Another New Record: Stocks Can Never Fall Again
S&P 500 rose 17 basis points on Thursday. Tech stocks fell and the banks rallied. Like No matter which stocks do well on the day, the index almost always goes up. The Nasdaq was down 34 basis points and the Russell 2000 was up 28 basis points. VIX was up 1.2 to 24.47 which is unusual when you consider that the market hit a record high. CNN fear and greed index rose 2 points to 76 which is extreme greed.
As you can see from the chart below, the S&P 500 has increased 83.3% of the days in August which is the most ever. There are only 2 days left and it looks like stocks will rise on Friday based on the futures market. Furthermore, the stock market has almost always risen on Mondays this summer. This will go down as the best month for stocks ever.

Fund Managers Love This Market
Fund managers love this stock market, which is crazy when you consider how badly the economy is doing. Yes, it has improved, but without more stimulus, the consumer might sag again. We need the Abbott rapid test to work to properly eliminate COVID-19.
Thursday was a bad day for COVID-19 as the 7 day average for both new cases and new deaths rose slightly. It was wrong to predict the 7 day average of deaths to fall to 800 by the end of August. Deaths have declined seemingly very slowly.

Despite that negative, fund managers are levered long stocks which is a sign of euphoria. As you can see from the chart above, the NAAIM index rose to 106.56 which is its 4th highest reading ever. More importantly, this is the 3rd straight reading above 100 and the 7th straight reading above 90.
Another time it was above 100 for 3 straight weeks was October 2017. S&P 500 rose 13% after that and then crashed early in 2018. This rally likely won’t last another 3 months. A crash will be worse than early 2018 because now we have retail investors involved with their stimulus money. Popular stocks with hedge funds and retail traders are about to take a nosedive.
Thursday’s Market (Tesla Passes JNJ)
Tesla stock rose 4% as it hit a record high. There was a crash mid-day where it fell 5.3%, but it rebounded near the high. Tesla’s 14 day relative strength index is 81.3. With Thursday’s rally, it likely got above 80. Even Apple fell after getting above 80 on Monday.
Tesla’s stock is up 62.9% since it announced its split. With a market cap of $418.6 billion, Tesla has surpassed Johnson and Johnson to become the 8th biggest company in America. Next stop is Visa which is at $449.2 billion.
We don’t know if the hype surrounding battery day on September 22nd can get Tesla above Visa. Financial press would go crazy if Tesla passes Berkshire Hathaway which is next on the list with a market cap of $518 billion. It’s tough to gauge Tesla because the stock will rally the most at the end of its bubble, but we don’t know when the end is. If it has another 2 weeks left, there might be a lot of gains to be had.
It was corret to predict that this week Tesla would rally without Apple which was correct as Apple is only up 0.5% this week. A big mistake was that the rest of the market would fall. Wednesday was an amazing day for the cloud stocks and Thursday was a great day for bank stocks.
Regional bank ETF was up 2% and the small cap value index was up 0.8%. Since this has been the best month ever in terms of the number of up days, we can say for certain September won’t be better. Investors are worried about election risk. Investors are more concerned with the tech bubble.
Everyone already knows the election is coming. It would be interesting if hedges don’t help traders when the tech stocks fall because the rest of the market rallies. That would be double trouble.
Put to call ratio is 0.38. This was the 2nd day in a row it was below 0.4 making this the 2nd time in the past 15 years it has done that. First time was April 2010. Recovery stocks rallied on Thursday as Live Nation was up 8.8% and Royal Caribbean was up 6%.
Worst sector was communication services which fell 1.3% as Facebook fell 3.5%. Best sector was the financials (up 1.7%) as the yield curve steepened. Wells Fargo was up 2.3%.
European Equities Low Versus America
As you can see from the chart below, European equities have done the worst versus American stocks in over 100 years. Divergence is even wider than the troughs in 1929 and 1999. That’s because U.S. tech stocks are in a comparable sized bubble to the 1920s and 1990s.
Everyone thinks European stocks are bad businesses. Their indexes don’t have a lot of tech stocks. However, that thesis has played itself out. These businesses aren’t as good, but they still have value. This relationship will normalize as American tech stocks will crash. European stocks might only rise modestly.

Conclusion
August 2020 will be remembered as having the most up days in a month ever. Many of us will be referring to this historic month for the rest of our investing lives.
This has been an amazing summer as cloud stocks have exploded. Salesforce was added to the Dow, Apple reached over $2 trillion, Tesla became the 8th largest company in America without being in the S&P 500.
Such a feat has never occurred before. Active managers are leveraged long on average. There are no bears left unless you look at the AAII investor sentiment poll.