Bull Streak Ends As August Begins

As the turn of the calendar occurred on Friday, the bull streak for the market since the April lows ended. Such was not unexpected, and the correction has been a topic of discussion in our #DailyMarketCommentary over the last two weeks. To wit:

“While the overall backdrop remains bullish, including stable economic growth and earnings, it is worth considering that markets don’t usually rise in a near-vertical line. It certainly happens historically, but they always eventually end, just when most begin to expect they won’t.”

Since the April lows, the bull streak has defied gravity. While there have been plenty of concerns from a debt downgrade by Moody’s to weakening economic data, tariffs, and a Fed remaining monetarily restrictive, the bull charge has been quite astonishing. The speculative frenzy, driven by retail investors, was fueled by a cocktail of AI euphoria, abundant liquidity, and an insatiable appetite for risk. Consequently, the S&P 500 has enjoyed its third-longest streak of 3-year highs since 1928.

“What a year to be an investor. In pretty much anything, at pretty much any time. Even during the dog days of summer. It’s unusual for stocks to record so many multi-year highs in July. With a week left and helped by six straight record closes, the S&P 500 has already carved out a place in history as one of the best Julys ever. Only two other years have witnessed so many highs during a traditionally slow month.”Sentimentrader.com

S&P 500 total number

Simultaneously, Wall Street analysts have been busy raising earnings expectations, but the bull streak’s true undercurrent has been speculation. The latest earnings season saw “beats” primarily driven by cost-cutting and buybacks, not increasingly strong top-line revenue growth. More importantly, as noted in the #BullBearReport, valuations expanded as investors piled into anything tied to AI infrastructure, semiconductor supply chains, or cloud capacity.

valuations based on forward