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Despite the S&P 500's relative strength, the broader market shows significant weakness, with over half the Russell 3000 stocks down 20% or more. This is not complacency but a sign of a well-advanced correction, suggesting growth risks are already being priced in by the majority of equities.
A key warning sign of a market top is low correlation, where different indices (e.g., NASDAQ, S&P 500, Russell 2000) peak at separate times. This indicates that capital is rotating from exhausted leaders to laggards in a final, desperate search for returns. When this rotation ends, the next likely move is a broad, correlated decline.
Corrections often smolder under the surface, but a true bottom isn't reached until a major, headline-grabbing event causes even the highest-quality stocks and indices to sell off sharply. This 'capitulation' signals the final phase of the downturn is at hand.
With the S&P 500's Price-to-Earnings ratio near 28 (almost double the historic average) and the Shiller P/E near 40, the stock market is priced for perfection. These high valuation levels have historically only been seen right before major market corrections, suggesting a very thin safety net for investors.
The true signal of a recession is not just falling equities, but falling equities combined with an aggressive bid for long-duration bonds (like TLT). If the long end of the curve isn't rallying during a selloff, the market is likely repricing growth, not panicking about a recession.
A speaker highlights that the S&P 500 is underperforming gold, which he calls a "pet rock." In an environment where commodities and gold are rallying—typically a risk-on signal—the fact that premier risk assets like stocks cannot keep pace is a bearish indicator for the broader equity market.
Major indices can mask underlying weakness. By the time a major negative event makes news, a significant portion of the market (like 50% of the Russell 3000) may have already been in a correction for months, signaling the downturn is more advanced than it appears.
A key sign of a market bottom is when the sell-off expands beyond speculative assets and significantly impacts the 'best stocks' and major indices. This final phase of capitulation is often triggered by a major external shock, like a war, indicating the correction is nearly complete.
Weakness in speculative, low-quality stocks and assets like Bitcoin often marks the beginning of a market correction. The final phase, however, is typically characterized by the decline of high-quality market leaders (the “generals”). This sequential weakness is a historical indicator that the correction is closer to its end than its beginning.
Crossmark's Chief Market Strategist identifies investor complacency as her primary concern. The market's collective belief that earnings will continue to support upward momentum, despite underlying risks, creates a dangerous environment where investors are unprepared for shocks.
The current market regime lacks strong directional conviction. Growth impulses are too weak for a "risk-on" bull run but not weak enough for a "risk-off" recessionary scare. This middle ground, or "slowdown," leads to choppy price action and performance dispersion among assets.