Stocks, bonds, oil and precious metals all had their ups and downs on Thursday, as the focus early was on stocks, which put on impressive gains, only to give half of them back in afternoon trading.
Oil was higher in early trading, spiking to $26.27 a barrel for WTI crude before collapsing all the way down to $23.13.
With a turn right after noon, money began to flow away from riskier assets and into safe havens, with bonds, gold, and silver all being bid as the day wore onward.
Silver started the day at $14.81, languished early, and finished sharply higher, at $15.36. Gold was also cold in the morning, but found its legs later, moving from Wednesday's NY close of $1684.10 to finish at $1718.00.
Treasuries were bought with unusual gusto on the long end. The yield on the 5-year note moved from 0.37% to 0.29% on the day, the 10-year yield went from 0.72% to 0.63%, and the 30-year dropped 10 basis points, from 1.41% to 1.31%. The curve flatted out by 10 basis points, 121 bips covering the entire complex.
All of this activity was against a backdrop of 3.2 million initial unemployment claims, bringing the recent total to 33 million over the past seven weeks.
April non-farm payrolls were also on the mind, with the number - expected to be a record for one month - due out Friday morning.
Argentina (silvery) is about to default on $65 billion of its foreign debt today, Friday, May 8, as bondholders and the government are at loggerheads over a restructuring, though the government appeared to be willing to make some concessions late Thursday. A harder deadline comes May 22, when the country could enter certain default, as a grace period for $500 million of interest payments comes to an end. The clock is ticking for the nation that has defaulted on debt eight times previously.
Argentina could be the doomsday clock the financial world is watching. Other nations are sure to be on the brink of debt default and currency crises after weeks and months of lockdowns, supply chain breakdowns, social unrest, and deaths caused by COVID-19.
Is this the beginning of the end of the stock market rally and a rush to the safety of hard assets? The Dow popped above 24,000 intraday, but it's been unable to surpass the seven-week high of 24,633.66, which is roughly a half retrace of the March pullback. Another failure at this level would signal a short-term selling condition.
Just moments ago, the BLS reported April non-farm payrolls, registering a loss of 20.5 million jobs, pushing the unemployment rate to 14.7%.
With COVID-19 continuing to cause dislocations in everything from meat distribution to pro sports to education, the debate over whether this economic maelstrom will eventually result in a sharp rebound or a long, drawn out recession or even a depression.
Siding with the sharp rebound are those who gave up the ghost back in March with lockdowns, the government, media, and most of the financial community following the lead of the Federal Reserve.
Naysayers, viewing the global economy at a severe breaking point with no good solutions, include James Rickards, Mike Maloney of goldsilver.com, Peak Prosperity's Chris Martenson, Peter Schiff (a fiat money perma-bear and gold perma-bull) and others.
Greg Mannarino, the Robin Hood of Wall Street adds some perspective:
At the Close, Thursday, May 7, 2020:
Dow: 23,875.89, +211.25 (+0.89%)
NASDAQ: 8,979.66, +125.27 (+1.41%)
S&P 500: 2,881.19, +32.77 (+1.15%)
NYSE: 11,121.67, +121.68 (+1.11%)
Showing posts with label Dow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dow. Show all posts
Friday, May 8, 2020
Friday, August 16, 2019
Ignore the Noise as Markets Grind Bond Yields Toward Zero
Thursday's trading saw more of the usual up-and-down twerking that usually accompanies large moves in either direction. After Wednesday's rout - the fourth-largest point decline on the Dow Industrials - some bounce was expected, and it did occur early, though markets slipped into the red midday before being rescued by apparently-optimistic investors (central banks, PPT) into the close.
Interesting is the idea that Wednesday's selloff was not met with more panic in the media and by the general public. Stocks have been volatile since October of last year, so the possibility that people are zoned out from the near-constant drubbing and recovery is real.
People should actually care that their college retirement funds are at so much risk in stocks, but that doesn't seem to be the case among the 401K crowd. Getting used to uncertainty is a kind of Stockholm syndrome that is inimitable to the Wall Street casino. The general public may get agitated more over mass shootings, tweets by the president, or a bad call in an NFL game, but when it comes to the money betting on their futures, they are sheepish.
Maybe that's a good thing when talking about market noise, but an 800-point drop on the Dow is something that shouldn't be ignored or overlooked. There are damn good reasons stocks get hammered, and even passive investors should express at least a modicum of concern.
Be that as it may, Thursday was more of the noisy variety, though most other markets - bonds, commodities, futures, FX - were being bounced around pretty vigorously, especially treasury bonds, where the 10-year-note continues to fall, reaching for all-time lows.
The 10-year is hovering in the 1.47 - 1.65 range. The all-time low yield on the benchmark 10-year was 1.375, on July 5, 2016. Anybody wearing a thinking cap clearly sees where this recent decline is headed. With now $16 trillion in bonds yielding negative returns globally, US treasuries stick out like sore thumbs. In the race to the bottom, the 10-year will fall below the record low yield. It's simply a matter of time. Eventually, US bonds will likely carry negative yields as the global financial system, rescued by central banks in 2008-09, completely falls apart over the next three to five years.
Money is dying. Fiat money will die quite painfully.
At the Close, Thursday, August 15, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,579.39, +99.97 (+0.39%)
NASDAQ: 7,766.62, -7.32 (-0.09%)
S&P 500: 2,847.60, +7.00 (+0.25%)
NYSE Composite: 12,409.54, +41.49 (+0.34%)
Interesting is the idea that Wednesday's selloff was not met with more panic in the media and by the general public. Stocks have been volatile since October of last year, so the possibility that people are zoned out from the near-constant drubbing and recovery is real.
People should actually care that their college retirement funds are at so much risk in stocks, but that doesn't seem to be the case among the 401K crowd. Getting used to uncertainty is a kind of Stockholm syndrome that is inimitable to the Wall Street casino. The general public may get agitated more over mass shootings, tweets by the president, or a bad call in an NFL game, but when it comes to the money betting on their futures, they are sheepish.
Maybe that's a good thing when talking about market noise, but an 800-point drop on the Dow is something that shouldn't be ignored or overlooked. There are damn good reasons stocks get hammered, and even passive investors should express at least a modicum of concern.
Be that as it may, Thursday was more of the noisy variety, though most other markets - bonds, commodities, futures, FX - were being bounced around pretty vigorously, especially treasury bonds, where the 10-year-note continues to fall, reaching for all-time lows.
The 10-year is hovering in the 1.47 - 1.65 range. The all-time low yield on the benchmark 10-year was 1.375, on July 5, 2016. Anybody wearing a thinking cap clearly sees where this recent decline is headed. With now $16 trillion in bonds yielding negative returns globally, US treasuries stick out like sore thumbs. In the race to the bottom, the 10-year will fall below the record low yield. It's simply a matter of time. Eventually, US bonds will likely carry negative yields as the global financial system, rescued by central banks in 2008-09, completely falls apart over the next three to five years.
Money is dying. Fiat money will die quite painfully.
At the Close, Thursday, August 15, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,579.39, +99.97 (+0.39%)
NASDAQ: 7,766.62, -7.32 (-0.09%)
S&P 500: 2,847.60, +7.00 (+0.25%)
NYSE Composite: 12,409.54, +41.49 (+0.34%)
Thursday, March 15, 2018
Stocks Bounce, Dead Cat Variety, Then Fade
Nothing much to see here, though the Dow has managed to stay in a relatively tight range, below the interim high and above the interim low, still negative for the month.
Further patience, with a slight bias to the short side, is advised
Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:
At the Close, Thursday, March 15, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,873.66, +115.54 (+0.47%)
NASDAQ: 7,481.74, -15.07 (-0.20%)
S&P 500: 2,747.33, -2.15 (-0.08%)
NYSE Composite: 12,743.61, -19.06 (-0.15%)
Added:
Report from upstate NY (30 miles east of Rochester) Crash is coming, very soon. Restaurants are closing everywhere. Most of the small towns, like Sodus, Macedon, Clyde, Newark have plenty of retail space for lease, much of it on the block for over two years.
Retail is awful. Only the biggest, best-established stores are surviving, and that's all they're doing. People are over-taxed, stressed out, debt-laden zombies. Average of $22k per student in most districts. Upstate NY (from Albany west to Buffalo) has been in a depression for the past 20 years, but, seriously, it's getting worse. People are down to buying just necessities and trying to pay off credit card and school debt. Forget about mortgages. It's like the sub-prime crisis is still ongoing. Monroe County (Rochester) lists two to three foreclosures a day.
The narrative that we're in "recovery" or "expansion" is complete horse manure. As soon as you make some money, there's the revenue guy or the locals erecting more stupid regulations to make life more difficult.
A true cleansing is needed. Start by closing all the schools. Screw the overpaid, fat, stupid teachers and their huge pension load. They suck. They don't teach; they only take. Same for most government employees. Then sack half the municipal and state employees. Then 50% of the federal employees. When half of the nation is on welfare, cut that off, shoot the worthless eaters and start over.
I'm in my mid-60s and I have to admit, I've never seen the economy in worse condition. Ever since 2008, it's been every man for himself. Pretty darn sad. We used to have a good country, but it's been going downhill for several generations. Half of the youth are worthless and will be dangerous.
Bankruptcy filings will erupt in the second half this year unless there's dramatic change from within. Trump can't do it all, but he's fighting a deflation monster nobody wants to admit exists.
Here, with a foot of snow on the ground five days before Spring, things are looking pretty damn bleak.
Further patience, with a slight bias to the short side, is advised
Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
3/1/18 | 24,608.98 | -420.22 | -420.22 |
3/2/18 | 24,538.06 | -70.92 | -491.14 |
3/5/18 | 24,874.76 | +336.70 | -154.44 |
3/6/18 | 24,884.12 | +9.36 | -145.08 |
3/7/18 | 24,801.36 | -82.76 | -227.84 |
3/8/18 | 24,895.21 | +93.85 | -133.99 |
3/9/18 | 25,335.74 | +440.53 | +306.54 |
3/12/18 | 25,178.61 | -157.13 | +149.41 |
3/13/18 | 25,007.03 | -171.58 | -22.17 |
3/14/18 | 24,758.12 | -248.91 | -271.08 |
3/15/18 | 24,873.66 | +115.54 | -155.54 |
At the Close, Thursday, March 15, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,873.66, +115.54 (+0.47%)
NASDAQ: 7,481.74, -15.07 (-0.20%)
S&P 500: 2,747.33, -2.15 (-0.08%)
NYSE Composite: 12,743.61, -19.06 (-0.15%)
Added:
Report from upstate NY (30 miles east of Rochester) Crash is coming, very soon. Restaurants are closing everywhere. Most of the small towns, like Sodus, Macedon, Clyde, Newark have plenty of retail space for lease, much of it on the block for over two years.
Retail is awful. Only the biggest, best-established stores are surviving, and that's all they're doing. People are over-taxed, stressed out, debt-laden zombies. Average of $22k per student in most districts. Upstate NY (from Albany west to Buffalo) has been in a depression for the past 20 years, but, seriously, it's getting worse. People are down to buying just necessities and trying to pay off credit card and school debt. Forget about mortgages. It's like the sub-prime crisis is still ongoing. Monroe County (Rochester) lists two to three foreclosures a day.
The narrative that we're in "recovery" or "expansion" is complete horse manure. As soon as you make some money, there's the revenue guy or the locals erecting more stupid regulations to make life more difficult.
A true cleansing is needed. Start by closing all the schools. Screw the overpaid, fat, stupid teachers and their huge pension load. They suck. They don't teach; they only take. Same for most government employees. Then sack half the municipal and state employees. Then 50% of the federal employees. When half of the nation is on welfare, cut that off, shoot the worthless eaters and start over.
I'm in my mid-60s and I have to admit, I've never seen the economy in worse condition. Ever since 2008, it's been every man for himself. Pretty darn sad. We used to have a good country, but it's been going downhill for several generations. Half of the youth are worthless and will be dangerous.
Bankruptcy filings will erupt in the second half this year unless there's dramatic change from within. Trump can't do it all, but he's fighting a deflation monster nobody wants to admit exists.
Here, with a foot of snow on the ground five days before Spring, things are looking pretty damn bleak.
Dow Sheds For Third Strat Day; Last Week's Gains In Jeopardy
Trade wars. Inflation. Rate hikes. Housing prices. Wealth inequality.
Take your pick. These are but a few of the issues vexing investors as the Dow Jones Industrials recorded triple digit losses for the third straight session, wiping out the gains from the previous Friday and threatening to eviscerate all of the upside from a momentous prior week.
Anybody keeping score (and if you have a pension plan, college fund, or any other kind of tangential reach into the world of equities, you should be) has to be at least a little bit alarmed at the inability of stocks to regain their momentum. After a wildly positive January, February was fraught with panic and pain. Now March is beginning to shape up into a further continuation of the slippery slope upon which stocks are currently sliding downward.
Over the previous week, the Dow had ramped up nearly 800 points, but, as of the current mid-week, the blue chips are down nearly 600 points. Another day like Wednesday would not only eclipse the gains of last week, but it would also signal to chart-watchers a breach of the prior interim low, 24,538.06, achieved March 2nd.
A drop below that level would be an almost certain sign that the index - and stocks in general - are in for another round of relentless selling pressure. What matters little is the suspected cause. What matters most is the evaporation of profits and gains and the spread of fear in the accumulation of wealth.
It would not be the first time that investors had been hoodwinked by snake oil salesmen promoting a path to easy street via investments in minuscule percentage ownership of gigantic corporations. In all likelihood, it would not be the last.
As has been stated in prior posts here at Money Daily, the market is moving not only on money flows and fundamentals, but on political considerations, whether they be real or imagined.
There is very real danger at this juncture and investors would be wise to hold cash and/or take profits.
Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, March 14, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,758.12, -248.91 (-1.00%)
NASDAQ: 7,496.81, -14.20 (-0.19%)
S&P 500: 2,749.48, -15.83 (-0.57%)
NYSE Composite: 12,762.67, -69.08 (-0.54%)
Take your pick. These are but a few of the issues vexing investors as the Dow Jones Industrials recorded triple digit losses for the third straight session, wiping out the gains from the previous Friday and threatening to eviscerate all of the upside from a momentous prior week.
Anybody keeping score (and if you have a pension plan, college fund, or any other kind of tangential reach into the world of equities, you should be) has to be at least a little bit alarmed at the inability of stocks to regain their momentum. After a wildly positive January, February was fraught with panic and pain. Now March is beginning to shape up into a further continuation of the slippery slope upon which stocks are currently sliding downward.
Over the previous week, the Dow had ramped up nearly 800 points, but, as of the current mid-week, the blue chips are down nearly 600 points. Another day like Wednesday would not only eclipse the gains of last week, but it would also signal to chart-watchers a breach of the prior interim low, 24,538.06, achieved March 2nd.
A drop below that level would be an almost certain sign that the index - and stocks in general - are in for another round of relentless selling pressure. What matters little is the suspected cause. What matters most is the evaporation of profits and gains and the spread of fear in the accumulation of wealth.
It would not be the first time that investors had been hoodwinked by snake oil salesmen promoting a path to easy street via investments in minuscule percentage ownership of gigantic corporations. In all likelihood, it would not be the last.
As has been stated in prior posts here at Money Daily, the market is moving not only on money flows and fundamentals, but on political considerations, whether they be real or imagined.
There is very real danger at this juncture and investors would be wise to hold cash and/or take profits.
Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
3/1/18 | 24,608.98 | -420.22 | -420.22 |
3/2/18 | 24,538.06 | -70.92 | -491.14 |
3/5/18 | 24,874.76 | +336.70 | -154.44 |
3/6/18 | 24,884.12 | +9.36 | -145.08 |
3/7/18 | 24,801.36 | -82.76 | -227.84 |
3/8/18 | 24,895.21 | +93.85 | -133.99 |
3/9/18 | 25,335.74 | +440.53 | +306.54 |
3/12/18 | 25,178.61 | -157.13 | +149.41 |
3/13/18 | 25,007.03 | -171.58 | -22.17 |
3/14/18 | 24,758.12 | -248.91 | -271.08 |
At the Close, Wednesday, March 14, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,758.12, -248.91 (-1.00%)
NASDAQ: 7,496.81, -14.20 (-0.19%)
S&P 500: 2,749.48, -15.83 (-0.57%)
NYSE Composite: 12,762.67, -69.08 (-0.54%)
Friday, December 8, 2017
Stocks End Week Higher; Bitcoin Still Bubbly; Gold, Silver Pounded Lower
Stocks got back to rising without worry on Friday following the 238,000 new jobs reported in November, according to the BLS' non-farm payroll data.
The Dow, S&P, and Composite set new all-time high closing marks, the NASDAQ falling short of a record by 74 points, due primarily to the drubbing of the FAANGs late last week and early this week. Highly speculative tech stocks are considered to be benefited least of all companies by the tax bill currently coursing its way through congress, thus, some investors were shunning the sector for that reason. Others were likely taking profits after what is looking like a banner year for the tech leaders.
Bonds ended the week with a quiet session, the curve steepening ever so slightly, with the short-duration issues yielding the same or .01% more, while the 10-year-note yield was bumped a pip higher, to 2.38%.
The curve is still quite flat, with the spread between 2s and 30s only 98 basis points (0.98%). In other words, investors are flocking to short terms, which spells long-term trouble. In more normal times, a 30-year treasury bond would be yielding five from seven percent, but, even with the economy growing - albeit sluggishly - long-dated commitments are out of fashion. Lending the government money for a long period of time will only produce a return of 2.75%, hardly anything upon which one would hang a retirement fund. The federal government, if one believes in free market economics, is not a worthy bet from more than a few years.
Difficult to believe, but would you put your money at risk for an additional 20 years for an extra 0.37% return (the difference between the ten-year and the 30 year)? Probably not, and expert bond traders apparently agree.
No report would be complete without mentioning Bitcoin, which galloped above $17,000 on Thursday, but dropped back to just under $16,000 Friday, capping a week which it began just below $12,000 per coin.
On the flip side (pun intended), gold and silver were beaten down all week, sending silver to a loss year-to-date. Looks like a buying opportunity in the physical mining and bullion sector which has been the poster children for underperformance the past four years.
At the Close, Friday, December 8, 2017:
Dow: 24,329.16, +117.68 (+0.49%)
NASDAQ: 6,840.08, +27.24 (+0.40%)
S&P 500: 2,651.50, +14.52 (+0.55%)
NYSE Composite: 12,643.06, +74.08 (+0.59%)
Gold: 1,245.90, -3.90 (-0.31%)
Silver: 15.73, +0.01 (+0.06%)
For the week:
Dow: +97.57 (+0.40%)
NASDAQ: -7.51 (-0.11%)
S&P 500: +9.28 (+0.35%)
NYSE Composite: +28.50 (+0.23%)
The Dow, S&P, and Composite set new all-time high closing marks, the NASDAQ falling short of a record by 74 points, due primarily to the drubbing of the FAANGs late last week and early this week. Highly speculative tech stocks are considered to be benefited least of all companies by the tax bill currently coursing its way through congress, thus, some investors were shunning the sector for that reason. Others were likely taking profits after what is looking like a banner year for the tech leaders.
Bonds ended the week with a quiet session, the curve steepening ever so slightly, with the short-duration issues yielding the same or .01% more, while the 10-year-note yield was bumped a pip higher, to 2.38%.
The curve is still quite flat, with the spread between 2s and 30s only 98 basis points (0.98%). In other words, investors are flocking to short terms, which spells long-term trouble. In more normal times, a 30-year treasury bond would be yielding five from seven percent, but, even with the economy growing - albeit sluggishly - long-dated commitments are out of fashion. Lending the government money for a long period of time will only produce a return of 2.75%, hardly anything upon which one would hang a retirement fund. The federal government, if one believes in free market economics, is not a worthy bet from more than a few years.
Difficult to believe, but would you put your money at risk for an additional 20 years for an extra 0.37% return (the difference between the ten-year and the 30 year)? Probably not, and expert bond traders apparently agree.
No report would be complete without mentioning Bitcoin, which galloped above $17,000 on Thursday, but dropped back to just under $16,000 Friday, capping a week which it began just below $12,000 per coin.
On the flip side (pun intended), gold and silver were beaten down all week, sending silver to a loss year-to-date. Looks like a buying opportunity in the physical mining and bullion sector which has been the poster children for underperformance the past four years.
At the Close, Friday, December 8, 2017:
Dow: 24,329.16, +117.68 (+0.49%)
NASDAQ: 6,840.08, +27.24 (+0.40%)
S&P 500: 2,651.50, +14.52 (+0.55%)
NYSE Composite: 12,643.06, +74.08 (+0.59%)
Gold: 1,245.90, -3.90 (-0.31%)
Silver: 15.73, +0.01 (+0.06%)
For the week:
Dow: +97.57 (+0.40%)
NASDAQ: -7.51 (-0.11%)
S&P 500: +9.28 (+0.35%)
NYSE Composite: +28.50 (+0.23%)
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
All-Time Highs Becoming the Norm on Wall Street
Even though a potential government shutdown and another rate hike by the Fed are just weeks away, stock investors don't seem to care.
All the major indices rocketed out of the gate to impressive gains on Tuesday, eviscerating previous records.
As Wednesday morning approaches the opening bell, news that third quarter GDP was revised higher in the second estimate, to 3.3%, has futures kicking higher.
While Bitcoin surpassed $10,000 per coin on Tuesday night, the Dow might one-up the cryptocurrency by hurtling past 24,000 on Wednesday. The Dow Industrials passed the 22,000 mark on September 11, and cruised above 23,000 on October 18, so, ripping through 24,000 in just over a month wouldn't be much of a surprise.
At the Close, Tuesday, November 28, 2017:
Dow: 23,836.71, +255.93 (+1.09%)
NASDAQ: 6,912.36, +33.84 (+0.49%)
S&P 500: 2,627.04, +25.62 (+0.98%)
NYSE Composite: 12,520.23, +129.45 (+1.04%)
All the major indices rocketed out of the gate to impressive gains on Tuesday, eviscerating previous records.
As Wednesday morning approaches the opening bell, news that third quarter GDP was revised higher in the second estimate, to 3.3%, has futures kicking higher.
While Bitcoin surpassed $10,000 per coin on Tuesday night, the Dow might one-up the cryptocurrency by hurtling past 24,000 on Wednesday. The Dow Industrials passed the 22,000 mark on September 11, and cruised above 23,000 on October 18, so, ripping through 24,000 in just over a month wouldn't be much of a surprise.
At the Close, Tuesday, November 28, 2017:
Dow: 23,836.71, +255.93 (+1.09%)
NASDAQ: 6,912.36, +33.84 (+0.49%)
S&P 500: 2,627.04, +25.62 (+0.98%)
NYSE Composite: 12,520.23, +129.45 (+1.04%)
Friday, August 4, 2017
Indices Split Again, Dow Only Gainer; NFP Shows 209,000 July Jobs
The rally fizzled badly on Thursday, but the market may get a boost from strong jobs data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), which showed non-farm payrolls increasing by 209,000 in the month of July.
All the major index futures are showing plus signs prior to the opening bell on Wall Street. The official unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, matching the 16-year low set back in May.
With all this good news on the employment front, there seems to be nothing capable of holding back another rally on Wall Street to close out the week.
If all of this seems to be a trifle boring, it's because the Dow has now posted gains in each of the last eight sessions, rising from 21,500 to over 22,000 over that short span.
The other indices don't appear to share the enthusiasm for the Dow. The NASDAQ in particular has been down five of the last six sessions.
Perhaps this is just money moving from speculative tech stocks into solid dividend-paying stocks on the Dow, although Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) are all components of the 30 Dow Jones Industrials.
At the Close, 8/3/17:
Dow: 22,026.10, +9.86 (0.04%)
NASDAQ: 6,340.34, -22.30 (-0.35%)
S&P 500: 2,472.16, -5.41 (-0.22%)
NYSE Composite: 11,956.52, -22.85 (-0.19%)
All the major index futures are showing plus signs prior to the opening bell on Wall Street. The official unemployment rate fell to 4.3%, matching the 16-year low set back in May.
With all this good news on the employment front, there seems to be nothing capable of holding back another rally on Wall Street to close out the week.
If all of this seems to be a trifle boring, it's because the Dow has now posted gains in each of the last eight sessions, rising from 21,500 to over 22,000 over that short span.
The other indices don't appear to share the enthusiasm for the Dow. The NASDAQ in particular has been down five of the last six sessions.
Perhaps this is just money moving from speculative tech stocks into solid dividend-paying stocks on the Dow, although Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) are all components of the 30 Dow Jones Industrials.
At the Close, 8/3/17:
Dow: 22,026.10, +9.86 (0.04%)
NASDAQ: 6,340.34, -22.30 (-0.35%)
S&P 500: 2,472.16, -5.41 (-0.22%)
NYSE Composite: 11,956.52, -22.85 (-0.19%)
Labels:
BLS,
Dow,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
non-farm payroll
Monday, July 24, 2017
For US Markets, It's Splits-ville Again
Another day, another session punctuated by divergent indices.
The NASDAQ goes up; the Dow goes down, or vice versa. The S&P 500 and NYSE Composite seem to go their own ways, more often than not, separate. All of this reeks of manipulation, selectivity, goal-seeking, and just about anything other than rational investing.
Upon examination, the stock market is nothing more than pieces of paper representing shares in company X or Y or Z, being traded for other pieces of paper known as yen, dollars, euros or pesos. It's the ultimate paper chase, based entirely on faith and foolery of grand design by the world's central bankers. It's a confidence game being played at the highest levels of finance, a dangerous precedent for the entire planet.
Unless the public detaches from the fraud, it will continue. The unique phenomenon at work in today's financial arenas is commonly known to psychiatrists as normalcy bias. It is the belief that everything seems to be working all right, so the urge to change is minimized, which is precisely the condition present in the debt-infested governments, businesses, and households everywhere.
The ultimate fear is that confidence is lost in the fiat system. After eight long years of propping up governments, businesses, and households with freshly-printed-or-minted cash, confidence is still durable, thanks to normalcy bias.
But, there are canaries in the coal mine, so to speak. These are burgeoning, non-repayable government debt, underfunded pensions (especially public union pensions), slack demand, disinflation, demographics, and the undeniable eventuality of recession, either in the US, Europe, or globally.
Fighting these trends with some degree of success has been the role of the central banks, but they are running out of viable options to keep global finance operating while also quelling local discontent, which is growing rapidly.
Money Daily does not pretend to know who is buying stocks and/or causing the variations in the major indices, but it is apparent that some entity other than brokerages are buying and it is well known that the Bank of Japan (BOJ), Swiss National Bank (SNB), and European Central Bank (ECB) have been and will continue to be outright buyers of equities.
When these entities become sellers, there will be no bottom to the markets.
Caveat Emptor.
At the Close, 7/24/17:
Dow: 21,513.17, -66.90 (-0.31%)
NASDAQ: 6,410.81, +23.05 (0.36%)
S&P 500: 2,469.91, -2.63 (-0.11%)
NYSE Composite: 11,904.71, -19.89 (-0.17%)
The NASDAQ goes up; the Dow goes down, or vice versa. The S&P 500 and NYSE Composite seem to go their own ways, more often than not, separate. All of this reeks of manipulation, selectivity, goal-seeking, and just about anything other than rational investing.
Upon examination, the stock market is nothing more than pieces of paper representing shares in company X or Y or Z, being traded for other pieces of paper known as yen, dollars, euros or pesos. It's the ultimate paper chase, based entirely on faith and foolery of grand design by the world's central bankers. It's a confidence game being played at the highest levels of finance, a dangerous precedent for the entire planet.
Unless the public detaches from the fraud, it will continue. The unique phenomenon at work in today's financial arenas is commonly known to psychiatrists as normalcy bias. It is the belief that everything seems to be working all right, so the urge to change is minimized, which is precisely the condition present in the debt-infested governments, businesses, and households everywhere.
The ultimate fear is that confidence is lost in the fiat system. After eight long years of propping up governments, businesses, and households with freshly-printed-or-minted cash, confidence is still durable, thanks to normalcy bias.
But, there are canaries in the coal mine, so to speak. These are burgeoning, non-repayable government debt, underfunded pensions (especially public union pensions), slack demand, disinflation, demographics, and the undeniable eventuality of recession, either in the US, Europe, or globally.
Fighting these trends with some degree of success has been the role of the central banks, but they are running out of viable options to keep global finance operating while also quelling local discontent, which is growing rapidly.
Money Daily does not pretend to know who is buying stocks and/or causing the variations in the major indices, but it is apparent that some entity other than brokerages are buying and it is well known that the Bank of Japan (BOJ), Swiss National Bank (SNB), and European Central Bank (ECB) have been and will continue to be outright buyers of equities.
When these entities become sellers, there will be no bottom to the markets.
Caveat Emptor.
At the Close, 7/24/17:
Dow: 21,513.17, -66.90 (-0.31%)
NASDAQ: 6,410.81, +23.05 (0.36%)
S&P 500: 2,469.91, -2.63 (-0.11%)
NYSE Composite: 11,904.71, -19.89 (-0.17%)
Labels:
BOJ,
central banks,
Dow,
ECB,
European Central Bank,
fiat,
fraud,
Nasdaq,
SNB,
Yen
Monday, May 15, 2017
With the Fed Pledged to Complete Wall Street Backing, There's No Top In Sight
At the Close, 5/15/17:
Dow: 20,981.94, +85.33 (0.41%)
NASDAQ: 6,149.67, +28.44 (0.46%)
S&P 500: 2,402.32, +11.42 (0.48%)
NYSE Composite: 11,614.23, +67.18 (0.58%)
Welcome to the asylum.
Just for reference, a random look at stocks from a one-year perspective.
On May 16, 2016, here's where the major averages closed.
Dow: 17,500.94
NASDAQ: 4,769.56
S&P 500: 2,052.32
NYSE Composite: 10,250.49
OK, so those look like nice gains, right? How much, percentage-wise, through today's close:
Dow: 16.59%
NASDAQ: 22.45%
S&P 500: 14.58%
NYSE Composite: 11.75%
The obvious question is, how long, with the current bull market more than 8 years long (second longest in market history) can this continue?
Skeptics posit that the entire global financial structure is a massive Ponzi scheme based entirely on fiat money backed by nothing, while realists may refer the old "go with the flow" ideology.
With the Fed continuing to be accommodative via historically low interest rates and the continued buying of financial assets by central banks, there may be no better time to be in the market.
Whoever it was who coined the term, "don't fight the Fed," should be sainted immediately by Pope Francis. This bull market could last another two years or end in two weeks. For now, nearly the entire investment community (approaching 100%) is bullish on stocks, which typically signals a turn of fortune. However, this time truly is different. Never has there been the levels of accommodation and asset purchasing by central banks, who eventually, if current patterns play out, will own the entire market, at inflated prices.
Then what?
Global hyperinflation? It could happen, but that will take time.
Stay the course. This is the age of easy money.
Dow: 20,981.94, +85.33 (0.41%)
NASDAQ: 6,149.67, +28.44 (0.46%)
S&P 500: 2,402.32, +11.42 (0.48%)
NYSE Composite: 11,614.23, +67.18 (0.58%)
Welcome to the asylum.
Just for reference, a random look at stocks from a one-year perspective.
On May 16, 2016, here's where the major averages closed.
Dow: 17,500.94
NASDAQ: 4,769.56
S&P 500: 2,052.32
NYSE Composite: 10,250.49
OK, so those look like nice gains, right? How much, percentage-wise, through today's close:
Dow: 16.59%
NASDAQ: 22.45%
S&P 500: 14.58%
NYSE Composite: 11.75%
The obvious question is, how long, with the current bull market more than 8 years long (second longest in market history) can this continue?
Skeptics posit that the entire global financial structure is a massive Ponzi scheme based entirely on fiat money backed by nothing, while realists may refer the old "go with the flow" ideology.
With the Fed continuing to be accommodative via historically low interest rates and the continued buying of financial assets by central banks, there may be no better time to be in the market.
Whoever it was who coined the term, "don't fight the Fed," should be sainted immediately by Pope Francis. This bull market could last another two years or end in two weeks. For now, nearly the entire investment community (approaching 100%) is bullish on stocks, which typically signals a turn of fortune. However, this time truly is different. Never has there been the levels of accommodation and asset purchasing by central banks, who eventually, if current patterns play out, will own the entire market, at inflated prices.
Then what?
Global hyperinflation? It could happen, but that will take time.
Stay the course. This is the age of easy money.
Labels:
Dow,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
Fed,
Federal Reserve,
Nasdaq,
NYSE Composite,
S&P 500
Thursday, March 2, 2017
Trump Effect: Stocks Roar To New All-Time Highs Following Presidential Address
How important President Donald Trump's speech before a joint assembly on congress Tuesday night was is not easy to gauge, but, from a Wall Street perspective, he must have hit the high notes perfectly because all major averages were straight up at the opening bell and continued to add to gains throughout Wednesday's session.
The Dow, which blew away the 20,000 Rubicon less than a month ago, added nearly 1.5%, or 303 points, its largest one-day gain since early December. With Industrials leading the way, the other three major averages broke out as well, with the S&P pretty much reaching highs that analysts had been predicting as end-of-year results, yet we're barely two months into the new year.
How this kind of euphoria will eventually manifest itself is still a mystery, especially with stocks tacking higher despite consistent warnings of a valuation trap being set. While stocks continue to ramp on a daily basis, corporate reports are not following the same tune. Additionally, analysts from various houses also revised first quarter GDP estimates lower, with Goldman Sachs and the Atlanta Fed looking for 1.8% growth. JP Morgan and Bank of America are even more pessimistic, at 1.5% and 1.3%, respectively.
In the main, what companies behind the stocks are counting on is a relaxed regulatory environment under President Trump's administration. The President has already issued a variety of pro-business executive orders and his commitment to repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) is also being viewed as a positive on two fronts. First, it will free up consumer funds from an expensive mandated coverage nightmare; second, companies will probably get breaks as well in group coverage.
Adding to the speculative high spirits are items currently under the radar such as the President's budget, which includes massive cost-cutting across agencies, a one trillion dollar infrastruture plan that Mr. Trump touched on it in his speech, and trade negotiations with countries outside the framework of international treaties such as NAFTA, TPP and the World Bank.
All told, President Trump's first six weeks in office have been nothing short of miraculous for stocks, though it will take some time to see how it all plays out. Either stock pickers have been set up for a major catastrophe or the enthusiasm and honesty of the new president will indeed guide America and American business interests to new heights.
Lurking in the shadows behind the presidential bluster is the Federal Reserve, which meets in two weeks to decide whether to raise federal funds rates or keep them at current levels. Money is on them keeping the rates at the current 0.50-0.75, though even an increase of 25 basis points would seem to be inadequate to quiet Wall Street's enthusiasm.
At the Close, 3.1.17:
Dow: 21,115.55 +303.31 (1.46%)
NASDAQ: 5,904.03 +78.59 (1.35%)
S&P 500: 2,395.96, +32.32 (1.37%)
NYSE Composite: 11,661.22, +148.83 (1.29%)
The Dow, which blew away the 20,000 Rubicon less than a month ago, added nearly 1.5%, or 303 points, its largest one-day gain since early December. With Industrials leading the way, the other three major averages broke out as well, with the S&P pretty much reaching highs that analysts had been predicting as end-of-year results, yet we're barely two months into the new year.
How this kind of euphoria will eventually manifest itself is still a mystery, especially with stocks tacking higher despite consistent warnings of a valuation trap being set. While stocks continue to ramp on a daily basis, corporate reports are not following the same tune. Additionally, analysts from various houses also revised first quarter GDP estimates lower, with Goldman Sachs and the Atlanta Fed looking for 1.8% growth. JP Morgan and Bank of America are even more pessimistic, at 1.5% and 1.3%, respectively.
In the main, what companies behind the stocks are counting on is a relaxed regulatory environment under President Trump's administration. The President has already issued a variety of pro-business executive orders and his commitment to repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) is also being viewed as a positive on two fronts. First, it will free up consumer funds from an expensive mandated coverage nightmare; second, companies will probably get breaks as well in group coverage.
Adding to the speculative high spirits are items currently under the radar such as the President's budget, which includes massive cost-cutting across agencies, a one trillion dollar infrastruture plan that Mr. Trump touched on it in his speech, and trade negotiations with countries outside the framework of international treaties such as NAFTA, TPP and the World Bank.
All told, President Trump's first six weeks in office have been nothing short of miraculous for stocks, though it will take some time to see how it all plays out. Either stock pickers have been set up for a major catastrophe or the enthusiasm and honesty of the new president will indeed guide America and American business interests to new heights.
Lurking in the shadows behind the presidential bluster is the Federal Reserve, which meets in two weeks to decide whether to raise federal funds rates or keep them at current levels. Money is on them keeping the rates at the current 0.50-0.75, though even an increase of 25 basis points would seem to be inadequate to quiet Wall Street's enthusiasm.
At the Close, 3.1.17:
Dow: 21,115.55 +303.31 (1.46%)
NASDAQ: 5,904.03 +78.59 (1.35%)
S&P 500: 2,395.96, +32.32 (1.37%)
NYSE Composite: 11,661.22, +148.83 (1.29%)
Labels:
ACA,
Affordable Care Act,
Dow,
infrastructure,
NAFTA,
Obamacare,
President Trump,
TPP,
trillion
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Dow Winning Streak Ends At 12, Should Resume Promptly
Stocks ended a historic run of 12 straight winning sessions on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, tying the mark set in January of 1987, finishing the month of February on a dour note, though overall, stocks were fantastic for the month and so far in 2017.
With a possible March rate hike still two weeks away, there's still plenty of time to jump upon the Wall Street bandwagon. Since stocks apparently have no downside, more money will be pumped into the market by the almighty algos, probably beginning on March 1.
The old adage, "don't fight the tape," is in play as fundamentals have been tossed to the curb in favor of momentum-chasing. Stocks should continue to climb until they don't.
At The Close, 2.28.17:
Dow: 20,812.24, -25.20 (-0.12%)
NASDAQ: 5,825.44, -36.46 (-0.62%)
S&P 500: 2,363.64, -6.11 (-0.26%)
NYSE Composite: 11,512.39, -45.96 (-0.40%)
With a possible March rate hike still two weeks away, there's still plenty of time to jump upon the Wall Street bandwagon. Since stocks apparently have no downside, more money will be pumped into the market by the almighty algos, probably beginning on March 1.
The old adage, "don't fight the tape," is in play as fundamentals have been tossed to the curb in favor of momentum-chasing. Stocks should continue to climb until they don't.
At The Close, 2.28.17:
Dow: 20,812.24, -25.20 (-0.12%)
NASDAQ: 5,825.44, -36.46 (-0.62%)
S&P 500: 2,363.64, -6.11 (-0.26%)
NYSE Composite: 11,512.39, -45.96 (-0.40%)
Friday, February 17, 2017
Big Week For Equities Sends All US Indices To All-Time Highs
Stocks suffered early in the day on Friday, but rallied late with the Dow, S&P 500, and NASDAQ all closing with marginal gains. Only the NYSE Composite ended the day in the red, down about a point-and-a-half.
Even with options expiry, Friday was barely exciting, but, for the week, the US averages were, in a word, incredible.
The closing figures for the day and week are presented below. More analysis (if any is even necessary) Saturday AM.
At the Close, Friday, February 17, 2017:
Dow: 20,624.05, +4.28 (0.02%)
NASDAQ: 5,838.58, +23.68 (0.41%)
S&P 500: 2,351.16, +3.94 (0.17%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: 11,502.71, -1.48 (-0.01%)
For the week:
Dow: +354.68 (1.75%)
NASDAQ: +104.45 (1.82%)
S&P 500: +35.06 (1.51%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: +133.19 (1.17%)
Even with options expiry, Friday was barely exciting, but, for the week, the US averages were, in a word, incredible.
The closing figures for the day and week are presented below. More analysis (if any is even necessary) Saturday AM.
At the Close, Friday, February 17, 2017:
Dow: 20,624.05, +4.28 (0.02%)
NASDAQ: 5,838.58, +23.68 (0.41%)
S&P 500: 2,351.16, +3.94 (0.17%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: 11,502.71, -1.48 (-0.01%)
For the week:
Dow: +354.68 (1.75%)
NASDAQ: +104.45 (1.82%)
S&P 500: +35.06 (1.51%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: +133.19 (1.17%)
Labels:
Dow,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
Nasdaq,
NYSE,
NYSE Composite,
S&P 500
Friday, February 10, 2017
Bubble Superfecta: Dow, NASDAQ, S&P 500, NYSE Composite All Close At New Records
As the week comes to a stunning close, it's official, every market in America is officially in deep into bubble territory.
Consider that the major indices all closed at all-time highs today and that the Dow Jones Industrial Average is up a whopping 2200 points since election day, November 8, 2016. That amounts to a gain of just over 12% in three months. At that rate of ascent, 22,000 on the Dow should be a no-brainer by the end of 2017.
Nothing other than stupidity, other people's money, greed, and momentum were needed to foment one of the most rapid rises in the history of the Dow. The other indices have surely been along for the ride; even the broad measure of the entire NYSE Composite cracked to a record close today.
Not to suggest that a reversal is imminent (been that way for 6 years at least), but for some perspective, let's examine where these markets were at the depths of the Great Financial Crisis (GFC), on March 9, 2009.
Dow: 6,547.05
NASDAQ: 1,268.64
S&P 500: 676.53
NYSE Composite: 4,226.31
In the span of eight years, during what has ostensibly been the weakest recovery after a recession since the Great Depression, the Dow and S&P have more than tripled, the NASDAQ has more than quadrupled, and the poor old NYSE Comp. is just short of tripling.
So, if you missed it you missed it, but there still may be time to get in. Nobody knows where this is going to end, but we can all thank Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen for oodles of free cash injections worldwide (QE), zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) and the most reckless economic policies the world has ever witnessed.
It's still ongoing, though. The ECB and BOJ are still pumping money into their markets, and, unless you missed it, none other than the Swiss National Bank holds more than $64 billion in US equities.
Who said these central bankers don't know what they're doing?
Enjoy the weekend!
At the Close, Friday, February 10, 2017:
Dow: 20,269.37, +96.97 (0.48%)
NASDAQ: 5,734.13, +18.95 (0.33%)
S&P 500: 2,316.10, +8.23 (0.36%)
NYSE Composite: 11,377.72, +50.04 (0.44%)
For the Week:
Dow: +197.91 (0.99%)
NASDAQ: +67.36 (1.19%)
S&P 500: +18.68 (0.81%)
NYSE Composite: +50.04 (0.44%)
Consider that the major indices all closed at all-time highs today and that the Dow Jones Industrial Average is up a whopping 2200 points since election day, November 8, 2016. That amounts to a gain of just over 12% in three months. At that rate of ascent, 22,000 on the Dow should be a no-brainer by the end of 2017.
Nothing other than stupidity, other people's money, greed, and momentum were needed to foment one of the most rapid rises in the history of the Dow. The other indices have surely been along for the ride; even the broad measure of the entire NYSE Composite cracked to a record close today.
Not to suggest that a reversal is imminent (been that way for 6 years at least), but for some perspective, let's examine where these markets were at the depths of the Great Financial Crisis (GFC), on March 9, 2009.
Dow: 6,547.05
NASDAQ: 1,268.64
S&P 500: 676.53
NYSE Composite: 4,226.31
In the span of eight years, during what has ostensibly been the weakest recovery after a recession since the Great Depression, the Dow and S&P have more than tripled, the NASDAQ has more than quadrupled, and the poor old NYSE Comp. is just short of tripling.
So, if you missed it you missed it, but there still may be time to get in. Nobody knows where this is going to end, but we can all thank Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen for oodles of free cash injections worldwide (QE), zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) and the most reckless economic policies the world has ever witnessed.
It's still ongoing, though. The ECB and BOJ are still pumping money into their markets, and, unless you missed it, none other than the Swiss National Bank holds more than $64 billion in US equities.
Who said these central bankers don't know what they're doing?
Enjoy the weekend!
At the Close, Friday, February 10, 2017:
Dow: 20,269.37, +96.97 (0.48%)
NASDAQ: 5,734.13, +18.95 (0.33%)
S&P 500: 2,316.10, +8.23 (0.36%)
NYSE Composite: 11,377.72, +50.04 (0.44%)
For the Week:
Dow: +197.91 (0.99%)
NASDAQ: +67.36 (1.19%)
S&P 500: +18.68 (0.81%)
NYSE Composite: +50.04 (0.44%)
Wednesday, February 8, 2017
Midweek Doldrums: Dow Lower; NAZ, SPX, NYSE Comp Flat; Oil Still In Glut
With no major economic data released, Wednesday was a bit of a nothing-burger on the day. The Dow lost some ground while the other indices finished modestly to the upside.
There was more interest in the 10-year note, as the Treasury auctioned off $23 billion on what was deemed a very weak sale at a yield 2.333%.
Also making some headlines was WTI crude oil, which fell below $52 per barrel, after the American Petroleum Institute (API) said crude inventories rose by 14.2 million barrels, the second largest weekly build in the series.
The dull session comes as Q4 2016 earnings are winding down, and there hasn't been much in the way of good news from the corporate sector. Conversely, not many companies have been lowering forecasts, leaving investors in an area of suspense about which direction the market may go next.
At The Close, Tuesday, February 8, 2017:
Dow: 20,054.34, -35.95 (-0.18%)
NASDAQ: 5,682.45, +8.24 (0.15%)
S&P 500: 2,294.67, +1.59 (0.07%)
NYSE Composite: 11,252.31, +8.93 (0.08%)
There was more interest in the 10-year note, as the Treasury auctioned off $23 billion on what was deemed a very weak sale at a yield 2.333%.
Also making some headlines was WTI crude oil, which fell below $52 per barrel, after the American Petroleum Institute (API) said crude inventories rose by 14.2 million barrels, the second largest weekly build in the series.
The dull session comes as Q4 2016 earnings are winding down, and there hasn't been much in the way of good news from the corporate sector. Conversely, not many companies have been lowering forecasts, leaving investors in an area of suspense about which direction the market may go next.
At The Close, Tuesday, February 8, 2017:
Dow: 20,054.34, -35.95 (-0.18%)
NASDAQ: 5,682.45, +8.24 (0.15%)
S&P 500: 2,294.67, +1.59 (0.07%)
NYSE Composite: 11,252.31, +8.93 (0.08%)
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Fed Hikes Fed Funds Rate 0.25%, Everything Gets Mashed In Panic Attack
You name it, stocks, bonds, oil, gold, silver, real estate, it all got smashed down pretty well after Janet Yellen and her central bank buddies decided to hike the federal funds rate by 1/4 point, from the unreasonably low figure of 0.25-0.50% to the nearly unreasonable low point of 0.50-0.75.
The only saving grace on the day was the dollar, which strengthened against almost every other currency, the dollar index quoting at 102.24 just after 4:00 pm ET.
While the FOMC move was well-telegraphed and supposedly baked into the markets, stocks still took a nosedive after the 2:00 pm announcement by the Fed. Though it's not much in terms of a rate hike and even less significant since he rate is still at historically low levels under one percent (absurd), perhaps driving the sell-off was the idea that the Fed predicted three rate hikes in 2017, which would ostensibly bring the federal funds rate to an area above one percent by this time next year. Three hikes would put the base rate at 1.25-1.50%. Optimistic, aren't they?
That's a doubtful prediction, however, as the Fed has continually over-promised and under-delivered when it comes to returning the US economy and interest rates to normalcy.
As pointed out in the previous post, the play of the day would have to be in silver and possibly gold, depending on how well-heeled and aristocratic one believes one to be. But not just yet. Wise traders will wait until the dust from this little market spasm settles and the new year selling begins on January 3rd (Yep, New Year's Day is on a Sunday, so Monday, January 2nd is a holiday. See, Trump's already making the country great again by giving everybody an extra day off).
Silver already dropped 30 cents per ounce since the FOMC announcement. Gold took a twenty dollar whacking, from $1160 to $1140. King Midas and the gold bugs are salivating! If there's one thing one can count on in this market is the pair trade on the downside. If stocks are going down, precious metals are going to get hammered, if for no good reason whatsoever. That's what happens when you trade as many contracts in a month as there is gold in the world. It's a fake, controlled, manipulated market, but, it has been steady if not profitable in recent years, once one learns the ins, outs, cheaters, liars and innuendos of playing with REAL MONEY.
Stay tuned to Money Daily as the trade of the year takes place. The few days or weeks wait will be well worth it.
Closing prices, Wednesday, December 14:
Dow: 19,792.53, -118.68 (-0.60%)
NASDAQ: 5,436.67, -27.16 (-0.50%)
S&P 500: 2,253.28, -18.44 (-0.81%)
NYSE Composite: 11,099.21, -137.96 (-1.23%)
The only saving grace on the day was the dollar, which strengthened against almost every other currency, the dollar index quoting at 102.24 just after 4:00 pm ET.
While the FOMC move was well-telegraphed and supposedly baked into the markets, stocks still took a nosedive after the 2:00 pm announcement by the Fed. Though it's not much in terms of a rate hike and even less significant since he rate is still at historically low levels under one percent (absurd), perhaps driving the sell-off was the idea that the Fed predicted three rate hikes in 2017, which would ostensibly bring the federal funds rate to an area above one percent by this time next year. Three hikes would put the base rate at 1.25-1.50%. Optimistic, aren't they?
That's a doubtful prediction, however, as the Fed has continually over-promised and under-delivered when it comes to returning the US economy and interest rates to normalcy.
As pointed out in the previous post, the play of the day would have to be in silver and possibly gold, depending on how well-heeled and aristocratic one believes one to be. But not just yet. Wise traders will wait until the dust from this little market spasm settles and the new year selling begins on January 3rd (Yep, New Year's Day is on a Sunday, so Monday, January 2nd is a holiday. See, Trump's already making the country great again by giving everybody an extra day off).
Silver already dropped 30 cents per ounce since the FOMC announcement. Gold took a twenty dollar whacking, from $1160 to $1140. King Midas and the gold bugs are salivating! If there's one thing one can count on in this market is the pair trade on the downside. If stocks are going down, precious metals are going to get hammered, if for no good reason whatsoever. That's what happens when you trade as many contracts in a month as there is gold in the world. It's a fake, controlled, manipulated market, but, it has been steady if not profitable in recent years, once one learns the ins, outs, cheaters, liars and innuendos of playing with REAL MONEY.
Stay tuned to Money Daily as the trade of the year takes place. The few days or weeks wait will be well worth it.
Closing prices, Wednesday, December 14:
Dow: 19,792.53, -118.68 (-0.60%)
NASDAQ: 5,436.67, -27.16 (-0.50%)
S&P 500: 2,253.28, -18.44 (-0.81%)
NYSE Composite: 11,099.21, -137.96 (-1.23%)
Labels:
Dow,
federal funds rate,
Federal Reserve,
FOMC,
gold,
silver,
stocks
Monday, June 20, 2016
Markets Get Boost On Brexit Opposition; Fake Move Fades Throughout Trading Session
When equity prices jump suddenly at the opening bell by one percent or more - as they did today in New York - the only ones who benefit are those already in the market, with positions in the "selected" stocks.
Average investors have no opportunity to partake in the market's sudden generosity. Hedgers and speculators who played properly prior to the open are the big winners. Wealth is not created in any way, shape, or form, other than in a paper manner. It's a trade and soon enough it vanishes.
Stocks, for whatever they're worth (caveat emptor), lost half of their gains over the course of the day. The NASDAQ was up 88 points and closed up 36 and change. The S&P was up 29 points - hitting the magic 2100 spot, again - before falling throughout the day to close up a mere 12 points.
Blue chips fared no better. The Dow was up a whopping 271 points by 10:00 am EDT, but ended the day disappointing to all but the HFTs, who were no doubt front-running every single trade (it's rumored that there were a few hundred bettors in the game), ahead by only 129.
Most of the euphoria at the open was due to a media frenzy over the prospect of England remaining in the European Union. Polls have been tight, but the mainstream media continues to portray Thursday's upcoming vote as a referendum on patriotism for Brits. Vote to stay in the EU, you're a good citizen; vote to leave, or Brexit, you may just be a terrorist sympathizer.
Of course, the media spin is just that, all noise and no substance. Not only would leaving the EU be better for most working Britons, it would also send a powerful message to the status quo that their form of governing is no longer working, and must go. With so many government jobs on the line, the mainstream is pushing hard for a "stay" vote.
Last laugh of the day went to silver holders. Even the best efforts of the central bank cabal could not keep gold's little brother down, closing at 17.52 per troy ounce.
On that note, Hugo Slainas Price proposes a Silver Ruble for Russia. Interesting reading for anyone considering honest money.
Stormy Monday?
S&P 500: 2,083.25, +12.03 (0.58%)
Dow: 17,804.87, +129.71 (0.73%)
NASDAQ: 4,837.21, +36.88 (0.77%)
Crude Oil 49.17 +2.48% Gold 1,292.70 -0.16% EUR/USD 1.1307 -0.11% 10-Yr Bond 1.67 +3.21% Corn 422.75 -3.43% Copper 2.09 +1.80% Silver 17.52 +0.63% Natural Gas 2.97 +2.67% Russell 2000 1,158.05 +1.17% VIX 18.20 -6.23% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4685 +1.52% USD/JPY 103.8550 -0.84%
Average investors have no opportunity to partake in the market's sudden generosity. Hedgers and speculators who played properly prior to the open are the big winners. Wealth is not created in any way, shape, or form, other than in a paper manner. It's a trade and soon enough it vanishes.
Stocks, for whatever they're worth (caveat emptor), lost half of their gains over the course of the day. The NASDAQ was up 88 points and closed up 36 and change. The S&P was up 29 points - hitting the magic 2100 spot, again - before falling throughout the day to close up a mere 12 points.
Blue chips fared no better. The Dow was up a whopping 271 points by 10:00 am EDT, but ended the day disappointing to all but the HFTs, who were no doubt front-running every single trade (it's rumored that there were a few hundred bettors in the game), ahead by only 129.
Most of the euphoria at the open was due to a media frenzy over the prospect of England remaining in the European Union. Polls have been tight, but the mainstream media continues to portray Thursday's upcoming vote as a referendum on patriotism for Brits. Vote to stay in the EU, you're a good citizen; vote to leave, or Brexit, you may just be a terrorist sympathizer.
Of course, the media spin is just that, all noise and no substance. Not only would leaving the EU be better for most working Britons, it would also send a powerful message to the status quo that their form of governing is no longer working, and must go. With so many government jobs on the line, the mainstream is pushing hard for a "stay" vote.
Last laugh of the day went to silver holders. Even the best efforts of the central bank cabal could not keep gold's little brother down, closing at 17.52 per troy ounce.
On that note, Hugo Slainas Price proposes a Silver Ruble for Russia. Interesting reading for anyone considering honest money.
Stormy Monday?
S&P 500: 2,083.25, +12.03 (0.58%)
Dow: 17,804.87, +129.71 (0.73%)
NASDAQ: 4,837.21, +36.88 (0.77%)
Crude Oil 49.17 +2.48% Gold 1,292.70 -0.16% EUR/USD 1.1307 -0.11% 10-Yr Bond 1.67 +3.21% Corn 422.75 -3.43% Copper 2.09 +1.80% Silver 17.52 +0.63% Natural Gas 2.97 +2.67% Russell 2000 1,158.05 +1.17% VIX 18.20 -6.23% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4685 +1.52% USD/JPY 103.8550 -0.84%
Friday, June 10, 2016
As Expected, Dow Falls Back Into Sub-18,000 Range
Editor's Note: Apologies are in order for the tardiness of the extended post, but the publisher has been trying to cope with an unfair labor situation and other troublesome issues. Those are now past. This blog shall forge ahead.
The week ended on a down note, as stocks fell across the board on the US indices.
While the Dow was the only one of the three major averages to close out the week with a gain, it still did not manage a close above the now-legendary 18,000 mark. Likewise, the S&P closed below 2100 and the NASDAQ slid further into sub-5000 numbers.
More institutional voices added to the chorus of caution as the week wore on, including Bill Gross, George Soros and Stan Drunkenmiller. Global condition stubbornly refuse to improve, despite vain attempts at stimulation by central banks, governments and the financial media.
US bond yields fell across the spectrum, with the curve flattening. The 10-year is at levels not seen in months, while globally, sub-zero percent returns have expanded to over $10 trillion in the aggregate.
Clearly, what the markets need is a cleansing of excessive and misplaced debt, something the authorities have managed to avoid for the past seven years and counting. The latest bailout comes via the US House of Representatives, putting US taxpayers on the hook for a significant portion of Puerto Rico's unpayable obligations.
The House overwhelmingly passed a package that would establish a financial control board made up of more bureaucrats, those indirectly responsible for the various aspects of the global malaise. The measure is nothing more than further can-kicking, pushing the debt and problems further out rather than addressing the underlying problems.
None of what governments do, in terms of rescue packages or stimulus measures, has made or will make any difference whatsoever. They simply borrow more, adding to the national debt, which, closing in on $20 trillion in the US, will never be repaid.
The sooner the farce of ZIRP, NIRP, QE, debt spending, and global free trade are foreclosed upon, the sooner the global economies can begin functioning as centers of capitalism.
Hoping for change will not bring change. Usually, change requires more radical measures. Globally, politicians all appear to be built from the same model, caring only to keep their positions of power and persuasion. That has to change, though real change begins at the micro-level, not the macro.
For now, heading into Northern Hemispheric summer, the course has not changes, despite storm clouds on the horizon.
The coming week offers four central bank meetings and pronouncements, in Switzerland, the UK, Japan and the US, where the FOMC is expected to keep rates unchanged on Wednesday, June 15.
For the Week:
Dow: +58.28 (+0.33%)
S&P 500: -3.08 (-0.15%)
NASDAQ: -47.97 (-0.97%)
Seriously? Again? Friday's Figures:
S&P 500: 2,096.07, -19.41 (0.92%)
Dow: 17,865.34, -119.85 (0.67%)
NASDAQ: 4,894.55, -64.07 (1.29%)
Crude Oil 48.88 -3.32% Gold 1,276.30 +0.28% EUR/USD 1.1253 +0.01% 10-Yr Bond 1.64 -2.44% Corn 422.25 -1.00% Copper 2.03 -0.61% Silver 17.33 +0.36% Natural Gas 2.92 -1.65% Russell 2000 1,163.93 -1.46% VIX 17.03 +16.33% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4255 -0.04% USD/JPY 106.9400 0.00%
The week ended on a down note, as stocks fell across the board on the US indices.
While the Dow was the only one of the three major averages to close out the week with a gain, it still did not manage a close above the now-legendary 18,000 mark. Likewise, the S&P closed below 2100 and the NASDAQ slid further into sub-5000 numbers.
More institutional voices added to the chorus of caution as the week wore on, including Bill Gross, George Soros and Stan Drunkenmiller. Global condition stubbornly refuse to improve, despite vain attempts at stimulation by central banks, governments and the financial media.
US bond yields fell across the spectrum, with the curve flattening. The 10-year is at levels not seen in months, while globally, sub-zero percent returns have expanded to over $10 trillion in the aggregate.
Clearly, what the markets need is a cleansing of excessive and misplaced debt, something the authorities have managed to avoid for the past seven years and counting. The latest bailout comes via the US House of Representatives, putting US taxpayers on the hook for a significant portion of Puerto Rico's unpayable obligations.
The House overwhelmingly passed a package that would establish a financial control board made up of more bureaucrats, those indirectly responsible for the various aspects of the global malaise. The measure is nothing more than further can-kicking, pushing the debt and problems further out rather than addressing the underlying problems.
None of what governments do, in terms of rescue packages or stimulus measures, has made or will make any difference whatsoever. They simply borrow more, adding to the national debt, which, closing in on $20 trillion in the US, will never be repaid.
The sooner the farce of ZIRP, NIRP, QE, debt spending, and global free trade are foreclosed upon, the sooner the global economies can begin functioning as centers of capitalism.
Hoping for change will not bring change. Usually, change requires more radical measures. Globally, politicians all appear to be built from the same model, caring only to keep their positions of power and persuasion. That has to change, though real change begins at the micro-level, not the macro.
For now, heading into Northern Hemispheric summer, the course has not changes, despite storm clouds on the horizon.
The coming week offers four central bank meetings and pronouncements, in Switzerland, the UK, Japan and the US, where the FOMC is expected to keep rates unchanged on Wednesday, June 15.
For the Week:
Dow: +58.28 (+0.33%)
S&P 500: -3.08 (-0.15%)
NASDAQ: -47.97 (-0.97%)
Seriously? Again? Friday's Figures:
S&P 500: 2,096.07, -19.41 (0.92%)
Dow: 17,865.34, -119.85 (0.67%)
NASDAQ: 4,894.55, -64.07 (1.29%)
Crude Oil 48.88 -3.32% Gold 1,276.30 +0.28% EUR/USD 1.1253 +0.01% 10-Yr Bond 1.64 -2.44% Corn 422.25 -1.00% Copper 2.03 -0.61% Silver 17.33 +0.36% Natural Gas 2.92 -1.65% Russell 2000 1,163.93 -1.46% VIX 17.03 +16.33% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4255 -0.04% USD/JPY 106.9400 0.00%
Labels:
Dow,
Fed,
Federal Reserve,
FOMC,
interest rates,
Japan,
UK,
yield,
yield curve
Wednesday, June 8, 2016
Dow Closes Above 18,000; SPX Within 15 Points Of All-Time High; Silver Rockets Over 17; Cruce Oil At 11-Month High
No commentary required.
S&P 500: 2,119.12, +6.99 (0.33%)
Dow: 18,005.05, +66.77 (0.37%)
NASDAQ: 4,974.64, +12.89 (0.26%)
Crude Oil 51.52 +0.57% Gold 1,266.90 +0.36% EUR/USD 1.1402 +0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.71 -0.41% Corn 432.50 +1.11% Copper 2.07 +0.34% Silver 17.11 +0.77% Natural Gas 2.85 -0.28% Russell 2000 1,188.95 +0.76% VIX 14.08 +0.21% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4522 +0.03% USD/JPY 106.8950 0.00%
S&P 500: 2,119.12, +6.99 (0.33%)
Dow: 18,005.05, +66.77 (0.37%)
NASDAQ: 4,974.64, +12.89 (0.26%)
Crude Oil 51.52 +0.57% Gold 1,266.90 +0.36% EUR/USD 1.1402 +0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.71 -0.41% Corn 432.50 +1.11% Copper 2.07 +0.34% Silver 17.11 +0.77% Natural Gas 2.85 -0.28% Russell 2000 1,188.95 +0.76% VIX 14.08 +0.21% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4522 +0.03% USD/JPY 106.8950 0.00%
Tuesday, June 7, 2016
Stocks Rally, Then Fall, In Late-Day Trading
Roughly 2:15 pm EDT, all of the major indices in the US began selling off, apparently for no reason.
Probably more to the point is that the Dow Jones Industrial Average poked above the magical and mysterious 18,000 mark a few times during the session, but could not sustain a rally beyond it.
As has been often suggested and sometimes proven, if the stock market is made up more of psychology than fundamental reality, 18,000 is a price too far to pay for the Dow, even for the most bullish bulls in the china shop that is the NYSE and the NASDAQ.
In any case, stocks closed well off their highs and only a little closer to all-time highs, last seen more than a year ago.
This doesn't appear to be a positive sign for stocks; the truth is that stocks are selling at historically high valuations, a condition that normally precedes a sharp selloff. With the Fed heavily "invested" in stocks, today's sudden reversal of fortune does not bode well, either for the Fed's monetary gimmickry nor for rate increases any time this year.
Those who believe that stocks are the only game in town - and, there's an acronym for that: TINA (There Is No Alternative) - hang on to your hats, gents. The drop may be sudden and deep.
Ouch! That Might Leave A Mark:
S&P 500: 2,112.13, +2.72 (0.13%)
Dow: 17,938.28, +17.95 (0.10%)
NASDAQ: 4,961.75, -6.96 (0.14%)
Crude Oil 50.38 +0.04% Gold 1,247.30 +0.02% EUR/USD 1.1358 +0.04% 10-Yr Bond 1.71 -0.58% Corn 427.00 -0.06% Copper 2.05 +0.17% Silver 16.41 +0.07% Natural Gas 2.86 +1.82% Russell 2000 1,179.97 +0.26% VIX 14.05 +2.93% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4540 +0.02% USD/JPY 107.3025 -0.03%
Probably more to the point is that the Dow Jones Industrial Average poked above the magical and mysterious 18,000 mark a few times during the session, but could not sustain a rally beyond it.
As has been often suggested and sometimes proven, if the stock market is made up more of psychology than fundamental reality, 18,000 is a price too far to pay for the Dow, even for the most bullish bulls in the china shop that is the NYSE and the NASDAQ.
In any case, stocks closed well off their highs and only a little closer to all-time highs, last seen more than a year ago.
This doesn't appear to be a positive sign for stocks; the truth is that stocks are selling at historically high valuations, a condition that normally precedes a sharp selloff. With the Fed heavily "invested" in stocks, today's sudden reversal of fortune does not bode well, either for the Fed's monetary gimmickry nor for rate increases any time this year.
Those who believe that stocks are the only game in town - and, there's an acronym for that: TINA (There Is No Alternative) - hang on to your hats, gents. The drop may be sudden and deep.
Ouch! That Might Leave A Mark:
S&P 500: 2,112.13, +2.72 (0.13%)
Dow: 17,938.28, +17.95 (0.10%)
NASDAQ: 4,961.75, -6.96 (0.14%)
Crude Oil 50.38 +0.04% Gold 1,247.30 +0.02% EUR/USD 1.1358 +0.04% 10-Yr Bond 1.71 -0.58% Corn 427.00 -0.06% Copper 2.05 +0.17% Silver 16.41 +0.07% Natural Gas 2.86 +1.82% Russell 2000 1,179.97 +0.26% VIX 14.05 +2.93% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4540 +0.02% USD/JPY 107.3025 -0.03%
Wednesday, May 25, 2016
Smooth Sailing As Stocks Approach Top Of Range
It's such a sham, there's little to say other than 18,000 on the Dow approaches, a level the genii marketeers have yet been able to surpass.
The likelihood is that any rally over 18,000 will be sold off within days, if not minutes.
Tomorrow's headline will scream about the Fed raising rates, thus scaring investors. Friday, Federal Reserve Chairwoman, Janet Yellen, speaks at Harvard, which should provide what the talking heads are calling "clarity."
Harumph.
Happy Motoring!
S&P 500: 2,090.54, +14.48 (0.70%)
Dow: 17,851.51, +145.46 (0.82%)
NASDAQ: 4,894.89, +33.84 (0.70%)
Crude Oil 49.74 +2.30% Gold 1,224.20 +0.03% EUR/USD 1.1154 -0.03% 10-Yr Bond 1.87 +0.59% Corn 404.00 +1.64% Copper 2.10 +0.02% Silver 16.33 +0.42% Natural Gas 2.16 +0.75% Russell 2000 1,141.02 +0.50% VIX 13.90 -3.61% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4701 -0.01% USD/JPY 110.2160 +0.01%
The likelihood is that any rally over 18,000 will be sold off within days, if not minutes.
Tomorrow's headline will scream about the Fed raising rates, thus scaring investors. Friday, Federal Reserve Chairwoman, Janet Yellen, speaks at Harvard, which should provide what the talking heads are calling "clarity."
Harumph.
Happy Motoring!
S&P 500: 2,090.54, +14.48 (0.70%)
Dow: 17,851.51, +145.46 (0.82%)
NASDAQ: 4,894.89, +33.84 (0.70%)
Crude Oil 49.74 +2.30% Gold 1,224.20 +0.03% EUR/USD 1.1154 -0.03% 10-Yr Bond 1.87 +0.59% Corn 404.00 +1.64% Copper 2.10 +0.02% Silver 16.33 +0.42% Natural Gas 2.16 +0.75% Russell 2000 1,141.02 +0.50% VIX 13.90 -3.61% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4701 -0.01% USD/JPY 110.2160 +0.01%
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