Showing posts with label Ben Bernanke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Bernanke. Show all posts

Friday, March 8, 2013

Boom Times: Stocks Up Every Friday in 2013

Want to know what the easiest trade of 2013 has been?

Simple. Buy any index fund, future or call on Thursday just prior to the market close and sell it for a profit some time on Friday.

Stocks have been up on each and every Friday of 2013, ten in a row, including today's push higher thanks to a BLS non-farm payroll report that showed creation of 236,000 jobs in February and the unemployment rate falling from 7.9 to 7.7%.

Never mind that most of the jobs were part time or that the jump in the unemployment rate was due to a furher deterioration in the labor participation rate, Wall Street took the headline number and ran with it.

As has been said ad nauseum on this and other like-minded blogs, there has probably never been a safer environment in which to invest in stocks. Due to the low level of returns on bonds, equities are the only game in town and one would have to have been one of the worst stock pickers or timers of the last century not to have made money in this unprecedented, elongated bull run.

Besides being in the midst of one of the best market advances of all time, today marks the four-year anniversary of the bottom. On March 9, 2009, stocks bottomed, began to rise and have never looked back.

Whether one agrees with the tactics or not, one has to hand it to the federal reserve and Chairman Bernanke. Through their efforts of quantitative easing, sero interest rate policy and coordination with central banks around the globe, the Fed - with an assist from the Treasury Department - averted what could have been one of the most devastating financial collapses of all time.

Bravo! Mr. Bernanke.

Dow 14,396.92, +67.43 (0.47%)
NASDAQ 3,244.37, +12.28 (0.38%)
S&P 500 1,551.15, +6.89 (0.45%)
NYSE Composite 9,059.53, +46.09 (0.51%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,574,870,375
NYSE Volume 3,734,663,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4298-2148
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 601-21 (WOW!)
WTI crude oil: 91.95, +0.39
Gold: 1,576.90, +1.80
Silver: 28.95, +0.14

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Forget the Sequester; Bernanke Has All the Cards (and all the money)

Nothing like a couple of days in the woods - away from the Sturm und Drang of the neo-rational markets and shrieking media pundits - to offer a bit of perspective on not only the economic realities of the day, but the human condition in general.

What appeared to be the inevitable swoon the naysayers have been long-hoping-for on Monday, with markets taking their most violent downturn of the year, was quickly overruled on Tuesday and absolutely trumped and superseded with the third-best gain (on the Dow, at least) of the year on Wednesday.

Not that there wasn't a good share of associated nonsense and rationale for each of the directional market moves, but, in the end, it was a wash and a win for the erudite chairman of the Federal Reserve, Mr. Ben Bernanke, who availed himself of the opportunity to alternately receive and give both praise and chiseled criticism to both chambers of Congress in his annual Henry Hawkins testimony and the adjoining question and answer periods. We rest assured that the Chairman is content that not only are his policies of ZIRP and QEternity the correct ones for the US and global economies (because as goes the US, so goes the world at this juncture), but also that he has convinced most members of congress that they are working. Besides, there's nothing the congress nor the president nor any other person or assemblages can do about said policies, right, wrong or otherwise.

He is, for all intents and purposes, master of the financial universe. So be it.

Noting the chairman's unadulterated power to influence and control the economics of the world, skeptics still advertise their discontent, brining up the untidy details of the unwinding of his easy money regime, but this argument is a chimera, a cloak for ineptitude, a misunderstanding, a falsity, an impotent attempt to fleece power from the unbridled king of money, because the chairman and his cronies at the Fed are not at all concerned with unwinding anything. Their policies will remain in effect until the next chairman and governors are appointed/elected, and then such unwinding - if there ever is one at all - will be their problem.

For the rest of us, who do not enjoy the luxuries of appointments or elections, but rather suffer the daily slings, swings and arrows of outrageous fortune (or misfortune), a plan is a necessity, though those offered by the shysters and criminals populating the financial services industry might not always be in our own self-interest, if only because they contain the notion of conceit that markets are always optimized and correct, risk is always contained and humans always make rational decisions.

History will prove all three of those basic financial tenets absolute falsehoods. That is why we have booms and busts, successes and failures, joy and tears. Existence is not guaranteed and a fruitful existence is only attainable at some others' expense, such is the basis of capitalism.

So, a note, as the congress and the president sit upon their fattened hands awaiting the monster of their own creation - sequestration - which commences on March 1st, but in reality is more a boogie-man-in-the-closet apparition than an actual threat to the economy, especially on a local, individual, human level. It's something on the order of a two percent cut in the discretionary budget - domestic programs (not welfare, Social Security Medicare or Medicaid) and defense spending - thrown against the background of a baseline budgeting process which automatically increases the spending on these programs by three to ten percent in the upcoming continuing resolution process (which has displaced the budget process for five years now) due to commence by mid-March. In effect, the sequester is a non-sequitur - it is utterly meaningless.

Still, a plan one must have for the Ben Bernanke era, so make one, and make sure it includes not buying a new car unless you are willing and able to pay for it in cash or can get 0% interest for the life of the loan (hey, the banks get that rate, why not you?) which should be no longer than five years. Your plan should also include the paying down or clipping up (or maybe both) of all your credit cards except one for dire emergencies, unless you have $10,000 or more in cash safely hidden away in your back yard or sock drawer (though a safe would seem a more prudent place).

Those are the starting points, but check to see if you are playing more than 1/3 of your net income (after taxes) on housing. If you are, move. Downsize. There are plenty of deals available at excellent prices, even though the housing market in many places has yet to bottom.

And here's something that bugs the heck out of some people: It doesn't matter if you make $20,000, $200,000 or $2,000,000 a year. Spending four to five dollars on a cup of coffee is stupid. Stop it. Put Starbucks out of business. And stop all the other dumb, extravagant, ludicrous things like lottery tickets, day spas, dining out and "entertainment." Well, you don't have to stop them altogether, just be sensible about your spending. A very wise man (my father, RIP) once said, "it's not how much you make, but how much you spend." That kind of depression-era advice can go a long way these days (since we're in another depression but don't really know it. Shhh... the banks are faking it).

Remember at all times that financial news - even news on specific stocks - is marco-news, and, thus, will have little effect on your own personal condition.

Save. Don't invest. Save 5-10% of your gross income and put it into cash or physical gold or silver or tangible assets which will hold their value no matter what (a tough find).

Grow yourself some herbs, fruits or vegetables. Seriously. There's nothing like the taste of something you've nurtured from seed or seedling or sapling to a ripened delicacy. And, it's relatively easy. Nature does most of the work. Wall Street has nothing that compares to the return you get from a handful of seeds, sunshine and rain. Beyond that, you will be the envy of your neighbors, who aren't nearly as smart or thrifty or nature-loving as you. There's something to be said for that.

All hail the great Bernanke! Amen.

Dow 14,075.37, +175.24 (1.26%)
NASDAQ 3,162.26, +32.61 (1.04%)
S&P 500 1,515.99, +19.05 (1.27%)
NYSE Composite 8,875.33, +109.15 (1.25%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,726,024,500
NYSE Volume 3,911,747,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4528-1799
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 252-38
WTI crude oil: 92.76, +0.13
Gold: 1,595.70, -19.80
Silver: 28.94, -0.317

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Fed Minutes Send Shock Waves, Stocks Plummet

Was today the day that the skeptics and shorts have been waiting for the four months? The day the market turned and rolled over, ending ridiculous speculation that the rally had more legs and major indices - S&P, Dow - would reach all-time highs?

Maybe. And to think that it would be the Fed, the very same Federal Reserve that continues relentlessly pumping money at a rate of $85 billion a month into the market, that would cause the turn is simply delicious in its irony.

Stocks were cruising along aimlessly most of the session, down slightly, until last month's Fed minutes were released at 2:00 pm ET. The initial reaction was muted, as most algos were turned off for the event, not being able to peer into the minutes from the FOMC meeting of January 29-30.

The minutes revealed extensive discussion over the current expansionary Fed policy of QE, focused around the purchase of Treasury and mortgage-backed bonds that has been in effect since September of 2012 and whether or not the Fed should continue the policy along the lines of its current stature - until unemployment targets of 6.5% are met - or modify the existing arrangement as market actions warrant.

The committee discussed its options at the January meeting, but voted in favor of keeping the current polify intact, though today's minutes show that fissures in Fed policy are beginning to appear, with not all members completely in line with Chairman Ben Bernanke's policy of unusually easy money.

Once enough wall Street experts were able to read and comprehend what the Fed was transmitting, the selling ensued and at times became quite raucous, especially in the more speculative issues on, mainly on the NASDAQ, which suffered its worst loss of the year.

The Dow lost over 100 points on the day and the S&P pulled back substantially as well. Whether or not the declines will last for more than one session is still up in the air, but what is certain is that officials at the Fed are now openly questioning policy decisions - some insisting that QE is necessary and that the economy is too fragile to change policy, others suggesting that the extraordinary measures are leading to a bubble in equity markets, a view that is beginning to gain traction.

There's little doubt anywhere that if the Fed were to substantially reduce its asset-buying-binge, the economy - and especially the equity markets - would not respond favorably and the economy could be thrust into another round of recession, a reality that is much closer than anyone wishes to believe, after last quarter's -0.1 GDP print.

At this juncture, it would appear that the Fed has tied its own hands, and that any change in policy would be damaging to markets, if not the greater economy. Mere mention of discussion about change caused a selloff, so actual change would no doubt engender more severe reactions.

Dovetailing into the government's do-nothing policy regarding the upcoming sequestration issue, Fed policy should not materially change for the next three to six months, unless the president and congress find a way toward compromise on spending cuts without raising taxes, an outcome seen as remote by most.

How the market responds tomorrow and Friday will set the stage for the final week of February, which is loaded with important economic data releases, not the least of which is the second estimate on fourth quarter GDP on the 28th. Since next Friday is the first of March, the usual non-farm payroll data will be delayed until the 8th, giving the BLS more time to analyze and massage the data.

This may or may not be a significant turn in the markets, but for certain, it's an important development heading into at least three weeks of important data and serious fiscal issues that the government has thus far been reluctant to address.

Collateral damage was done in the precious metals as gold and silver took sizable hits after the Fed minutes release.

Dow 13,927.54, -108.13 (0.77%)
NASDAQ 3,164.41, -49.18 (1.53%)
S&P 500 1,511.95, -18.99 (1.24%)
NYSE Composite 8,883.63, -120.75 (1.34%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,998,613,000
NYSE Volume 4,576,938,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1519-5016
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 470-59
WTI crude oil: 94.46, -2.20
Gold: 1,562.40, -41.80
Silver: 28.51, -0.912

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Print, Baby, Print; Dow Over 14,000 Again

The Dow topped the 14,000 mark for the first time since February 1, setting a closing high that was the best in more than five years.

Thank you, Mr. Bernanke.

There's no substitute for rampant liquidity in a market climate such as this one. Uncertainty continues to abound, the economies of the developed nations are in the proverbial toilet, circling the bowl either in recession (Europe), complete deflationary stagnation (Japan), or barely chugging along at under 2% GDP (USA).

Of late, the Japanese have embarked on "unlimited" quantitative easing (printing money with nothing at all backing it), though the US continues as king of the hill, with the world's largest sovereign economy, the Fed buying up all the rancid mortgage paper and monetizing the federal debt to the tune of $85 billion a month (a touch over $1 trillion per year, annualized).

Europe seems to be getting the message that it's finally time to play no-holds-barred currency war, though the socialists on the continent seem fairly sanguine about continuing their efforts to bail out banks and sovereigns one-by-one, a little at a time, rather than using the bazooka approach favored by Mr. Bernanke.

Sooner or later, the Europeans will devalue by printing, mostly because the high level of the Euro is crimping Germany's exports, and, if Germany's economy suffers, one can probably bet on the good people of Deutschland not being very supportive of the Euro and/or wanting more in return from their Euro-brethren to the south, who, like the American welfare caste, produce nothing, but get much in return.

So the US and other major countries will continue to print, print, print their feckless paper fiat, a time-honored practice that has never ended well, ever. In the meantime, however (and that meantime could stretch out to 2016, 2017, or beyond), one cannot fault stock investors in their search for yield. The past four years in stocks has been nothing but Fat City Easy Street to the xxxxxth degree. During the period from March 9, 2009 until the present, it's been nothing but straight up for stocks, to a point at which the general market is now sporting a 14 multiple, even though many companies are not growing earnings one whit, others making their numbers through cost-cutting and downsizing.

Global finance is in an unsustainable state, but, as long as the printing presses continue to churn out crisp currency, nobody seems to care.

There are signs that it's getting a bit wearisome. Oil is heading over $100 a barrel for WTI crude, despite a glut on the market, especially in the US. Food prices have moderated lately, but they're higher overall than a year, two, three years ago and will only rise from here.

It's a great market for speculators, especially those wearing blinders. Giddy-up!

Dow 14,018.70, +47.46 (0.34%)
NASDAQ 3,186.49, -5.51 (0.17%)
S&P 500 1,519.43, +2.42 (0.16%)
NYSE Composite 8,955.92, +36.90 (0.41%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,719,904,375
NYSE Volume 3,424,131,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4076-2361
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 450-31
WTI crude oil: 97.51, +0.48
Gold: 1,649.60, +0.50
Silver: 31.02, +0.109

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Was That It? New Year's Rally a One-Day Wonder

Actually, the New Year's rally on Wednesday - the first day of trading in 2013 - wasn't even a one-day wonder. One might actually consider it a 30-minute - or even 30-second - wonder, in that most of the advances were right at the open with some follow-on in the first half hour of trading.

Naturally, this is how the market rolls these days. If you're not one of the connected special few that can trade pre-market, in futures or make huge buys via HFT computers, like 99% of individual investors, you're SOL, missing out on most of the biggest moves in the market.

Is there any wonder the individual investor has pulled most, if not all, of their money out of equities? The odds are severely stacked against the little and middle guys, yet another reason to despise the one-percenters who glom up the vast majority of Wall Street profits.

As for today's action, not much was happening. Stocks drifted lower in the morning, recovered to around break even or positive, but then slumped when the Fed minutes from the December FOMC meeting were released.

Horror of horrors, some members of the committee were actually openly suggesting an end to their long-standing asset purchase program "well before the end of" 2013.

It's obvious that the Fed can and will do whatever it feels necessary in order to achieve their goals of making every American a debt slave while keeping the US economy from falling into an abyss. In fact, the abyss might just be on the agenda, the Fed owing allegiance to nobody but themselves and their member banks.

So, when traders got a whiff of the odor of no more free money courtesy Helicopter Ben, some went scurrying for the exits, albeit, a bit prematurely. The Fed isn't about to end ZIRP or stop its insane money printing exercise (currenty at a cool $80 billion a month and counting), but there's also the fear that the political clowns in Washington may not exactly get around to cutting spending for a while, and they also may stage a huge fight over extending the debt limit, a la 2011.

So, life in La-La Land (AKA Wall Street) goes on. Stocks got a big boost by acersion of the fiscal cliff, though the job is only half done. There's a sense that whatever conditions arise to offend the investor class, the Fed and the government will be completely accommodative, so that corporate America and the financial sector participants can continue grinding the middle class into dust.

Today's small setback notwithstanding, there's very little fear to keep stocks contained in January, traditionally one of the best months for gains.

A couple of data releases on employment were mixed, with the ADP private jobs report for December showing a net gain of 215,000 jobs, while unemployment claims spiked higher, to 372.000, after last week's 350,000, which was revised (as it always is) higher, to 362,000. The dual releases sent a mixed message in front of tomorrow's December Non-farm Payroll data, due out at 8:30 am.

Dow 13,391.36, -21.19 (0.16%)
NASDAQ 3,100.57, -11.69 (0.38%)
S&P 500 1,459.37, -3.05 (0.21%)
NYSE Composite 8,597.61, -34.40 (0.40%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,724,966,250
NYSE Volume 4,005,988,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3305-3199
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 427-17
WTI crude oil: 92.92, -0.20
Gold: 1,674.60, -14.20
Silver: 30.72, -0.287

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Stocks Slide on Fiscal Cliff Stalemate, Fed Confusion

As they've done after the occasion of every recent FOMC meeting, traders sold off on the news, though today's slide was exacerbated at least a little by angst over the ongoing stalemate in Washington over fiscal cliff issues.

John Boehner, Speaker of the House, went before the microphones this morning, followed by Senate leader Harry Reid, and the two of them managed to give Wall Street a dose of temporary depression, sending stocks lower throughout the session.

The major indices slid into the final hour, but rebounded off their lows of the day when news leaked that President Obama and Boehner were to meet at the White House late this afternoon. While it will probably amount to nothing, as have their previous talks, the markets viewed it as slightly positive.

Traders are still mulling over yesterday's FOMC announcement, in which Chairman Bernanke tied raising interest rates to the unemployment rate and inflation. It's something of a crude cobbling of numbers that may or may not make sense, but, in the best counterintuitive spirit, lower unemployment and a recovering economy wiht low inflation (all good) would probably send stocks screeching into the abyss because interest rates would be on the rise.

Whatever the case and however it eventually plays out, it's a scenario unlikely to arrive any time soon, probably not for at least another 12 months, but it still has investors somewhat spooked.

Some good news for the economy came in the form of lower initial unemployment claims dropped to 343K in the most recent reporting period, on expectations of 375K. Retial sales, however, were a little disappointing, up just 0.3% in November, though that was better than the -0.3% from October.

The PPI was downright deflationary, posting a decline of 0.8% in November. Tomorrow's CPI reading will give an indication of price pressure or the lack thereof at the consumer level.

Dow 13,170.72, -74.73 (0.56%)
NASDAQ 2,992.16, -21.65 (0.72%)
S&P 500 1,419.45, -9.03 (0.63%)
NYSE Composite 8,338.62, -42.26 (0.50%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,800,313,250
NYSE Volume 3,299,683,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1847-3671
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 85-58
WTI crude oil: 85.89, -0.88
Gold: 1,696.80, -21.10
Silver: 32.36, -1.427

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Bernanke Drops Unemployment Bomb; Markets Get Cranky

After John Boehner chastised President Obama again from the floor of the House of Representatives in the morning, the markets got what they were so eagerly anticipating and pricing in for the last two weeks: Ben Bernanke's unveiling of QE4, the promise by the Federal Reserve to purchase an additional $45 billion in long-dated treasuries each month, commencing with the wind-down of a similar program known as "Operation Twist."

This new monetizing of government debt is in addition to the fed's commitment to continued purchasing agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month for the foreseeable future, which translates roughly into "forever, or until the fiat monetary system collapses."

What the market didn't expect was the Fed's statement tying interest rates to the unemployment rate. In the FOMC statement issued shortly after noon and prior to Bernanke's 2:00 pm ET press conference, the Fed announced, "the Committee decided to keep the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and currently anticipates that this exceptionally low range for the federal funds rate will be appropriate at least as long as the unemployment rate remains above 6-1/2 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than a half percentage point above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal, and longer-term inflation expectations continue to be well anchored."

With inflation fairly tame and trending toward dis-inflation on the retail level, the Fed has finally embarked upon a robotic-like exit strategy, though with existential caveats and various loopholes and escape clauses.

After digesting the news, stocks were initially bought up, but, during the press conference, began to slip, finally ending the day with no gains.

While on the one hand the Fed is keeping the monetary floodgates wide open, they are anticipating economic recovery, though even the most ardent bulls don't see the official unemployment rate (U3) falling below 6.5% for at least another year. It currently stands at 7.7%, though that figure is largely due to the decline in the labor participation rate.

With baby boomers retiring at an estimated rate of 10,000 per day - many taking the offer of smaller benefits at age 62 - the labor market is in a state of generational flux unlike any seen in modern times, so there's literally no telling when unemployment might fall below the Fed's threshold level, if at all.

One thing's for certain: if the economy suddenly finds its legs and springs into a real recovery with job creation and rising GDP, Wall Street will be offended because the free money spigots will be turned off or borrowing costs will be significantly increased.

It's a double-edged sword of competitiveness vs. financial repression being played by Wall Street bankers against the population at large. Higher interest rates would tamp down rampant speculation and reverse the galloping higher market trends. In fact, the mere hint from the Fed that interest rates might rise already has seen some effect.

Withe the final Fed meeting of the year out of the way, all eyes will be on the Speaker and the President as they race against time to find a solution to their wide differences to solving the fiscal mess they've created (with ample assistance from Wall Street and the 2008 crash).

Time is running short on the politicians and Wall Street may not be so easily amused over the next few weeks.

Dow 13,245.45, -2.99 (0.02%)
NASDAQ 3,013.81, -8.49 (0.28%)
S&P 500 1,428.48, +0.64 (0.04%)
NYSE Composite 8,380.88, +14.40 (0.17%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,755,775,625
NYSE Volume 3,678,721,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2467-3083
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 204-45
WTI crude oil: 86.77, +0.98
Gold: 1,717.90, +8.30
Silver: 33.78, +0.765

Friday, November 9, 2012

Wall Street Peers Over Fiscal Cliff, Likes the View, Maybe

Only in the Wall Street casino can such madness prevail.

When the S&P 500 index closes almost exactly on its 200-day moving average on a day in which it was down, then up sharply, then down, then up again and finally closing almost where it started, one has a sense of the level of manipulation designed to produce the maximum level of uncertainty.

It's working.

The day started with stocks down sharply, but slowly advancing in anticipation of Rep. John Boehner's brief news conference shortly after 11:00 am ET, during which it sold off slightly before rising - after his very abrupt departure - to what would turn out to be the highs of the day, up 78 points on the Dow, just before President Obama made prepared remarks at 1:07 pm. During and just after the president's appearance, the Dow lost all of its gains and fell briefly into negative territory, a move of 103 points in just under an hour.

Stocks spent the rest of the afternoon folling along the line of unchange, with a couple of sharp rises just to keep things interesting.

Naturally, the final hour turned into a circus microcosm of the day, with the Dow up, down, up, down and eventually closing with a gain of four points.

So much for resolution.

The dueling parties in Washington preened and postured for the cameras and microphones while the wise guys in New York pushed buy and sell buttons with just enough pressure to keep markets in suspended animation for the full session, miraculously ending with gains of less than 10 points on all exchanges (four or less excluding the NASDAQ).

It was politico-socio-psycho-econo theater at its best.

There's surely more to come from the recently-re-anointed crowd in Washington and the usual suspects in New York as we end our way through the final seven weeks of 2012.

While the news and financial networks scramble and flail about trying to explain the undesirable effects of falling over the "fiscal cliff," though Wall Streeters seem perfectly at ease tip-toeing along the precipice. One gets the distinct feeling that the deal has already been struck and the rest is just for show.

How to trade it? Well, one can take the virtuous route and ignore it all, or play along with the pros and prepare to be beaten by their wickedly swift HFT algos which scan and skim every trade.

Bottom line is that there is no actual bottom line, so long as Ben Bernanke sits quietly in the background, his finger poised to punch up another couple hundred billion dollars as needed, along with his counterpart, Mario Draghi, in Europe.

Did somebody mention Europe? That place where equally nothing matters? Yes, they're still out there, kicking their own can further down the road to perdition.

With the elections in the US over and done with, it's back to business as usual, wherein neither the politicians nor the bankers can lose.

For all you poker fans, the market did leave a couple of "tells." Gold and silver notched nice gains again, and, for the third day in a row, new lows slaughtered new highs, 231-76.

That's a pretty fat slice of salami laying out there, Wall Street. Some of us actually notice... and our appetite is good.

Dow 12,815.39, +4.07(0.03%)
NASDAQ 2,904.87, +9.29(0.32%)
S&P 500 1,379.85, +2.34(0.17%)
NYSE Composite 8,053.56, +2.74(0.03%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,802,865,630
NYSE Volume 3,572,545.750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2707-2778
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 76-231
WTI crude oil: 86.07, +0.98
Gold: 1,730.90, +4.90
Silver: 32.60, +0.359

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Dead Cats Don't Bounce; No Joy in Fraudville; Stocks Continue Slide

Maybe, as the movie title suggests, white men can't jump, but Wall Street proved today that dead cats don't bounce... at least not very high.

Stocks got a little bit of a boost from futures pumping prior to the opening bell, but the dismal nature of earnings for the third quarter made any gains transitory, fleeting and utterly disappointing (much like a lot of people in this author's life).

It is as it should be, perhaps. Fed policies do not a market make, so the major indices are now well below the levels encountered when the Chairman, the pseudo-salubrious Ben Bernanke, announced QE3, or, rather, QEtc. or QEternity on September 13.

The prescription the good doctor of economics gave the markets was unlimited buying of mortgage-backed securities (MBS), those ubiquitous instruments of mass financial destruction that essentially started the whole financial and economic mess in the first place, and which will, almost without doubt, end up worth less than what the Federal Reserve pays for them.

With any luck, the Fed's foray into economic wonderland, replete with diamond-farting unicorns and frogs that belch profits, will end in tears and anguish for not only the lower and middle classes, but the rich and self-appointed masters of the universe as well. We wish them no luck, because tactically, they have erred in their assessment of the global economy, not once or twice, but repeatedly since the advent of the crisis in 2007 or 2008, take your pick.

Today's FOMC rate policy decision was another non-event, the Fed reiterating that it would stick to its plans until 2015, which would be long after the chairman has departed, ostensibly in early 2014, should he even last that long.

The market is more interested these day in politics and earnings, each of which offering a mixed bag of blessings or banes, so precarious is the global outlook. Fears are rising that President Obama will win re-election, though the real fears are over the poor earnings reports pouring into the street like so many viperous snakes ready to bite the legs of impudent investors standing still.

Layoff announcements from Ford, Dow Chemical and Volkswagen were only whispered on Wall Street today. In the coming months, workforce reductions will be major headlines as all attempts to revive the economy the banks destroyed will ultimately fail. Europe is sinking steadily deeper into a black hole of debt and deflation, with Asia following soon, and the US - the last bastion of relief in a sea of declining opportunity - to join them in the hell of destroyed currencies and wrecked economies within short order.

Stocks have levitated for months, but the handwriting is clearly written and the game is nearly up. The US elections of November 6 mark a turning, a reckoning that will be absolute and without reprieve. All of the Merkels, Bernankes, Legardes and Draghis of the world cannot resurrect that which was already dead when they first took notice.

While there may be a few days of brightness ahead in the near future for stocks, to outlook continues to deteriorate and today's market action verifies the quietly-held beliefs of the skeptics: all is lost.

There is no joy in Fraudville; mighty Bernanke has struck out.

Dow 13,077.34, -25.19 (0.19%)
NASDAQ 2,981.70, -8.76 (0.29%)
S&P 500 1,408.75, -4.36 (0.31%)
NYSE Composite 8,179.26, -16.05 (0.20%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,965,715,000
NYSE Volume 3,346,029,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2404-3120
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 97-94
WTI crude oil: 85.73, -0.94
Gold: 1,701.60, -7.80
Silver: 31.62, -0.173

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Ben Bernanke, Bankers' Friend; QE3 Sends Stocks Screaming Higher, Oil, Gold, Silver Rally

After the German Constitutional Court OK'd the ECB's ESM (love those acronyms!), Thursday was set up for a real bazooka blast of fresh money-printing by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.

And, of course, the chairman did not disappoint, announcing an unlimited bond buying scheme, whereby the Federal Reserve would commit to buying $40 billion per month of MBS (Mortgage-Backed Securities) for a time period that the chairman left open-ended.

According to the FOMC statement: "If the outlook for the labor market does not improve substantially, the committee will continue its purchase of agency mortgage-backed securities, undertake additional asset purchases, and employ its other policy tools as appropriate until such improvement is achieved in a context of price stability..."

The FOMC statement also extended ZIRP (Zero Interest Rate Policy) through mid-2015, another easing which mostly benefits banks, which can borrow at 0-1/4%.

The Fed's move was - and will be - huge, providing liquidity and a lifeline to the banks by sopping up their horrendous MBS, which are almost all underwater, spoiled or otherwise non-performing.

A move of such scope cannot be underestimated for its overall effects to the larger economy, not only in the US, but globally. The world is already awash in US dollars, and these policy actions only exacerbate that situation. In response, the Euro has galloped ahead, trading in excess of 1.31 to the dollar.

Markets all popped, with the Dow at its highest level since autumn of 2007 and now within shouting distance of its all time high, along with the S&P.

It is absolutely amazing that stocks can be artificially propped up due to actions from the public sector, but there is a downside to consumers in the form of higher prices, especially in food and fuel. Gasoline at the pump is nearing $4.00 per gallon nationwide. The average price of a gallon of unleaded regular is now $3.87.

The Fed believes that even with their massively-inflationary policies that inflation will remain below two percent. They must be dreaming, because the price of oil, tied directly to gas and home heating fuel, continues to rise and should continue to do so in the months ahead.

That will effect all consumer prices on everything that needs to be shipped, trucked or transported, which is just about everything except food you grow in your own back yard and items you make at home (depending on where you buy raw materials).

Good-bye Mitt Romney; hello second term for Obama. The election, thanks to the Fed, should be a slam-dunk for president Obama and likely will result in congress continuing to be split, with Republicans ruling the House and Democrats the Senate.

Great. More deadlock from the pols, higher prices for everything, more riches for bankers, a weaker dollar (in just the past two weeks, that European vacation rose in price about 10%) and no way to save unless you buy hard assets, gold and silver.

The status quo remains print, print, and print some more. The middle class is being squeezed out of existence. The big hope is that the Fed will sop up so much of the horrid MBS out there that they will bankrupt themselves and someday the US will return to sound money, though that scenario is probably a few years away.

In the meantime, enjoy. Spend. The Fed and the government have your back with unlimited public spending, a new, higher federal debt ceiling (coming soon and monetized by the Fed) and fiat money out the wazoo.

It's the grandest clusterf--k of monetary policy and make-believe debt-funding in the history of the world.

Dow 13,539.86, +206.51 (1.55%)
NASDAQ 3,155.83. +41.51 (1.33%)
S&P 500 1,459.99. +23.43 (1.63%)
NYSE Composite 8,407.03, +139.71 (1.69%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,884,013,625.00
NYSE Volume 4,616,279,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4230-1321
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 598-27 (flashing red light extreme)
WTI crude oil: 98.31, +1.30
Gold: 1,772.10, +38.40
Silver: 34.78, +1.49

Monday, September 10, 2012

Stocks Drop on Fears of NO QE by Fed

Nothing but headlines and rumors are moving the markets these days - and, incidentally, it's Monday, so stocks must go down - and, since Europe's already been sated by ECB president Mario Draghi's new proposal to bail out all sovereign nations in need by purchasing one, two and three year bond issues in exchange for said nations' acceptance of "conditions," all eyes have turned to the two-day FOMC meeting at which Chairman Ben Bernanke is supposed to announce his own version of bond-buying (AKA, QE3).

But, as with all things Ponzi-oriented and subject to whims, official data and sentiment - to say nothing of the upcoming presidential election - speculators, insiders, hedge fund managers and other market participants are a little nervous about what's to come on Wednesday afternoon, when the FOMC will surely announce no chance in policy, keeping rates at zero, and after that...

Chairman Bernanke may well hint at new stimulative measures or actually set a date for a plan to proceed, or, he may weigh all the factors, including Friday's uninspired non-farm payroll data, and do nothing (which would be, historically speaking, the correct path).

If that's the case - and that's what had investors worried in the final hour of trade today - then expect a sharp pull-back from the currently-inflated levels on the major indices. Additionally, the German high court is set to rule, earlier in the day on Wednesday, on the constitutionality of the ESM, and that could be an even bigger deal.

Some 70% or more of the German populace is opposed to the ESM, the funding mechanism that is supposed to - just like all other failed plans - save the Euro, because the bulk of the fund would be bourn by Germany and the good people of that country who pay taxes, which are already viewed as too high. The thought of more taxation in Germany, one of the highest-taxed nations in the world, is unpalatable to most, but taxpayers, alas, do not have a vote. The ruling will come at about the time markets open in the US, setting up for what could be a wicked roller coaster ride.

Thus, there's enough nervousness on Wall Street to make even the coolest of operators break into a cold sweat these days, as uncertainty exists at all levels of economies globally and in the political world.

Today's double digit losses on the major exchanges could be nothing more than profit-taking, or a precursor to some terrible future without government stimulus on both the European and American continents.

How sad. Brokers and dealers might actually have to do some fundamental analysis for a change instead of depending on round after round of money printing to keep the stock markets at nose-bleed levels. Time will tell, and the time is nigh.

Dow 13,254.29, -52.35 (0.39%)
NASDAQ 3,104.02, -32.40 (1.03%)
S&P 500 1,429.08, -8.84 (0.61%)
NYSE Composite 8,192.40, -42.11 (0.51%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,578,686,000
NYSE Volume 3,213,290,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2228-3284
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 332-38
WTI crude oil: 96.54, +0.12
Gold: 1,731.80, -8.70
Silver: 33.63, -0.06

Friday, September 7, 2012

August Non-Farm Payrolls Miss Flatlines Stocks

The US economy showed another sign of sluggishness, as August Non-farm Payrolls rose less than expected, gaining 96,000 net new jobs for the month, well below consensus estimates of 125,000.

Additionally, June and July data sets were revised downward by a combined 41,000. June payrolls were just 45,000, while the number in July was revised down to 141,000.

The official jobless rate fell from 8.3% to 8.1%, as labor force participation fell to its lowest level in decades, at 63.5%.

The poor showing for the labor market was seen as a blow to president Obama's re-election bid, and also as cause for the Fed supplying more stimulus when the FOMC meets next week.

Volume more or less returned to the doldrums, following the massive ramp-up Thursday, following the unveiling of the ECB's new bond purchase program.

Stocks tended to just meander around the flat line, with the odd exception of the NYSE Composite, which gapped up at the open and stayed in a tight range all session long.

It's somewhat a sad commentary on markets that they are so well-coordinated in response to news, specifically that this or that central bank is making money easier for bankers to borrow at little to no interest, all the while the general public scratching out a living without any mechanism for saving.

Outward appearances may be deceiving. This kind of controlled economics seldom works out well in the long run.

Precious metals may be telling the markets something. Gold and silver soared again today and are at multi-month highs, generally a sign that economic or geopolitical conditions are strained and risk assets not to be trusted, though one could hardly suspect that anything evil may come the way for stocks, as well as they have performed this year.

Dow 13,306.64, +14.64(0.11%)
Nasdaq 3,136.42, +0.61(0.02%)
S&P 500 1,437.92, +5.80(0.40%)
NYSE Composite 8,233.98, +73.42(0.90%)
NYSE Volume 3,627,325,750
Nasdaq Volume 1,694,756,120
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3490-1997
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 449-40 (extreme)
WTI crude oil: 96.42, +0.89
Gold: 1,740.50, +34.90
Silver: 33.69, +1.02

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Draghi Delivers Win-Win for Europe, Stocks

ECB president Mario Draghi pleased just about everyone when he unveiled the latest bond-purchasing scheme by the European Central Bank at a news conference early this morning. Stocks rose across Europe and the Americas with the NASDAQ reaching 11 1/2 year highs.

Portions of the new ECB bond purchase program, which is designed to purchase sovereign bonds with maturities of 1, 2, and 3 years, were purposely leaked to the press in the days and weeks prior to the official announcement, which came after the ECB's rate policy meeting (kept the official bank lending rate at 0.75%), during afternoon trading on European bourses and prior to the open of trading in New York.

The plan, called by Draghi, Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) rests on five main pillars: 1) Strict conditionality will be applied to bond purchases 2) There will be unlimited purchases of bonds with a maturity of one to three years 3) The ECB will not have seniority 4) All transactions will be 'sterilized' 5) Purchases will be reported monthly.

Countries wishing to participate (notably Spain and Italy) will have to make a formal application and adhere to conditions, mostly in the form of austerity measures, something at which many governments have balked.

While the stock markets advanced broadly, the S&P reaching a four-year high there are some land-mines over which the ECB will have to traverse in order to make the program a success.

First, there is the matter of legality, upon which the German high court will rule on Wednesday, September 12. The court is reviewing previous bond-buying programs by the ECB, such as the ESM, to determine if such plans comply the rigors of the German constitution. If the court decides against such plans, everything in Europe will be thrown into chaos, as Germany is the major funder of bailout programs.

The matter of nations applying for funding is another sticking point. Spain and Italy are in fiscal crises, but the political leaders are wary of conditionality, submitting their government to severe austerity measures, such as the recently-proposed six-day work week for Greeks. Additionally, sticking to the conditions ofthe loans is often difficult if not impossible, though the OMT specifically says that bond purchases will be curtailed if conditions are not met.

with the ECB now in the Fed's arena of massive money printing, what lies ahead for the US and global economies is next week's FOMC meeting, at which it is widely believed Fed chairman Ben Bernanke will unveil some new liquidity program of his own, commonly called QE3, though recent economic data, such as today's August ADP employment report and the ISM Services data would seem to indicate that further easing by the Fed is not warranted nor wise at this juncture.

Thus, positive economic data, a recovering economy and anything outside the stock market viewed as positive to growth will be viewed by Wall Street as an impediment to more easy money, likely causing a sell-off in equities.

Tomorrow's non-farm payroll report for August is the linchpin to Fed action. Anything over 150,000 net new jobs may cause the Fed to hold back from further easing. There's also widespread belief that the Fed will be reluctant to move so close to the US presidential elections, not wishing to be perceived as a political entity.

Next week is shaping up to be epic, one way or the other.

Dow 13,292.00, +244.52 (1.87%)
NASDAQ 3,135.81, +66.54 (2.17%)
S&P 500 1,432.12, +28.68 (2.04%)
NYSE Composite 8,160.40, +168.39 (2.11%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,883,115,000
NYSE Volume 3,919,524,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4360-1203
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 494-39
WTI crude oil: 95.53, +0.17
Gold: 1,705.60, +11.60
Silver: 32.67, +0.35

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Nothing Moves in Advance of Draghi's ECB Announcement

Remember those days of late August, when the markets traded in narrow ranges and closed within a tiny fraction of a percentage point on super-low volume?

Today was another one of those days. Stock pickers are waiting for the ECB meeting on Thursday, when president Mario Draghi is supposed to release details of his plan to fund all of the peripheral nations that are broke, bankrupt or about to be.

Last week, everyone waited for the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, to give a speech at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and signal that the Fed was soon to unleash more free capital into the corrupt, dysfunctional, insolvent banking system.

Now we wait for Draghi. It's a complete disaster unfolding right before our eyes and barely worth commenting upon because Bernanke didn't say anything the markets didn't already know, and, in all likelihood, neither will Draghi. Either that, or he'll do what the Europeans are so good at, making funny noises, promising something for a later date, your basic can-kicking exercise.

The clock is ticking...

Dow 13,047.48, +11.54 (0.09%)
NASDAQ 3,069.27. -5.79 (0.19%)
S&P 500 1,403.44, -1.50 (0.11%)
NYSE Composite 7,992.01, -10.31 (0.13%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,432,807,125
NYSE Volume 2,782,468,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2308-2724
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 274-59
WTI crude oil: 95.36, +0.06
Gold: 1,694.00, -2.00
Silver: 32.33 -0.08

Friday, August 31, 2012

Bernanke's Jackson Speech Self-Fulfilling for Wall Street

Well, was it worth the wait?

Fed Chairman Ben Bernake delivered his speech at Jackson Hole, much to the delight, it seems, to the hordes of hungry bankers and investors wallowing around the money trough from which their riches are made.

The Chairman didn't say much, except what he always says: that the Fed would be ready to add stimulus when needed. The Wall Street parasites took this as a sure sign that more easy money, in the form of QE3, would be forthcoming, likely as of the September FOMC meeting in about two weeks.

In the meantime, stocks jumped, slumped and humped back to highs of just over 13,150 on the Dow, just in case anybody's interested heading into the long weekend.

As usual, stocks have to go higher on Friday, as they have in just about every instance since the end of May.

Anecdotally, Wall Street exhibits all the traits of wild herds, following wherever they are led, this time toward all risk assets, including stocks and commodities. It's been reported that food prices have already risen some 10-20% in poorer nations, which will eventually foment riots, panic and revolution, thoughthat doesn't matter a whit to the wizards of Wall Street or their political counterparts, Al that matters is a rising stock market, even though it may lead to the eventual destruction of the currency and the global economy to boot.

It's a sick game, with seemingly no end in sight.

Labor Day. What an odd name for a holiday. It should be called slaver day, because other than a few sporadic holidays and a week or two of annual vacation, americans and workers in the "civilized" world are nothing more than slaves to debt.

Try not to ponder that fate much over the next few days of what should be a relaxing, peaceful weekend.

Free houses for Everyone!


Dow 13,090.76, +90.05 (0.69%)
Nasdaq 3,066.96, +18.25 (0.60%)
S&P 500 1,406.57, +7.09 (0.51%)
NYSE Composite 8,014.93 +48.69(0.61%)
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3658-1811
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 184-37
WTI crude oil: 96.47, +1.85
Gold: 1,687.60, +30.50
Silver: 31.37, +1.00

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Markets Edge Closer to Reality on Eve of Bernanke Speech

As has been ongoing for the whole week, markets took a decided turn negative today on strong sentiment and comments from a few Fed governors that Ben Bernanke's speech tomorrow at Jackson Hole will include no overt nor hidden message that the Fed is ready to commit to another round of QE, bond purchases or any kind of policy easing.

That's the current betting, and there's little more than that moving markets.

Here is a good summary of what Wall Street is expecting in advance of the speech, from the Wall Street Journal, along with excerpts from analysts from leading financial institutions.

Scheduled for 10:00 am EDT, the Fed Chairman's speech, "Monetary Policy Since the Crisis" has had the markets gripped for weeks.

At the very least, by 11:00-11:30 tomorrow, everyone will have an inkling of what the Fed plans to do, if anything, and possibly when.

Then, everything can return to normal - whatever that is - after the Labor Day holiday.

Dow 13,000.71, -106.77 (0.81%)
NASDAQ 3,048.71, -32.47 (1.05%)
S&P 500 1,399.48, -11.01 (0.78%)
NYSE Composite 7,966.24, -65.41 (0.81%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,218,830,750
NYSE Volume 2,534,874,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1481-3987
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 118-54
WTI crude oil: 94.62, -0.87
Gold: 1,657.10, -5.90
Silver: 30.37, -0.47

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Yuck. Stocks Stuck, Seek Direction from Fed. Good Luck.

News flash: Tail wags dog.

The markets continued their perverse game of chicken with the Chairman of the Federal Reserve over whether he'll offer any hints of a new round of QE, but sentiment seems to be shifting toward the argument that the chairman is not going to be very accommodative, either toward the stock market, interest rate policy or further bond purchases.

Whatever the assembled genii on Wall Street care to think, Mr. Bernanke is likely to be of the opinion that it's time for the congress to get up off their duffs and do something about the stagnating economy since the Fed - for all intents and purposes - has done what it can, albeit with limited success.

Any sane person (and we can safely assume that Bernanke hasn't gone completely off the deep end) would think that the US economy needs now to pick itself up, dust itself off and get on with business.

Were it all that simple, and, it should be, but the meddlers at the Federal Reserve and in the halls of congress have seen to it that the US - and by proxy the global - economy is largely a function of interest rates and government policy, not the vaunted free market that so many believe could work out of this malaise, if given a chance.

So, there's a chance that Bernanke will deliver what the mortal villains on Wall Street want so desperately, but the chance seems slim. Stocks would have likely risen in anticipation of golden words from the Chairman were there widespread belief that he was indeed planning on more easy money for his Wall Street buddies, because, as anyone who's ever played with stocks or options knows all too well, it's not a good idea to be late to the party.

By the time Mr. Bernanke finishes his speech at Jackson Hole, most of the major bets will already have been placed. Those who wait and see will likely suffer like the poor suckers who think investing is easy.

Stocks followed their familiar pattern again today: a stumble at the start, ramp up and sell off into the close, though the Dow managed - as all the majors did except the Comp. - to eke out a tiny gain of just over four points. Everything moved in slow motion, as volume has nearly dried up completely.

Whoopie!

Bernanke is not going to rescue Wall Street for the sake of a few hundred points on the Dow. He's done it three times already (QE1, QE2, Operation Twist) and the players keep coming back for more. It's time for the Chairman to do what's right and take the punch bowl away.

The party should have been over a while ago. Only the chutzpah of the "masters of the universe" has managed to keep it going for so long.

Dow 13,107.48, +4.49 (0.03%)
NASDAQ 3,081.19, +4.05 (0.13%)
S&P 500 1,410.49, +1.19 (0.08%)
NYSE Composite 8,031.61, -2.24 (0.03%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,253,324,130
NYSE Volume 2,534,702,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3287-2178
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 181-45
WTI crude oil: 95.60, -0.73
Gold: 1,658.50, -11.20
Silver: 30.70, -0.17

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Drip... Drip... Drip... Dow Bleeds from Small Wound; NASDAQ at 11 1/2 Year High

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times...
-- Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cites

So it goeth... in the best Dickensian sense, the NASDAQ and Dow have diverged of late, forming an odd dichotomy, reprising the 2000-era old/new economies.

As the Dow suffered its sixth loss in the last seven sessions, the NASDAQ returned to the halcyon days of 2000, when, on its way through one of the worst crashes in market history it closed above 3100 for the last time, on November 15, 2000, on its eventual way to a bottom of 1419.23 on September 21, 2001.

So, for the NASDAQ, it is an 11-year, three month high, give or take a few days.

While the Dow is still within hailing distance of its own multi-year closing high (13279.32, May 1, 2012), it is down roughly two percent from there with losses mounting since the 68-point drop on the outside day last Tuesday.

The difference between the two indices is probably is risk assessment, or the mere fact that Apple (AAPL) is not a Dow stock. Had it been for, say, the last two years, the Dow Industrials might today be sporting a 15,000 handle, but, alas, the riggers of the Dow 30 apparently see Apple as unfit for inclusion, despite being the world's largest corporation by market cap.

The makers of the Dow components have a history of not being exactly of the genius character. For instance, Ford Motor Company has never been an elite member of the Dow club, despite a stellar record of accomplishments and great gains through the 20th century.

Whatever the case, the differences in how the averages are structured and weighted makes for interesting interplay as the stodgy Dow companies, what with their dividend-paying stocks and generally long track records, grind slowly in one direction or the other, the NASDAQ offers more high-fliers, jocular IPOs (like Facebook, Groupon and Zynga, to name just a few) and many small niche players, thus being the desired place for the sport of day-trading and point-splitting by the HFTs, hedgies and other mindless market cyborgs.

Once again, as has been the case through almost the entire month of August, there was little in the way of data or news to shake traders out of or into positions. The Case-Shiller 10-and-20-city index of home values showed another smallish year-over-year gain, though the August consumer confidence reading of 60.6 - down sharply from last month's 65.4 - did arouse some traders momentarily from their checker-playing, book-reading or whatever worthless activity keeps them in attendance these days.

After a few moments of excitement, however, they'd had enough and went back to the business of not trading, allowing the computers to do their dirty handiwork behind the scenes and away from the incessant snoring.

It was, again, quite the snooze-fest, and one has to wonder if traders will be back on their toes after the Labor Day recess or whether this kind of low-volume, low volatility regime is all part of a new normal that precludes individual investors.

There is a bit of tension over Friday's speech by Ben Bernanke at the Jackson Hole economic symposium (how anyone, and especially an army of seasoned traders, can get excited about one speech is yet another matter) and the news that ECB president Mario Draghi - citing a "heavy work load" - bowed out from attending.

We're happy that Mr Draghi is working hard at whatever he's doing, purportedly hammering out a deal with the German Bundesbank to save Europe from imminent collapse, though one might also assume attending important economic events such as Jackson Hole has come to be known, should be on his agenda.

At least Mr. Draghi has a job, something roughly 20% of Greeks, Italians and Spaniards do not. It is everyone's hope that he and other Eurocrat leaders concoct a suitable rescue plan for Europe and the rest of civilization before the world ends on December 21, according to wild-eyed gloom-and-doom types eyeing the Mayan calendar, because, if they don't, it will be too late.

Perhaps its for the best that the markets and traders take August off, like their politician friends in Washington almost always do. Wall Streeters can join congress with an approval rating of under 10%. Nearly everyone else - about 9.98% of the population - could care less.

Dow 13,102.99, -21.68 (0.17%)
NASDAQ 3,077.14, +3.95 (0.13%)
S&P 500 1,409.30, -1.14 (0.08%)
NYSE Composite 8,032.72, -3.53 (0.04%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,335,361,880
NYSE Volume 2,499,501,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3147-2303
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 152-51
WTI crude oil: 96.33, +0.86
Gold: 1,669.70, -5.90
Silver: 30.88, -0.17

Monday, August 27, 2012

Despite Big Move By Apple, Stocks Have No Monday Lift

As has been the case for many weeks (as noted in Friday's posting), stocks could simply not find any meaningful reasons to move to higher ground, even in the wake of a big move by Apple after a federal jury awarded Apple $1 billion in its patent infringement case over rival Samsung.

Apple stock hit an all-time high of 680.87 in early trading, but drifted lower throughout the session.

Veteran tape-watchers (we're fairly certain there are a few left out there) must have dozed off from another in a seemingly-endless stream of low-volume, noiseless, motion-defying trading. All but the first and last hours saw any significant action. The trading range on the Dow amounted to less than 80 points from top to bottom, with stocks selling off in the final hour and closing near the lows of the session.

Of the major averages, only the NASDAQ finished in positive territory, though it was green by only three points. The Dow was the biggest percentage loser, off 0.25% on the day.

Otherwise, there was little to no interest in equities on first day of the final unofficial week of summer, prior to the three-day Labor Day holiday.

Traders may be asleep at the switch and/or holding positions until after the holiday and Ben Bernanke's speech to the assembled central bankers and key economists at Jackson Hole on Friday.

Many on Wall Street are expecting Bernanke to signal another round of quantitative easing (QE), as he did in his 2010 speech, though skeptics of that theory abound, citing politics (the elections are nearly just two months away) and the muddled and murky economic picture as reasons the chairman of the world's largest central bank will not offer specificity in his remarks.

Additionally, ECB president Mario Draghi will present at the symposium, though his record for signaling specific policy actions are spotty at best. Draghi, as well as most European politicians, seems always to be long on rhetoric and short on delivery of specifics.

Outside of some M&A activity and Apple's move higher, the week began with a dolorous thud and will likely end that way unless Bernanke can be convinced that the time for the Fed to act - once again - is now. The high degree of uncertainty and doubt in the markets and general economy will likely keep a lid on what have to be viewed as excessively overpriced stocks and accompanying indices.

Dow 13,124.67, -33.30 (0.25%)
NASDAQ 3,073.19, +3.40 (0.11%)
S&P 500 1,410.44, -0.69 (0.05%)
NYSE Composite 8,033.93, -13.94 (0.17%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,363,789,875
NYSE Volume 2,439,756,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2676-2833
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 162-45
WTI crude oil: 95.47, -0.68
Gold: 1,675.60, +2.70
Silver: 31.05, +0.43

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Stocks Split in Another Lackluster Session

There were heaps of indecision and disbelief after yesterday's rise and fall led to a stumbling session for US stocks on Wednesday, with the major indices split after a midday rally pushed the S&P and NASDAQ modestly into positive territory, but left the Dow and Composite with marginal losses.

With literally no data points on which to trade, investors were mostly in a defensive posture until FOMC minutes were released at 2:00 pm EDT. The idea that the Fed might still be considering some easing before the November elections lit a fire under some traders, though the size of the move was unconvincing.

It's unlikely that the Fed would move decisively soon unless there are overt signs of weakness in the economy to a greater degree than has already been proven. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and the rest of the world's elite traders, economists and analysts will gather at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, next week for an annual economic symposium, though skepticism over whether the Chairman will make any earth-shattering announcements abounds.

That is primarily what has the the bulls running for cover, because the economy has been sullen and without forward momentum, even while stocks have recorded strong gains through the summer. The entire June-August rally may have been built on false hopes and pipe dreams of another round of quantitative easing.

Without a monetary boost, stocks could suffer anything from a mild to severe correction within the next two weeks, and the charts are beginning to show signs that Tuesday's double top was something to actually be concerned about.

With little in the way of economic data this week (New and existing home sales, initial unemployment claims and durable orders), traders have little upon which to trade, so the late summer doldrums should continue, at least into the early portion of next week and possibly through Labor Day.

After that, the experts will be back on the street with new strategies or old ones, based entirely on best guesses as to the outcome of the elections and how long European leaders can keep their juggling act going without dropping all of the balls.

It's a strange state for the markets, full of uncertainty and doubt, though very close to 52-week highs. It's ripe for something - either a breakout to the upside or a 5-15% slide. And, while everyone has opinions, nobody is really putting out convincing arguments on either side.

The market bears close scrutiny at this juncture, as the next move may be decisive and worth playing, but only if one has guts and conviction to stick with trades over the next couple of months, because, as has been shown all year long, this market likes to gyrate like a lithe belly dancer without giving off any signs of where it's headed next.

Our money is on the downside, but we've been in that posture for a long time and have been in cash or equivalents for the better part of the past four years. If the precious metals continue to gather momentum, that could convince us to take a flier on some puts or shorts in selected stocks or indices. If new highs - new lows continue to compress tomorrow and the A-D line opens negative, we could be all in on Diamond (DIA) and/or Spider (SPY) October puts.

Both gold and silver have broken out of their recent ranges and could put in a long, strong run through the end of the year, so the buying opportunity window may be closing quickly on the metals, a favorable trade the past twelve years, despite persistent meddling and price fixing by major and central banks.

Dow 13,172.76, -30.82 (0.23%)
NASDAQ 3,073.67, +6.41 (0.21%)
S&P 500 1,413.49, +0.32 (0.02%)
NYSE Composite 8,079.02, -3.66 (0.05%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,426,827,000
NYSE Volume 2,809,365,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2122-3396
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 93-53 (compression)
WTI crude oil: 97.26, +0.42
Gold: 1,656.80, +16.30
Silver: 29.84, +0.28