If you’ve been watching the market action in recent days, you’ll notice a growing sense of unease. The S&P 500 has repeatedly scaled past 2,000, only to be rebuffed. Is it simply buyers’ fatigue or instead the result of growing concerns about the economies in China and Europe and military action in the Middle East? Frankly, the news outside our borders has been mostly negative, and we may be hearing about the rising set of challenges being faced by export-focused U.S. multinationals as earnings season gets underway in a few weeks. To be sure, the stocks that comprise the S&P… Read More
If you’ve been watching the market action in recent days, you’ll notice a growing sense of unease. The S&P 500 has repeatedly scaled past 2,000, only to be rebuffed. Is it simply buyers’ fatigue or instead the result of growing concerns about the economies in China and Europe and military action in the Middle East? Frankly, the news outside our borders has been mostly negative, and we may be hearing about the rising set of challenges being faced by export-focused U.S. multinationals as earnings season gets underway in a few weeks. To be sure, the stocks that comprise the S&P 500 aren’t in crisis mode — most of them trade near their all-time highs. Yet further down the food chain, small caps and micro caps are quickly breaking down. The Russell 2000 index has begun to drift steadily lower, and many of the underlying components in that index are now 30%, 40% or more from their 52-week highs. In fact, more than 140 stocks hit 52-week lows on Monday, September 22, on each the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange. That’s the largest number we’ve seen all year. The divergence between small cap stocks and their larger peers… Read More