November 9 was a good day for Wall Street bulls. Stocks opened strong, and the S&P 500 surged 3% after the bell. The reason – Pfizer had issued a press release declaring that their covid-19 vaccine was 90% effective.
Wall Street reacted to this first concrete shred of optimism by pouring investments into stocks so far crushed by the economic paralysis caused by the coronavirus outbreak. In the depressed travel industry, for example, Carnival Cruise Lines and American Airlines saw double-digit gains.
Flash forward to December 2020 – vaccines by both Pfizer and Moderna have been approved, and the S&P 500 is up almost 14% year to date.
Too Hot to Handle?
In a year of flailing demand, market rallies have pushed Price Earnings (P.E.) multiples through the roof. Is the market overvalued?
S&P 500 Shiller PE. Image source: Multpl.com
The Shiller PE Ratio uses a 10-year average inflation-adjusted earnings and is not highly influenced by a single bad year. Currently, at 33.71, it is much higher than the mean (16.77). Its the highest since the Dotcom Bubble in December 1999.
Buffer Indicator as a Percentage of Historical Trend. Image source: Current Market Valuation
The Buffet Indicator, the ratio of total US stock valuation to GDP, shows similar results. The indicator is 2 standard deviations above the mean and represents a tail event, comparable only to the Dotcom Boom in recent history.
Markets appear overvalued as per these indicators. Equilibrium would mean either price reversal or economic recovery. Wall Street’s bullishness is hinged on a low friction vaccine rollout, promoting a speedy economic recovery.
Buy the Rumour, Sell the News
Buy the Rumour, Sell the News is a Wall Street adage for trading strategies. It is especially popular with retail investors, especially day traders. It suggests buying good rumour stocks and selling when bad news hits.
A strong trend in 2020 has been the continuous influx of retail investors into financial markets. For many day traders, it is an alternate income source facilitated by free time in lockdown. Retail investors have led the current volatility. Lizz Ann Sonders, Chief Investment Strategist at Charles Schwab, told Forbes that the “extremes of speculative fervour have defined the mini peaks and troughs in the market this year”.
Low yields have made stocks the best game in town for return seekers, which supports price levels. However, significant negative news about the vaccine rollout may send retail investors scurrying. The resulting fall in prices could cause an exodus towards capital preservation rather than returns. Another double-digit fall in returns may make even the most aggressive institutional investor apprehensive.
So what are the possible news stories that could cause a bear market? What should we look out for in 2021 to know when to sell or short?
Where’s the Gloom?
Mutation
The final trading week before Christmas brought news of a mutated strain of covid-19 in the UK. The CDC has stressed that this variant is not necessarily more infectious, and pharma majors have expressed confidence that their vaccines will be efficacious against this variant. The markets remained bullish, but the mutation shows that an easy recovery may be too much to hope for.
Anti-Vaxx
This has been a fringe movement for much of history. However, recent events have made vaccination an extremely polarising political issue. Dr Fauci, an advocate of mask-wearing and vaccination on the White House’s coronavirus taskforce, now travels with a security detail, due to threats on his life from extremist critics. NBC News reported, “The anti-vaxx movement in the US is strong, and multiple studies have shown large swaths of the population are reluctant to get vaccinated.” There is a strong possibility of extremism delaying adoption and economic recovery.
Allergic Reactions
The FDA is currently investigating five cases of allergic reactions. They stressed that mitigation strategies were in place to treat severe allergic reactions, but this could serve as fodder for the Anti-Vaxx movement.
Trial Limitations
Pfizer’s and Moderna’s trials focused on the vaccine’s efficacy on the disease rather than the virus. However, it is unclear if vaccinated individuals can still carry and spread the virus. Complacency may cause vaccinated individuals to abandon current preventive protocols and spread the virus, elongating the route to economic recovery.
Logistics
The US is on course to miss its original goal of having 20 million vaccinated people by the end of 2020. While the government has coordinated extensively with logistics companies and airlines, there are hurdles in storage and movement. The Pfizer vaccine, for example, has to be stored at -70 degree Celsius. FedEx and UPS are expanding their fleet but struggling to keep up with demand. These are the first signs of logistical bottlenecks in the system, and if more do appear, investors are likely to be spooked.
Inexperience
Inexperience may be an issue for Moderna’s vaccine. The vaccine is the first product from the company to receive regulatory approval, and there is a risk that scalability may not be as smooth as Wall Street expects.
Meanwhile, most outlooks forecast a robust structural economic recovery only in the second half of 2021. If a recovery does not take place in the first half and the corporate earnings releases fall short of expectations, market shocks may follow.
Market sentiment is overwhelmingly optimitic right now, as shown by the Acuity Trading dashboard.
The large role of retail investors in the current market is likely to make prices more sensitive than usual to bad news.
Another aspect to consider is the relationship between the S&P500 and VIX. When they decouple, it shows more frenzied buying and selling by retail traders, and this can be considered a warning of the market trend reversing. This is what the e Acuity Trading dashboard currently shows.
With the recent exuberance in stock multiples, the potential to get spooked is higher. Combining these with all the possibilities of bad news, we seem to have a perfect storm. Early 2021 will be critical for Wall Street, and it appears that their optimism is unlikely to go unpunished.