The S&P 500 in Week 2 of March 2017 ended just ever-so-slightly below where it opened the week. After generally trending downward on the week, the S&P 500 recovered much of what the index had lost on Friday, 10 March 2017.
Our alternative futures chart updates the trajectory that the S&P 500’s closing prices took in the second week of March 2017 against the backdrop of what our dividend futures-based standard model projected, based on a combination of historical stock prices and the expectations that investors have for the amount of dividends per share to be paid out through specific points of time in the future.
That brings us to the one thing that really drew your eyes in this week’s updated chart – that red box outlining where the S&P 500’s closing stock prices on each day of the week fell. The one that we teased at the end of last week’s edition!
Like the previous red-shaded box, the new red-lined box represents our prediction of the range into which the S&P 500 will close over the indicated period of time during the indicated period of time, which runs from 3 March 2017 through 21 March 2017. We’ve drawn both boxes on top of our standard model’s projections in order to account for the effect of the echo of past volatility on our standard model’s projections, which arises as a result of our model’s use of historic stock prices as the base reference points from which we project future stock prices.
Unlike the previous red-shaded box shown on the chart, the starting point is not aligned with the projected trajectory that corresponds with the future quarter that we believe investors have fixed their forward-looking attention upon in making their current day stock prices, which we believe to be the current quarter of 2017-Q1 based on the Fed’s recent concerted efforts to convince market participants that it will next hike short term interest rates in the U.S. before the end of the quarter.
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