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Steve Reitmeister

Are Stock Fireworks OVER After July 4th?

Monday was the typical sleepy holiday session. Low trading volume and modest price moves which means not much interesting activity worth discussing after the strong June rally to put an exclamation point on the first half of the year.

What matters now is what happens next. And that depends on the Fed rate decisions and what that means for the health of the economy. In particular, if employment remains resilient or if it will finally crack leading to recession and renewal of the bear market.

All that and more will be at the heart of today’s Reitmeister Total Return commentary.

Market Commentary

The most complete way for me to share my stock market outlook and trading plan for the 2nd half of the year is by watching the presentation I just gave for the MoneyShow that covers the following topics:

  • Review of...How Did We Get Here?
  • Bear Case
  • Bull Case
  • And the Winner Is??? (Spoiler: Bear case more likely)
  • Trading Plan with Specific Trades Like...

Watch It Here >

Assuming you watched the video, let me add some additional color commentary.

ISM Manufacturing got the July economic data off with a thud on Monday. The overall reading weakened from 46.9 to 46.0.

Please remember again that below 50 = contraction. And also remember that manufacturing is considered the leading indicator for what happens to the overall economy. As you can see below the trend keeps cutting lower and lower.

Next consider this quote from Timothy Fiore, Char of the ISM, as to what he is seeing in this month’s manufacturing report:

“Demand remains weak, production is slowing due to lack of work, and suppliers have capacity. There are signs of more employment reduction actions in the near term".

That last part is what demands repeating. That being signs that employment is finally showing signs of weakening which has been the lynchpin for the recession conversation.

Q1 and Q2 of 2022 the US economy actually contracted which is typically the recipe for a recession. However, employment stayed strong and without that pain, then no recession was recorded. This means that we need to see unemployment go up to believe that a recession is afoot and that would reawaken the bear market from its slumber.

This statement from head of ISM, coinciding with a drop of their employment index from 51.4 to 48.1, could indeed be a sign that employment is ready to tip negative with higher jobless claims, lower job adds, and higher unemployment rate in the months ahead finally signaling recession.

No...just this ISM reading alone is not enough for bears to wave a victory flag. Just an interesting note of caution investors should consider before overly committing to this rally which appears far too ahead of itself given the concerning state of the economy at this time. Plus given history as our guide the economy is likely to only get worse the longer the Fed keeps raising rates to stamp out growth and inflation. (12 of the 15 last rate hike cycles ended in recession).

Speaking of the Fed, the odds of a 25 point rate hike on July 26th is now up to 87% from just 53% just a month ago. This has further inverted the yield curve and thus further increased the odds of a recession forming in the coming year up to 71%.

More economic reports are on the way that investors will want to keep a close eye on including:

7/6 ISM Services: Will it follow ISM Manufacturing into negative territory? Well, last time it dropped from 51.9 to 50.3...barely in expansion territory. Also of interest will be the employment component which tipped negative last month. That combined with weakness in ISM Mfg employment component could tell us something about the next set of jobs reports.

7/6 ADP Employment & JOLTs: Investors will look for clues in these 2 employment reports to predict what shows up Friday in the more widely followed...

7/7 Government Employment Situation Report: Investors are still expecting 250,000 job adds showing the strength of the jobs market. That seems a bit elevated and perhaps set up for disappointment. Further, investors will keep a close eye on changes in Average Hourly Earnings. This form of sticky wage inflation has been bothering the Fed and keeping them on the rate hike war path. So this wage component will have a good deal to do with future rake hike decisions.

7/12 CPI & 7/13 PPI: These monthly inflation reports will also have market moving impact as it certainly will factor into the next element...

7/26 Fed rate hike decision: To be honest, the pause last month made no sense when you are saying more work to do and likely 2 more rate increases. At this stage it is a forgone conclusion that a rate hike will come in late July. Thus, the key to market reaction will be statements by Powell to see if the committee still sees 1 or more rate hikes and when they might be ready for a pivot to greater accommodation.

As shared in my 2nd Half of 2023 Stock Market Outlook I still believe the facts point to recession and return of the bear market the most likely outcome.

Yes, I understand the price action is clearly saying something else. But that is just the pendulum of fear and greed for you...it always swings too hard in one direction before swinging back to the other.

The key for investing at this time is to maintain a balanced investing posture...like 50% invested in the stock market.

If indeed I am right that Fed is working overtime to create a recession...then when those signs become more evident to investors stocks will tumble and we can get more defensive in our portfolio (selling Risk On stocks + upping the ante on inverse ETFs to profit on the way down).

If the Fed amazingly generates a soft landing, then I will be happy to heed those signals by getting more aggressively long the stock market.

But let’s remember the Fed themselves are predicting a recession will form before they start lowering rates. When you consider the historical optimistic bias of Fed statements, then more investors should appreciate why being bullish now seems a bit premature.

What To Do Next?

Discover my full market outlook and trading plan for the rest of 2023. It’s all available in my latest presentation:

2nd Half of 2023 Stock Market Outlook >

Just in case you are curious, let me pull back the curtain a little wider on the main contents:

  • Review of...How Did We Get Here?
  • Bear Case
  • Bull Case
  • And the Winner Is??? (Spoiler: Bear case more likely)
  • Trading Plan with Specific Trades Like...
  • Top 10 Small Cap Stocks
  • 4 Inverse ETFs
  • And Much More!

If these ideas appeal to you, then please click below to access this vital presentation now:

2nd Half of 2023 Stock Market Outlook >

Wishing you a world of investment success!


SPY shares were trading at $443.79 per share on Monday afternoon, up $0.51 (+0.12%). Year-to-date, SPY has gained 16.92%, versus a % rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index during the same period.



About the Author: Steve Reitmeister


Steve is better known to the StockNews audience as “Reity”. Not only is he the CEO of the firm, but he also shares his 40 years of investment experience in the Reitmeister Total Return portfolio. Learn more about Reity’s background, along with links to his most recent articles and stock picks.

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Are Stock Fireworks OVER After July 4th? StockNews.com
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