Slowdown Ahead - How Much Will They Cut?

Welcome back, readers. We hope you weathered the market storm this past week, as we started off September with a big down move.

Last week, we wrote about the new highs (blue skies) but also the possible September swoon that often occurs this month. We highlighted the past four Septembers and their consecutive, negative performance.

You may recall that we described what typically happens after Labor Day when portfolio managers return from their summer getaways and long extended holidays: buckle down, start rebalancing, and begin rotating in/out of companies that look more promising.

Given the technology sell-off which began in mid-July, it is apparent that there has been a rotation going on into more “value” oriented stocks which include financials, utility, and recently consumer staple stocks. These are typically considered defensive stocks.

Given the non-farm payroll revisions in the past few months (almost 1,000,000 less jobs created) and the monthly job number misses, it is no surprise that portfolio managers are beginning to prepare for an economic slowdown. More on this shortly.


It’s a Tough Time of Year for Stocks

As we’ve mentioned, it’s a tough time of year for stocks, and election years don’t help, as you can see by the chart below. This widely-known seasonal trend may increase the market’s volatility.


A Big Down Week

This was a shortened week due to the Labor Day holiday. However, stocks began a brutal sell-off from the opening bell on Monday and followed through to the market close on Friday with four negative days.

The S&P 500 (SPY) had its worst week since March 2023 (the bank crisis) and was down 4.1%. The Nasdaq (QQQ) followed suit and dropped 5.8%. This was the worst week for the Nasdaq since the bear market lows of October 2022. The Russell 2000 (IWM) small-cap index was down 5.5% as investors abandoned smaller companies. This is an area of the market that would normally benefit from a potential reduction in interest rates as investors see a more serious slowdown ahead.

While the S&P 500 is now down -4.5% off its record high, the Nasdaq is down twice as much, at -10.9%. This weakness is appearing right on time, as we have previously pointed out, September has notoriously been the worst month for stocks.

The largest sector of the S&P 500, technology (XLK), had its worst week since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, declining -7.5%. The bond market rallied as did donsumer staples, both defensive sectors, as we saw a clear flight to safety. See charts below that illustrate the negative week for investors:

The bond market is starting to look much more attractive to investors as rates come down in expectation of an easing by the Federal Reserve. See charts below:

Regarding technology stocks, it was the semiconductor stocks that led the sell-off back in July and most certainly through this past (shortened) week. The semiconductor sector ETF (SMH) was down 11.5% for the week. Additionally, another major chip company, Broadcom (AVGO) announced disappointing earnings, and investors could not sell the stock quickly enough.

The semiconductor index (SOX) sits precariously at its 50-day moving average. Is a bigger breakdown coming? See chart below:

To see exactly how brutal the month-to-date rate has been so far, we provide the following table of the worst 25 stocks for September. You will likely notice that technology makes up the biggest share of companies that are getting clobbered thus far. There are 9 semiconductor companies on this list. See chart below:

(Click on image to enlarge)

Investors may ask, “is the AI trade done?” We are not sure, but ChatGPT did report that far less people are coming to their website and that traffic and inquiries have slowed. Many of these tech AI companies are also expressing that they are “laying off” employees and beginning to slow cap ex, given the potential economic slowdown we are facing.

What concerns this writer is the number 1 stock up above. That is Dollar Tree (DLTR). Along the same lines are other retail stocks, Dollar General (DG), Dicks Sporting Goods (DKS), Five Below (FIVE), and possibly even Amazon (AMZN), which has begun to look vulnerable. These retail stocks are the giants of middle America, and they have all announced disappointing earnings and have all seen implosions of their stock prices.

Additionally, credit card delinquencies accelerated to over 9% this past month, further cementing the idea that consumers are tapped out and have exhausted any leftover stimulus from the pandemic. See retailer stock laggard charts below:

Some aspects of the retail sector are holding up for now. Stocks like Walmart (WMT) remain near their all-time highs. As Mish commonly states, movements in semiconductors (SMH) and retail (XRT) are often leading signs of the strength of the economy.

Here is a look at the volatile XRT retail sector ETF. It has been very volatile this year, but it is holding up above the January price (Amazon & Walmart are helping, for now). See chart below:


Will This Be a Repeat of August?

You may recall that we had a similar short and abrupt stock market pullback in late July and early August, followed by a significant relief rally into the end of August. The precursor back then was the yen carry trade.

Interestingly, the same yen strength could be seen this past week. It makes one wonder if we will yet again see a relief rally for the next couple of weeks? See chart below (this chart shows the yen/US dollar ratio, and a declining line means the Japanese yen has appreciated against the US dollar):

Historically, Sept. 8-18 is a more bullish period, and we may see a rally out of this current down move. However, this writer is concerned about a more serious slowdown and possible economic contraction that may be forthcoming the next few months and into 2025.

We see some other signs of this. One chart (below) is from the DBC-commodity ETF chart, which shows signs of an economic slowdown. Also, this past week, oil prices were down $4. Other industrial commodities, including copper, silver, and steel, are all showing weakness as an economic slowdown is being priced in. See the commodity and steel ETF charts below:


An Uninverted Yield Curve - What’s Comes Next?

According to an indicator that just began flashing this past week, we may be headed to a recession. Also given that third quarter GDP was revised to 0.60%, we may already be close to one.

The inversion of the yield curve, which occurs when short-term bonds offer a higher yield than long-term bonds, just ended after a two-year plus long stretch. The 10-year US Treasury yield ended Friday at 3.71%, while the 2-year US Treasury Yield was at 3.66%. However, several times this week, the yield curve flipped between positive and negative territory.

According to Interactive Brokers’ senior economist Jose’ Torres, investors should pay close attention to the disinversion of the yield curve because of its long-term track record of predicting recessions. “A positive spread across the 2- and 10-year Treasury maturities following a long period of a negative difference has historically preceded economic downturns,” Torres said in a note on Friday. See a chart describing this below:

“Investors are responding by unloading almost everything,” Torres said, adding that the August jobs report (the NFP came out at 8:30 a.m. on Friday) unlocked the “painful” disinversion. This report, which showed employers added 142,000 jobs, which was below economist estimates of 164,000, along with multiple monthly job growth revisions downward, sparked fresh concerns of a continued slowdown in the broader economy.

This is the first disinversion since September 2019, and the first time the yield curve was positive since July 1, 2022, according to data from YCharts.


What Happens to The S&P 500 After a Disinversion?

Surprisingly, until a recession starts (2 consecutive quarters of negative GDP numbers), the S&P 500 holds up relatively well. However, you can see in the chart below that there are two distinct routes the S&P 500 can take, one with a soft landing (light blue line) and one accompanied by a recession (dark blue line). See chart below:


The Federal Reserve Says They Are Ready to Cut Rates 

On Friday, Federal Reserve policymakers said they are ready to lower interest rates at the US central bank’s meeting in two weeks. New York Fed President John Williams said at the Council on Foreign Relations event, “it is now appropriate to dial down the degree of restrictivess in the stance of policy by reducing the target range for the federal funds rate.” But he added, “by how much and at what pace is still up in the air.”

Fed Governor Christoper Waller, speaking at the University of Notre Dame, went a little further. “If the data supports cuts at consecutive meetings, then I believe it will be appropriate to cut at consecutive meetings," Waller said. “If the data suggests the need for larger cuts, then I will support that as well. I was a big advocate of front-loading rate hikes when inflation accelerated in 2022, and I will be an advocate of front-loading rate cuts if that is appropriate.”

I believe there is no doubt that the Fed cuts the overnight Fed Funds at their upcoming September meeting. However, let me lay out 3 possible scenarios, that could occur.

  1. The data that the Fed relies on shows inflation is still sticky and that they should retain a tight “hawkish” policy until after the election. Analysts and traders will be shocked by this turn of events, and the market will sell off further.
  2. The Fed decides to cut the overnight rate by 0.25%. The market may be alright with this and stabilize. However, there could be an economic surprise in October and/or with the election. Or the market does not think it is enough of a reduction and deteriorates into October.
  3. The Fed determines that the economy is deteriorating at an accelerated rate and decides to cut rates by 0.50%. Trauma will settle in as people understand the gravity of the situation and the market sells off.


What is Different This Time? 

Many economists and investors have been pricing into their earnings and stock price models quite a few cuts in the upcoming rate reduction cycle. See chart below:


There is Good and Bad That Comes From Interest Rate Reductions

Some investors see the potential Fed move as very positive. Any reduction in the Fed overnight Fed Fund rates should help bring down borrowing costs, which will benefit corporate debt, the consumer housing market, credit card borrowing, and a host of other economic sectors. A 25 basis point cut may not do this right away, but if they continue cutting and we see upwards of a 1% cut by year-end, this will be construed positively.

On the other hand, many analysts and historians know that when the Fed begins to cut rates, it almost always is a precursor of economic weakness and almost always leads to a recession. This is the fear that many folks have about the beginning of this rate cut cycle. See chart below:


Employment Outlook Ahead

Recently, many corporate leaders have been delivering mixed views about their businesses and the economy during earnings calls and post-earnings interviews. I believe this is a function of uncertainty from the election as well as the Fed’s posture with regards to interest rate movements. This is likely to lift, as we show in the chart below:

A closing note about semiconductor stocks. The future may be much more positive than some of the above charts and indicators illustrate. The good news is, after a drop like last week, semiconductor stocks usually rally back. See chart below:

We hope that you have an enjoyable day as we welcome the first full day of NFL games for the 2024-25 season. I know I am one big fan. Good luck with your investments for the coming week.

Every week, we review the big picture of the market's technical condition as seen through the lens of our data charts. The bullets below provide a quick summary organized by conditions we see as being risk-on, risk-off, or neutral. 


Risk-On

  • The charts are still very strong for the Dow and the S&P 500 in all time frames.


Risk-Off

  • With the exception of the Dow, all three leading US equities indexes broke down hard and entered warning phases, with the QQQs down 3% on Friday alone.
  • There were more distribution days than accumulation days across all four indexes. The Nasdaq 100 has a negative TSI reading for the first time in nearly a year.
  • Sector analysis is showing some deep risk-off sentiment as utilities and consumer staples were up on the week, while semiconductors, retail, and energy were off the hardest.
  • The McClellan Oscillator flipped negative for both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq, and it is not in oversold territory despite the sell-off this week.
  • With the potential of a slowing global economy, oil and energy in general got hit pretty hard, with USO leading the decline down over -10% for the week.
  • The 52-week new high/new low ratio is rolling over for both the Nasdaq and the S&P 500.
  • In one of the fastest turnarounds, our risk gauge that went positive last week flipped back to fully negative.
  • The number of stocks above key moving averages reversed order into bearish readings, though they look a bit oversold on a short-term basis.
  • Semiconductors broke below the 200-day moving average for the first time since January 2023. They had an interesting momentum divergence off the highs from early July that continues to unfold.
  • Foreign equities, both emerging and more established, broke down hard and moved into warning phases. There is a crucial real motion divergence on EFA (large-cap foreign equities).
  • Volatility readings confirm this week's price action, and it has a lot more to go before it becomes oversold. As we highlighted last week, volatility levels were dropping but holding up, and that price action has since reversed course and is now trading in a bullish phase. Assuming the VIXY can hold Friday’s low, pressure will remain on the market.
  • Copper closed at the bottom of its recent trading range and in a distribution phase, indicating potential pressures on the economy.
  • With a slowing economy and job growth, along with the prospect of an easing Fed policy, interest rates closed near the top of the recent trading range and look poised to move higher.
  • Oil collapsed under a key low setup in early June, though it is a bit oversold and might be subject to mean reversion, but the core trend looks very negative.
  • Gold bucked the trend and held up on a relative basis, showing excellent relative performance to equities.


Neutral

  • Despite value selling off this week, as well as the rest of the market, the relative performance is holding up and still remains in a bull phase.
  • Soft commodities and food held up and remain in a bull phase.
  • The charts have a mixed to negative reading for the Nasdaq 100.

More By This Author:

We Are in the Period of Hot Air and Blue Skies, But the Month of September is Ahead!
Markets Take Off On Another Win Streak, & The “Other” Asset Class You May Be Missing
After An Ugly Start To The Week, The Market Recovers - And Now The Door Is Wide Open

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