End Of The Streak?

The wild ride of market moves continued overnight as the Nikkei 225 rallied 6% after falling more than 7% on Monday. That’s just the ninth time in the last 45 years that the index has rallied 5%+ after falling more than 5% in the prior session. Along with those days, there have only been two other days when the Nikkei fell more than 5% after rising 5% in the previous session. The Nikkei’s move was extreme, but we’ve seen volatile back-and-forth action in equity markets worldwide this week.

This morning, futures are building on some of yesterday’s intraday strength in US stocks on optimism that several countries are looking to make a trade deal with the Trump Administration. This doesn’t mean deals will happen, but at least conversations are taking place which buys some time for a pause in the selling. With this optimism, US equity futures are indicated higher, and that would end what has been a streak of nine straight days where the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) opened the day lower. In yesterday’s Chart of the Day, we covered that streak and how the market has historically performed following prior streaks of similar or longer durations, so make sure to give that a look.

They call the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) a gauge of the stock market’s psychological state, and higher levels indicate a more emotional state for the market. Yesterday, the market got as emotional as a high school senior looking for a prom date. It closed at an extraordinarily high level of 46.98, but intraday it briefly traded above 60, which it has only done on 52 other trading days since 1990!

The chart of the S&P 500 below shows every time the VIX traded above 60 on an intraday basis since 1990. The only other times were in Q4 2008, during Covid in 2020, and one day last August. In retrospect, these periods turned out to be good buying opportunities although the market remained volatile in the short-term. Following the occurrences in Q4 2008, for example, the S&P 500 didn’t bottom until early March, but on an internal basis, that marked the low as most stocks bottomed in Q4 2008. Like a child, markets sometimes find themselves in a tantrum or emotional spiral, but more often than not, a pause, and a deep breath are enough to get things to calm down.


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Disclaimer: Bespoke Investment Group, LLC believes all information contained in this report to be accurate, but we do not guarantee its accuracy. None of the information in this report or any ...

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