Showing posts with label carry trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label carry trade. Show all posts

Sunday, August 04, 2024

PSEi 30: Has BBM’s SONA Cycle Climaxed? Rising Contagion Risks from the Unwinding of the Yen-Yuan Carry Trade


Bulls of 1929 like their 1990s counterparts had their eyes glued on improving profits and stock valuations. Not a thought was given to the fact that the rising tide of money deluging the stock market came from financial leverage and not from savings—Dr. Kurt Richebächer 

In this issue 

PSEi 30: Has BBM’s SONA Cycle Climaxed? Rising Contagion Risks from the Unwinding of the Yen-Yuan Carry Trade

I. PSEi 30: Has BBM’s SONA Cycle Climaxed? 

II. The Health of the Pre-SONA Pump: July’s Index Spike on Sluggish Volume 

III. The Impact of the "National Team:" Rising Concentration Risks in the Financial Spectrum 

IV. The Impact of the "National Team:" Rising Concentration Risks in the Economy 

V. How Media Shapes the Overton Window: Focus on "Ghost Month" while Ignoring Geopolitical Risks from South China Sea 

VI. How the Unwinding Carry Trade from the Japanese Yen’s Massive Rally May Aggravate the PSEi 30’s post SONA Dump 

PSEi 30: Has BBM’s SONA Cycle Climaxed? Rising Contagion Risks from the Unwinding of the Yen-Yuan Carry Trade 

Has BBM’s SONA Cycle Peaked? While the headline index has shown resilience in July, market internals reveal structural weaknesses. The unraveling of the Yen-Yuan carry-trade increases global contagion risks. 

I. PSEi 30: Has BBM’s SONA Cycle Climaxed? 

The following post is a follow-up on my July 21st, “The 2024 Pre-SONA Pump: Philippine PSEi 30 Soars to 6,800 - History, Details, and Effects 

Since its interim peak on July 19th, the PSEi 30 has dropped 2.97%—as of the week ending August 2nd—supported by this week’s decrease of 1.79%, marking its second consecutive decline. 

The major Philippine benchmark fell in 5 of the last 9 trading days. 

Interestingly, this week’s larger decrease came as the Philippine government is expected to announce the Q2 GDP—which has been widely projected to outperform—and June’s labor force survey. 

The authorities are also set to release July's CPI print, which the BSP expects to show a bounce from last month.

And it's also earnings season, where the consensus expects Q2 earnings to exceed expectations. 

Meanwhile, the establishment and media have been peddling the idea of the “ghost” month affecting the stock market’s performance, earnings, and the economy

II. The Health of the Pre-SONA Pump: July’s Index Spike on Sluggish Volume 

First, let's examine the performance of the Philippine Stock Exchange last July*. 

*Nota Bene:

-The base reference matters. In my perspective, the 2013 starting point represents the real peak of the PSEi 30 based on volume and market internals.

*Annual returns of the PSEi 30 partially represent an apples-to-oranges comparison due to marginal changes in its membership.

*The data indicated reflects nominal returns and not CPI-adjusted or real returns.


Figure 1

Thanks to the pre-SONA pump, the PSEi 30 jumped 3.23%—representing its second-best monthly performance in 2024 and the biggest July returns since 2018. (Figure 1, topmost image)

It was also the largest of the BBM's pre-SONA pumps over the last three years.

On a year-to-date basis, the PSEi 30's meager 2.62% returns signified its best showing since 2019, which highlights the ongoing bear market.  (Figure 1, middle graph)

Despite this, diminishing returns continue to be a scourge on the PSEi 30.

But how about the volume?

Though July's gross turnover was up 11.3% from a year ago, in peso terms, its depressed level, which was almost equal to 2021, reinforced the downtrend since 2015. (Figure 1, lowest chart)

Figure 2 

Gross volume includes the published special block sales and the undeclared substantial share of cross-trades.

In the first 7 months of 2024, gross volume fell by 8.4% year-over-year (YoY) to Php 865.5 billion, marking a third consecutive annual decline. (Figure 2, highest window)

This means that the paltry improvement last July has not been significant enough to cover this year's volume deficit.

The 7-month main board volume likewise dropped 3.69% to Php 702.7 billion, which signified levels below 2018. (Figure 2, middle visual)

Resonating with the gross volume levels in peso, it has been a downhill for the main board volume since peaking likely in 2013.

Amazing.

The more than a decade-long depression in the PSE's gross and main board volume represents the decadent conditions of capital or savings.

It must be emphasized that these volumes have been inflated by foreign trade, pumps by the "national team," and intra-day dealer trades.

In the first 7 months of 2024, the share of foreign participation has risen from 45.44% in 2023 to 48.8% this year. (Figure 2, lowest diagram)

Foreign investors remained marginal sellers, posting Php 27 billion in outflows, their fifth consecutive year of net selling.

III. The Impact of the "National Team:" Rising Concentration Risks in the Financial Spectrum 

As for the "national team," the Other Financial Corporations (OFC) could be part of this cabal engaged by authorities to prop up the index.

Clue?

The BSP on the OFC’s activities in Q1 2024: The BSP on the OFC’s activities in Q1 2024: “The QoQ growth in the other financial corporations’ domestic claims was attributable to the increase in its claims on the other sectors, the central government, and the depository corporations. The other financial corporations’ claims on the other sectors grew as its investments in equity shares issued by other nonfinancial corporations and loans extended to households increased. Likewise, the sector’s claims on the central government rose as its holdings of government-issued debt securities expanded. Moreover, the sector’s claims on the depository corporations rose amid the increase in its deposits with the banks and holdings of bank-issued equity shares. (bold added) [BSP 2024]


Figure 3

The growth of OFC’s claims on the private sector slipped from 9.5% in Q4 2023 to 8.5% in Q1 2024, which was also reflected in the claims on depository institutions, whose growth rate decreased from 20% to 13.9%. 

Nevertheless, both claims surged to record highs in nominal peso levels, reflecting the returns of the PSEi 30 amounting to 7% and the Financial Index to 17% in Q1 2024. (Figure 3, upper and middle charts) 

OFCs have not just been funding the government; they have also been propping up the PSE! 

To emphasize, the percentage share of the free float capitalization of the top three banks reached an unprecedented 22.7% of the PSEi 30 last May! (Figure 3, lowest image) 

Though it has slipped, it has remained within a stone's throw of 21.85% as of the week of August 2nd. 

The same banking heavyweights command a whopping 89% of the overall Financial Index pie, which is stunningly higher than the 79% share in the week of July 16, 2023.  

This outgrowth partially reflects the decrease in the number of members from 9 to 7, due to the exclusion of Rizal Commercial Bank and Union Bank. 

The only non-bank member of the index is the Philippine Stock Exchange [PSE:PSE].

Figure 4

The Financial Index has not only starkly outperformed, alongside ICT, electrifying the gains of the PSEi 30, but it has also been absorbing a greater share of the depressed volume of the PSE. (Figure 4, topmost graph)

That is, the uptrend in the Financial Index has climbed along with its estimated volume share of the PSEi 30, comprising 18.15% last June. (Figure 4, middle image)

As such, the concentration of gains in the index has also resonated in the context of gross volume.

To wit, the rising concentration risk comes amidst a declining trend in profit growth of the banking system, where a bulk of it represents accounting profits. For instance, mark-to-market losses are concealed via record Held-to-Maturity (HTM) assets, and BSP relief measures that understate NPLs, etc.

IV. The Impact of the "National Team:" Rising Concentration Risks in the Economy

And it is not just banks.

While year-to-date (YTD) gains of the PSEi 30 members have been evenly distributed (as of August 2), the returns of the top five issues have defined the index's performance rather than the overall breadth. (Figure 4, lowest pane)

For instance, the traded volume of the top 20 most active issues increased by 40% this July compared to a year ago and was up by 2.17% YTD 2024 from the previous year.

In the same vein, the volume of the Sy Group soared 46.6% last July from the same month in 2023 and was up 7.3% YTD 2024 compared to a year ago. 

This indicates that the heavy index pumping last July by the Philippine version of the “National Team” amplified the percentage share of the top 20 issues and the Sy Group in the context of volume. 

Meanwhile, the average share of the top 10 brokers increased from 56.98% in July 2023 to 57.6% last month. 

Aside from the sluggish volume, the PSEi 30’s SONA gains have barely been reflected in the PSE’s constellation. 

The advance-decline spread last July 2024 was -150 compared to -166 in the same month a year ago. Again, the PSEi was up 3.23%.

Figure 5

This divergence reverberated in the YTD performance: although negative breadth has become less negative—or price declines have been less intense—a positive sign, they are still declining.  Again, the PSEi was up 2.62% YTD. (Figure 5, topmost diagram) 

Lethargic volume (a symptom of capital consumption), rising risks from the concentration of activities in trading volume (reflecting maladjustment in balance sheet exposure), select stock prices (inflation of mini-price bubbles), broker exposure (increased balance sheet leveraging?), as well as low levels of retail trades (low savings), and rising dependence on foreign trade (increasing reliance on global capital flows) translate to magnified risks of significant downside volatility or simply—a meltdown. 

A stock market meltdown leads to a decrease in collateral values that underpin bank lending, which magnifies balance sheet mismatches, increases illiquidity, and heightens the risk of insolvency within the industry and among its borrowers. It also weakens the balance sheets of investment, pension, and insurance funds (such as the government’s SSS and GSIS), potentially leading to increased capital deficits and further heightening the risk of illiquidity and insolvencies. 

The BSP would likely bail some of these out at the expense of the peso. 

During the stock market meltdown in March 2020, the Finance Chief called on the SSS and GSIS to boost or "rescue" the stock market. The BSP followed this up with record cuts in official rates, historic liquidity injections, and the implementation of various relief measures. The rest is history. 

The BSP implemented ex-Fed chairman Ben Bernanke advise, 

History proves, however, that a smart central bank can protect the economy and the financial sector from the nastier side effects of a stock market collapse (Bernanke, 2009) 

The Philippine version of the national team likely exists for these reasons. 

V. How Media Shapes the Overton Window: Focus on "Ghost Month" while Ignoring Geopolitical Risks from South China Sea 

Incredibly, the establishment and media continue to entertain and mislead the public with the alleged influence of the so-called "Ghost Month" on stocks or the economy.

Because "Ghost Month" is a superstition rooted in Chinese tradition (religion), the media and establishment's embrace of it assumes that the markets and the economy are driven by Chinese culture, even when the Philippines is predominantly a Catholic population. (Figure 5 middle window)

For example, some BSP literatures cite the "Ghost Month" to rationalize the unexplainable. The BSP should address accusations of their having 'ghost employees' instead. 

The repetitive references to the so-called "Ghost Month" also assume that foreign participation in the financial markets and the economy is influenced by Chinese tradition.

Or, are investors or market participants in the PSE and the economy predominantly of Chinese descent or a practitioner of Chinese traditions?

Some PSE facts regarding the alleged misfortunes of the Ghost Month:

Since the PSEi uptrend from 2003 through 2023, August has closed lower in 14 of the 21 years, or 67% of the time, with an average change of -0.72%. Yet, August 2021 delivered a majestic 9.33% return, the highest since 2000. August 2022 also produced a 4.24% return, the highest since 2008. (Figure 5, lowest graph)

So, what happened to the "Ghosts" of 2021 and 2022? Did the PSEi call upon the movie comedians known as the "Ghostbusters" to foil the rut? Or, have these rallies been a product of the BSP's easy money campaign?

Ironically, the same media and establishment experts have been unanimously silent about the June 17th Ayungin Shoal incident, which involved a standoff between the Philippine and Chinese Coast Guard.

The incident could have triggered World War III—had the US agreed with the Philippines' interpretation, activating the 1951 Mutual Defense Treaty. Unfortunately, the US implicitly gave a cold shoulder to the Philippines, forcing the latter to negotiate and deal with Chinese authorities over the South China Sea. Naturally, the US is opposed to this.

The same echo chamber has been observed ignoring the ongoing shift to a war economy through its embrace of war socialism.

Superstitions are given precedence over facts that matter, translating to the brazen hoodwinking of the public that fomenting war is good for the economy while Ghosts will scare the wits out of investments. 

Won't a war lead to a partial transformation of the living population into ghosts? 

Yet, who would invest in a country on the brink of war? Who would like to see their investment ownership evaporate when enemy drones start wreaking havoc on crucial social, economic, and political edifices, exacting a heavy toll on life and disrupting the division of labor?

But don't worry, stocks and real estate will boom! 

Sorry, but that’s an absolutely stunning imbecilic logic. 

VI. How the Unwinding Carry Trade from the Japanese Yen’s Massive Rally May Aggravate the PSEi 30’s post SONA Dump

The scarcity of local volume translates to amplified vulnerability to volatile foreign sentiment, mercurial fund positioning, and flows. 

Proof?

The massive +4.7% rally by the Japanese yen $USDJPY stole this week’s thunder.

It smashed what the consensus called the “unstoppable” force, a speculative mania. 

To amplify its policy, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) reportedly timed its $36 billion intervention in July to coincide with softening signs in the US economy.

Furthermore, the Chinese yuan $CNY also rebounded by 1.1% week-over-week (WoW). The US dollar index fell by 1.1%. 

The unraveling of the yen and yuan carry trades unleashed a wave of de-risking and deleveraging that rippled across the globe.

Figure 6 

Asian currencies posted substantial gains. (Figure 6, topmost graph) 

The Philippine peso rallied by 0.46%, with the $USDPHP closing at 58.08 and looking poised to fall below the 58 levels and retest the 57.5 area this coming week.

The Philippines led the rally in ASEAN bonds. (Figure 6, middle window) The sharp fall in the 10-year Philippine bond yields strengthens the view that the BSP is about to cut rates.

Furthermore, as signs of mounting strains in the economy emerge, the "belly" of the Philippine treasury curve has also inverted—meaning yields of 2-to-7 year notes have dropped below the 1-year note and partly below the 6-month T-bills. (Figure 6, lowest chart)

Philippine treasuries appear to be defying the BSP’s projected increase in inflation.


Figure 7

The unwinding of the carry trades sent the Japanese stocks crashing.  The yen’s massive rally coincided with the Nikkei 225’s 5.81% nosedive last Friday, to register its 2nd largest one-day decline after the Black Monday crash of October 1987.  The Nikkei was down 4.6% WoW. (Figure 7, topmost and middle charts)

Asian stock markets closed mostly lower. Eleven of the nineteen bellwethers posted deficits, with an average decline of 0.47%. Aside from Japan, the most significant weekly declines were led by Taiwan and the Philippines.(Figure 7, lowest graph)

All of this indicates the magnified contagion risks associated with asset booms driven by financial leverage.

Figure 8 

Risks in the ‘periphery’ have reached the ‘core.’ 

The race to a series of record highs by the S&P 500 $SPX has echoed the PSEi 30’s muted rally in 2024. With the SPX down, the PSEi 30's SONA pump has started to wobble. (Figure 8, highest image)

Foreign outflows of Php 1.6 billion this week have partly resulted in the PSEi 30’s 1.79% decline.

In the backdrop of lethargic volume, concentrated activities, and a rising share of foreign participation, a continuation of global de-risking and deleveraging translates to more liquidations here and abroad, which could expose many skeletons in the closet of the Philippine financial system.

The SONA pumps of 2022 and 2023 not only surrendered all their gains; more importantly, the PSEi 30 closed lower than its base at the start of the pumps. (Figure 8, middle graph)

If history rhymes, the PSEi 30 could fall below its June 21st low of 6,158 during this SONA cycle (post-SONA dump).

Further, when the Philippine peso rallied in 2018 (USD PHP trended lower), it marked the onset of the PSE’s bear market. Will history repeat? (Figure 8, lowest chart)

Importantly, weren't we repeatedly told that easy money would fuel the embers for the rocketing of asset gains?

___

References

Prudent Investor, The 2024 Pre-SONA Pump: Philippine PSEi 30 Soars to 6,800 - History, Details, and Effects, July, 21, 2024

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, Q1 2024 Domestic Claims of Other Financial Corporations Rise by 2.8 Percent QoQ and 12.9 Percent YoY, July 31, 2024

Ben S. Bernanke, A Crash Course for Central Bankers, ForeignPolicy.com, November 20, 2009

  

Sunday, July 23, 2023

PSEi 30 6,600: Global Carry Trade and the SONA Pump? 3Q Vulnerability, The Impact of SONA on the PSEi 30


To make money in the markets, you have to think independently and be humble. You have to be an independent thinker because you can’t make money agreeing with the consensus view, which is already embedded in the price. Yet whenever you’re betting against the consensus, there’s a significant probability you’re going to be wrong, so you have to be humble—Ray Dalio 

 

In this issue: 


PSEi 30 6,600: Global Carry Trade and the SONA Pump? 3Q Vulnerability, The Impact of SONA on the PSEi 30 

I. A Week of Pumps and Pre-closing Dumps! 

II. Global Financial Easing Have Fueled Cross-Border Flows or Carry Trades; PSE Supported by Foreign Flows 

III. PSEi 30: The Property Sector Powered Another Low-Volume Rebound 

IV. Financial Melt-up, Market Dislocations, and Mounting Concentration and Market Risks 

V. Seasonal Vulnerability: Bears have Ruled September and the 3Q Outcomes 

VI. Trivia: The Impact of SONA on the PSEi 30 

 

PSEi 30 6,600: Global Carry Trade and the SONA Pump? 3Q Vulnerability, The Impact of SONA on the PSEi 30 

 

The Philippine PSEi 30's comeback eked a weekly gain on thin volume.  Cross-border flows from global financial easing played a role.  Sectoral rotation signified the other factor. 


I. A Week of Pumps and Pre-closing Dumps! 

 

After an early pullback, the PSEi rebounded to close the week up .34%, a second straight week of advance, which lifted year-to-date returns to 1.24%.  However, this gain lacked vigor, evidenced by listless volume and weak market breadth.  

 

Nonetheless, it was a pre-SONA week with intriguing developments. 

Figure 1 

 

For starters, pumps and pre-closing dumps signified the defining character of four of the five trading sessions.  Pre-closing dumps accounted for about 142.6 points or a whopping 2.15% from the other week's close! (Figure 1, topmost chart) Incredible. 

 

Like clockwork, the headline index would climb during post-lunch recess, which I call the "afternoon delight," but much of the late gains would be offset by furious pre-closing dumps.  

 

Given the substantial structural distortions in the % weight distribution, some market participants have used this to "manage" the PSEi 30 index level.   

 

Again, the top 5 issues commanded an accumulated weight of 47.2%, and the top 10, a 68.8% share of the PSEi 30, as of July 21.   

 

Further, the cumulative share of the main board volume of the previous top 6 issues (SM, SMPH, BDO, ALI, AC & JGS) continues to climb, exhibiting the increasing concentration of trading activities towards the heavyweights.  The increased volume has also supported their share weight of the PSEi free float cap. (Figure 1, middle and lower windows) 

 

Additionally, the top 10 brokers, mostly institutional brokers, have corralled the trading activities, which averaged 54.85% this week. 

 

So, pumps and dumps remain a highlight of the "stock market with Philippine characteristics." 

 

II. Global Financial Easing Have Fueled Cross-Border Flows or Carry Trades; PSE Supported by Foreign Flows 

Figure 2 

 

The easing of credit conditions in emerging markets, which indicates likely forthcoming central bank rate cuts, has accelerated ahead of their developed market peers.  (Figure 2, topmost graph) 

 

This financial easing has emerged as the global inflation cycle culminates, fueling leveraged cross-border arbitrages such as "carry trades." (Figure 2, second to the highest window) 

 

The disparity in the weekly performance of Asian-Pacific stocks could be a symptom of this unfolding dynamic.   

 

South Asian benchmarks unanimously ascended, with an average return of 1.99%. All ASEAN bellwethers closed up with an average of .53%.   The national indices of Vietnam +1.5%, Laos +1.21%, and Singapore +.91% led the region's winners.  (Figure 2, second to the lowest diagram) 

 

On the other hand, the bourses of developed economies of East Asia and the Pacific mostly endured losses. 

 

Foreign trade was instrumental in propping up the domestic benchmark.  Fund inflows reported Php 981 billion, a decrease from Php 2.6 billion a week ago.   

 

Due to special block sales, the share of foreign flows to the total turnover fell to 39.5% from 56.3% over the same period. (Figure 3, lowest window) 

 

Here is the thing, the increased foreign participation, notwithstanding, underscores the susceptibility of the PSE to volatility from sudden outflows due to the low volume. 

 

III. PSEi 30: The Property Sector Powered Another Low-Volume Rebound 

Figure 3 

 

The key beneficiary of this week's midweek rally was the property sector (+2.53%), supported at the flanks with gains of the services (+.83%) and the continuing melt-up in financials (+.44%). (Figure 3, topmost window) 

 

The free float market cap of financials accelerated its "blow-off phase" as the property sector staged a weekly bounce. 


In any event, the bounce of the property sector comes in the wake of grotesque divergence with financials. Of course, the irony of this relationship is that the bank's biggest client is the real estate sector.  

 

And while the bounce suggests that the financial conditions will improve due to falling rates, the property/PSEi 30 ratio exhibits the deterioration of the sector's performance since 2019, regardless of the direction of official interest rates. (Figure 3 lowest chart)

 

Further, for PSEi 30 members, the advance-decline spread was in favor slightly for the latter, backed by a weekly aggregate score of 13-16 and one unchanged. This slant was the same for the broader market; decliners were ahead of advancers with 450-431.  

 

The thing is, market internals remain frail and susceptible to excess downside volatility. 


IV. Financial Melt-up, Market Dislocations, and Mounting Concentration and Market Risks

Figure 4 

 

Despite the participation of foreign money, volume remained depressed.  Mainboard daily turnover (averaged weekly) slipped 8.7% to PHp 3.55 billion from Php 3.89 billion a week ago.  The mainboard turnover remains adrift at 2017 lows. (Figure 4, topmost chart) 

 

Back to the divergence between the financial sector and the PSE 30, on a 6-month basis, the "blowoff" phase of the financial sector—its index fast approaching the 2017 all-time high—has been synchronized with the momentous or record buildup of the sector's peso turnover. (Figure 4, middle window) 

 

Once again, this punctuates the increasing concentration of trading activities toward select banking issues in the face of an enervated general turnover.   

 

In contrast, the erosion of volume has led to a downtrend in the property index. (Figure 4, lowest graph) 

 

In a nutshell, the seemingly engineered melt-up in the financial sector represents a market dislocation that has only increased concentration and market risks. 

 

V. Seasonal Vulnerability: Bears have Ruled September and the 3Q Outcomes 

 

Finally, let us deal next with seasonal performance. 

 

To be sure, today's conditions are different from the past.  But in the context of leverage, inflation, and interest rates, current financial health must be worse than the antecedents.  

Figure 5 

 

The third quarter tends to be unfavorable to domestic equity markets.  Though the average returns from 2008 have been a positive 1.22%, mainly due to outstanding gains of 2009 (14.9%) and 2010 (21.6%), diminishing returns have afflicted the seasonal performance of the PSEi 30 in the 3Q. (Figure 5, upper window) 

 

If seen from the start of 1st wave of the inflation cycle in 2015, the nominal PSEi 30 returns submerged to 2.5%, with 5 of 6 3Qs in the red.  

 

That’s because September sticks out as the most vulnerable month.  (Figure 5, lower pane) 

 

From 2008, the returns have averaged -1.08%.  Adjusted from a base of 2015, this magnifies the MoM deficit to -2.99%.  And from 2015, the biggest recorded MoM plunge was last year and 2018, with 12.8% and 7.4%, respectively.   In essence, significant September activities materially influence the annual returns. 

 

Of course, this could provide profitable short-term trading windows.  One can sell before September or take a position once a selloff materializes. 

 

The takeaway, the PSEi 30 remain susceptible to amplified downside volatility considering the decaying volume trend.  

 

VI. Trivia: The Impact of SONA on the PSEi 30 

  

Will Monday's State of the Nation’s Address (SONA) by the incumbent President buoy the domestic stock market? 

 

Last week we asked, 

 

Will the surge in the PSEi 30 be used to justify to the public the enactment of the Philippine version of the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF), the Marharlika Investment Fund? 

 

This week, the leadership legislated the Maharlika Investment Fund (MIF).  

 

We should see in the SONA if the leadership rationalizes the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF), the MIF, with the latest performance of the financial markets.  

 

Adding to the MIF, the SONA will likely include the announcement via Proclamation No. 297, the emancipation from the pandemic's authoritarian and discriminatory restrictions.  

 

Further, the leadership will likely elaborate on the declining inflation rate to signify acts of their political triumph. 

 

In any case, how does the PSEi 30 perform before and during the SONAs? 

Figure 6 

 

1.  Bulls have dominated the PSEi 30 covering the week before the SONA, where the average return since 2007 has been +.62%, bolstered by increases in 11 of 17 episodes—including 2023. (Figure 6, topmost chart) 

 

2.  Bears were in control of the trading day of the SONA, capturing 11 of 16 sessions since 2007.  The average rate of change was -.41% through 2022. (Figure 6, middle graph) 

 

3. Lastly, bulls retained the slight edge covering weekly returns of the SONA.  Though bulls prevailed in 10 of the 16 events since 2007, the average return was a paltry .15% through 2022. (Figure 6, lowest diagram) 

 

Of course, past performance is no guarantee of future outcomes.  

 

Data from the SONA signify mainly noise than signals when assessing the periodical performance (monthly, quarterly & annual). 

 

If anything, the previous and the coming SONA look more like political vaudeville.