Good morning! As long-time subscribers know, I believe data is an incredible way to tell the story of financial markets.
When you can visualize that data with charts, the same stories become easier to learn and remember.
Todayâs edition does just that â an entire chapter of the stock market told in one chart.
Todayâs letter is brought to you by iTrust!
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Wall Street folks like to say the stock market looks âhealthyâ when a lot of different names are moving in the same direction.
Just the same, commentators consider a top-heavy stock market âunhealthy.â
By that logic, itâs safe to say the S&P 500 looks healthier than it has in years coming out of the third quarter as well as September â historically the worst month of the year for investors.
In the three months up to September 30, the S&P 500 gained nearly 6%.Â
That is certainly strong.
Yet those returns donât tell us as much about the health of the market compared to the equal-weighted S&P 500, which climbed more than 9% in the same stretch.Â
That marked the biggest quarterly outperformance by the equal-weighted S&P 500 since December 2022, as well as the indexâs best third quarter since 2010, Bank of America analysts led by Savita Subramanian wrote in a note Wednesday.
To be clear, the market-cap weighted and the equal-weighted S&P 500 are two versions of the same index.
In the former, big companies like Apple and Microsoft have a greater influence over the performance of the entire index.
In the latter, each company holds equal influence, which reduces the dominance of the giants and grants the âlittle guysâ more of a say. Â
When the equal-weighted version outperforms the traditional one, it signals a few things:
Small- and medium-sized companies are doing well relative to big ones
Investors are rotating out of dominant growth names and buying other stocks
Broad optimism for more corners of the market
Eric Freedman, the CIO of US Bank Asset Management, called the stock marketâs third-quarter performance âsuperb and broad-based.â
âInflation is falling, interest rate cuts are in motion, and earnings are trending higher,â Freedman wrote in a note to clients. âAll of which help provide valuation support.â
Meanwhile, 67% of individual stocks in the S&P 500 outperformed the index in the third quarter. That hasnât happened since the first quarter of 2002.Â
Typically, according to Bank of America, less than one-third of names do that in a given quarter.Â
One more sign of a healthy market: Nine of the 11 S&P 500 sectors outperformed the benchmark index in the third quarter.Â
âWhile itâs just one quarter of broad dispersion, thatâs the kind of sector rotation and broadening market weâre looking for to make the bull market more durable,â said strategist Barry Gilbert of Carson Group.Â
âMarket broadening is not only a sign of a healthy market,â he added. âIt can also be beneficial to investors, since it would make it easier to diversify some risk without sacrificing return.â
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Elsewhere:
đ Tesla stock tumbled. The EV maker announced third-quarter deliveries Wednesday that fell slightly short of Wall Streetâs expectations, dragging the stock more than 3% lower. Tesla delivered 462,890 vehicles in the three months through the end of September, 6.4% more than the prior quarter. (CNBC)
đ°ď¸Â Leaving your job isnât paying as well as before. New data from ADP showed the median annual pay for job switchers dropped 6.6% in September â the lowest growth rate in three years. Economists say it shows that the labor market is less dynamic and more sluggish than just a few months ago. (Yahoo Finance)
đ Goldman Sachs is very optimistic on stocks. Managing director Scott Rubner says seasonal trends could help the S&P 500 finish the year above 6,000. âI am bullish on US equities for a year-end rally starting on Oct. 28 and I am worried that my 6,000 target is too low.â (Bloomberg)
Rapid-fire:
Bank of America saw an outage late Wednesday with some customers reporting their account balances read $0 (USA Today)
The dockworkersâ strike threatens to push banana prices to the moon (Sherwood Media)
Nike stock dropped more than 6% Wednesday with the company withdrawing its guidance for the year (Yahoo Finance)
ChatGPT-creator OpenAI has nearly doubled its valuation to $157 billion in its latest funding round (WSJ)
Costco will now sell platinum bars on its website for $1,089.99, an addition to its lineup of gold bars and silver coins (CNBC)
Football legend Tom Brady is auctioning off game-worn items, luxury watches, and personal treasures (Barronâs)
Last thing:
Chief AI Officer @chiefaioffice
BREAKING: OpenAI raises a $6.6B round at a $157B valuation led by Thrive Capital
– Largest VC deal of all time – 3rd most valuable private company company by valuation