Articles by Phil Segner, CFA Co-Portfolio Manager & Sr. Analyst
Five of the Magnificent Seven firms ended November in the red. Despite that turbulence at the top, the S&P 500 still managed to eke out a gain for the seventh-consecutive month. The valiant November effort from the index’s 2025 underdogs—Value, High Dividend, Low Volatility, and Equal Weight—won’t change much in the final assessment of the year.
Read moreLast month, Royal Blue Value (+3.5%) outdid RB Growth (-4.1%) for the first time since April 2022. Over the last two years, Royal Blue Growth is up 52%, just a bit more than Royal Blue Value’s gain of 51%.
Read moreIt’s been five long years since Small Caps had their last sustained relative-strength rally: From November 2020 through March 2021, the S&P 600 gained an astounding 51% versus the S&P 500’s +22%.
Read moreThe latest Up/Down ratio is 1.64—the second consecutive above-average reading for this vignette. Since the GFC, outperforming quarters have most commonly appeared in chunks of four or five. Still, for now, the story of EPS-growth expansion continues to gain steam.
Read moreAs we tickle the October high, the present bull has already achieved something quite special. This iteration has posted the largest price gain (+93%) of any bull market that wasn’t born in a recession.
Read moreThe index’s monthly win streak looked as dead as Disco as November progressed. Then, SPX rallied to close the month with its best five-day run since mid-May to attain a 7th consecutive monthly win. In the majority of prior cases, the index proceeded to post above average results for the next three- and six-month periods.
Read moreThe index gained 5% in the last five trading days of November to eke out a minuscule gain—but it was enough to score its seventh-consecutive monthly advance. The S&P 500 is back within spitting distance of its all-time high set in late October.
Read moreWith the second month of Q3 reporting complete, S&P 500 estimated bottom-up operating EPS continued to scream higher (Chart 1). At $72.40, it is now 8.2% above the level at the end of September (before Q3 earnings reports began). Percentage-wise, this is double the bounce we saw two months into the still historically very good Q2 earnings period. Q3’s YOY growth stands at 22%—the highest rate since the 2021 surge out of the pandemic.
Read moreAn 8.5% gain, modest by Nvidia standards, propelled that firm to a congruent 8.5% weight in the S&P 500—a new record. The semiconductor firm also achieved the stock market’s first $5 trillion valuation last month. That’s a little larger than the annual economic output of Germany—or the combined output of Central and South America.
Read moreSmall Cap Growth continued its surge over Small Cap Value. From March forward, SC Growth has gained 30% versus +18% for SC Value.
Read moreThe Russell 2000 (lower-quality firms) has gained 12% YTD, while the higher-quality S&P 600 has advanced only 4%. Since we need P/E ratios to calculate this measure, firms with no earnings are excluded. For that reason, the ratio continues to sag.
Read moreThe Up/Down ratio reads 2.14. We have to go all the way back to October 2021 to find a higher “one-month” ratio. Aside from the Q1-25 hiccup, the ratio has advanced the past seven quarters and now sits at a level generally associated with a robust economy.
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