Thursday, October 29, 2015

Markets Fall Like Cherry Blossoms in Gentle Spring Rain

Stocks close generally mournful and reflective.

Inauspicious update below.

From ZeroHedge:

Eventually The Weight Becomes Too Much To Bear

The “equal-weight” S&P 500 has dropped to near 3-year lows versus the cap-weighted version. Previous such events under similar conditions occurred at inauspicious times. 
Continuing with the impromptu weekly theme regarding the relatively “thin” nature of the recent stock rally, today we take a look inside the S&P 500. Like yesterday’s post on the consumer discretionary sector, this one examines the “equal-weight version of the index versus the traditional cap-weighted version. Whereas the performance of the cap-weighted index can be subject to undue influence by the very largest components, a look at the equal-weight version can give us an idea of the health of the broad swathe of stocks within the index. 
While the relative under-performance on the part of the equal-weight S&P 500 (as judged by the Rydex Equal-Weight S&P 500 ETF, RSP) may not be as egregious as in the consumer discretionary sector, it is still somewhat alarming. Despite the cap-weighted S&P 500 (as judged by the S&P 500 SPDR ETF, SPY) being reasonably close to its all-time highs again, the equal-weight:cap-weight ratio has dropped to near 3-year lows. Considering the context, the RSP:SPY ratio is at levels only seen just prior to substantial declines in July and back in 2007. 
image
 By “considering the context”, we mean that the cap-weighted S&P 500 is less than 3% from its all-time high. The only months, historically, that have seen the equal-weight:cap-weight (RSP:SPY) ratio at a 2-year low under those circumstances are shown below. Obviously, these did not mark the best months to be buying stocks.
  •  September-November 2007
  • July 2015
  • October 2015
Again, like we have mentioned throughout the week, this situation means that the inordinate bulk of the lifting during the recent rally is being done by the biggest of stocks. It does not necessarily mean that the rest of the stocks are falling or doing poorly. It just means that they’re not doing their fair share. As it turns out, on an equal-weighted basis, the indices have basically been drifting sideways during the most recent few weeks while the biggest stocks have been rallying smartly. 
So is this a big deal? Well, in July it was. And in the fall of 2007 it was. Does this mean the market is on the verge of another collapse? Not necessarily. It doesn’t even mean that the rally cannot continue, for a time. It does mean that if one wants to participate on the long side, they are likely better suited being in those relatively few stocks or areas that are carrying the market at the moment.
...MORE
Invest in Kirin
Mindfulness overrated
Sensei insensate 

Okay, the pseudo Japanese schtick is hard to maintain, much less in haiku format, so I'll outsource. Here's the inspiration for this iteration, Alphaville's Joseph Cotterill from a few years ago:

One of the following is an autumnal haiku composed on Twitter by Herman van Rompuy, President of the European Council. But which is it?
The night has fallen
The bare branches can be seen
Even more lonely

A season of mists
And of mellow fruitfulness
But not you; you’re Greek

Wet leaves, brown, rotting
Keep bloody slipping on them
Look, Spain metaphor
......
One more, in honor of our link source, this time from Cassandra Does Tokyo:

ZeroWhinger

Got any Gold? I do...
Glass is always half-empty
The game's frickin' rigged!