferred inflation indicator shows higher inflation, and the market expects further interest rate hikes from the Fed and ECB.
  • Bullish sentiment is decreasing, and volatility is increasing in the markets.
  • A few days ago, Michael Wilson, who took first place in last year's Institutional Investors survey when he correctly predicted a massive sell-off in equities, said the S&P 500 could fall by as much as 26% this year. No one has a crystal ball, but his comment has caused quite a stir.

    Friday's Personal Consumption Expenditures data is important as it is the Fed's preferred inflation indicator. The market was expecting a monthly rise of 0.4%, but it came in at 0.6% in the end. This will encourage the Fed to continue raising interest rates.

    The S&P 500 has shown some weakness in recent days. Firstly, it reached overbought levels on Feb. 2. The last time this happened was in August 2022, which meant a fall from 4325 to 3491 in less than two months. Second, because it is at a key point in relation to its 200-day moving average., it is very close to losing it.

    The S&P 500 has recently lost its positive correlation with Bitcoin. For most of 2022, the markets had a good positive correlation. With the exception of the bankruptcy of FTX in November, the last time the correlation was negative was in December 2021.

    h2 Investors’ Patience Is Wearing Thin/h2

    The average holding period for a US stock is now just ten months, down from 5 years in the 1970s. The average holding period of a mutual fund, at two and a half years, is also too low. Impatience does not help investors' odds. Time generally works in their favor when it comes to investing in the markets.

    Admittedly, we have just come out of a complicated 2022, and so far, in 2023, volatility has increased, and the range of daily movements is wide. But in reality, this is not unusual.

    1. The S&P 500 was in the red for 4 consecutive sessions last week, but thanks to Thursday, it did not reach 5 consecutive sessions (and falls of 5 consecutive days can happen in bull markets ). Looking back over the last 15 years, there were only two years without a 5-day losing streak: 2014 and 2017. So it is not that rare.
    2. This week marked the 35th stock market day, 17 of which saw the S&P 500 move 1% or more (up or down). Over the last 70 years, it ranks 5th among the years with the most such days. This brings us to volatility. The CBOE Volatility Index made a bottom in early February and has been rising ever since. This bottom, now a support, has prevented the index from crashing since April 2022.
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