Tech, Financial Index ETFs Lead Q1 Rally | ETF Trends

The SPX (S&P 500 Index) shook off three consecutive losing sessions to finish last week, and the first quarter of 2012 above 1400 (the official close on Friday was 1408.47), registering a 12.13% gain in the first quarter.

We saw the SPX fall below 1400 on several occasions last week, but as our market technician David Chojnacki has noted recently, there is technical support at 1388 as well as 1397-1400, and even a novice chart reader will note that equities have rallied off of these levels recently after any temporary setbacks.

There is overhead technical resistance however, both at 1412 and 1425. Late last week in one of our daily client notes, David noted that “All three major indices dropped below key near term support levels during the session, but recovered by the final bell. This pattern is not atypical during this year’s rally, as we have had weak or sideways action, and then a burst to the upside.”

From a sector standpoint, Technology and Financials continue to show leadership, as has been the case throughout this quarter and we have pointed this out regularly. Financial Select Sector SPDR (NYSEArca: XLF) for example, finished up 21.37% to end the quarter and the NDX (Nasdaq 100 Index) was up 20.98% during this timeframe.

Another leading sector in terms of performance during the quarter, Homebuilders (as XHB has rallied 24.73% year to date) are within striking distance of a multi-year high that was touched earlier last week but size put buyers emerged late last week and this could be a sign of a potential top forming.

From a fund flows standpoint, SPY led the pack with over $2.6 billion entering the fund via creations, and followed by iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond (NYSEArca: TLT), which attracted more than $300 million in assets. We pointed out the presence of bearish speculators in ETF products and options (i.e. TBT inflows and call buyers, TLT put buyers, and TMV inflows) tied to longer dated U.S. Treasuries for the past several weeks, as TLT cratered rapidly earlier in March, eventually finding support on its 200 day moving average.

Last week for the most part TLT resumed its uptrend until a vicious sell off on Friday, where it gave back nearly 2%.