The S&P 500 In Week 5 Of August 2016
August 2016 was a very long and very uneventful month for the S&P 500. About the most notable thing about the month from our perspective, other than the utter absence of volatility, is that our modified futures-based model appears to have performed very well in more accurately anticipating the trajectory that the S&P 500 would take all the way through Week 5 of August 2016 than our standard forecasting model.
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Investors appear to have maintained a strong focus on the distant future quarter of 2017-Q2 in setting their current day expectations throughout most of the month. By contrast, the projections suggested by our standard model, which incorporates historic stock prices, and thus reflects the unusually high level of volatility that defined the S&P 500 during the end of last summer, were much further away from the actual trajectory of the S&P 500.
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To help underscore just how little volatility there has been in the S&P 500, especially during the last few weeks, we decided to have a little bit of fun in treating our modified model's trajectory for 2017-Q2, which parallels the average actual trajectory that stock prices have taken over each of the previous 65 years, as if it were the mean trajectory about which the S&P 500's actual volatility played out during the 19 trading days from 9 August 2016 through 2 September 2016. Also keep in mind in considering the chart below that the inherent assumption that the variation in stock prices is normally distributed does not hold, especially over prolonged periods of time.
(Click on image to enlarge)
We should probably appreciate the lack of volatility while it lasts. In the meantime, here are the major market-related headlines that caught our attention during Week 5 of August 2016, which just happened to last through the second day of September 2016!
Monday, 29 August 2016
Tuesday, 30 August 2016
- Wall St. weighted by Apple but banks shine on - Apple was down because the EU determined the company would have to pay a $14.5 billion income tax bill to Ireland. Curiously, Ireland doesn't seem to want the money, which may very well come straight out of the pockets of U.S. taxpayers.
- Oil falls on strong dollar, crude glut; storms limit losses
Wednesday, 31 August 2016
- Oil down 2 pct on large U.S. crude, distallates build - also, Energy shares fall on oil decline; U.S. yields set for monthly surge.
- Fed's Evans, citing slow growth, says low U.S. rates are here to stay
- Energy drags Wall St. lower; S&P down slightly in August
Thursday, 1 September 2016
- Fed's Mester says case for rate increases is compelling
- August U.S. auto sales down; carmakers say industry has peaked
- Oil slides on glut worry, on track for biggest weekly drop since Jan
- U.S. European shares flat after U.S. data; oil falls
Friday, 2 September 2016
- Dollar falls, global stocks rise after weak U.S. jobs data
- U.S. economy may need much higher interst rates: Fed's Lacker - also: Fed's Lacker favors raising U.S. rates sooner than later
- Wall Street advances as U.S. payrolls report falls short
- Sleepy summer may give way to freaky fall - we may just have been given the official designation of how the stock market will be described this fall!
Be sure to also see Barry Ritholtz' summary of the week's positives and negatives for markets and the U.S. economy.
Disclosure: None.