Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Peaks, Valleys and Trading Ranges: Stocks Stuck In Trader's Paradise

Another day, another volatile session with a 216-point trading range on the Dow has investors concerned, but traders - those commission-or-volume-based entities that make markets - ebullient.

The range of trade on the day was nothing of concern to anybody, since the levels are far from the extremes. Those extremes on the Dow, since February 8 include a February 26 high of 25,709 and a March 23 low of 23,533 and are dignified on charts as significant peaks and valleys. With the Dow closing somewhere betwixt and between is indicative of a market that simply cannot make up its own mind, since there are roughly equal parts sellers and buyers, but barely any conviction on either side.

Stocks will continue to trade in this 2100-point range until there is some decisive catalyst to lead them either higher or lower. Presently, there is nothing to encourage the bulls nor the bears that a breakout or breakdown is about to occur. What happens during these volatile but rangebound periods are fairly discernable patterns of behavior, most notably stocks bouncing higher off the 200-day moving averages of the various major indices, or correcting lower off the 50-day moving averages.

Stocks being tied to computers and the computers run by algorithms, programmatic trading is ensured.

There isn't much to be said or inferred from this sideways pattern, except that the range continues to be on the low side, with all-time highs from January 26 (26,616.71) becoming a smaller and smaller object in the rear view mirror of the stock market race car.

Nothing is likely to change this pattern until either the peak or valley is breached, though the odds are good that the valley breach will be the eventual winner, leading to a more vicious, faster-paced downturn.

That's not to say that the Dow could not add significantly from its current level. It's a distinct possibility, but one that would probably fail as the index approaches that February 26 peak.

Throw away all the fundamentals, dismiss all the geopolitical news, ignore all data and just focus on the chart. Sometimes - and now is one of those times - it is really that simple.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10
5/2/18 23,924.98 -174.07 -238.17
5/3/18 23,930.15 +5.17 -233.00
5/4/18 24,262.51 +332.36 +99.36
5/7/18 24,357.32 +94.81 +194.17

At the Close, Monday, May 7, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,357.32, +94.81 (+0.39%)
NASDAQ: 7,265.21, +55.60 (+0.77%)
S&P 500: 2,672.63, +9.21 (+0.35%)
NYSE Composite: 12,519.75, +26.40 (+0.21%)

Monday, May 7, 2018

Index Divergence Not A Pretty Sight; Higher Dollar, Oil, Gas Prices To Kill Economy

Friday's across the board gains in stocks managed to get the Dow into positive territory for the month, but paradoxically, not the week, which included the last day of April, a 148-point decline.

Thus, three of the major indices took it on the collective chins, with only the NASDAQ allowing for gains on a weekly basis. This kind of divergence - often seen in bear markets - is just another signal to astute investors that all is not well in the land of unicorns and lollipops otherwise known as Wall Street.

There's a significant amount of panic on display if one know where to look for it, one the best locations being the dollar index, which has been staging a rather relentless rally since mid-April, rising from 89.42 to 92.89, which may not seem like much on the surface, but in real terms, it's a huge matter to international trade. Companies not nimble enough to adjust to sudden currency movements may be caught flat-footed, on the wrong sides of trades, with losses in capital amounting to staggering sums if not accordingly hedged.

A rising dollar does rather damaging things to trading partners and to the US itself. Most obvious is that a strong dollar makes imports cheaper, dampens commodity prices should cause oil prices to decline, but, since the United States has become the world's largest producer of crude, perversely, oil is rising in tandem with the dollar (by Monday morning it had crested above $70/barrel), a condition which is going to cause some considerable pain to Americans who use more distilled products (gasoline) than any other nation.

If there's anything that will put a lid on economic expansion, it's high fuel prices, and the current level, if it remains so, primarily threatens the budgets of small businesses and individuals, acting as an up-front tax on production and consumption.

Practically every recession in modern history has been tied to the price of oil and/or gas. The current runaway price surge, if not contained and reversed, is likely to send the economy into a vicious tailspin. Since consumer credit is at an all-time high, the average driver cannot afford to spend more on fuel, be it to power an automobile, heat a home, or run a small business.

Once again, nefarious forces are at work, spiking the dollar and the price of crude simultaneously, when there is oil sloshing around everywhere and dollars returning to their US home thanks to congress and the president's tax reforms.

Those dollars, upon return, are being used by corporations for more stock buybacks, boosting - temporarily - stock prices, and are not reaching the consumption level, keeping inflation somewhat in check. The good news is that consumer goods will not skyrocket in price, though getting to the stores (what few of them remain) to buy such will cost more and more.

Greed will go where greed wants, and it always seems to manifest itself most profoundly in the price of a gallon of gas. Thank Larry Kudlow for this windfall for the Exxons and Chevrons of the world as his "king dollar" theory will be tested on the world stage.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10
5/2/18 23,924.98 -174.07 -238.17
5/3/18 23,930.15 +5.17 -233.00
5/4/18 24,262.51 +332.36 +99.36

At the Close, Friday, May 4, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,262.51, +332.36 (+1.39%)
NASDAQ: 7,209.62, +121.47 (+1.71%)
S&P 500: 2,663.42, +33.69 (+1.28%)
NYSE Composite: 12,493.35, +100.84 (+0.81%)

For the Week:
Dow: -48.68 (-0.20%)
NASDAQ: +89.92 (+1.26%)
S&P 500: -6.49 (-0.24%)
NYSE Composite: -100.68 (-0.80%)

Friday, May 4, 2018

When The Bottom Falls Out The Media Might Tell You

Most people who are invested in stocks via an employer-supplied pension plan of 401k don't watch the stock market very closely. Many of them don't even know the stocks in which their fund has invested their money.

Thus, most of these people - which is a rather large segment of the market as a whole, and a very important one - will never know that the Dow Industrials were down nearly 400 points on Thursday, or that the NASDAQ and S&P had similar, scary declines.

Rather, some of these people will note that the Dow gained five points and the other indices were down very little at the end of the day. They will get this information from the nightly network news, which is such an overrated form of communication, largely composed of liars telling lies, that it ought to be banned.

When the bottom finally does fall out of the market, as it nearly did in February, these same idiot non-savants on the television will bleat out doom and gloom and warn that all is not well because our precious corporations are today not worth what we thought they were yesterday, or the day before that.

These people, these casual observers of market mechanics, have only themselves to blame for not taking better care of their money. What kind of country is this that fosters the belief that men in suits from downtown Manhattan are better stewards of our wealth than the people who made the money in the first place?

There's an answer to that somewhat rhetorical question, and it is simply this: a gullible, trusting country, full of good-hearted people who routinely get taken to the cleaners by investment advisors, bankers, and their loving government. And then the press lies to them about it.

It's too bad, because there was once a time these advisors, bankers, and people from government could be trusted to do the right thing. There was a time when the press was free and honest.

Those days are long gone.

Look out below.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10
5/2/18 23,924.98 -174.07 -238.17
5/3/18 23,930.15 +5.17 -233.00

At the Close, Thursday, May 3, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,930.15, +5.17 (+0.02%)
NASDAQ: 7,088.15, -12.75 (-0.18%)
S&P 500: 2,629.73, -5.94 (-0.23%)
NYSE Composite: 12,392.50, -25.56 (-0.21%)

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Federal Reserve FOMC Meeting EPIC FAIL; Stocks Battered

The Federal Reserve - yes, those people who made what in 1968 was a hamburger and french fries for about $1.50, today $7.95 on average - snuck in another FOMC rate policy meeting, doing nothing, but suggesting that there will be absolutely three and probably four rate hikes this year.

Market reaction: Initial happiness, followed by a shocking reality. "We're screwed!" was the soundbite of the day from those well-tailored gentlemen and women who trade stocks with your money for a living.

Since - like the eTrade advertisements say - your stockbroker's new car isn't going to pay for itself, the buyers and holders of stocks have once again been taken to the proverbial cleaners.

As we can clearly see from the Money Daily handy Dow scoreboard, "sell in May" is already in play.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10
5/2/18 23,924.98 -174.07 -238.17

At the Close, Wednesday, May 2, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,924.98, -174.07 (-0.72%)
NASDAQ: 7,100.90, -29.81 (-0.42%)
S&P 500: 2,635.67, -19.13 (-0.72%)
NYSE Composite: 12,418.06, -74.96 (-0.60%)

Stocks Ripped Lower In Early Trade Before Miracle Rally; Signs Of Decline Ominous

After closing out April with the first positive result in three months - a paltry gain of 50.81 points - the Dow Jones Industrial Average began the month of May with a bad stumble, falling by as many as 350 points before rallying miraculously in the afternoon to end the session with a minor loss of just 64 points.

While the first day of May could have been - and probably should have been - a worse result than what the nightly news reports, signs for a continued decline in stocks overall are ominous.

The Dow remains far from all-time highs set in January, and, with earnings season winding down, traders will have a difficult time conjuring up reasons to have faith in equities over the near term.

With many stocks wickedly overvalued, the short-covering rally of Tuesday is likely to be short-lived, though the market still appears to be slightly oversold in the very short term.

April showed the market trading in a sideways direction, though the tilt to the downside is evident and wearing on Wall Street's general optimism. Any little thing could set off a panic, exacerbated by programmed trading and those silly algorithms and ETFs that bounce stocks around like rubber balls on concrete.

After the bell on Tuesday, Apple (AAPL) reported earnings for the most recent quarter that beat analyst estimates.

The company posted earnings of $2.73 per share on $61.1 billion of revenue. Analysts were looking for $2.64 per share on $60.9 billion of revenue, so, it wasn't exactly a blowout quarter, something that will surely be a cause for concern going forward. Apple is supposed to beat every quarter, and usually by leaps and bounds, but the company - which hasn't produced a new product in years - seems to be living more on reputation, and record stock buybacks, than innovation.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10

At the Close, Tuesday, May 1, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,099.05, -64.10 (-0.27%)
NASDAQ: 7,130.70, +64.44 (+0.91%)
S&P 500: 2,654.80, +6.75 (+0.25%)
NYSE Composite: 12,493.02, -22.34 (-0.18%)