A telling recent signal from a trusted bond market indicator as well as price action in a popular bond ETF suggests that stocks are likely to remain under pressure in the short term.
Global stocks have been under pressure for the past five days, but so far, the early selling in the US stock market has been well absorbed, as stocks have closed each day this week well above the early lows.
Most of the major averages made their highs in early April, and one measure of the interest rate market turned up just as stocks were topping. Commodities expert and bond market veteran John Person called my attention to the recent action of the NOB spread, which measures the difference, or spread, between T-bonds and T-notes.
When the economy is perceived as weakening or stocks are considered vulnerable, traders will often buy bonds and sell notes to take advantage of the difference in yields because long-term rates will typically fall faster than short-term rates.
As John noted, “The spread diverged from the stock market as the Sypder Trust (SPY) was making its high in early April, and as long as this spread continues to rise, it indicates that stocks are likely to be under pressure.”
The recent analysis of this spread will convince many stock investors to start following it on a regular basis. The analysis of long-term yields and a popular bond ETF can also be used to monitor the market’s perception of the economy.
Chart Analysis: The daily chart of the T-bond/T-note spread (left panel) shows that late last July, the spread broke through resistance and began a strong uptrend, line a.
The daily chart of T-bond yields (right panel) shows that they have been in a broad trading range, lines g and i, since last September. After the early-March rally, the improvement in some of the weekly momentum indicators suggested to me that yields may have finally bottomed.
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