All major U.S. indices finished in the red last week, led by the market-leading Nasdaq 100 and Russell 2000, which more than relinquished their modest gains of a week earlier. Last week’s decline resulted in all major indices falling back into negative territory for 2015. All sectors of the S&P 500 closed lower last week with the exception of financials, consumer staples and utilities. The latter two are defensive and thus expected to outperform during a down week. #-ad_banner-# Interestingly, Asbury Research’s asset flow-based metric showed the biggest outflow of sector bet-related assets during the past… Read More
All major U.S. indices finished in the red last week, led by the market-leading Nasdaq 100 and Russell 2000, which more than relinquished their modest gains of a week earlier. Last week’s decline resulted in all major indices falling back into negative territory for 2015. All sectors of the S&P 500 closed lower last week with the exception of financials, consumer staples and utilities. The latter two are defensive and thus expected to outperform during a down week. #-ad_banner-# Interestingly, Asbury Research’s asset flow-based metric showed the biggest outflow of sector bet-related assets during the past one-week and one-month periods came from former 2015 highflier health care. While it is still among the strongest sectors of the S&P 500 year to date, it now looks vulnerable to more weakness during the fourth quarter. Market Must Break Resistance to Confirm a Bottom In last week’s Market Outlook, I pointed out an important overhead resistance level at 641 in the market-leading PHLX Semiconductor (SOX) index. I said a sustained rise above it would be necessary to help confirm a broader market bottom was in place. The SOX closed last week 7.5% below this level at 593. The… Read More