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The 10.7% rally in the S&P 500 from its June lows is stumbling as it runs into what has historically been the toughest month for the U.S. stock market, sparking nerves among some fund managers of a broad sell-off in September.

The S&P has been in a bear market since plummeting early this year as investors priced in the expectation of aggressive Federal Reserve interest rate hikes, but the index has rallied strongly since June, regaining half its losses for the year.

That rebound has been fueled by a combination of strong earnings from bellwether companies and signs that inflation might have peaked, potentially allowing the Fed to slow rate hikes.

But as investors and traders return from summer holidays, some are nervous about a bumpier ride in September, due to seasonal concerns and nervousness about the Fed’s pace of hikes and theireconomic impact.

The S&P 500 fell nearly 3.4% Friday after Fed Chair Jerome Powell reiterated the central bank’s commitment to taming inflation despite a possible recession.

“These are the unfortunate costs of reducing inflation. But a failure to restore price stability would mean far greater pain,” Powell said in a closely watched speech in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

September typically is a down month for the stock market because fund managers tend to sell underperforming positions as the end of the third quarter approaches, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac.

“We’ve had a breathtaking run and I wouldn’t be shocked if the market takes a hit here,” said Jack Janasiewicz, lead portfolio strategist at Natixis Investment Management Solutions.

The S&P 500 could fall as much as 10% in September as investors price in the likelihood that the Fed will not start to cut rates as early as some had hoped, Janasiewicz said.

September has been the worst month for the S&P 500 since 1945, with the index advancing only 44% of the time, the least of any month, according to CFRA data. The S&P 500 has posted an average loss of 0.6% in September, the worst for any month.

The index is down 14.8% year to date and has been in a bear market, hitting its lowest level in June since December 2020 after the Fed announced its largest rate hike since 1994.

Chief among the reasons for the gloomy outlook is a belief that the Fed will continue hiking rates and keep them above neutral longer than markets had anticipated as recently as a week ago, weighing on consumer demand and the housing market.

Nearly half of market participants now expect the Fed funds rate to end the year above 3.7% by the end of the year, up from 40% a week ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool. The fed funds rate is currently between 2.25 and 2.5%.

The Sept. 20-21 FOMC meeting will also likely drive volatility during the month, prompting the S&P 500 to fall near its June lows, said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA. Ahead of that will be critical economic data, such as a reading on consumer prices that will give investors more insight into whether inflation has peaked.

The strong rally since June, however, suggests the index will continue to rebound through December, Stovall said.

“While we might end up retesting the June low, history says that we will not set a new low,” he said.

While fund managers as a whole remain bearish, the ratio of bulls to bears has improved since July, reducing the likelihood of outsized gains in the months ahead, according to Bank of America survey released Aug. 16. The bank’s clients were net sellers of U.S. equities last week for the first time in eight weeks, suggesting that investors are growing more defensive, the bank said.

At the same time, the use of leverage by hedge funds - a proxy for their willingness to take risk - has stabilized since June and is near the lowest level since March 2020, according to Goldman Sachs.

Investors may rotate into technology and other growth stocks that can take market share despite an economic slowdown, said Tiffany Wade, senior portfolio manager at Columbia Threadneedle Investments, who is overweight mega-cap stocks like Amazon.com Inc and Microsoft Corp.

“We expect the pullback will start with some of the riskier names that have run up a lot since June,” she said..

-David Randall, Reuters

Also see, from David Berman: Stocks are starting to look vulnerable as the ‘cruellest month of the year’ approaches

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Stocks to ponder

Ballard Power Systems Inc. (BLDP-T) For nearly three decades, the Burnaby, B.C.-based maker of hydrogen fuel cells has attracted investors with the potential of a breakthrough that never seems to materialize. Once again, hydrogen fuel is having a moment, as Europe’s energy crisis and U.S. President Joe Biden’s climate agenda have given new urgency to the commercialization of clean energy sources. Hydrogen plays have caught a bid as a result, with Ballard’s shares gaining 22 per cent over the past month. Has Ballard’s time finally arrived? Tim Shufelt takes a look.

SmartCentres Real Estate Investment Trust (SRU-UN-T) In February, 2020, John Heinzl initiated a position in SmartCentres Real Estate Investment Trust for his dividend growth portfolio. Talk about bad timing. Less than three weeks later, the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic, sending the stock market into a panic. Retail REITs such as SmartCentres took a direct hit, as public-health authorities ordered many stores to close and some tenants stopped paying rent. But John held onto his units, and he’s glad he did. In fact, he’s now back to buying even of them. He explains why.

The Rundown

Short sales on the TSX: What bearish investors are betting against

A stock with a large number of short sales is not necessarily a reason to avoid it – but certainly a reason to make sure your due diligence is solid when considering an investment. Larry MacDonald highlights some of the short-selling activity on the Toronto Stock Exchange this month. Among the findings, some short sellers are betting energy stocks are in store for further weakness.

Stocks in this recovering sector are falling below investors’ radar

Transportation stocks seem to fly below the radar of most investors. But right now, this is one of the better performing sectors in the market. Gordon Pape looks at two of his favourites.

Hot potato portfolio has a tasty run, but what about its more conservative cousin?

The hot potato portfolio has served up average annual returns of 15.2 per cent since 1981 by using momentum to jump into stocks during bull runs and out of them during long bear markets. Norman Rothery looks at a simpler, more conservative portfolio strategy that also has been producing attractive returns.

Why this $1.2-billion portfolio manager has just cut his equity exposure to less than 50 per cent

While most investors try to avoid volatility, fund manager Craig Basinger embraces big swings in the market. The chief market strategist at Purpose Investments runs the $700-million Purpose Tactical Asset Allocation Fund, which automatically responds to changing market conditions to generate returns. And right now, it has shifted decidedly away from equities. Brenda Bouw talks to the fund manager.

Money is flying into this cash parking spot investment account - does it make sense for you?

Three of the five bestselling exchange-traded funds last month offered nothing more exciting than a safe place to hold cash in an investment portfolio and earn an acceptable return. The popularity of high-interest savings ETFs is a comment on the uncertainty in financial markets as we head into the fall. But it also shows that these ETFs are achieving mass acceptance and thus merit some scrutiny to help investors get value from them. Rob Carrick tells us more.

Also see: Canada’s largest banks block clients’ access to high-yielding funds

Others (for subscribers)

The most oversold and overbought stocks on the TSX

The highest-yielding stocks on the TSX, plus risk data

Monday’s analyst upgrades and downgrades

Buying steel stock with summer job earnings taught this CEO how to guide portfolio managers

China audit deal offers relief but few reasons to invest

Six ETFs for investors looking to bet on the future of retail

Globe Advisor

Utilities ETFs gain traction as recession fears mount

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