Investors cancel the 'apocalypse' and make a hard pivot in August: Morning Brief

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Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Today's newsletter is by Brian Cheung, an anchor and reporter covering the Fed, economics, and banking for Yahoo Finance. You can follow him on Twitter @bcheungz.

The last two months have been a welcome rebound for stock market investors who endured a brutal first half of the year.

Declining oil prices and optimism over an improving picture on inflation — which would tame the Federal Reserve’s pace of rate hikes — appear to have supported the bounce-back between July and August.

After losing about 24% through the first five and a half months of the year, the S&P 500 has rebounded 17% from its lows in mid-June. Other pockets of the market have showed signs of improvement as well — longer-term bond yields retreated from their post-COVID highs, and the VIX, known as the "fear index," dipped back to levels not seen since earlier in the year.

Oppenheimer Head of Technical Analysis Ari Wald said the stock market appears to be showing signs of a market bottom. Wald told Yahoo Finance Live on Tuesday mid-June showed a “washed out” market, with only 14% of companies on the New York Stock Exchange trading above their 200-day moving averages. The 200-day is a closely-watched indicator that broadly tells you if a security's long-term trend is up or down.

“That is consistent with capitulation, that is a full surrendering of the markets,” Wald said.

Headlines in July supported an easing picture on inflation, advancing the market recovery. Lower oil prices supported an inflation report showing no price increases between June and July.

And Bank of America Global Research’s latest monthly survey of fund managers released Tuesday showed big money investors moving marginally back into stocks between July and August.

BofA's monthly survey of 284 fund managers (representing $836 billion in assets under management) showed strong repositioning between July and August into stocks. (Source: BofA Global Fund Manager Survey)
BofA's monthly survey of 284 fund managers (representing $836 billion in assets under management) showed strong repositioning between July and August into stocks. (Source: BofA Global Fund Manager Survey) · BofA Global Fund Manager Survey

“Sentiment remains bearish, but no longer apocalyptically bearish as hopes rise that inflation and rates shocks end in coming quarters,” BofA strategist Michael Hartnett said in the report.

Nonetheless, BofA’s survey showed fund managers still positioned defensively, leaning heavily on cash and away from riskier assets like stocks. Taken together, this surge of buying last month still shows investors are far from max bullishness.

When compared against average positioning over the last 10 years, investors remained overall long cash and underweight equities. (Source: BofA Global Fund Manager Survey)
When compared against average positioning over the last 10 years, investors remained overall long cash and underweight equities. (Source: BofA Global Fund Manager Survey) · BofA Global Fund Manager Survey

All of which results in an interesting dynamic wherein investors are trying to figure out not only how to time an entry back into the market, but which stocks, sectors, and assets to buy while doing so.

For some clues on this struggle, we need look no further than the hedge funds, where big names are all over the place on positioning.