Risk Control & CTA Buying: Potential $150-200 billion buying...and $25-50 billion in stock weekly buybacks through year-end.
https://x.com/themarketear/status/1854975931703582922
Corporate America’s earnings growth over the next year, which could pump the brakes on the blistering stock market rally before long.
A key indicator known as earnings-revision momentum – a gauge of upward-to-downward changes to expected per-share earnings over the next 12 months for the S&P 500 – has slumped into negative territory and is hovering near its second-worst reading in the past year,
Souring outlook on profit growth may dent a further S&P 500 advance after this year’s run made valuations stretched and positioning elevated.
The benchmark has been on track for its second consecutive year of gains, rising more than 20 per cent, and is at its most expensive level since April 2021.
“The big issue heading into 2025 is whether the Fed will be able to continue easing policy and if earnings momentum will favour laggards outside of Big Tech.”
The Magnificent Seven tech giants – Alphabet, Amazon.com, Apple, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla – are expected to post a combined earnings increase of 18 per cent in 2025, down from a projected 34 per cent for 2024.
Strip out Nvidia, arguably the biggest beneficiary of Wall Street’s AI mania, the rest of the group is expected to post a measly 3 per cent increase in profits in 2025.
The S&P 500 Index’s earnings growth is projected to reach 13 per cent in 2025, up from 10 per cent this year. In other words, the tech giants are no longer setting the pace for Corporate America.
In the week through Dec 4, the information technology group had its largest outflow in six weeks at US$1.4 billion.
Small-cap stocks, which have been trailing the broader market this year, had US$4.6 billion of inflows, putting them at an annualised record high of more than US$30 billion.
Last week, the Magnificent Seven companies traded at 41 times projected earnings, the highest valuation multiple since early 2022. The entire S&P 500 has seen a jump as well, with its ratio of 23 times the highest since 2021.
I’d rather buy the rest of the S&P 500 at 18 times (forward earnings) versus the entire S&P 500 at 23 or 24 times.
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