Market Risk May Have Just Become Two-Sided
May 15, 2023? |? Allio’s Chief Investment Officer, Raymond Micaletti , on why the bear case may be gaining steam.?
–
Yet another range-bound week for equities last week. The S&P 500 was essentially unchanged and has now traded within a 3% low-to-high range for the last 29 trading days–a situation Goldman Sachs’ trader, Scott Rubner, calls “Groundhog’s Day.”?
Inflation came in slightly dovish to expectations mid-week, jobless claims spiked on Thursday, and consumer sentiment was a big miss to the downside on Friday.
Despite this slew of bearish growth data, longer-term yields surged on Friday. (Is the market suggesting more inflation is coming?)?
The Fed’s balance sheet increased last week, which may have helped the Nasdaq eke out yet another weekly gain (+0.7%).
This week is the regular monthly options expiration on Friday. As such, we would expect head-scratching cross-asset behavior during the week.?
Thus, we may have to wait until the following week to get more clues as to where markets go from here.?
The Bull Case
For nearly a year, the bull case for equities has largely rested on the fact institutions have been more bullish than retail investors. That is still the case.?
And thus, we should be open to the possibility of a strong rally from here. Such a rally would mesh nicely with the multiple breadth thrusts that triggered earlier in the year.?
But beyond retail positioning and breadth thrusts, other bullish considerations include:?
The Bear Case
While the relative positioning between institutions and retail investors has been the foundation of the bull case for nearly a year–the bullish nature of that relative positioning appears to be losing steam.?
While institutions are net long equities and retail traders are net short equities, and while institutions have continued to buy and retail traders have continued to sell, the rate at which institutions are buying and retail is selling is much lower now than virtually anytime in the last year.?
Thus, relatively speaking, institutions are less bullish compared to retail investors now than they have been since a brief period in mid-December 2022 (and June 2022 before that).?
On top of waning relative sentiment, the entirety of the year-to-date market rally has been driven by only a handful of megacap tech stocks.?
I.e., market breadth has been exceedingly narrow. While it’s possible the rest of the market will catch up to tech, it seems more probable (although hardly a given) that tech will catch down to the market–if so, that would likely drag the broad indices lower as well.?
领英推荐
Waning relative sentiment and narrow breadth are hardly the only bearish catalysts, however. Others include:
Our View
We have been resolutely bullish–on account of bullish relative sentiment–virtually nonstop since Q3 2022.?
Yet despite there being plenty of supporting evidence for a continued bull thesis, we are taking a neutral stance here.
This shift in our outlook largely stems from a shift in investor positioning in long-duration bonds and along the yield curve.?
Since the last Fed meeting in early May (just two weeks ago), institutions have been taking an aggressively bearish position in long duration bonds.?
Because we believe we’re in an inflation-driven regime in which equities and bonds will have positive correlation, if the smart money is positioning for bonds to fall, that’s an under-the-radar indication they expect equities to fall as well.?
To be sure, institutions’ combined positioning in equities, long-duration bonds, and along the yield curve is STILL in a bullish state relative to retail investors.?
BUT…at the rate it is trending bearish, it could flip negative in as little as two weeks’ time (and sooner if that rate accelerates).?
Even if it does turn bearish, however, the smart money often positions themselves defensively a bit early. Which is to say, equities could continue to drift higher or even squeeze higher before ultimately rolling over.?
Thus, it would not surprise us to see equities continue to rally in the near term, especially if it coincided with a more bullish narrative (e.g., AI, better than expected earnings) to entice retail traders back into the market.?
But with institutions sneakily shorting bonds rather than stocks, downside risk in the broad equity market now seems to be comparable to upside risk.?
Hence, our neutral outlook.?
Allio Portfolio Updates
No change to Allio’s portfolios. We continue to be tilted strategically for the prevailing secular regime and tactically to the Nasdaq 100 (on account of investor positioning and its strong technical condition).?
Allio Advisors, LLC is a registered investment adviser. Information presented is for educational purposes only and does not intend to make an offer or solicitation for the sale or purchase of any specific securities, investments, or investment strategies. Investments involve risk and, unless otherwise stated, are not guaranteed. Be sure to first consult with a qualified financial adviser and/or tax professional before implementing any strategy discussed herein. Past performance is not indicative of future performance.