What Correction? S&P Forecast To Approach Pre-October Levels

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Although December was undeniably a painful month for equities, it’s almost like the steep correction never happened. The S&P 500 hasn’t yet reached the level it was at before the early-December crash, but the way things are looking now, the index could be close to it within the next few months—at least that’s what one firm is forecasting.

S&P heading for 2,750: BofAML

In their weekly “Flow Show” report, Bank of America Merrill Lynch Chief Investment Strategist Michael Hartnett and team said in general, positioning is still bearish, so they remain “tactically bullish on risk asset prices.” They expect the S&P 500 to reach 2,750 by the end of winter. Before it crashed in early December, the index was trading in the 2,790 range, and before the October crash, it was closer to 2,925.

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Even though there is still much more ground to make up, the stock picture is looking eerily similar to pre-October action. Tech stocks are back, with the exception of Netflix, which is crashing on the back of mixed earnings results. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook, Alphabet and many other hot tech names are rallying again today. It looks like those who were hoping for the extreme imbalance between growth and value to be reduced will just have to keep waiting.

U.S. equities are expensive versus global stocks

The BofAML team also noticed something else about U.S. equities that’s particularly interesting. U.S. stocks are at their highest level versus global stocks in 70 years.

However, they also said a “sustained rally” is waiting on an “unambiguous signal” from a number of earnings lead indicators. One is the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which they said should pass 1,400 to signal that tech isn’t in a bear market.

Despite the rising prices, the BofAML team also reported that equity funds have recorded outflows in eight of the last nine weeks. Last week equity outflows reached $4.8 billion. U.S. equities saw massive outflows of $7.7 billion. Equity redemptions totaled $4.8 billion.

European equities have recorded outflows in 44 of the last 45 weeks, while emerging market equities saw their 14th week of inflows at $3.4 billion. U.S. large cap saw outflows of $5 billion, while U.S. value funds recorded $1.7 billion in outflows. U.S. small cap funds saw $1.1 billion in outflows, while outflows from U.S. growth funds amounted to $1.1 billion.

Credit crash is done

The BofAML team also reported that the crash in credit flows has ended over the last two weeks.

Pre-October Levels

They said the market was risk-on with $2.8 billion in inflows for bonds. They also said last week brought the highest level of outflows from government bonds since October and the highest inflows for high-yield bonds since April 2017, at $2.8 billion. At $2.5 billion, EM debt saw its highest inflows since January 2018. However, investment-grade bonds continue to lag the rest of the market.

Overall, BofAML’s Bull & Bear Indicator continues to tick slowly back toward neutral after briefly tripping a contrarian buy signal earlier this month. The indicator ticked up to 2.5 last week.

Pre-October Levels

This article first appeared on ValueWalk Premium

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