The Danger of Complacency: Are Investors Blind to the Next Market Shock?

It is always difficult to spot when markets are taking situations to extremes, and even more difficult to determine whether those extremes are immediately problematic.  One must wonder whether traders have become so certain about buying dips that they no longer sell on bad news, fearing they’ll miss a buying opportunity.

Unfortunately, the longer a market environment is taken to or beyond its normal limits, the more painful the eventual resolution.  We could be setting up situations where highly sanguine investors might be forced to once again reckon with revised earnings guidance and the eventual implementation of tariffs.

Underlying this situation is the ability for momentum-driven markets to ignore fundamentals.  This is a topic that we have discussed at length before, and in detail in a piece we wrote in May entitled When Momentum Rules, Fundamentals are Optional.  The key thrust of that article was:

[F]undamentals don’t really matter when momentum rules.  Price action, not the underlying justification for those prices, is all that’s important.

We added,

Fundamentals do eventually matter, but the price action can continue without regard to them for long periods of time.  In theory, markets are constantly interpreting all available information to find a stable fair values.  In reality, they are subject to a wide range of motivations and opinions that might have little to do with that noble search.

When momentum and sentiment are strongly positive, traders can overlook almost anything.

The original piece was written as stocks were recovering from the April swoon.  That drop was a reminder that momentum trades can go viciously awry, but that was not the actual catalyst for the comments.  We were noting that investors who were intent upon bargain hunting were charitable rather than punitive toward companies who chose not to offer guidance, citing tariff uncertainty:

We’ve seen very charitable responses to corporate earnings in recent weeks.  In any normal quarter, a company that withdraws guidance gets punished, and punished hard.  Instead, because of the tariff-induced uncertainty, companies are frequently doing so without consequence.  They are saying that they don’t have enough information to allow investors to make intelligent valuation decisions about their stocks, yet in many cases, investors don’t care. 

With earnings season beginning in earnest next week, we need to consider whether investors will be quite so charitable this time around.  The first piece of evidence came this morning when Delta Air Lines (DAL) rallied over +10% after reinstating guidance that they removed last quarter.  The new outlook is for an adjusted profit of $5.25-$6.25 per share, generally well above the prior consensus of $5.35.  That is indeed a solid rationale for a rally. 

But it is useful to remember that the company predicted earnings above $7.35 when they last offered guidance in January.  As a result, even after today’s rally, DAL is not challenging its earlier highs.  Will investors be quite so enthused if companies that are trading at or near all-time highs fail to match earlier guidance?

DAL, 6-Months, Daily Candles

Source: Interactive Brokers

Another extreme is the way that traders are essentially ignoring tariff news.  Quite frankly, I get it.  On Tuesday, in a piece entitled Traders Continue to Call a Bluff on Tariffs, we noted:

Heck, a lot of money has been made by traders betting on tariff malleability – why should they reverse course now?

As long as the market can plausibly assert that there is room for negotiation or extension, then it won’t freak out…

Thanks to the relentless dip buying, the “half-life” of dips has been drastically shrinking.

Something occurred to me when I was asked about the “half-life” comment during a media appearance yesterday.  It occurred to me that,

If one is conditioned to see every dip as a buying opportunity, then at some point you don’t even want to react [to bad news] and sell because why sell if it’s only going to go up more?

That sounds perverse, but when we consider the relative sizes of recent selloffs compared to rallies, we have to wonder the degree to which this mentality is embedding itself in traders’ psyches.  Broad market dips seem to be getting continually shallower and shorter, meaning that traders are ever more quickly pivoting toward bargain hunting.  At some point, do they even bother waiting for the dip, or risk creating one that they will regret by selling on bad news?  We’ve seen lasting plunges that stick in individual stocks on catastrophic news, like Centene (CNC), but the news flow that might affect the markets’ leaders has been insufficient to cause a lasting hiccup, let alone meaningful profit-taking.

The environment is increasingly risk-on all the time.  This situation can persist for a while, and even get more extreme.  It’s impossible to know when the proverbial rubber band gets overstretched, but the longer it goes, the more the risks get buried.

Related: Tariff Bluff? Why Traders Aren’t Buying the Political Posturing