The Standard and Poors 500 index (SPX) closed today at 6173, up 32 points or 0.5%. This week’s trading was strongly bullish with a gain of 3.4% for the week. Trading volume finally spiked higher today after remaining largely below the 50-day moving average (50 dma) for the past two months.
VIX, the volatility index for the S&P 500 options, opened the week at 21.2% and declined all week, closing today at 16.3%. We would have to go back to
mid-February to find a similar value for VIX. The bulls are in charge and the large institutions and hedge funds are going “risk on”.
In the past, I have tracked the Russell 2000 index with the IWM ETF in order to monitor the high beta stocks relative to the average S&P 500 stock. However, one of my clients called my attention to SPHB, the Invesco S&P High Beta ETF. SPHB is an ETF composed of the top 100 S&P 500 stocks ranked by beta. SPX gained 3.4% this week; IWM also gained 3.4% this week, so the Russell 2000 index must have an average beta across its stocks close to that of the S&P 500. By contrast, SPHB gained 5.2% this week. I will use SPHB to monitor the movement of high beta stocks in the future.
The NASDAQ Composite index closed today at 20,273, up 106 points or 0.5%. NASDAQ opened the week at 19,427, setting up a weekly gain of 4.4%. NASDAQ’s trading volume ran below the 50 dma this week but spiked higher today.
The bulls were running this week, gapping open higher three mornings this week. The S&P 500 stocks and the NASDAQ Composite closed at new all-time highs today. A cease fire in the Israeli/Iran conflict certainly played a role. Progress in several of the trade tariff negotiations helped improve the market’s mood. The NASDAQ Composite led the S&P 500 stocks this week. This appears to be a replay of NASDAQ’s high-tech stocks leading the bull runs last year. IBD’s recommendation for market exposure remains at 80-100%. We may be looking at a double-digit year for the markets. Predictions are always dangerous, but this market looks pretty solid at this point.