Major Trend Index
MTI Negative, Bear Market Rally Underway
For the second week in a row, the Major Trend Index gained 0.02 points to close at a ratio of 0.87 using data for the week ended February 19th. We believe a bear market rally remains underway and have positioned the Leuthold Core and Global Funds with net equity exposure of 42%, compared with levels near 32% in the third week of January.
MTI Little Changed, Broad Market Is Beat-Up
The Major Trend Index rose 0.03 to a ratio of 0.83 using data for the week ended February 5th. The ratio was lifted by moderate gains in both the Attitudinal and Momentum/Breadth/Divergence categories. The work suggests a cyclical bear market remains in force—and it’s worth noting that virtually every global stock market measure other than the DJIA and S&P 500 tends to confirm that view. Broad market damage, in fact, has been severe enough that we’ve covered another portion of our equity hedge, lifting net equity exposure in the Leuthold Core and Global Funds to 40% from 36-37%.
Major Trend Index Decisively Negative
The MTI fell deeper into bear territory during a horrendous market month. The 0.80 ratio is consistent with an ongoing primary bear market—and so are many of the moves by various MTI categories.
MTI Readings Characteristic of Ongoing Bear
Based on data through last Friday, the Major Trend Index rose 0.07 points to a ratio of 0.80. It benefited from a huge jump (115-points) in the Attitudinal category and a solid gain in the Intrinsic Value work. Steady improvement in these countertrend categories, combined with deeply negative readings in the Momentum/Breadth/Divergence work, is characteristic of an ongoing cyclical bear market; the body of evidence suggests it’s still too early to hit a major low in equities.
MTI Fell 0.06 Points To A Ratio Of 0.73
The Major Trend Index fell 0.06 points to a ratio of 0.73, using last week’s data (week ended Friday, January 15th). Essentially all of our trend-following work is now confirming that a cyclical bear market is underway. In fact, the new closing low this week, on January 20th, confirmed our suspicion that the S&P 500 decline from its high close on November 3rd represented the second leg of the bear market decline from the bull market high May 21st.
MTI Drops To 0.79
The Major Trend Index dropped 0.13 points to a ratio of 0.79 using data through January 8th. Several trend-following sub-models confirmed what our other "anticipatory" tools have been telling us for many months: a cyclical bear market is underway. Bearish market action to open 2016 has driven our tactical funds’ net equity exposure down to the 34-35% range. We’ll consider covering a portion of the equity hedge if evidence of a short-term low appears.
MTI Moves Up But Remains Negative
The Major Trend Index rose 0.03 in the latest week’s data to 0.92. The Momentum/Breadth/Divergence category, with a moderate gain, is primarily responsible for the improvement. Our shortest-term indicators are solid enough that we wouldn’t rule out a narrow move to new cycle highs in the DJIA and S&P 500 during the first week or two of 2016, but our longer-term work still points toward considerable cyclical risks for equities. The Core and Global Funds both remain positioned defensively with net equity exposure of 39%.
MTI Remains Decidedly Negative
The Major Trend Index inched up 0.01 in the latest week’s data to a ratio of 0.89, with several sizable swings within its five indicator groupings largely cancelling one another out. This work remains consistent with a high-risk environment for equities, and both our Core and Global Funds are positioned defensively with net equity exposure of 38%.
MTI Reverts To Negative
The Major Trend Index reverted to negative territory based on data through last week, dropping 0.10 points to close at a ratio of 0.88. We assume that a cyclical bear market remains underway, and have reduced net equity exposure to 38% (from 42%) in both the Leuthold Core and Global Funds via a 4% short position in the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY). We’d view any further advance in U.S. blue chip stocks as an opportunity to increase hedges even further, provided the rally maintains its internally weak character.
MTI Still Neutral; Cautious Stance Recommended
The Major Trend Index ticked up 0.02 points to a ratio of 0.98 with the latest tally, extending its streak of neutral readings to five weeks. The Momentum, Supply/Demand, and Valuation work all remain on the negative side of the ledger, and we suspect the Economic work is near its peak for this cycle. Overall, the analysis supports a cautious stance on the stock market, and our tactical funds remain positioned with net equity exposure of 41-42%.
MTI Unchanged At 0.96
Despite a pickup in volatility across its categories, the Major Trend Index was unchanged at 0.96 using data for the week ended November 20th. The failure of the MTI to bounce in response to last week’s 3%+ market gain reinforces what we’ve been saying for more than three months: the backdrop for stocks remains a fragile one, and portfolios with the requisite flexibility should remain significantly underweight equities.
MTI Little Changed In Low Neutral Territory
In the latest week, the Major Trend Index declined 0.01 to a low-neutral reading of 0.96, with little action among the five categories for the second week in a row. We consider it a “tell” that the best reading the MTI could manage in response to the S&P 500’s recent 13% rally was a score of 0.97 on Nov. 6th. With the S&P 500 still trading within a few percentage points of its May 21st all-time high, we can’t rule out that it (along with the DJIA and NASDAQ) could poke out to new nominal highs in the days or weeks ahead.
MTI Still Low-Neutral; No Major Swings Within Factor Categories
The Major Trend Index ticked up 0.01 in the latest week to a low-neutral reading of 0.97, with no major swings within the five categories. While the prior week’s initial improvement to neutral zone forced us to cover a few hedges, the weight of the evidence still points to high stock market risks. Our tactical funds are positioned defensively with net equity exposure of 42%.
Major Trend Now (Barely) Neutral
The Major Trend Index rose 0.05 to a neutral reading of 0.96 in the final week of October, following a 2 1/2-month period in the negative zone.
To Play The Rally, Or Not To Play?
Question: What will you do if the Major Trend Index returns to its bullish zone?
Large Gain In Technicals Bumps Up Ratio
The Major Trend Index jumped 0.11 to 0.91 using data for the week ended Oct. 23rd. The increase came on the heels of a large gain in the Momentum/Breadth/Divergence category, and puts the ratio closer to its 0.95-1.05 neutral zone than at any time since its initial negative reading in early August.
The Major Trend Index Fell 0.02 Points To A Ratio Of 0.80
The Major Trend Index fell 0.02 to 0.80 using data for the week ended October 16th, with a solid gain in the Momentum/Breadth/Divergence category overshadowed by losses in three other categories.
MTI: Small Increase Due To Bear Market Rally
The Major Trend Index rose a solid 0.10 to a ratio of 0.82 using data for the week ended October 9th; the improvement entirely reflecting a predictable bounce in the Momentum/Breadth/Divergence category in the wake of last week’s market rebound.