Monday, the government said retail sales rose a scant 0.2% in February. Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had forecast a 0.6% increase. Restaurant sales were down 1.5%, the largest decline in 13 months.
On Tuesday, the market needs to digest housing starts, building permits, import prices, industrial production and capacity utilization before the opening bell. Those readings are expected to come largely in line with estimates. Import prices are probably not reflective of tariff effects yet.
Housing starts ripped 11.2% higher after dropping 11.5% in January, well above estimates of a +1.4% monthly gain. Building Permits fell 1.2% month over month.
Capacity utilization stepped up to 78.2 percent, a rate that is 1.4 percentage points below its long-run (1972–2024) average. Industrial Production was solid, up 0.7% in February.
On Wednesday, the FOMC delivers the second rate policy decision of 2025, expected to keep the federal funds target rate on hold, citing changing, challenging conditions. Following the 2:00 announcement, Fed Chair, Jerome Powell will hold a press conference and likely will take questions concerned over any deviation from economic projections from December. FOMC participants are not expected to cause much turbulence, though the market appears on edge, ready to drop another shoe, so to speak.
With the FOMC looming, Tuesday may be a repeat performance of Monday or could extend the tail that appeared late in Monday's session. Despite the seemingly large gains of the past two sessions, the majors are barely off last week's bottoms and have a lot of work to do just to
Resistance exists not far from where stocks closed Monday. A key level for the S&P appears at 5,700 and the index is at six-month lows. Buyers that fueled the rally from mid-September through mid-February must contend with being caught in a valuation trap. There's support for the S&P at 5400, 5200 and 5000, though it is ill-defined. Market forces have already signaled prevailing bearish conditions. The likelihood of a sustained rally rests on very slim assumptions and long odds.
The Dow and NASDAQ have similar set-ups with overhead resistance restraining the upside and market bottoms from August and September - the result of extensive coordinated and correlated algorithms - serving as markers for directional purposes.
From a chartist perspective, the overall picture is less-than-encouraging for the bulls. Sentiment has turned bearish, for many good reasons, among them continuing geo-political turbulence, trade and tariff concerns, expected GDP collapse for the first quarter, rising unemployment, and the potential for a recession in the U.S., rivaling what appears to be weak conditions across Europe, with political leadership steering economies toward a glacial outcome.
One could easily assume the worst is yet to come in Europe, though the equity markets in France, Germany, Britain, Spain, and elsewhere are trading at levels at or near all-time records. That particular anomaly is probably due more to a weakening U.S. dollar than to any factual basis of market fundamentals. Ir's almost as if Europeans are unaware that the equity bubble is bursting or their markets are even more divorced from reality than those in the United States. Sometimes, reality is stranger than fiction and this appears to be the case for most of Europe.
Stock levels in European markets are unsustainable, especially in the face of a U.S.-led recession. Should that emerge as the primary economic driver, the fall may be devastating.
On the other hand, European nations are hell-bent on continuing and even expanding the assault against Russia, calling for war-time spending via issuance of new debt in the trillions of euros. No doubt, a fresh infusion of cash and credit - or, at least the promise of such - will continue fueling an equity rally, but the logic behind further victimization of Russia, just as the Russians and Americans appear on the verge of a deal to partition Ukraine into smaller, more-readily digested territories, seems ill-conceived.
Perhaps the best analysis of the European condition is that their leaders, after persuing objectives laid out by the WEF and the "Great Reset" ideology for the past 15 years and now seeing them fail, are drowning in their own pools of tears. Unable to admit defeat, and, with the very real prospect of America pulling back its offensive and defensive postures, they have joined hands around a doomsday plot. Like the incursion by Ukrainian forces into Kursk, they seem to be willing to trade short term benefits for long term failure.
Such short-sighted leadership will almost certainly lead to devastating outcomes.
In light of the shuffling madness (hat tip to Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull) European investors and institutions are doing all they can to inspire confidence, buying stocks at higher and higher levels without regard to inflation, civil unrest and a generally unamused - and completely disregarded - public.
With European adventurism as a backdrop, there's no wonder gold is breaking to new records daily. From the ground level, faith and confidence in the entire European union project has been shattered. The pubic has grown weary of unelected Brussels and its dictates, longing for a return to peace and prosperity which the leadership is unable to provide. Decades of bad policies and worse decisions are soon to be coming back to haunt the continent and the British. Europe appears to be nothing less than a rudderless ship headed directly toward an iceberg while the captain and first mates are asleep in their cozy cabins.
Prospects for gold and a return to sound money may not have been this good since prior to World War I. For more than a century, central banks have ridden hard money into the ground but the game has changed. Politicians, being woefully behind the curve, are either unwilling or unable to accept the reality of new conditions. Instead they deny the truth and fight against the winds of change, like Don Quixote tilting at windmills.
The gold rally and its race to the ultimate end of being the source of all wealth and power are now unstoppable. The only question now is the timing of when fiat currencies reach their final destinations as worthless paper. It could be many more years or possibly soon. Whatever the case, gold will continue to march higher against all other currencies as the absolute store of value.
As the sun brightens over lower Manhattan this Tuesday morning, gold's shimmer is rivaling its celestial counterpart. Already today it is up another percentage point, arcing over $3.040 per ounce on the COMEX. Silver is following, at $34.55 and rising. Precious metals prices have been soaring in countries around the world. India is a prime example, with prices for gold and silver at record levels.
Stock futures are falling like dominoes. S&P Futures are down 18 points. Dow futures off 80, NASDAQ futures down 101 with the open approaching.
WTI Crude oil is up over $68/barrel, but still seems to be seeking a bottom. There are no good reasons for crude to rise and plenty of rationales for furhter declines or at least a range-bound regime short term.
At the Close, Monday, March 17, 2025:
Dow: 41,841.63, +353.44 (+0.85%)
NASDAQ: 17,808.66, +54.58 (+0.31%)
S&P 500: 5,675.12, +36.18 (+0.64%)
NYSE Composite: 19,494.71, +263.36 (+1.37%)
No comments:
Post a Comment