The S&P 500 is on the cusp of a robust ascent, with Bank of America's proprietary Sell Side Indicator (SSI) nearing a strong "buy" signal—a signal historically associated with positive 12-month outcomes for the index.
This indicator serves as a contrarian measure of sentiment, historically portending bullish market phases when investor outlook skews distinctly bearish.
The current position of the SSI resides in neutral territory; however, it is thrice as proximal to triggering a "buy" signal than a "sell," suggesting a potential upcoming bullish trajectory for equities.
Projections by Bank of America strategists place the S&P 500 at a prospective 15.5% climb over the next year, aiming for a target level of 4,850.
This contrarian indicator's reliability has been underscored by Bank of America's team, led by strategist Savita Subramanian. "At this juncture or below it, the S&P 500 has yielded positive returns 95% of the time after 12 months, compared to an 81% positive return rate overall, with a median uptick of 21%," strategists elaborated.
Despite recent increases in bond yields spurring bearish market sentiment and contributing to the S&P 500's sequential monthly losses, the effect on businesses and consumers may be mitigated.
The strategists highlight that a significant majority of debt—over 75% for S&P 500 companies and 85% of U.S. mortgages—is locked in at fixed long-term rates.
The Bank of America team posits that the dampened impact of rising rates on equities could be offset by the resilience of corporate and consumer sectors, which may outperform expectations given their capacity to adjust over time.
In another analysis, the bank maintained an optimistic stance on the economy's durability amidst higher interest rates, advocating for a potential continuation of stock performance elevation even with persistent rate hikes.
On Wednesday, bond yields showed a retreating pattern, dipping roughly nine basis points to 4.776% following the Federal Reserve's decision to maintain interest rates, a move that could signal transient relief for equities.
November 2, 2023
More Articles
Seeds: Direct Indexing Starts with Understanding the Client, Not the Capabilities
Direct indexing offers powerful capabilities—tax-loss harvesting, values-based screening, concentrated position management. But Zach Conway, CEO and Founder of Seeds, argues the conversation often stops at the advisor level. The client gets a pitch deck without clarity about how the solution fits their situation. Seeds aims to flip the script by starting with deep client understanding before determining which product solutions make sense. The framework helps advisors answer a simpler question: who should get direct indexing, and why?
Last Month Was The Worst January For Layoff Plans Since 2009: Challenger
Layoff announcements ballooned in January, hitting the highest level for the month since 2009.