In mid-December, I warned that although my intermediate-term outlook (one to two quarters) for the U.S. stock market was bullish, Market Outlook readers should consider adopting defensive strategies to protect assets in the short term. Following an ill-fated attempt at a Santa Claus rally, the weakness I was afraid of emerged with a vengeance last week. In fact, this year’s nasty stock market decline has already done so much technical damage that it calls my positive intermediate-term bias into question. #-ad_banner-#The S&P 500 collapsed by 122 points, or 6%, to its lowest level… Read More
In mid-December, I warned that although my intermediate-term outlook (one to two quarters) for the U.S. stock market was bullish, Market Outlook readers should consider adopting defensive strategies to protect assets in the short term. Following an ill-fated attempt at a Santa Claus rally, the weakness I was afraid of emerged with a vengeance last week. In fact, this year’s nasty stock market decline has already done so much technical damage that it calls my positive intermediate-term bias into question. #-ad_banner-#The S&P 500 collapsed by 122 points, or 6%, to its lowest level since early October, exceeding my initial downside target of 1,965. The market-leading Nasdaq 100 and Russell 2000, which represent the technology and small-cap spaces, fared even worse, declining 7% and 7.9%, respectively. From a sector standpoint, last week’s broader market decline was led by financial services, which lost 8.7%. This was driven by a strong shift in investor assets back into the relative safety of U.S. Treasuries, which pushed long-term interest rates lower. Declining long-term interest rates eat into the profits of lending institutions. The best-performing sector was utilities, which only lost 0.4%. The decline in long-term rates encouraged… Read More