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Stock Rally Nobody Is Comfortable With Makes It Hard to Chase

(Bloomberg) — Equity investors pushed back into the market by a relentless rally are about to find out that the real challenge is just beginning.

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A sharp rebound in risk assets — fueled by progress in trade talks, economic resilience and receding volatility — is turning skepticism into a trade that nobody’s really comfortable with, following a month in which the consensus was to brace for the worst. The three-month pause in US-China trade tensions is reassuring investors, yet lurking in the background is the risk that stocks get so extended that they’re vulnerable to any fresh surprises.

“Markets are in limbo as world leaders scramble to agree deals within the 90-day tariff pause,” notes the TS Lombard research team including Steven Blitz and Davide Oneglia. “What matters is the potential for permanent damage during and after the trade war purgatory.”

The powerful move off the April lows was almost impossible to predict or to fully participate in. A mix of out-of-the-blue headline risk, blurry data and a flip-flopping narrative created an unprecedented rebound. The speed of the drop and the still-unfolding rebound resembles the Covid market of 2020. Hence, a full recovery for the S&P 500 might be much quicker than other bear markets.

Monday’s surge offered a stark example of the squeeze facing underexposed investors. Stocks leveraged to global growth and China-sensitive sectors surged on a wave of fast-money buying.

Data compiled by Bloomberg shows that many risky themes, which suffered losses of as much as 60% since the S&P 500 peaked in February, are back in favor. “Stocks are bid on the back of the cooling trade war temps, but it’s the low-quality themes that are pacing stocks,” note the traders at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s equity trading desk. They add that client activity levels were up by 71% on Monday.

Systematic strategies are adding to fuel to the rally. This cohort of investors uses quantitative models to buy stocks and cares not one bit about headline risk. Those flows push the market higher into areas where risk/reward becomes thin for everyone using classic valuations or a lack of conviction due to economic uncertainty.

Even retail investors — often the first to give up and the last to join rallies — were constantly buying during the selloff.