Major U.S. indices advanced modestly last week, with most tacking on 0.5% or less. This suggests expectations for lower corporate taxes and fewer regulations from a Trump presidency may be fully priced into the market. If this is indeed the case, I believe it will open the door for a period of seasonal weakness during the first quarter, similar to the one we saw last year, which resulted in an almost 19% decline in the broader market S&P 500 from the Dec. 29 high to the Feb. 11 low. #-ad_banner-#From a sector standpoint, the market was essentially split down the… Read More
Major U.S. indices advanced modestly last week, with most tacking on 0.5% or less. This suggests expectations for lower corporate taxes and fewer regulations from a Trump presidency may be fully priced into the market. If this is indeed the case, I believe it will open the door for a period of seasonal weakness during the first quarter, similar to the one we saw last year, which resulted in an almost 19% decline in the broader market S&P 500 from the Dec. 29 high to the Feb. 11 low. #-ad_banner-#From a sector standpoint, the market was essentially split down the middle last week, indicating investor indecision. Financials, technology, industrials and utilities outperformed the S&P 500, while real estate, materials, health care, energy, and consumer discretionary underperformed. Keep Watching Overhead Resistance In last week’s Market Outlook, I pointed out that the Dow Jones Transportation Average was testing major overhead resistance at its 9,310 November 2014 high. I said that as long as this level continued to hold, it suggested the correction I’ve been expecting may finally be beginning. This week’s first chart shows the NYSE Composite also recently tested and failed to break overhead resistance at its 11,255 May 2015… Read More