The most underrated element of technical analysis has to be relative strength.
It's impossible to outperform your benchmark if you own assets that are underperforming.
Much of this work is grounded in the overarching notion that asset prices trend while volatility mean-reverts.
But humans behave as if it's the opposite.
Relative strength is merely denominating prices in a different asset than the native currency. Like price trends, relative strength also exhibits a tendency to trend, rather than mean-revert.
The NAAIM exposure index surpassed its August high last month and has been on either side of its April high over the past two weeks. With price action cooling, active investment managers may regret their eagerness to increase equity exposure.
Why It Matters: Active managers led the recent shift from pessimism to optimism. While sentiment overall doesn’t look ready to boil over at this point, there are some hot spots that could benefit from cooling. The NAAIM data, which has outpaced the recovery in price, is in that category. The broader sentiment risk is that a period of sideways price action leads reluctant optimists to turn bearish again. At this stage in the cycle we need bulls to have a bull market and a return to pessimism would likely add to downward pressure on price. This is all the more likely if volatility remains undiminished (only 4 years in the past quarter century began with more 1% swings in the S&P 500 than we have experienced so far this year) and breadth meaningfully...
Does that mean it’ll go on a run, applying downside pressure on risk assets?
It’s tough to say.
Nevertheless, I have one chart for you that provides clarity as the dollar begins to make its move.
Check out the triple-pane chart of the US Dollar Index $DXY, our G-10 currency index, and our US dollar advance-decline line:
At the top, we have six pairs dominated by the euro. I’ve been vocal about the significance of the euro trading below 1.08. It’s basic math.
The EUR/USD comprises more than half of the DXY weighting. If it’s trading below 1.08, it’s messy with downside risks – the perfect environment for a dollar rally.
Slippery markets make for rising options premiums. And one sector ETF is currently rising head and shoulders above the rest, offering some juicy premiums for us to sell into along with a wide risk management band for us to dance in.
So let's take advantage of the rising fear in this sector for an opportunistic trade and potentially quick profits.
Equities had their worst session of the year yesterday, as the S&P 500 retraced 2% during the day.
This comes as rates and the US dollar push higher, with the yield on the 10-year US Treasury note making fresh three-month highs.
Surprisingly, Bitcoin seems to be bucking this recent selling pressure, and the short-term correlations between stocks and Bitcoin have flipped negative for the first time since the FTX fiasco.
During that period, Bitcoin crashed to its cycle lows of 16,000, while equity markets were hammering out their most recent bottom.