Tuesday was a doubly significant day for the S&P 500. Not only did we notch a fresh all-time high, this also became the longest bull market in history. Not bad for a market that most were giving up on only a few weeks ago.
Last week stocks stumbled on fears of a Turkish collapse, but I wasn’t worried. If the stock market didn’t care about a trade war between the world’s two largest economies, why would it get spooked by problems in a minor eastern European country with an economy smaller than Netflix’s market cap?
Hindsight bias being what it is, everyone knows now it wasn’t a big deal. But if we want to make money we need to know these things ahead of time. Luckily readers of this blog were ready because I wrote the following last Tuesday before we dipped to 2,800 and bounced decisively off support:
While it already looks like the Turkish selloff is dead, we need to hold this bounce for a few more days to be certain. There is a chance this bounce could fizzle and we continue slipping back to 2,800 support. If that happens, that will be a far more attractive entry point. Until then I will keep watching, waiting, and hoping for that next profitable opportunity.
As for our longer-term positions. There is nothing to see here. Stick with what has been working and ignore the noise. The market is still setting up for a strong rally into year-end.
That was simple and profitable advice for both short-term traders and long-term investors. And even better for regular readers of this blog, they had the cash to buy the dip because I recommended locking in profits the week before.
While it is nice to reflect on profitable trades, what people really want to know is what comes next. Even though Tuesday was a record day for the S&P 500, things got a more difficult in the afternoon after Trump’s personal lawyer plead guilty and appears willing to work with prosecutors. If the worst plays out, Trump could be implicated in campaign finance violations. This was a developing story at the close and stocks continued to fall in after-hours trade.
That said, the losses were relatively minor, only falling 0.5% after the close. While this Michael Cohen stuff is making headlines today, it doesn’t really surprise anyone. This scandal has been brewing for months and if the market was truly worried about it, we would have fallen on these headlines a long time ago. If it didn’t matter then, it doesn’t really matter now.
The market is a little more vulnerable to these headlines simply because we are at the upper end of the trading range and a cool down was inevitable. If it wasn’t these headlines, it would have been something else. We are still stuck in the slower summer months and we won’t have the firepower to push a large directional move until institutional money managers return from their summer cottages. Until then we should expect these smaller directional moves to fizzle at the edges of the trading range or one reason or another.
As I said, I don’t expect the market to overreact to these Cohen headlines because anyone who was paying attention saw this coming a mile away. Remember, we fear what we don’t know, not what everyone else is talking about. There are real risks lurking out there, but this is not one of them.
And to editorialize a little here, I actually don’t think the market would mind all that much if Trump was bogged down by a scandal that robbed him of a big chunk of his political capital. The stock market got the regulatory relaxations and tax cuts it was looking for last year. In a perfect world Trump would have gone on a two-year vacation instead of starting fights with our biggest trading partners. At this point there is a good chance the market would actually cheer Trump getting his hands tied so that he couldn’t screw with anything else.
Earnings season is winding down and by all accounts, it was a good one. Trade and politics don’t matter nearly as much as economic growth and profitability. Despite all the negative headlines dominating the financial press over the last six months, companies are doing well and the stock market is rallying on that strength. Nothing else mattered then and it won’t matter now. This is a strong market and we should continue to trade it as such.
For short-term traders, the opportunity to buy was last week as we tested support, not now that we are making new highs. This is a better place to be taking profits than adding new money. Assuming this Cohen thing is short-lived, we should push toward 2,900 resistance over the next week or two. That would be a good place to take short-term trading profits.
For our long-term stocks, there isn’t a lot to do here other than relax and let the profits come to us. We are setting up for a rally into year-end and we should enjoy the ride.
As for the tech trade, it missed the early parts of last week’s bounce off of support, but it has been catching up the last two days. The tech trade will survive as long as the broad market does well and it will continue leading the way. FB and NFLX got hit pretty hard and are consolidating their losses, but the worst is behind us. These are the discounts people were praying for a few months ago. No doubt in a few months those same people will be kicking themselves for not buying these discounts when they had the chance.
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Jani
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Jani Ziedins (pronounced Ya-nee) is a full-time investor and financial analyst that has successfully traded stocks and options for nearly three decades. He has an undergraduate engineering degree from the Colorado School of Mines and two graduate business degrees from the University of Colorado Denver. His prior professional experience includes engineering at Fortune 500 companies, small business consulting, and managing investment real estate. He is now fortunate enough to trade full-time from home, affording him the luxury of spending extra time with his wife and two children.
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