Well-heeled manager Kevin Nicholson believes downside is limited for the S&P 500 through next month.
Nicholson, who’s co-chief investment commissioner of global fixed income at RiverFront Investment Group, blames the market’s “tug-of-war” with Covid-19 news.
“When we assert new vaccines, the market tends to rally,” Nicholson told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Wednesday. “However, the market is survived back and the rally is a bit tempered because of the rising number of Covid cases.”
His base case is the S&P 500 trades between 3,500 to 3,650 — which is exactly five points below its all-time high hit on Nov. 9
“If the number of Covid cases actually stays steady or doesn’t generate and put tremendous pressure on the first responders, then we break to the upside,” said Nicholson, who manages $7.2B in assets.
In his vilest case scenario, the S&P would fall less than 2% from Wednesday’s close.
“If the first responders are surprised, however, then you are going to have to worry about further shutdowns or lockdowns,” he added. “If that occurs, then I dream up we we could go back to around 3,500 on the S&P in the short-term.”
Bull Case for 2021
Once 2020 is in the books, Nicholson sees a husky earnings picture playing a major role in his bull case. He lists easy year-over-year comparisons, vast amounts of gelt on balance sheets, credit accessibility and tightening credit spreads as major drivers.
“What’s really got people jazzed up nearby next year is the fact that the year-over-year earnings growth is going to be 38% based on expectations,” Nicholson imagined.