International ETF Momentum Movers

iShares Germany (EWG) and iShares MSCI Netherlands (EWN) both climbed thirty-five positions in the The Global Momentum Guide’s relative momentum rankings the past month. Both funds rallied close to 40 percent off their lows, boosted by a double-digit rally in the euro versus the U.S. dollar. Neither fund has climbed enough to make it near the top-10, but both could get there quickly if their rally continues.

Other European funds have joined them such as the iShares EMU Index (EMU), iShares MSCI Austria (EWO), iShares MSCI Sweden (EWD) and iShares Dow Jones Euro STOXX 50 (FEZ). The latter fund did make it into the top-10 of the rankings.

On the plus side, these funds are all climbing in the rankings. In a clear bull market, this would move them into momentum portfolio in a few more weeks. In a rangebound or bear market, these momentum moves often run out of steam once they make a run towards the top-10.

Working against them are new and existing headwinds. The latter first. The war in Ukraine and Russian sanctions in response have cost Germany about $500 billion thus far in bailouts and subsidies amid soaring energy costs. That’s roughly 10 percent of their economy. Other European countries, aside from those such as Norway that have ample energy supplies, are seeing similar costs. It is somewhat surprising how well their economy had held up to this point. Germany’s IfW, an economic research institute and think tank, raised its 2023 GDP growth forecast to 0.3 percent this month versus the prior 0.7 percent decline. If their economy manages any positive growth with energy such a massive headwind, it speaks to the underlying strength in Europe’s most important economy.

A new headwind is the European Central Bank. It raised interest rates by 50 basis points in December, matching the Federal Reserve’s hike, and it also announced quantitative tightening will start in March. It’ll start off slowly with 15 billion euros per month until the end of June before reassessing. The Bank of England also hiked 50 basis points despite the United Kingdom’s economy being in recession. Europe’s move is not surprising considering how much is being spent on energy and related costs. Spending money when energy costs rise is what helped entrench high inflation in the 1970s. As the Bank of England showed, and both the Federal Reserve and ECB have warned, central bankers will fight inflation even if the economy weakens.

The next couple of weeks will determine whether developed European markets can move back into leadership among international funds or if this is a bear market rally that has run out of steam. The weakest economies such as Italy and Greece have moved back into the top-10 because they are more volatile to the upside and downside. The euro’s exchange rate with the dollar will play an important role, as will the performance of emerging markets that currently rank ahead of countries such as Germany and the Netherlands.

 

Market Perspective for December 11, 2022

Market Perspective for December 11, 2022

Higher than expected producer price inflation capped off a down week for stocks.

Wall Street slid lower on Monday and Tuesday before trying a rebound mid-week, only to be hit with higher-than-expected producer price inflation. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 2.77 percent, the S&P 500 Index 3.37 percent, the Nasdaq 3.99 percent and the Russell 2000 Index 5.08 percent.

Oil prices appeared set for weekly losses on recessionary concerns. Crude oil fell to $71.02 per barrel, a new 52-week low. Diesel remains elevated in price, but it too has been on a losing streak. It fell to $2.78 per gallon in the futures market, down 30 percent in a little more than one month.

Energy was the worst performing sector last week, losing more than 8 percent. Communication services and consumer discretionary each fell more than 4 percent. Utilities were the best performing sector, but still slipped 0.30 percent in an overall down week for the market.

Despite falling oil prices, producer prices climbed 0.3 percent in November. Fresh fruits and vegetables, along with rising fees at financial firms, pushed the index up more than expected. Although some analysts dismissed the reading because of what caused the higher prices, inflation is never balanced.

Next week will bring the consumer price index for November. The market consensus sees 0.4 percent headline inflation for the month and 0.3 percent core inflation. As long as core inflation meets the consensus or comes in lower, stocks should hold up well. If like the PPI, core CPI comes in hotter than forecast, selling could push the indexes lower.

Investors may hold off on taking too much action in response to the CPI though, because the Fed will disclose its plans for interest rates on Wednesday. Officials from the central bank have hinted at another 0.5 percentage point increase and futures markets have priced that hike in. Any deviation from that plan will spark volatile bullish or bearish reaction, depending on if it comes in dovish or hawkish. Chairman Powell’s press conference, along with the “dot plots” showing Federal Open Market Committee members’ expectations for the economy and rates in 2023, could also spark a market reaction. Currently, speculators and interest rates futures forecast rates will rise into September 2023, with the market split about 50/50 on whether 5 percent or 5.25 percent will be the highest rate before the Federal Reserve starts cutting.

The weekly number of U.S. jobless claims rose to 230,000 last week, up from 226,000 the previous week, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported Thursday. The labor market remains strong, but the four-week moving average of initial claims has been rising.

China shifted its coronavirus policy in the wake of protests. It has abandoned zero-covid and now says most of the population will be infected. Serious outbreaks will still be met with lockdowns, as will places where there are more elderly residents. It remains to be seen how quickly the country opens up though because two years of intense virus propaganda has altered consumer behavior. November trade data showed Chinese trade was weaker than forecast. Tuesday and Wednesday will see Chinese lending, industrial production and retail sales data.

iShares China Large Cap (FXI) has rallied about 33 percent over the past six weeks and lifted emerging market funds with it. The rally has also helped global equities as investors hope for faster growth from China. If the U.S. inflation data and Fed meetings are in line with expectations, its possible the Chinese data be more impactful on markets this week.

Earnings for the upcoming week:
• Monday: Oracle Corp
• Thursday: Adobe Inc.: Q4 2022 Earnings
• Friday: Accenture plc: Q1 2023 Earnings

ETF Momentum Movers in November

Global X Copper Miners (COPX) +38
iShares Silver Trust (SLV) +28
VanEck Steel (SLX) +27
VanEck Gaming (BJK) +26
SPDR Basic Materials (XLB) +26

The month of November saw materials stocks lead the market higher. SPDR Materials (XLB) gained 13 percent in December 2, more than double the 5.5 percent rise in SPDR S&P 500 (SPY). Sectors such as copper and steel rallied as well, but oil, palladium and agricultural commodities were among the largest momentum losers. What explains this divergence?

In one word: China. Although one can look at the above funds and maybe guess China was the driver, the presence of VanEck Gaming (BJK) gives it away. Gaming stocks in that portfolio are heavily influenced by Chinese gamblers. As for the commodities, copper and steel are two of the main metals in demand when China increases stimulus spending.

The past month saw several rumors of China reopening along with large protests against lockdowns in some cities. Combined with the general rally since October, it delivered substantial gains in equities with China exposure. Invesco China Technology (CQQQ) climbed 43 percent from its October low. As a large component in emerging market funds, China and Chinese tech stocks helped emerging markets outperform U.S. markets, as did the weaker U.S. dollar.

What’s next for these sectors will be an important signal for markets and the world economy.

VanEck Steel (SLX) is the only fund ranked high enough in our relative momentum rankings to be a possible portfolio addition anytime soon. Often times, sectors come close to making into the top-10 of the rankings only to fizzle out though. Is it headed for leadership or will this be another fizzle?

Overlaying technical signals such as the 200-day moving average on the major indexes shows the markets at a major decision point. Rallies in 2022 have ended around this level. Will this be the third major reversal or has the bottom been made?

A breakout in all assets will signal this past year was more like a large correction than a bear market. At the very least, it would signal extended rallies into the end of 2022. If optimism around China remains, then the momentum indicates China-related sectors should extend their momentum gains.

If sectors such as copper, steel, industrials and emerging markets extend their rallies, it could create a bifurcated market. If these shares are doing well, it doesn’t confirm inflation will be higher. Investors will make that assumption though, and it could be why stocks such as Amazon (AMZN) are lower now than they were in October. Strong growth amid higher inflation would weigh on technology-heavy indexes such as the Nasdaq.

Finally, it’s possible history repeats. Most assets turn lower from here and resume the downward trend that has dominated 2022. In that case, it’s possible some of the above sectors underperform as traders who piled in and created the upward momentum find themselves scrambling out.

When the market finally tips its hand, the momentum rankings will tell us which sectors are primed for leadership.