BANK OF AMERICA: There's mounting evidence that the stock market will make an extreme move higher before the year ends — here's where to invest now

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BANK OF AMERICA: There's mounting evidence that the stock market will make an extreme move higher before the year ends — here's where to invest now

  • Historical patterns and key present-day indicators point to a rebound in the stock market before the end of the year, according to strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
  • In the same breath, the analysts said they expect markets to get more volatile and offered recommendations for what investors should buy.


It may not look likely right now, but the stock market is poised for a big rally into the end of the year, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

In fact, the firm's strategists hold this conviction precisely because of the turmoil that has rocked stocks over the past several weeks. Investors hold painful memories of October because three of the most painful crashes ever — in 1929, 1987, and 2008 — happened then. And last month turned out to be the worst for stocks in seven years.

"October is known for sharp market declines, but also known for creating market lows that lift stocks into a year-end rally," Mary Ann Bartels, an investment and exchange-traded-fund strategist, said in a note. "We believe that the holiday rally is underway."

Bartels recommended that investors focus on large cap, high-quality companies, and noted that healthcare stocks are currently showing market leadership.

Read more: A $2 trillion strategist warns that a trap has formed in the biggest tech stocks — and pinpoints where you should put your money instead

She also laid out some positive catalysts that could lead to a rebound before the year runs out.

For one, when stocks sold off last month, their stretched valuations got reined in. In addition, the rate of earnings growth may be peaking, but overall profits are still positive. And also importantly, the US economy is still in solid shape.

This expected rally won't be risk-free, however. Bartels anticipates that on the way up, stocks will get rockier because of the historical relationship between interest rates and volatility.



The gap between 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields has narrowed to almost zero this year, meaning that traders are demanding an increasing premium for holding short-term bonds versus their longer-term counterparts. It's a dynamic that has historically revealed the market's concerns about economic growth, signaled a policy error from the Federal Reserve, and highlighted the competition that stocks faced from safer, higher-yielding assets.

Additionally, no recession since the 1960s has happened without a yield-curve inversion, which occurs when the 2-year and 10-year yield spread falls below zero. It fell to an 11-year low of 19 basis points in August and was near 26 basis points on Tuesday.

All these factors contributed to more volatile stock trading, as measured by the Cboe volatility index, or VIX.

"Higher interest rates and the changing shape of the yield curve informs us that volatility or more extreme price movement should be expected," Bartels said.

There are other volatility triggers that bullish investors should consider. Within the stock market, Bartels said it was "concerning" that tech stocks, which until recently had led the market's gains, have not regained their footing after the recent correction.

On the macro side, Bartels pointed out the slowdown in the housing market as mortgage rates rise, China and trade concerns, and the prospect of the 10-year yield rising above 3.25%. Oil prices, which fell for a record 12th-straight day on Tuesday, pose a risk to other markets if they continue to decline.
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