Stocks Could Climb in December and Beyond: Carson's Detrick

headshot of Ryan Detrick, former LPL market straregist

After the close, Detrick tweeted that the S&P 500 finished above its 200-day moving average for the first time in seven months. In the 13 previous times the index held below this trendline for at least six months and then closed higher, it fell to new lows only once, was higher 12 times and had climbed an average 18.8% a year later, he said.

The Dow was about 6.5% away from new highs, Detrick tweeted. “The good news is those that followed their investment plans and didn’t cave to the nonstop bearish takes are feeling pretty good today [and tomorrow],” he said.

With inflation likely peaking, the U.S. dollar weakening, a potentially more dovish Fed, investors bearishly positioned, broadening market participation, a stronger-than-expected consumer, and crude oil now near flat for the year, Detrick wrote Wednesday, “there are many former headwinds, which have now become potential tailwinds. When all is said and done with 2022, we wouldn’t be surprised to see this year end higher than where it is today.”

On Thursday, Detrick tweeted that the recent S&P 500 bear market, which he defines as lasting from Jan. 22 through Oct. 22, was about average with a 25% decline, compared with an average 30% drop for all bear markets since 1957 and a 24% fall for bear markets without recessions.

In his follow-up post, he suggested 2023 “should be a bounce-back year for stocks” and noted the S&P 500 has seen back-to-back yearly losses only twice in the past 50 years. He also noted, among other points, that when the index is down in a midterm election year, it tends to do very well the following year.

See also  How Guardian Capital helped solve a succession-planning problem