About

Ahead of the Curve provides analysis and insight into today's global financial markets. The latest news and views from global stock, bond, commodity, and FOREX markets are discussed. Rajveer Rawlin is a PhD and received his MBA in finance from the Cardiff Metropolitan University, Wales, UK. He is an avid market watcher, having followed capital markets in the US and India since 1993. His research interests include capital markets, banking, investment analysis, and portfolio management, and he has over 20 years of experience in the above areas, covering the US and Indian markets. He has several publications in the above areas. He currently teaches business and management students at CHRIST University. The views expressed here are his own and should not be construed as advice to buy or sell securities.

Featured post

Time Series Analysis with GRETL

This video shows key time-series analyses techniques such as ARIMA, Granger Causality, Co-integration, and VECM performed via GRETL. Key dia...

Monday, 3 April 2023

Market Signals for the US stock market S and P 500 Index and Indian Stock Market Nifty Index for the Week beginning April 03

 

Asset Class

Weekly Level / Change

Implication for S & P 500

Implication for Nifty*

S & P 500

4109, 3.48%

Bullish

Bullish

Nifty

17360, 2.45%

Neutral **

Bullish

China Shanghai Index

3273, 0.22%

Neutral

Neutral

Gold

1987, 0.12%

Neutral

Neutral

WTIC Crude

75.70, 9.30%

Bullish

Bullish

Copper

4.08, 0.21%

Neutral

Neutral

CRB Index

268, 3.57%

Bullish

Bullish

Baltic Dry Index

1389, -6.72%

Bearish

Bearish

Euro

1.0842, 0.77%

Bullish

Bullish

Dollar/Yen

132.76, 1.58%

Bullish

Bullish

Dow Transports

14439, 5.34%

Bullish

Bullish

Corporate Bonds (ETF)

109.61, 0.13%

Neutral

Neutral

High Yield Bonds (ETF)

92.82, 2.86%

Bullish

Bullish

US 10-year Bond Yield

3.47%, 2.98%

Bearish

Bearish

NYSE Summation Index

-195, 53%

Bullish

Neutral

US Vix

18.70, -13.98%

Bullish

Bullish

Skew

126

Neutral

Neutral

CNN Fear & Greed Index

Neutral

Neutral

Neutral

20 DMA, S & P 500

3965, Above

Bullish

Neutral

50 DMA, S & P 500

4021, Above

Bullish

Neutral

200 DMA, S & P 500

3936, Above

Bullish

Neutral

20 DMA, Nifty

17214, Above

Neutral

Bullish

50 DMA, Nifty

17557, Below

Neutral

Bearish

200 DMA, Nifty

17473, Below

Neutral

Bearish

S & P 500 P/E

21.97

Bearish

Neutral

Nifty P/E

20.44

Neutral

Bearish

India Vix

12.94, -15.12%

Neutral

Bullish

Dollar/Rupee

82.18, -0.19%

Neutral

Neutral

 

 

Overall

 

 

S & P 500

 

 

Nifty

 

Bullish Indications

12

11

Bearish Indications

3

5

Outlook

Bullish

Bullish

Observation

The S and P and the Nifty rallied last week. Indicators are bullish for the week.

The markets are back at resistance. Watch those stops.

On the Horizon

US – Employment data, India – RBI rate decision

*Nifty

India’s Benchmark Stock Market Index

Raw Data

Courtesy Stock charts, investing.com, multpl.com, NSE

**Neutral

Changes less than 0.5% are considered neutral

 


The S&P 500 and the Nifty rallied last week. Indicators are bullish for the week. We are back above resistance near the 50 and 200 DMA’s on the S&P 500, as we transition from an inflationary regime to a deflationary collapse. The Nifty is at resistance near its 50WMA near 17320. The current market is tracking closely the 1973/2008 moves down in the S&P 500, implying a panic low right ahead in the upcoming months (My views do not matter, kindly pay attention to the levels). A dollar rebound is a likely catalyst.

The past week saw US equity markets rise. Most emerging markets underperformed, as interest rates rebounded upwards. Transports led the move up. The Baltic dry index fell. The dollar fell. Commodities rose. Valuations are quite expensive, market breadth rebounded, and the sentiment is now neutral. Fear has cooled off again, despite possible contagion risk from bank failures. The sudden steepening of the yield curve, with rates falling, is a precursor to the next recession, and most risky assets will underperform under such conditions.

The recent currency crisis should resume and push risky assets to new lows across the board. Deflation is in the air despite the recent inflationary spike and the Chinese Yuan, Euro, commodities, and Yen are telegraphing just that. Feels like a 2008-style recession trade has begun, with a potential decline in risky assets across the board.

The S&P 500 is encountering resistance near its 200 DMA, and its 200 DMA is declining. Monthly MACDs on most global markets are still negative. This spells trouble and opens significant downside risk ahead. We have got bounces from recent lows without capitulation. This suggests the lows may not be in and the regime has changed from buying the dip to selling the rip. We may get a final flush down soon. Risky assets should continue breaking to the downside across the board. Downward earnings revisions are underway.

The Fed is aggressively tightening into a recession. Deflationary busts often begin after major inflationary scares. The market has corrected significantly, and more is left on the downside. The Dollar, commodities, and bond yields are continuing to flash major warning signs despite recent countertrend moves.

The epic correction signal occurred with retail, hedge funds, and speculators all in, in January 2022, suggesting a major top is in. The moment of reckoning is here. With extremely high valuations, a crash is on the menu. Low volatility suggests complacency and downside ahead.

We rallied 46% right after the Great Depression (the 1930s) first collapse and we rallied over 120% in our most recent rally of the COVID-19 lows. After extreme euphoria for the indices, a highly probable selloff to the 3300 area is emerging on the S&P 500, and 15000 should arrive on the Nifty in the next few months. The Nifty which has been out-performing will likely catch up with other assets on the downside soon.

The trend has changed from bullish to bearish and the markets are getting a reality check and getting smashed by contagion risk and a strong dollar. Global yield curves have inverted significantly reflecting a major upcoming recession. Looking for significant underperformance in the Nifty going forward on challenging macros.

The critical levels to watch for the week are 4120 (up) and 4095 (down) on the S&P 500 and 17450 (up) and 17300 (down) on the Nifty. A significant breach of the above levels could trigger the next big move in the above markets.  High beta / P/E will get torched yet again and will likely prove to be a sell on every rise. Gold (though technically overbought in the short term) is increasingly looking like the asset class to own in the upcoming decade. You can check out last week’s report for a comparison. Love your thoughts and feedback.

 

 

World Indices


Live World Indices are powered by Investing.com

Market Insight

My Favorite Books

  • The Intelligent Investor
  • Liars Poker
  • One up on Wall Street
  • Beating the Street
  • Remniscience of a stock operator

See Our Pins

Trading Ideas

Forex Insight

Economic Calendar

Economic Calendar >> Add to your site

India Market Insight

My Asset Allocation Strategy (Indian Market)

Cash - 40%
Bonds - 20%
Fixed deposit - 20%
Gold - 5%
Stocks - 10% ( Majority of this in dividend funds)
Other Asset Classes - 5%

My belief is that stocks are relatively overvalued compared to bonds and attractive buying opportunities can come along after 1-2 years. In a deflationary scenario no asset class does well other than U.S bonds, the U.S dollar and the Japanese yen, so better to be safe than sorry with high quality government bonds and fixed deposits. Cash is the king always. Of course this varies with the person's age.