Ominous market signals show more trouble could await US stocks

A security personnel stands inside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) building on Tuesday following Monday’s broad sell off in New York City, US, March 11, 2025.—Reuters


A security personnel stands inside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) building on Tuesday following Monday’s broad sell off in New York City, US, March 11, 2025.—Reuters

NEW YORK: Investors are wary about worrisome market signs, after a steep US stocks selloff that has wiped out more than $4 trillion in value and all of the gains notched following President Donald Trump’s election.

Among the signs are technical signals such as the S&P 500 on Monday closing below a crucial trend line, a key measure of the market’s internals weakening, a concerning pattern in volatility futures contracts, rising cash levels among investors and de-leveraging by hedge funds away from equities.

US equities experienced a punishing drop this week, with the S&P 500 briefly falling into correction territory on Tuesday as uncertainty over Trump’s tariffs exacerbated worries about economic growth.

“This is a classic S&P 500 selloff, with growth stocks taking it in the teeth,” said Patrick Fruzzetti, managing director of Rose Advisors, part of wealth management firm Hightower Advisors. “With more bearish signals appearing, this could be ongoing for quite a while.”

After registering its biggest drop of the year on Monday, the benchmark S&P 500 index endured another volatile day on Tuesday, ending down 0.8 per cent. The index has dropped 9.3 per cent from its February 19 record high, with some of the market’s highest fliers including Nvidia and Tesla hit particularly hard. It is now down 3.6 per cent since Trump’s November election.

TARIFF, RECESSION UNCERTAINTY

The ominous market signals add to growing anxiety about the economic outlook. A Reuters poll last week found 95 per cent of economists across Canada, the US and Mexico said the risk of a recession in their respective countries had increased following Trump’s chaotic tariff implementation.

Trump has offered conflicting views on whether the US could face a recession amid tariff concerns. Over the weekend he declined to predict if there could be a recession. On Tuesday Trump’s take on a possible recession was: “I don’t see it at all.”

“The back and forth on tariff announcements is playing havoc with consumer and business confidence,” equity strategists at HSBC said in a note.

Shares of major US airlines sank on Tuesday after Delta Air Lines DAL.N slashed its first-quarter profit estimates by half. Delta’s CEO said the environment had weakened due to US economic uncertainty.

WORRYING TECHNICAL SIGNALS

On Monday, the S&P 500 closed below its 200-day moving average — a closely watched long-term trendline — for the first time since late 2023.

Bespoke Investment Group found that in 15 other instances when the S&P 500 stayed above its 200-day moving average for at least a year, when the index finally fell below the trendline, returns over the next year were generally weaker than normal. The S&P 500 rose 6.9 per cent on a median basis in those cases compared with a 10.3 per cent one-year median gain historically.

“We are starting to shift more toward a downtrend,” said Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist for LPL Financial. “That alone is a warning sign.”

Turnquist also noted a key measure of the market’s internals was weakening. The number of S&P 500 constituents above their 200-day levels had dropped to 47 per cent as of Monday. When that percentage has dropped below 48 per cent historically, the S&P 500 has fallen by an average of 7.3 per cent over the next year, according to Turnquist, citing data since 1990.

The yield spread between junk-rated corporate bonds and US Treasuries — typically a measure of investor views of the strength of the riskier part of the corporate sector — widened to 316 basis points on Monday, the biggest spread since September.

The widening spread is “showing that the markets are getting more concerned with this growth slowdown narrative,” said Matthew Miskin, co-chief investment strategist at John Hancock Investment Management.

Philip Palumbo, founder and CEO of Palumbo Wealth Management, said some clients who had a full allocation towards stocks were lightening up on equity exposure because of concerns about elevated valuations.

Even with the recent slide, the S&P 500 on Monday was trading at 20.5 times earnings estimates for the next year, versus a long-term average P/E of 15.8, according to LSEG Datastream. “Volatility, with valuations at all-time highs, has made stocks too unpredictable,” Palumbo said.

NO MORE BUYING DIPS?

Absent a signal that either confirms or denies economic fears, the market could be entering a period when sharp rallies get sold, provided investors keep rotating out of equities into bonds and from US equities into markets abroad, Nomura strategist Charlie McElligott said in a note on Tuesday.

Equity volatility futures contracts expiring this month are trading at a premium to those expiring eight months out, signalling greater investor concern about higher volatility now than future market turmoil.


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