Charts of the Week1. Largest volume in IWM calls (Russell 2000) ever recently, and a day after that the surge in small caps continued, only to be unwound on Thursday and today.
2. Largest call volume in SPX ever, as 0DTE options traders have become meaningful market participants, accounting for nearly half of all SPX options trading volume.
3. The CBOE put/call ratio also ended the week last week at the lowest level we had seen since early March of 2020.
4. Global liquidity has been ample over 2023. We’ve certainly seen markets rejoice as balance sheets of the Bank of Japan, Bank of China, and even the Fed have expanded.
5. As we see a large amount of US Treasury issuance and other factors, such as tightening credit conditions, we’re likely to also see liquidity fall by about $1 trillion, according to BofA.
6. Tech saw the largest monthly inflows during May since February of 2021, another area worth reflecting on as that was around the time we saw a lot of smaller cap names peak, and market breadth began to narrow further and further throughout 2021.
7. This time there isn’t much roo
m for breadth to narrow further.
8. Last week, we also saw the largest inflow in to tech stocks ever, on top of one of the largest monthly outflows.
9. We can see that the year-to-date returns have been somewhat constrained. If we look at the “magnificent 7” of META, AMZN, AAPL, MSFT, GOOGL, TSLA, and NVDA, then the return on that basket is 54% year-to-date! But the broader market only returned 12% in comparison, and if we net out those companies, the remaining 493 S&P 500 components would only return a paltry 2%.
10. 2023 has been the third best year ever for buy-the-dip strategies. 2021 was the best year on record. 2022 was not a good year for this strategy.
11. Next week we have $296B of Treasury issuance coming in, which is significant and may begin to have a drag impact on market liquidity dynamics.
12. The National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) survey rose to over 90, which is the highest level we’ve seen since early 2022.
13. With regards to inflation, global supply-chain pressures are continuing to ease.
14. Export data from China, Korea, Taiwan, and elsewhere, that we’re seeing a very sluggish global economy.
15. The Deutsche Bank recession probability indicator has risen to near 100% over the next 12 months, meaning that the indicator says there’s near certainty that sometime over the next year we will be in a recession.
Source: Macrovisor
https://www.macrovisor.com/p/charts-of- ... tter&sd=pf