In Week 1 of May 2017, the probability that investors expecting the Federal Reserve to next hike U.S. short term interest rates before the end of 2017-Q2 reached 90%. As a result of that strong focus by investors upon the current quarter of 2017-Q2, the S&P 500 (Index: INX) has developed a real potential to experience the "ticking clock" problem.
The ticking clock problem for the S&P 500 arises whenever investors become strongly focused on the current quarter as they make the investing decisions that affect the value of the S&P 500 index. Because the clock on the current quarter is ticking down, investors only have a limited amount of time during which they can maintain their attention on the current quarter before they will be forced to shift their forward-looking attention to another point of time in the future.
The potential for a problem as a consequence of that shift in focus arises because of the expectations associated with the next period of time in the future to which investors might next collectively target their attention. If those expectations include an acceleration in the rate of growth of the index' dividends per share, then the shift in attention will drive an increase in stock prices, which would not be considered to be much of a problem.
If however those expectations include a deceleration (or negative acceleration) of the expected growth rate for the S&P 500's dividends per share, then the shift in attention will drive a decrease in stock prices. How much they might potentially move would then be a factor of the magnitude of the difference in those future expectations between the quarter they are currently focused upon and the quarter to which they set their attention to next.
Our dividend futures-based model for projecting the alternative future trajectories for the S&P 500 allows us to show how stock prices will likely be set as investors might focus their attention on specific points of time in the near future.
If investors shift their attention to focus upon 2017-Q3, say because Fed officials begin communicating that they'll next hike interest rates in that quarter, that shift in attention will likely produce as much as an 8-10% decline in stock prices with respect to its projected trajectory. If investors fully redirect their focus to the 2017-Q4, then stock prices may rise by as much as 5%. And if investors have reason to split their focus between the two quarters, stock prices will fall somewhere in between, weighted to whichever future quarter investors are more strongly directing their attention toward.
As for telling how far forward investors may be looking, that takes paying attention to the market's news to understand the context of the market's information environment....
- Monday, 8 May 2017
- Tuesday, 9 May 2017
- Wednesday, 10 May 2017
- Thursday, 11 May 2017
- Friday, 12 May 2017
Elsewhere, Barry Ritholtz tallies up the week's positive and negative economics news….
Two final notes before we close out Week 2 of May 2017 for the S&P 500:
- Should investors redirect their attention to 2017-Q3, that shift in focus would represent why the "Sell in May" stock trading strategy might matter in 2017, even though we basically debunked the evidence to support the calendar effect as the result of statistical outliers last week! As we hinted in that post, it would be purely coincidental if it turns out to have any bearing this year!
- More significantly, we've had a major change in our data source for the S&P 500's dividends expected to have been paid out during future quarters. The CBOE has discontinued publishing their Implied Forward Dividends (DVS) Indicators for the S&P 500 (DVMR, DVJN, DVST and DVDE), where as of 11 May 2017, our analysis is now based upon the CME Group's S&P 500 Quarterly Dividend Index Futures quotes in our analysis (accounting for the apparent changes in the projected alternative trajectories beginning on that date). Since these quotes represent actively-traded options, we anticipate somewhat more noisy volatility in their reported levels.