Week Ahead: Fresh Catalysts Could Trigger Added Equity Market Volatility

 | Sep 26, 2021 11:58

  • China’s Evergrande remains a threat to global markets
  • Analysts warn of market weakness ahead of historically most volatile month of the year
  • Expect markets to remain at last week's levels of raised volatility through at least the Sept. 30 government funding deadline if the US Senate vote on Monday doesn't enable the suspension of the debt ceiling. Should the motion not pass, it could force a government shutdown at the end of the month, weighing on stocks.

    Still, even if US lawmakers are able to avert a shutdown, additional global equity market risk remains in play, fueled by China's heavily indebted real estate developer Evergrande (HK:3333) (OTC:EGRNY). The company missed a key, dollar-denominated, bond coupon payment on Thursday, leaving global investors even more jittery about the chances of a collapse of the Shenzhen-based property company—which many believe could start a cascading stock market tsunami.

    A third potential market-mover could be Fedspeak, as Chairman Jerome Powell will testify before Congress on Tuesday, even as other policymakers are slated to speak at events throughout the week.

    Rounding out the list of probable market drivers is Friday’s Nonfarm Payrolls print, a heavily watched, always anticipated critical monthly report that inevitably moves markets. As well, weekly COVID data is released on Friday, which could also affect traders.

    h2 October Effect About To Play Out?/h2

    The month of October is considered to be a time when stocks historically decline, giving rise to the term the 'characterizes October as a “seismic month,” during which “volatility is higher...you have a greater number of pullbacks, corrections and bear markets that either start or end in the month.”

    Stovall also points out that technical indicators are signaling distribution—a term referring to selling by the 'smart money' to what's often referred to as 'dumb money,' creating a top—signaled as well by the fact that “many stocks are trading below their 200-day moving average.”

    Only 59% of stocks on the New York Stock Exchange remain above their 200-DMA, or in an uptrend, according to wealth management company Wellington Shields. That's a bearish indicator, as breadth weakens.

    In other words, major indices such as the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ, are all up based primarily on gains by bigger, mega-cap companies, as participation slips, diminishing support. Wellington analysts noted:

    “The rule is that when this 200-day number drops from above 80% to below 60%, it usually goes below 30%.”

    Case in point: the S&P 500. The broad benchmark is showing cracks from a variety of angles. Remember, these analysts have been referring to individual stocks that are not keeping up with the overall index. Is this breakdown visible via the index itself, the face of the US stock market?

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