Friday, July 26, 2024

Lack of Fear

They are not getting scared.  The bullishness has lasted for so long, the uptrend has gone for so long, that there is quite a bit of investor inertia.  Maybe you can call it denial.  But investors are not treating this selloff as something that can get really nasty, but are viewing it as a run of the mill pullback, with many viewing further downside as being limited.  You are not seeing the rush towards puts as you normally see when you get a nearly 5% pullback in less than 2 weeks. 

Let's compare the current selloff to the April correction.  In early April, right before 3 weeks of selling in the index, you had a somewhat complacent, but not exuberant market.  You didn't see rampant call buying or analysts raising their S&P 500 year end price targets left and right.  You didn't hear much positive regarding the Fed, as they were still viewed to be on the sidelines, with many investors still worried about inflation.   

Fast forward 3 months to early July.  Call buying in the Mag7 is prevalent, with lots of speculation in the big 2 options monsters, NVDA and TSLA.  Inflation is now viewed as being under control, with lower than forecast CPI readings for 3 straight months.  The market is now expecting and looking forward to rate cuts.  They are bullish on Trump's chances of being elected, and that was viewed as a good reason to buy small caps and non Mag7 names.  Breadth is expanding, which is applauded by the crowd.  It is about as exuberant a market as you will see.  Nearly 2021 exuberant levels. The ISEE index for the year shows the level of call buying steadily rising, reaching a peak in the first half of July.  Even after a 270 point selloff in SPX, the call buying persists, and you still are not getting more puts than calls opened, which is what happened for several days during the depths of the April selloff. 

The selloff in April started slowly and gained steam, as the steepest part of the selloff happened in the final week of selling, between April 15 to 19.  This July selloff has been much steeper, as the rise was much steeper, with markets reacting symmetrically. 

Yet, you would think that with such a steep selloff, you would get much more put buying and not so much call buying, but that's not what happened.  Surprisingly, you are still seeing much more call buying than put buying here.  

If you are a bull, this has to be quite concerning.  You have had much more selling than in April, yet traders have not done much put buying to protect their portfolios, unlike what they did in mid April.  Instead, they've been buying the dip this week and continued speculating in calls.  This has added to my conviction on the short side, as this is a lot of complacency in the face of bearish and volatile price action.  

The sentiment data supports this conclusion, as you are not seeing much of a drop in exposure.  The NAAIM fund manager exposure index as of Thursday is still quite long despite the selling, at levels that are higher than most of 2023.  


Seasonally, we are getting into negative fund flows.  August is the weakest fund flow month of the year.  Investors know history, and know that September and October are seasonally weak.  Plus you have many on vacation and looking to de-risk ahead of the fall. 

You saw more gyrations this week in investor positioning, as you got a violent unwind in the USDJPY, as the yen carry trade started to unwind.  The yen carry trade is so 2007, I thought it was given up for good after the nasty rallies in the yen on past risk off moments.  But with both positive carry and a steady uptrend, hedge funds have gotten greedy, and pushed their short yen exposure higher and higher.  The COT data shows how lopsided the speculators are short the yen.  The biggest short position in the past 10 years.  I expect the yen to gain strength, regardless of the moves in the 10 year yield, as these carry traders are not trading based on yield differentials, but have just been riding a one way gravy train.  With the Fed looking to cut rates starting in September, and the BOJ looking to hike rates at nearly the same time, you have a fundamental catalyst for a sharp yen appreciation.  A move towards the mid 140s is definitely in the cards within the next 3 months.  If that happens, that would cause even more panic selling among yen carry traders who have bought US and Japanese stocks with the proceeds of their yen borrowing. 

We are seeing a big gap up today after yesterday's volatile up and down trade.  I expect this gap up to fade in the first couple of hours of trade.   I have a full short position, which I will look to hold for a much bigger down move.  I expect this selloff to last longer than the 15 trading day selloff in April, as well as go down more than the 310 SPX points lost back then.  5250 is definitely in play in August.  I will not try to predict the path to that level, but predict that it gets there within the next 3 weeks.  I expect any bounces from here to be fleeting, and its not worth it to try to micro trade around the position.  All the signals and indicators are lining up for nearly a perfect storm on the sell side.  The setup is too bearish to play around with short term trades and potentially miss a big move. 

33 comments:

soong said...

Agree. Time to all in (almost)

Anonymous said...

Still 90 below where we closed wednesday. Enticing but being cautioyus

Anonymous said...

added some dia and xhb puts. not adding to spy, qqq or iwm yet. will re-evaluate mon/tue

Market Owl said...

Strong resistance at SPX 5490-5500. COT data shows hedge funds covered a lot of SPX shorts, and asset managers barely reduced their longs as of Tuesday.

krako said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

trying to play this day by day to be cautious of the bull market we have been in - dont like 3-4 days on constant rallies. wondering if there is anything that would change your mind? also have the fed meeting that usually has led to big rallies

Anonymous said...

In other words, if I am not max short, should I consider adding around 5500?

Market Owl said...

My views have not changed, and actually think too many are expecting the Fed to bail them out. Powell being dovish is a fait accompli. Its priced in. Whats not priced in is earnings growth projections going lower and weaker guidance from Mag7. Remain max short and would recommend a short near the highs today if not full short.

Anonymous said...

Thank you - much appreciated

Market Owl said...

This morning appears to be the final day to sell near SPX 5480-5490 before the next leg lower. Looking for a move towards 5250-5260 within the next 2 weeks. Starting to see put buying today, which should be traders finally starting to hedge with puts. This usually lasts for several days until capitulation.

Anonymous said...

Good calls so far on ghis leg. Still playing cautiously but staying decent short. Will keep trimming every 50 points or so

Anonymous said...

Any views on homebuilders - dhi at all time highs and wondering if should spread shorts into some names that have not fallen at all

Market Owl said...

Homebuilders seem to be a bet on interest rates. I don’t have any strong views on particular sectors, just sticking with index shorts now. Neutral on bonds, but I would rather short rallies than buy dips in Treasuries.

Anonymous said...

Thanks @marketowl. Msft fell a lot but recovered nicely. The market is banking on the Fed meeting. While i agree with your views, i might trim before the Fed meeting - most Fed meetings jn last few years were followed by a rally

Anonymous said...

Why the big rally pre open today? Making me a wee but nervous

Market Owl said...

Appears to be a pre FOMC short squeeze. It could have a 1-2 day rally here and then reverse hard afterwards. Looks like the dip buyers are trying to play for a dovish Fed after yesterday's selloff. It could have a slight overshoot of this week's highs of SPX 5490 and get up to 5510-5520. Be prepared for it to happen, while maintaining a short position. This selloff looks like it will be a longer 20 trading day variety which means some brief consolidation during the middle (which is now) and more intense selling near the end.

Anonymous said...

i trimmed some - seems your advice be to reload fully around 5510-20

Anonymous said...

The rebound looks very strong hope it peters out after fomc. Waiting until next week will be hard

Market Owl said...

If you're not confident, you should reduce your position now rather than panicking out of it if it goes against you some more. Always be prepared for a position to go against you and have a plan. My plan is to hold this short for either the next 2 weeks or until I see signs of capitulation. Have seen very little panic on this move down and the market is getting more volatile even while chopping up and down, which is a bearish sign, not a bullish one. Put/call ratio still low, seeing lot of complacency out there on TV, Twitter, etc.

Anonymous said...

Understood. I will
Keep trimming on opportunities. I never panic and sell. That has hurt me in last few years when we had a one way runaway train - holding longer than needed is bad too. Not going anywhere for couple weeks just wishing it to be a less painful prodess

Market Owl said...

Definitely a painful bounce if short, but at these levels, I see much more near term downside than upside. This is panic buying from both shorts and longs who have FOMO. We'll see if there is continuation tomorrow, but I am leaning towards one day rally and then fade for the next several days.

Market Owl said...

The intraday vol is nuts. Vol control funds will derisk under these market conditions, after being max long for the past 2 months. CTAs also are quite long and have lots to sell on any break of 5400.

Anonymous said...

I added shorts here and there. Will re-evaluate tomorrow but most likely holding everything into next week till Wednesday minimum

Anonymous said...

By the way have tech earnings been in line with your thought? Hard to say they are weak

Market Owl said...

Its reaction to the earnings which I look at. Its been mixed, we havent seen any really bullish reactions from big cap tech so far. Still have AMZN and AAPL remaining.

Anonymous said...

Meta?

Anonymous said...

What is your plan B if we rally hard today? and again Monday - does that change anything? It seems we may be over 5550 even closer to 5600 today

Market Owl said...

If we rallied hard today and tomorrow, I would have had to rethink my thesis, but I still would have leaned short. But the price action so far today is exactly what I want to see.

Anonymous said...

amazing calls. I have been trimming systematically - prob leaving money on the table but 5-10% for every 10 point decline now. want to reduce position by at least 25% today more for risk management. FYI - I only have puts, will close everything for this fri/next fri for sure and lot of aug 16. remaining 75% will carry into another big sell off day. most of them are jan 2025 puts

Market Owl said...

The Aug. expiry puts exploding higher today. Looking for a 3-4 day continued selloff leading to capitulation. Next Tues./Wed. should be timeline if it moves as projected.

Anonymous said...

i sold most of aug 16 also but some remaining. hopefully it pans out as u expected but will keep trimming along the way. i reduced positions by 20-25% today as need to manage risk also - cant keep holding 560 strike aug 16 puts in size

Market Owl said...

If short position size is too large, its good to trim on down days so you can withstand moves against you. Even at max short, I size it so that I can withstand a 100 point SPX move against me without having to reduce due to risk management. You never want to be the forced seller, you always want to be in a spot to take the other side of forced selling or forced buying (like yesterday).

Anonymous said...

Understood. Thx again