Showing posts with label greed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label greed. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

FOMC On Deck: Stock Rally Should End at 2:00 pm EDT

Void of volatility the past two days, US and global stock markets are about to get shock treatment courtesy of the Federal Reserve's FOMC, which will almost certainly increase the federal funds rate by 25 basis points, to 1.75-2.00%, the highest rate in well over a decade.

While the expected rate hike is well-anticipated, priced in (according to the usual suspect sources), and measured (one 25 BP hike per quarter is the new normal), markets will still see the rising rate environment for what it is: an economy killer, attracting all money to US treasuries and out of competing negative or near-zero-interest-paying bills, notes and bonds in other countries.

When the FOMC announces its policy decision at 2:00 pm EDT, the world will change in some small but all bad ways. Credit card payers will see their required monthly debt installments rise, any interest-rate sensitive debt obligations (most of it) will become more expensive, and, perhaps most important of all, stock buybacks will no longer appear to be the bargain they once were, when companies could borrow at extremely low interest rates to repurchase their own stock, rather than invest in capital equipment and labor.

The elephant in the room is the buyback scheme, one which has boosted stock prices to dizzying levels, based largely on lowered expectations via reducing the number of shares outstanding. Companies which had chosen to engage in the dumbest money move in recent history will still be clueless about how to expand their existing businesses. They will not invest in their own operations. They will not increase wages nor hire more human capital. They will continue their cowardly retreat into self-interested stock incentive bonuses for key executives, as if those people are the only ones in the organization who matter.

Sadly, US corporations are badly managed and have been for quite some time. The rot within the boardrooms and executive suites began many decades ago and has only accelerated though the first two decades of the new century, long after the "Greed is Good" Gordon Gecko exclamation point from the 90s.

Today, the fictional Mr. Gecko would be ridiculed for his naivety, modesty, and restraint by the avaricious purveyors of corporate theft currently occupying the positions of CEO and CFO at many major corporations traded globally.

As corporate executives continue to be glorified as champions of free enterprise and business leaders, elevated to the level of gods and goddesses, the corruption that has engulfed the entire political and economic spectrum will come to full bloom, the excesses and poor decisions exacerbated by tightening finial conditions. Just when everything becomes more dear and out of reach to the ordinaries, the wealthy and connected will resort to outright, in-your-face larceny, justified by an entitled mindset.

Once it begins to get worse, the levels of lawlessness, greed, immorality, and corruption will become unbearable, but, as it was in 2008 and 2009, none of the most obvious criminals will go to jail. Few will even be indicted.

When it's obvious that stocks are going to continue devaluing - a condition that's probably well-understood already by the elite - the rats will jump ship en masse along with their ill-gotten gains.

The short-term rally that began on June 1 may not end immediately after the FOMC decision, but it almost certainly will end shortly thereafter. The NASDAQ made a new all-time high on Tuesday while the Dow languished with a minor loss, ending a four-day win streak as it reached the upper band of its recent trend line.

Now comes the losing.

Next comes the lying.

Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
6/1/18 24,635.21 +219.37 +219.37
6/4/18 24,813.69 +178.48 +397.85
6/5/18 24,799.98 -13.71 +384.14
6/6/18 25,146.39 +346.41 +730.55
6/7/18 25,241.41 +95.02 +825.57
6/8/18 25,316.53 +75.12 +900.69
6/11/18 25,322.31 +5.78 +906.47
6/12/18 25,320.73 -1.58 +904.89

At the Close, Tuesday, June 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,320.73, -1.58 (-0.01%)
NASDAQ: 7,703.79, +43.87 (+0.57%)
S&P 500: 2,786.85, +4.85 (+0.17%)
NYSE Composite: 12,844.72, -12.24 (-0.10%)

Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Dow 20000 No Go Again; Is The Trump Rally Over?

In 2016, having first crossed the 19,800 point on December 12 and closing above 19,900 the following day, one would have thought that crossing the 20,000 rubicon for the Dow Jones Industrial Average would have been a slam dunk before New Year.

It wasn't and it still isn't. Like the final five yards on a scoring football drive, the final 100-200 points on the widely-watched blue chip index are proving to be tough, resistant, and, at this point, possibly a field goal attempt would be in order. Or a punt.

Including the 12th of December, it's been 20 days since the "Dow 20,000" baseball caps began circulating, but nobody's been able to don one just yet. There has been more than a fair share of drama over the simply psychological level, especially this past Friday, when the average fell just 0.37 points short of making magic.

But twenty days of hanging just below the number is giving some investors cause to pause and consider that the eight-year bull market - and more specifically, the massive post-election Trump rally - is finally tiring and about to head back to the corral. And if that happens, the confidence so prevalent the past few months will have been for naught unless one had the foresight to sell into the rally at some point.

Stocks continue to be highly valued, some say overbought. The last meaningful decline was in January of last year when the Dow and other indices took a hit somewhere between 12 and 15%. Though that particular correction never materialized into a bear market, it was a confidence-shaker and those who suffered losses are wont to forget it.

Taking a stab in the dark, it would appear that speculators are more interested in NASDAQ stocks, which continue to tear up new highs, just as the Dow is stalling. Could the NAZ pull the Dow along with it, or does the Dow hold the losing hand with which it will eventually pull down the composite, S&P, transports, et. al.?

With the Dow ending today roughly 150 points from the requisite top, it's still out there for the taking, though there seems to be no catalyst for any kind of extended move, so, reiterating past posts, even if the Dow makes the mark, it's doubtful it would hold for long. A correction is in the cards and it's likely to be swift rather than a slow grind, so day traders must keep stop losses close to the vest and hang on with all their fright. Yes, that's no typo. Fear and greed rule the markets and the fear index is on the rise.

At the Close 1.10.16:
Dow: 19,855.53, -31.85 (-0.16%)
NASDAQ: 5,551.82, +20.00 (0.36%)
S&P 500: 2,268.90, 0.00 (0.00%)
NYSE Composite: 11,183.33, +13.54 (0.12%)

Thursday, August 11, 2016

The Most Dangerous Market Of Your Lifetime

Investors in equities - those imaginary certificates that signify ownership of a portion of a company or corporation - are giddy.

Stocks are near all-time highs with prosperity and class envy writ large on every tick higher.

Sure enough, these investors are shrewd operators of finance and business, many having earned their degrees from the highest academic schools in the world, the diplomas proudly displayed on the walls of their hedge fund offices and trading areas.

So, why would they possibly be worried about anything, particularly, the value of their holdings?

Simply put, there just aren't enough of them partaking at the font of wealth pouring out of Wall Street. Making matters more complicated and distressed is that the executives of the companies in which their wealth is concentrated have been buying back their shares at an unprecedented rate, making the shares of stock available smaller and smaller, but also boosting the price of those available, traded shares.

It's an easy supply and demand formula: fewer shares available makes them more valuable. In effect, if companies are inclined to take back their shares at inflated prices (a de-issuance, if you will), those remaining shares have to represent the entire value of the company.

Thus, a company could theoretically buy back all the shares but one, leaving that one share of stock to account for the full value of the company. In the case of an Apple or Google or any of the thousands of billion-dollar market cap companies, that one share would be "valued" at some absurd number, like $285 billion.

In such a hypothetical case, the problem arises when the owner of that $285 billion share of stock wished to unload it, convert it to cash or some other assets. Who would be the buyer? And would they actually pay the offered price (the ask) in such an illiquid market?

Obviously, the seller of that massive share of stock might have to offer a discount, and a big one. Instead of $285 billion, the seller might be forced to accept $140 billion, or less, in event of a liquidity crisis, which, incidentally, is what stock buybacks are creating. Since there hasn't been adequate demand for shares since the financial crisis of 2008-09, companies have resorted to buybacks just to keep their companies afloat, many of them becoming less and less profitable over time, making the price of their stock even more ridiculously valued.

When the rush for the exits begins in earnest, the big-time hedgies and fund managers will be bidding directly against each other, each with the same goal, to dump corporate paper assets in exchange for something more sturdy, ostensibly government bonds or hard, cold cash.

The markdowns, margin calls and defaults will be spectacular and this market, this unsustainable fantasy created by zero and negative interest rates, central bank stimulus, and government dumbness and numbness will be exposed to real supply and demand economics in a swan song for greed, manipulation, and wealth concentration.

That this will occur is unmistakable. Everything does not go up in price all the time, forever. The business cycle has not been abolished, neither here in the US, nor in Japan, China, the Eurozone or anywhere else.

Central banks are currently backstopping the entire Ponzi scheme of the stock market with interest rate swaps, repos, direct investment, and options manipulation.

It can't continue forever, though it can continue for a long time. It's a deadly and dangerous game, putting at risk the entire economy of the planet, or, at least that portion of the planet that wants to play along.

Increasingly, the as the musical chairs are being removed one by one, players are opting out and moving elsewhere. Largely, the lower and middle classes aren't playing at all. They're invested in necessities, cash, maybe collectibles, precious metals, and real estate.

Eventually, the sheer volume of trade by the 99% not in the stock market and incensed by government policies which seek to impoverish them further, will outweigh the phony prices for stocks listed on the NYSE and NASDAQ.

The stock market will suffer a severe breakdown at some point. The trick is not to know when that breakdown will occur, but to continue to prepare for its inevitability.

Most will not be prepared. Those who have prepared may or may not proper at the expense of everyone else, because the chaos - political, economic, social - will be astonishing.

The Boy Scouts of America issued their motto many years ago and it applies today: Be Prepared.

Be a Boy Scout.

Wednesday's Washout:
Dow Jones Industrial Average
18,495.66, -37.39 (-0.20%)

NASDAQ
5,204.58, -20.90 (-0.40%)

S&P 500
2,175.49, -6.25 (-0.29%)

NYSE Composite
10,774.98, -29.53 (-0.27%)

Friday, May 14, 2010

So, I Was Right About the Fraud, Right?

OK, I hae stated my case all week. The case of the skeptic, of the cynic, of the personwho believes those who run big firms and those who execute trades for those big firms are among the most dishonest, corrupt, incorrigible people to ever set foot upon the planet, and it is they who are responsible (in cahoots with certain government agents) for the "flash crash" of last Thursday and much of the subsequent market action afterwards.

You can look back over the past six days of posts and my story doesn't vary. Insidious insiders caused the meltdown and bounce last Thursday, May 6, 2010, walked stocks further down on Friday, May 7, and knew full well that the EU would not only bail out Greece, but that they would approve a nearly $1 Trillion rescue package over the weekend.

When the market spiked 400 points at the open on Monday, it was they who benefited and it again is the very same people who have been selling at ridiculous short-term profits all week.

Here, for your reading and dancing pleasure are the numbers:

Thursday, May 6: Right around 2:30 in the afternoon, the Dow plummets suddenly, about 600 points, for a total downdraft of almost 1000 points, finally bouncing off 9,787.17. Just as quickly as the market fell, it rebounded. Traders and individuals are stunned. The Dow closes at 10,520.32.

Friday, May 7: Already confused and afraid, market participants sell out of fear that there are nefarious forces at work and they are correct. Dow closes at 10,380.43, a 10-week low.

Monday, May 10: EU approves monstrous bailout for member nations nearing default. Market gaps up 400 points at the open, benefiting only those who bought in on Thursday or Friday. Dow closes at 10,785.14.

Tuesday, May 11: Stocks moderate as insiders quietly begin selling shares. Dow closes at 10,748.26.

Wednesday, May 12: In what looked very much like a short squeeze, insiders maximize profits by boosting the Dow another nearly-200 points. Dow closes at 10,896.91.

Thursday, May 13: Selling now commences in earnest as insiders ramp up trading. Dow closes down 114 points, at 10,782.95.

Friday, May 14: More vigorous selling, with a bottom intra-day at 10,537.25. Dow closes down another 162 points, at 10,620.16.

There you have it. From Friday's close of 10,380.43, after all the obfuscation and hoopla, the Dow bottoms a week later at 10,537.25, a minuscule 157-point move, with plenty of action (for thieves, crooks and criminals) in between.

I've said it before, but the action of the past week confirms that Wall Street is no place for individual investors. There are far too many sharks in the waters to ensure safe swimming.

Dow 10,620.16. -162.79 (1.51%)
NASDAQ 2,346.85, -47.51 (1.98%)
S&P 500 1,135.68, -21.75 (1.88%)
NYSE Composite 7,077.64, -156.73 (2.17%


Decliners beat advancers, 5600-989. New highs barely edged now lows, 101-87. Volume improved a bit over Thursday's levels, though with the market pointing down, that's an ill-boding omen.

NYSE Volume 6,872,919,000.00
NASDAQ Volume 2,596,956,000.00


Oil was splattered all over the trading pits, losing $2.79 on the session, to $71.61, a 12% decline in a month, though gas prices are still at or above the levels they were two weeks ago, when crude was $86/barrel. Motorists are neither stupid nor amused at this non-conforming development.

Even the metals settled down, with gold losing $1.40, to $1,227.40 and silver off 27 cents, to $19.20.

A wild week, unless you were paying attention at the end of the prior week. Then you saw the raw greed and corruption that is part and parcel of today's trading environment.

It stinks. People should be going to jail. Unfortunately, the government is likely in on the game.