• Sun. Nov 17th, 2024

Here Were The Top 10 Performing Industry Groups In Q4 | Trading Places with Tom Bowley

Here Were The Top 10 Performing Industry Groups In Q4 | Trading Places with Tom Bowley

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For those who seek momentum gainers, I believe the best place to start is to find the leading industry groups. I’m a big fan of trading leading stocks in leading industry groups, so step one is obviously to identify those strong and/or strengthening industry groups. I keep an industry group relative strength ChartList in my StockCharts.com account that we provide to our annual members at EarningsBeats.com. Using the “Summary” feature, I can quickly identify the best relative performers over various time frames. As we ended 2022, here were the Top 10 industry groups in Q4:

As I look at this list of Q4 leaders, I can’t help but notice that materials (XLB) has 3 industry groups in the Top 10 – nonferrous metals ($DJUSNF), aluminum ($DJUSAL), and steel ($DJUSST). Clearly, materials had a strong Q4, but there were two sectors that did even better. Check out this Q4 sector leaderboard:

Energy (XLE) and industrials (XLI) saw significant money rotating their way, and at the expense of consumer discretionary (XLY) and communication services (XLC). I’m never a fan of poor relative strength among our 3 aggressive groups – the XLY, XLC, and technology (XLK). However, there’s definitely a silver lining. The money rotating away from these aggressive groups is NOT leaving the market. Instead, it’s simply sending other areas of the market higher. That’s why the S&P 500 was higher in Q4. That’s GOOD, not bad. But until we begin to see relative strength in the XLK, XLY, and XLC, the NASDAQ and other growth-oriented stocks will likely underperform.

One group on this Top 10 list is aerospace ($DJUSAS). I wrote a compelling Don’t Ignore This Chart blog article about the DJUSAS – and Boeing (BA) more specifically. If you didn’t get a chance to see that article, you can check it out HERE. Another group that I personally found to be shocking was footwear ($DJUSFT), especially given how poorly most consumer discretionary groups performed in Q4. Yet, here was a former leader, getting its act together as we head into 2023:

Usually, when you see a big breakout on confirming volume, there’s follow through and the beginning of a nice uptrend. But we’ve yet to see that. On top of that, there’s a negative divergence, which is a signal of slowing bullish momentum. While I absolutely LOVE what’s going on right now with footwear, I wouldn’t be shocked to see short-term disappointment and perhaps a slight pullback to the 20-day EMA. We’ll soon find out.

If you’d like to hear my thoughts on the upcoming year – and the thoughts of my StockCharts.com colleagues and good friends David Keller, Julius de Kempenaer, and Grayson Roze – be sure to CLICK HERE and register for this Saturday’s 4th annual MarketVision event, “The Road Ahead: Navigating an Uncertain Market”. This is a FREE virtual event that does NOT require a credit card. Simply click on the link above, provide your name and email address, and check out the details of the event. Even if you cannot attend the event live on Saturday, we’ll make sure you get a copy of the recording!

Happy new year and happy trading!

Tom

Tom Bowley

About the author:
Tom Bowley is the Chief Market Strategist of EarningsBeats.com, a company providing a research and educational platform for both investment professionals and individual investors. Tom writes a comprehensive Daily Market Report (DMR), providing guidance to EB.com members every day that the stock market is open. Tom has contributed technical expertise here at StockCharts.com since 2006 and has a fundamental background in public accounting as well, blending a unique skill set to approach the U.S. stock market.

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Image and article originally from stockcharts.com. Read the original article here.