Lately being a bear has meant sharing quite a crowded field. First it was JPMorgan, which not only said to sell any rallies, but three weeks ago said it had gone "underweight stocks for the first time since the financial crisis"; then technicians such as Evercore ISI summarized their sentiment as follows "I'm out; my bullish tactical call is over", and then on Monday, even Goldman jumped on the bandwagon urging clients "to go to cash" ahead of "expected elevated volatility" and that the "current relief rally" is almost over.
Today, it's the turn of UBS' technicians, Michael Riesner and Marc Muller, best known for calling both of the last two market selloffs in advance (and the concurrent jump in gold), as well as timing the Feb.11 market bottom with uncanny accuracy, when they joined the bearish chorus with one simple plea: "SPX Reaching 2050 Target … Take Profit/Sell!"
This is their call in a nutshell:
Last week, we saw the suggested overshooting into expiration and the SPX reached the upper end of our projected late Q1/early Q2 target at 2050, which leaves the short-term picture in the US unchanged as to what we highlighted last week. With the rally of the last few weeks and looking at our daily trend work, the SPX has reached its most overbought position since 2009!! Together with significant non-confirmations in our medium-term momentum work, and trading in the time window of our late Q1/early Q2 top projection, we see the market vulnerable for a significant reversal this week, which we would see as the beginning of a tactical top building process and subsequent correction into deeper Q2. We reiterate our last week’s comment and would not chase the market on current elevated levels.
The details:
After being aggressively oversold, we saw the February 11th risk bottom as the basis for a multi-week bear market rally in global equities into the late March/early April timeframe with a price target 2000/2050 in the SPX before starting a new significant tactical down leg into deeper summer. Last week, we said that a final overshooting into expiration is still likely, but particularly in the week after triple witching we very often see important tactical trend reversals in the market.
With last week’s extension, the SPX has reached the upper end of our suggested 2000/2050 late March/early April target range, and with this move the technical in the US has obviously not changed. The February/March rebound was nearly vertical, which is not sustainable. On the indicator side we now have exactly the same setup as in early February but just the other way around. Looking at our daily trend work, we highlighted the US market siting in the most aggressively oversold position since its 2008 panic low and it was one of our key arguments for anticipating a significant and longer lasting rally. With last week’s extension our daily trend work has reached its most overbought position since 2009. Together with our weekly momentum reaching overbought extremes we have a relatively high likelihood of seeing the market move into an important medium-term top followed by a significant setback. Even if our big picture market view (US and global equity markets are in a cyclical bear market that we expect to continue into Q1 2017) proves to be too bearish, with such an indicator setup we should see the US market minimum ahead of a multi-week consolidation pattern, where we should see higher volatility and therefore a significant pullback.
Conclusion: The US market is extremely overbought, and from a cyclical standpoint the SPX is trading in the time window of our late March/early April top projection. In this context, we see the US market vulnerable for a significant reversal this week, which we would see as the beginning of a tactical top building process and subsequent correction into deeper/later Q2. On the upside, the SPX has resistance at 2050 and in case of further overshooting we can see 2075/2080. A re-break below 2024 would be initially negative. A break of 2005 would imply that a more important tactical top is forming. From a cyclical aspect we see an initial pullback into first week April where we expect the SPX to test 2000/1970. We reiterate our last week’s call and would use strength to sell instead of chasing the market on the upside.
Will the Riener-Muller duo make it 4 out of 4 in recent predictions? Keep an eye on the S&P: if we take out the 2034 support level which pushes the market back to red for the year, the answer will be a redounding yes.