|

BRIEF UPDATE ON U.S. MATERIALS,
RETAIL, LARGE CAP/TECH ETF TRENDS
by
Econotech
May 31, 2007
Like
last week's article (May 24, "When Greenspan Talks, Do People
Still Listen?" link)
, this short update simply consists of three e-mails I sent out this
morning.
Materials Sector Overextended on
Unprecedented Global Boom and M&A
The global economy, led by China, India and other emerging markets, is
in arguably its strongest five-year boom in history, in terms of sheer
scale, scope and speed. The U.S. equity sectors that have benefited
most are energy, materials and industrial. Attached is an update of
the 4-year weekly chart of XLB, the materials sector etf, that I last
e-mailed on May 4, left click once on it to enlarge for better
viewing.

In my May 4 e-mail I wrote: "the XLB is now at the top of the
regression channel (three parallel blue lines, which curve slightly on
a log scale) for each timeframe shown [with just one exception of five
separate charts of XLB from long-term to very short-term timeframes]
... in the past, XLB's strong uptrend has tended to pause and
consoldiate when it reaches the top of these regression channels.
There is some potential upside left ... of about another 1 1/2 points,
about 3.8%, which I would not rule out, given the current worldwide
stock momentum."
That
was when XLB was 39.23, it's now at 40.93. I.e. it is even more
overextended or overbought at this point, e.g. one indication being
the "stochastic momentum index" in the bottom panel.
Obviously no one knows when the strong uptrend in the materials sector
from its July 2006 lows (red trendline) will start to consolidate, but
the odds of that happening usually continue to increase the higher
this etf goes above its long-term regression channel (the parallel
blue lines).
Nascent Defensive Market Shift Into
U.S. Large Caps and Tech?
A possible nascent, defensive market shift into U.S. large cap stocks,
including tech, continues. During most of the 2002-07 bull market,
international, especially emerging market, and U.S. small cap stocks
both dominated U.S. large cap and U.S. tech (the darlings of the
previous cycle).
However, since the beginning of 2007, the 200-day moving average (ma)
of SPY (S&P 500) relative to
IWM (Russell 2000) has had its first sustained, albeit small, rise,
meaning the long downtrend of U.S. large to small caps may, emphasis
on may, be finally starting to change in favor of large caps. A
similar picture is only just beginning now with respect to QQQQ (Nasdaq
100) relative to IWM, with
this 200-day ma just now turning up in May.
The 200-day ma of SPY relative to
EEM (emerging markets) flattened out in late 2006-early 2007. This
followed a very large decline of about -40% in the SPY to EEM relative
strength the prior two years. Since late March, the 200-day ma of SPY
to EEM has slightly declined again.
The value of SPY relative to
EEM made a potential double bottom in April, the first bottom at the
same relative level being in May 2006, just before a brief strong
rally in SPY relative strength as EEM sharply corrected down in
May-June 2006.
A similar thing may happen if China's small correction this week were
to deepen and/or spread to other emerging markets, sending money back
into the perceived short-term safety of the heavily indebted U.S.
economy and weak dollar.
Also as I noted in my last week's comment link,
the alpha, risk-adjusted excess return, of EEM is now around zero, it
just turned slightly positive again this week (alpha takes into
account factors that relative strength does not, and also is more
amenable to most fundamental analysts).
After the typical strong move in U.S. tech stocks in the first year of
the 2002-07 bull market, I am usually somewhat skeptical of the
long-term staying power of any U.S. tech rally in this cycle, viewing
them as either seasonal (fourth quarter) and/or a potential sign of
impending short-term consolidation of the far more powerful moves in
the true market leading sectors in this cycle, such as international
(both emerging market and non-U.S. developed), energy, materials and
industrial, etc.
Shop ‘Til They Drop U.S. Retail
Stocks
The health of the U.S. economy usually means American consumers
shopping 'til they drop (using East Asian and Mideast oil credit), no
matter what else might seem to be going wrong (e.g. this week a
correction in China's frothy equity markets that global markets have
shrugged off so far).
Attached is a 4-year weekly chart, courtesy of Prophet.net, of RTH,
the retail stock etf, that reflects this ongoing American shopping
binge, left click on it once to enlarge for better viewing. RTH broke
out of a long sideways consolidation (two parallel red lines) in the
beginning of 2007, and is now threatening to break out above its
recent resistance (short purple horizontal line).

Btw, this does not mean that U.S. retail stocks have been a preferred
place to park investment capital, since they have had negative alpha,
risk-adjust excess return (relative to the S&P 500 and U.S.
interest rates), for most of the time since Sep 2005 (bottom panel),
let alone greatly underperforming stocks and sectors exposed to the
huge emerging market uptrend.
But it does indicate that, for now at least, investors in U.S. retail
stocks still seem to think the American economy will be fine into the
second half of 2007, as indicated by RTH's still intact strong uptrend
since July 2006 (rising brown trendline, and rising red 200-day moving
average).

© 2007 Econotech
Editorial
Archive | Econotech
Blogspot
This
article is intended solely for information purposes. The opinions are
those of the author only. Please conduct further research and consult
your financial advisor before making any investment/trading decision. No
responsibility can be accepted for losses that may result as a
consequence of trading on the basis of this analysis.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Econotech
USA
Email l Website
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense.
|