From the Desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Alfonso Depablos @AlfCharts
With earnings season underway, financials are making a statement this week.
The first few weeks of reporting are always heavy with banks and financial stocks. As these are the market laggards, we knew we would get some critical information from their earnings reactions.
While it hasn't been fireworks to the upside by any means, there also hasn't been much downside from these stocks.
It is never a bad thing if the bears can't take down the weakest stocks. That's what is going on right now.
Meanwhile, more and more bullish setups keep crossing our desk. It's all very constructive.
From the Desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Alfonso Depablos @AlfCharts
Our Hall of Famers list is composed of the 150 largest US-based stocks.
These stocks range from the mega-cap growth behemoths like Apple and Microsoft – with market caps in excess of $2T – to some of the new-age large-cap disruptors such as Moderna, Square, and Snap.
It has all the big names and more.
It doesn’t include ADRs or any stock not domiciled in the US. But don’t worry; we developed a separate universe for that. Click here to check it out.
The Hall of Famers is simple.
We take our list of 150 names and then apply our technical filters so the strongest stocks with the most momentum rise to the top.
Let’s dive right in and check out what these big boys are up to.
If you would have told me in September that the Dollar would fall apart over the next 2 quarters, I would have told you that precious metals are likely doing well in that environment. I would have also said that Silver would outperform Gold during that period.
In this case I would have been absolutely right.
Great.
But what I would have also been confident about is foreign equities doing well in that weaker Dollar environment.
And while I would have also been correct in that guess, I would have definitely told you that it would be Emerging Markets outperforming, not Developed Markets.
And that would have been very wrong.
It's been the Developed Markets outside the U.S. that have been dominating the equities markets over the past couple of quarters. Look at the performance of these assets since the Dollar peaked: