Tuesday Trends (6/8/21)

By Charlie Bilello

08 Jun 2021


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The most important trends in markets and investing…

1) Equities

a) US vs. World ($SPY/$ACWX)

More than a decade long streak of US equity outperformance peaked last September. Since then US relative strength has gone sideways…

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b) Emerging Markets vs. US ($IEMG/$SPY)

Emerging Markets had been underperforming US equities for more than a decade before bottoming last May on the relative basis. Over the past year the ratio has gone sideways with wide swings in both directions.

c) US: Small vs. Large ($IWM/$SPY)

Small caps are still outperforming by a wide margin over the last year but have lagged large caps over the last few months…

d) US: Growth vs. Value ($IWF/$IWD)

Growth stocks had been outperforming value stocks since 2006 but the ratio of growth to value peaked last September and has trended lower since…

e) US: Tech vs. Broad Market ($XLK/$SPY)

2020 was one of the best years ever for Technology stocks, and 2-year Tech returns hit their highest level since 1998-1999. Over the last 12 months, however, the ratio of Tech to the broad market has gone sideways. Tech is underperforming this year with the US approaching herd immunity and the in-person economy reemerging…

f) US: Momentum vs. Broad Market ($MTUM/$SPY)

High momentum stocks had a very strong run of outperformance in 2020 and that strength continued to start 2021. But since February we’ve seen a sharp reversal and the relative strength of high momentum names recently hit a 52-week low (see here for a recent post on the momentum reversal).

g) US: High Beta vs. Low Vol ($SPHB/$SPLV)

After many years of underperformance, High Beta stocks outperformed Low Volatility names in 2020 by a wide margin. The recent surge higher started after the vaccine news last November, and has accelerated again in the new year with additional stimulus measures in place.

What’s driving this increase? A sector overweight in Financials and Energy which have been the best performing sectors this year…

Data as of 6/4/21

h) US: Consumer Discretionary vs. Consumer Staples ($XLY/$XLP)

Discretionary stocks have widely outperformed Staples over the last year on the stimulus measures and increase in consumer spending. Over the past few months, however, we’ve seen a slight reversal…

i) US: Banks vs. Broad Market ($KBE/$SPY)

Banks had been underperforming the market for many years, with the ratio bottoming last September. Since then optimism over rising rates, an economic recovery, and a steepening yield curve have lead to Banks sharply outperforming…

2) Bonds

a) TIPS vs. Treasuries – Inflation ($TIP/$IEF)

After collapsing last March, the ratio of TIPS to treasuries (which indicates rising inflation expectations) has trended steadily higher.

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Reported inflation (CPI) is up 4.2% over the past year, the highest rate of increase since 2008 (See our recent post on inflation here).

b) High Yield vs. Treasuries ($HYG/$IEI)

High yield strength versus treasuries (credit spreads tightening) has been persistent since the lows last March…

US High Yield credit spreads (3.27%) are near their lowest levels of the past 10 years while absolute yields (4.20%) remain near all-time lows.

c) Leveraged Loans vs. Treasuries ($BKLN/$SHY)

Leveraged Loan relative strength is back at a 52-week high after trending sideways since January…

d) Investment Grade vs. Treasuries ($LQD/$IEF)

Strength in investment grade credit (spreads tightening) has been a consistent theme since the lows last March.

Current Investment Grade spreads (0.91%) are near their lowest levels of the past 10 years.

e) Long Duration vs. Short Duration ($TLT/$SHV)

With the rise in long-term interest rates, the ratio of long duration to short duration bonds has moved lower after peaking last August…

30-Year and 10-Year Treasury Bond yields have trended higher since hitting all-time lows last March.

f) US Yield Curve (10-year minus 2-year)

After inverting in 2019, the Yield Curve steepened in 2020 with short rates plummeting (Fed cuts to 0% with promises to keep them there) and long rates slowly moving higher. That trend has continued to start the year with the Yield Curve hitting its steepest level since 2015…

g) Emerging Market Bonds vs. Treasuries ($EMB/$IEF)

Emerging Market bonds have posted sharp outperformance over the last year with new relative highs this week…

3) Commodities

a) Gold vs. Broad Commodities ($GLD/$DBC)

Gold was the commodity leader during the February/March crash last year but has since trended steadily lower as the economy has recovered…

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b) Copper vs. Gold ($JJC/$GLD)

The ratio of Copper to Gold has moved sharply higher this year as optimism over more stimulus and an economic recovery continues…

The price of Copper hit its highest level ever last month…

c) Silver vs. Gold ($SLV/$GLD)

Silver has bested Gold over the last year…

d) Lumber vs. Gold ($LUMBER/$GOLD)

The unexpected US housing boom was accompanied by a surging ratio of Lumber to Gold in 2020. That strength has only continued to start the year though in the last month we’ve seen a slight reversal…

4) Currencies

a) US Dollar vs. Major World Currencies ($UUP)

The US Dollar has trended lower over the past year…

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b) Japanese Yen vs. US Dollar ($FXY)

The Yen has shown sharp relative weakness since early January…

c) Euro vs. US Dollar ($FXE)

The Euro is showing gains against the Dollar over the last year…

d) Emerging Market Currencies vs. US Dollar ($CEW)

EM currencies have rallied over the last year with a new 52-week high this week…

5) Crypto

a) Ethereum vs. Bitcoin ($ETH/$BTC)

The ratio of Ethereum to Bitcoin recently hit its highest level since 2018 as Ethereum first outperformed on the way up and then again on the correction…

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b) Litecoin to Bitcoin ($LTC/$BTC)

Litecoin suffered a large decline during the recent Crypto correction, giving back its relative gains in the previous month.

6) Intermarket

a) Stocks vs. Bonds ($SPY/$AGG)

Ratio of stocks to bonds has trended higher over the last year as bonds have moved lower while stocks continue to hit new highs…

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b) Stocks vs. Commodities ($SPY/$DBC)

Stocks are underperforming commodities over the last year as a more inflationary environment takes hold…

c) Bitcoin vs. Stocks ($BTC/$SPY)

Bitcoin has outpaced stocks by a wide margin over the last 12 months, but its recent 54% correction has given back all of its relative strength since the start of the year…

d) Bitcoin vs. Gold ($BTC/$GLD)

Gold has trended higher during the recent crypto correction, leading to a sharp decline in Bitcoin’s relative strength. It is still outpacing Gold by a wide margin over the past year.

Related Reads/Videos:

The 2 Most Powerful Forces in Markets

The Great Reversal in Secular Trends

Video: 6 Long-Term Market Trends Showing Signs of Reversal

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