Showing posts with label Euro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Euro. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Failed German Bond Auction Sends Stocks Scurrying Lower

Germany, a tower of strength throughout the ongoing European debt crisis, got a taste of the bad medicine which has been doled out mostly across Southern European nations, as an auction for $8.1 billion in German Bunds was not well received, as bids covered only $5.9 billion of the offering.

Additionally, investors demanded a higher yield on the 10-year note, pushing the yield to a six-week high at 2.02%, higher than the corresponding 10-year note in US treasuries, which plummeted to as low as 1.88% during the course of the day.

Foremost on the minds of traders of all stripes, the question was simple, "If Europe's strongest nation cannot fund itself, what's next for the continent and for the rest of the planet?"

The news struck just prior to the opening of US markets. Along with unusual readings on US durable goods orders, personal income and personal spending, markets opened sharply lower and languished in the red all day.

Personal income for October showed a gain of 0.4%, while personal spending increased a mere 0.1%. Along with those figures, both below forecasts, the national savings rate fell to 4.1% in the third quarter compared to 5.1% in the second quarter, suggesting that Americans are dipping into savings or saving less in order to make ends meet, a scenario of which most lower and middle-income citizens are already well aware.

Durable goods orders, a key driver of broad economic growth, fell sharply, off 0.7% and yielded another odd number. Without transportation orders (autos, planes, etc.), durables were up 0.7%.

Spooking the market even more were poor results in the flash reading of China's PMI, which showed contraction, at 48.0, down from 51.0 in October. The flash reading generally captures about 85-90% of the businesses surveyed. The final reading will be released on December 1.

As US markets pause to give thanks (for what, nobody's exactly sure) on Thursday, economies and markets are gripped by turmoil, fear and trepidation over an imminent recession and possible currency collapse in Europe and elsewhere. With half of Europe likely already in recession, global growth seems to be stalling out in much the same fashion as it did in 2008. The Euro fell to its lowest level against the US dollar in six weeks, though still holding valiantly to the 1.33 level, though without relentless priming and pumping from the US Fed, the Euro seems doomed to fall to levels not seen since the Euro's earliest days.

That Europe can actually fund itself and fix the problems caused by decades of overspending appears more and more a fiction that only financial broadcasters and government officials mouth. Whether they actually believe what they're saying is a matter for speculators.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell for the fifth time in the last sixth sessions. The NASDAQ and S&P 500 fell for the sixth consecutive day. All of the major averages are now back below where they started the year and each has fallen below its 50-day moving average. The number of advances was at a three-month low and new 52-week lows outpaced 52-week highs by its highest margin since August.

All sectors were lower, led by energy, basic materials, technology and financials. Bank of America, possibly the most-hated financial institution in the world (though Goldman Sachs may garner even more angst) fell to 5.14 at the close, the lowest level since March of 2009, the bottom of the 2008-09 downturn. All 30 Dow stocks finished lower on the day.

Gobble, gobble, Happy Thanksgiving. See you on Black Friday.

Dow 11,257.55, -236.17 (2.05%)
NASDAQ 2,460.08, -61.20 (2.43%)
S&P 500 1,161.79, -26.25 (2.21%)
NYSE Composite 6,951.56, -143.33 (2.02%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,715,325,750
NYSE Volume 3,798,937,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 767-4911
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 39-371
WTI crude oil: 96.17, -1.84
Gold: 1,695.90, -6.50
Silver: 31.88, -1.07

Monday, November 21, 2011

Super Committee Epic Fail; Ron Paul Weighs In; New Government in Spain; Last Days of Euro?

Despite rumors of some kind of "a new idea" from senator Max Baucus that the congressional super committee would reach some kind of deal - a rumor that boosted stocks from their midday lows - there appears to be no deal in the works before the Wednesday, November 23, deadline.

Americans should have expected no less from a congress that hasn't met the public's perception of actually doing their jobs in well over a decade, some say longer. After all, they only had three full months to reach agreement on a plan that would cut the budget deficit by $1.2 trillion over the next ten years, a paltry $120 billion per year.

The stranglehold by Republicans' refusing to authorize any kind of tax increase at all has boondoggled the entire effort, so that automatic cuts, mandated by the debt limit debate of the past summer, will take effect, though not until 2013, making cutting the budget deficit - by tax increases or program cuts - an election year issue of grandiose magnitude.

Congress' inability to get anything done caused stocks to sell off sharply, with the deadline just two days off and prospects severely limited.

Presidential candidate Ron Paul suggested that congress and the president take a few steps back and adopt the same budget that passed in 2004, on the premise that 2012 expected federal revenue ($2.3 trillion) roughly matches the budget from eight years ago. Paul's idea is brilliant in its simplicity, though probably a non-starter for most of the brain-dead congressional members who would have to vote on the idea.

Meanwhile, across the pond, European "leaders" saw the sixth change in government since the debt crisis began as Spain elected into office the conservative Popular Party. Spain follows Ireland, Portugal, Slovakia, Greece and Italy in ousting parties that could not navigate Europe's ongoing crisis.

A report by Credit Suisse called “The ‘Last Days’ of the Euro,” warns that the 12-year-old currency may be under enough excess strain that the entire currency experiment could collapse soon, as the ECB struggles to create a funding mechanism that would take some of the pressure off Germany and, to a lesser extent, France.

All of these events and ideas led to a serious drubbing in US stocks, though the main catalyst for decline was surely the inaction by congress. As it has failed so many times in the past, expect this latest fiasco of central planning to escalate into finger-pointing, name-calling and another lurch toward anarchy in the USA.

Congress, state and local governments (mostly though the fascist attacks on "Occupy" protesters) have repeatedly shown that they have a general disdain for the people of America, preferring to focus their efforts on gaining re-election. Thus, they are, slowly, but surely, losing the ability to govern. If economic conditions don't improve in a dramatic way soon, or deteriorate further, expect the wheels of government to begin the process of grind to a halt before finally falling off completely.

It's a testament to the failed politics of crony capitalism and support for only the wealthiest Americans that are causing serious dislocations and mistrust of government at all levels. Elected leaders can stop it if they so choose, but they seem all too caught up in ideology to do anything constructive.

For this market, the old fascist line, "the beatings will continue until morale improves," seems oh so appropriate.

Dow 11,547.31, -248.85 (2.11%)
NASDAQ 2,523.14, -49.36 (1.92%)
S&P 500 1,192.98, -22.67 (1.86%)
NYSE Composite 7,134.73, -147.74 (2.03%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,063,252,500
NYSE Volume 4,050,063,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 908-4780
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 45-275 (oopsie!)
WTI crude oil: 97.41, +0.11
Gold: 1,678.60, -46.50
Silver: 31.12, -1.30





























Friday, November 11, 2011

Bond Market Closed, Stocks Go "ALL IN"; Jack Abramoff Says Congress Engages in Insider Trading

Guess what?

While some of you may have had the day off for observation of Veterans Day, the stock market was open, the Euro spiked higher and traders had a field day.

The correlation trade recently mentioned here between the Euro/Dollar and US equities went into high gear, with the Dow posting its 11th day this year with a gain of more than 200 points and the other major indices registering similar percentage gains. Not to be left behind, the commodity complex also saw dramatic gains, with oil, gold, silver and platinum leading the way.

For the week, all major indices closed with small gains due to Wednesday's wicked meltdown, which only served to fuel speculator appetite for risk assets in the final two trading days of the week.

There was no catalyst other than the Euro, which was boosted higher on hopes that the Italian parliament would continue to press for austerity measures. Italy's troubles seem to have subsided almost overnight, it's 10-year note falling well below the key seven percent level.

The disturbing story of the day came from CNBC, of all places, as disgraced and discredited lobbyist Jack Abramoff, on the heels of his explosive 60 Minutes interview last Sunday (see video below) spoke to reporter Eamon Javers about insider trading in congress.

Though Abramoff, who spent three years in prison for his crimes, refused to name names, he said he knew of at least twelve member of congress who traded stocks on inside information.

Naturally, these congress-critters and their staffers, belonging to the privileged one percent, will never be investigated, charged or tried. It's accepted practice in Washington to take advantage of information before it becomes general knowledge and therein lies the double-edged sword for anybody with a 401k, retirement account or an active brokerage account. While today's gains, and all gains, look great on one's balance sheet, the insiders of Wall Street and Washington are making ordinary people's profits look like chicken feed.

It's a sign of our times. Profits booked legally by 99% of the public are offset by the one percent's relentless, secretive, underhanded dealings.

That's all. Enjoy the weekend.

Dow 12,153.68, +259.89 (2.19%)
NASDAQ 2,678.75, +53.60 (2.04%)
S&P 500 1,263.85, +24.16 (1.95%)
NYSE Composite 7,576.18, +152.50 (2.05%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,575,004,500
NYSE Volume 3,326,831,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4629-984
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 81-59
WTI crude oil: 98.99, +1.21
Gold: 1,788.10, +28.50
Silver: 34.68, +0.58


Thursday, November 10, 2011

Euro/Equities Correlation In Play; Largest US Municipal Bankruptcy in Alabama; Foreclosures Rise

As has been noted here recently, the correlation between the Euro and US stocks is operating in perfect harmony. Today, with the Italian 10-year note dipping below the magic 7% yield line, the euro gained in strength against other currencies, most notably the US dollar, which sent - as it always does - US stocks upward.

There's really no further analysis to the US stock market needed, so long as Europe remains in crisis and the unannounced policy of the Fed and Treasury is to keep the US dollar weak. Whenever the Euro is rising, so too US stocks, and when the Euro is down, so are equities across the pond. It's a losing strategy in the big picture view, but that doesn't prevent Wall Street's masters of the universe from making bank on both sides of the trade.

One could suggest that the entire global economy is now tied to the fates of Greece and Italy, though in reality, it's the Fed and the major US banks that are pulling most of the strings. Just as fundamentals no longer matter for stock-picking, so too the daily drumbeat of Euro-craziness that manifests itself in speeches, statements and the occasional turnover of a sovereign government.

Keeping the dollar week and the Euro strong is all that matters, even though the Euro should, realistically, be trading at par with the dollar or lower. Eventually, this is a failing policy that will flatten everything: stocks, currencies, politicians and their weakened governments.

The correlation is not perfect, however, as our New highs - New lows indicator below demonstrates in perfect fashion. Today was a "risk on" event, though more of a momentum play than a true rally.

On the domestic front, Jefferson County, Alabama, filed for Chapter 9 bankruptcy protection on Wednesday after defaulting on a sewer project that plagued the county for nearly two decades. The county, which is home to Alabama's largest city, Birmingham, filed for $4 billion, making it the largest municipal bankruptcy filing in US history.

The story behind the bankruptcy is a pantheon of the the ills plaguing the once-great United States, involving the EPA - which ordered the county to upgrade its sewer system - corrupt local officials, who were offered and took sweetheart deals from - you guessed it - Wall Street speculators. There's blame and shame aplenty to go around, as 22 local officials were indicted and convicted for their roles in the corruption.

The federal government has bailed out banks, insurance companies and automakers, but when it comes to cites where Americans actually live and work, no dice. The county goes belly-up, leaving creditors holding worthless paper. It's an American tragedy brought to you by the crony capitalists spanning the nation.

Also making domestic headlines, RealtyTrac reported that foreclosure filings rose seven percent in October from the previous month, as lenders got back to work after the robo-signing scandal had derailed their efforts for a year. While Nevada remained atop the foreclosure rate for the 58th straight month, California took over as the top dog for October with a 17% spike in default notices. The top ten states for foreclosure activity (these are the places worth considering moving to in the next 3-5 years because housing prices will be ridiculously low) are Nevada, California, Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Georgia, Illinois, Idaho, Oregon and Colorado.

God bless America. We've been in a depression for three years but nobody will admit it. It's a shame, because this is a good country with some very wonderful people, but our political leaders and Wall Street bankers have bastardized the entire financial system.

Tomorrow being Veteran's Day, be sure to honor our living and fallen military men and women, and, maybe, save a little bit of wrath for those who made them fight, and die, for causes that benefitted a few at the expense of the many.

Dow 11,893.86, +112.92 (0.96%)
NASDAQ 2,625.15, +3.50 (0.13%)
S&P 500 1,239.70, +10.60 (0.86%)
NYSE Composite 7,423.64, +70.19 (0.95%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,908,959,750
NYSE Volume 4,015,058,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3629-1866
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 36-104
WTI crude oil: 97.78, +2.04 (WTI is becoming WTF. Oil up more than $20 in the past six weeks.)
Gold: 1,759.60, -32.00
Silver: 34.11, -0.26

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Global Stocks in Love with European Rescue Plan

If yesterday's gains were the equivalent of irrational exuberance, then today's stock risings around the world must be something akin to unconditional love for all things European, Euro, Eurozone or Euro-centric.

In the pre-dawn hours of Thursday, the meeting of leaders from the 17 nations comprising the the Eurozone - the nations employing the Euro as official currency - within the 27-nation European Union, broke from their marathon meeting and outlined a bold, yet still unfinished plan to stave off the collapse of Greece, keep key European banks solvent and expand the European Financial Stability Facility (yes, we know, you were wondering what EFSF stood for) to Euro 1 trillion ($1.41 trillion).

Greek debt-issuers, denominated mostly by major European banks, would be required to write down bonds by 50% (a haircut, as it is known), a proposal that many of the prominent banks had wished to avoid - and still may fight - was pushed through by the Eurozone leaders as a necessary action to keep the government of Greece from default and insolvency. The total amount to be written down on Greek debt came roughly to Euro 100 billion ($141 billion), though analysts debated the actual figure, most arguing the the recapitalization of the banks must be a much higher number.

Despite the lack of clarity over the details of the plan, stock indices around the world exploded to the upside on the news. The Hang Seng gained 3.26%, with other markets in the region all positive, though it was the European bourses themselves which registered the largest gains by far.

In Germany, the DAX finished more than 5% higher, the French CAC-40 soared 6.28% and Austria's ATX surged 6.11%. Other european markets registered significant gains.

While the European markets were notching higher through their afternoon, US futures were indication an explosive open with Dow futures in the green to the tune of - at times - more than 300 points. When US markets opened, the response was quick and certain, with all of the major indices higher in the early going, the NASDAQ setting the pace all day and finishing with a phenomenal gain of nearly 88 points and the S&P outdoing it with a 3.43% hike by days' end.

That Europe's long-awaited plan will proceed without hitches is uncertain, though there are sure to be bumps along the road. For now, however, the global stock market reaction appears to be showing broad approval and unequivocal support.

Buoying the euphoric sentiment in the US was the initial reading of US 3rd quarter GDP, which came in as expected, showing a growth rate of 2.5%, when skeptics of the somewhat-dormant US recovery had predicted much lower numbers, some believing that America was heading back into recession. With the holiday season fast approaching, chances for a double-dip recession have by now been effectively squashed.

Not only were stocks radically higher, with the Dow piercing the 12,000 threshold for the first time since August 1, the index on pace for it's best October ever, but commodities were also up sharply across the board, with oil, gold, silver, corn, soybean and wheat futures all posting superlative gains.

At the end of the day, the markets put on a show of global confidence not seen in some time, registering some of the best gains since the 2008-09 US financial catastrophe. What remains to be seen is whether the European leaders can actually implement the plan and keep the global economy churning. For today, at least, the consensus seems to be primed for their best efforts.

Dow 12,208.55, +339.51 (2.86%)
NASDAQ 2,738.63, +87.96 (3.32%)
S&P 500 1,284.59, +42.59 (3.43%)
NYSE Composite 7,813.99, +307.84 (4.10%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,851,696,750
NYSE Volume 6,600,709,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4956-827
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 282-31
WTI crude oil: 93.96, +3.76
Gold: 1,747.70, +24.20
Silver: 35.11, +1.80

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Irrational Exuberance, Part II or Squared to the Power of X

Talk about irrational exuberance, the term applied to stock market speculation by the liar-crook-Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan back in the heady days of the internet revolution of 1996 (actually, December 5, 1996), when the "esteemed" Chairman uttered:
Clearly, sustained low inflation implies less uncertainty about the future, and lower risk premiums imply higher prices of stocks and other earning assets. We can see that in the inverse relationship exhibited by price/earnings ratios and the rate of inflation in the past. But how do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly escalated asset values, which then become subject to unexpected and prolonged contractions as they have in Japan over the past decade?

While Greenspan was a few years ahead of his time - the great dotcom bust occurred in 2000 - his warning to speculative investments was not well-heeded then, just as today, practically anybody not predicting unlimited growth potential and stocks soaring to new levels is routinely given short shrift by the establishment Wall Street press. But suppose someone were to look at the past three-and-a-half weeks (or, extrapolating out to the past three-and-a-half years)and say something to the effect:
Let me get this straight. The hopes of the US stock market are pinned to perpetual zero interest rates at home and hope that a collective of mostly bankrupt European nations will cobble together a lending facility designed to keep certain mostly Southern European governments from defaulting on their massive debts by bailing out banks and then borrowing even more hundreds of billions of euros from them. That sends stocks ten to twelve per cent higher over the course of the past three-and-a-half weeks and we haven't even seen details of the plan. I would call that either wishful thinking, a complete fake-out or irrational exuberance squared and to the power of X, X being the number of idiots who believe issuance of more debt will solve a problem that began because of excessive debt.

Perhaps the imagined quotation is not quite as erudite or economically succinct as Greenspan's more famous lines, but the message is very clear, nonetheless and it is exactly how the Europeans plan to solve their various deep and myriad problems with finance. Most of the known world is so heavily indebted - spilt between governments, banks and businesses and individual households - that most should be barred from going further into debt. Fortunately for most Americans, this is exactly the case, as banks have not lent to anybody or anything besides the most creditworthy since the financial calamities of 2008. The mega-banks' own fears of their own imminent demise forced them into tighter lending standards after they realized (too late, though, since they are bankers, after all, they should have known better) that the trillions of dollars in mortgage loans made to people without adequate credit, jobs or income might just default and spread the contagion of massive debt default throughout the banking system.

Let's face it, they knew exactly what they were doing, peddling s&*t securities, disguised as top-shelf, AAA credit risk, by bundling together all of the garbage sub-prime, alt-A and payday loan-type mortgage junk into massive tranches of mortgage-backed securities and selling them to whomever came up with the cash. The bankers didn't really care that they would implode the system, knowing full well that their well-paid lackeys, aka bought-and-paid-for elected representatives of the US Congress and the Presidency would not allow them to fail. Besides, they had already absconded with billions of dollars in fees and other payments from the unsuspecting suckers they swindled.

Of course, this is now ancient history, as none of the bankers have gone to jail, nor even been investigated, much less tried for their egregious crimes. Instead we have the little show of insider trading by a couple of immigrants, Raj Rajaratnam (already indicted, tried and sentenced) and Rajat Gupta (indicted today on five counts of securities fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit securities fraud) to act as fall guys for the white, Wall Street elite.

Both are (were) rich, important and notably non-white and not natural-born American citizens. Rajaratnam was born in Sri Lanka and is of Tamil descent. Gupta was born in India. The message is clear. White guys who commit white collar crimes walk free. All others can, and likely will, be used as fall guys, protecting the brotherhood of the saintly banker elite. These guys may do jail time, but it won't be tough. Rajaratnam is already appealing his conviction and 11-year sentence, a process that could take years. Meanwhile, he's still free, at least until November 28. That's the date the judge set for him to surrender to authorities. Place your wagers on whether "Raj" flees the country or is admitted to a hospital. He suffers from multiple health issues, including diabetes.

It's pretty clear that these dark-skinned fellows are just actors in a well-scripted play that goeswell outside the bounds of traditional jurisprudence. Steal a car or a sell a dime bag of grass and justice will be meted out swiftly and surely. Steal billions of dollars and walk away.

So, expecting Wall Street to respond properly to the current European stupidity is just another example of the absurdity of economics, circa. 2011. Greece is already half-way to default, with Italy, Belgium and Spain close behind. Portugal and Ireland have lost their sovereignty to the international banking cartel, the citizens of those countries reduced to nothing more than indentured debt slaves. France teeters on the precipice of recession and the whole bunch will probably take down Germany - the only semi-stable country on the continent - with the lot.

All of that adds up to a buying frenzy of US stocks. If this isn't the most cockeyed, woeful example of irrational exuberance ever seen, I challenge anybody to make sense of it all. The contagion from the eventual failure of the Euro will spread like wildfire around the globe, affecting everything we buy, sell or touch. But until then, buy stocks, You can always sell them just before the next market crash.

Dow 11,869.04, +162.42 (1.39%)
NASDAQ 2,650.67, +12.25 (0.46%)
S&P 500 1,242.00, +12.95 (1.05%)
NYSE Composite 7,506.15, +105.33 (1.42%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,153,615,250
NYSE Volume 4,873,521,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4346-1278
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 87-52
WTI crude oil: 90.92, -2.25
Gold: 1,723.50, +23.10
Silver: 33.31, +0.26

Monday, October 24, 2011

Euro Rising Amid Escalating Debt Crisis; Gold Worth $11,000/Ounce?

There are now differing views over the ongoing European debt crisis, which made Monday a banner day for the pair trade of short US dollar/long US stocks.

The view widely held by Wall Street influencers is the one promoted by the well-compromised "news" organization, Reuters, a proxy for the Wall Street/Washington oligarchy currently under attack by the Occupy Wall Street and other, spawned protest movements. Reuters reports that there is growing confidence that the EU leaders will forge a broad agreement with which to deal with the Euro-zone's debt issues by Wednesday of this week. Such wishful thinking pushed the Euro to a six-week high against the dollar, sparking the rally in US equities on the cheaper - for now - US dollar.

Alternately, NPR, in the embedded radio clip below, headlined its story Agreement On Debt Crisis Eludes EU Leaders, citing differences in approach by the various leaders amid calls for austere cutbacks in Italy to stem its own set of problems.



Realistically, nobody has a very good handle on where this is all headed, though widespread agreement seems a long shot. Greece has needed two rounds of bailout money already, and the country has been forced to suffer through doubt, derision, protests, strikes and riots in recent days as the government agreed to severe austerity measures, cutbacks in services and layoffs to help the government avoid running out of money.

Some kind of European plan is supposed to be released to the public by Wednesday, so there's probably no reason for stocks or the Euro/Dollar trade to deviate much until then. Details of the plan have been hashed about, though nothing is for certain except that it will include bailout money for some of Europe's largest banks (called: recapitalization) and some funding and dispersal mechanisms for the EFSF, the newly-created sovereign debt fund that is supposed to provide much-needed liquidity to the Euro system. Of course, the Euro money machine is beginning to look a lot like another global Ponzi scheme, with indebted countries providing funding through various channels to even-worse indebted nations like Greece, Ireland, Italy, Spain and Portugal.

Anyone with a view of history longer than his or her current lifespan might have a better idea of where the Greek crisis is headed and it is most certainly not a happy place. Usually, when governments spend or steal too much of their citizens' money, overtaxing and under-delivering on promises and services, it means the end of the reigning regime, either trough violent overthrow or peaceful negotiation, though the former, albeit it's bloody features, has been more successful through the pantheon of history in securing the absolute rights of individuals while removing parasitic forces of government from the inflicted nation.

In Greece, it appears that the rowdy protesters have slowly but steadily been gaining ground and, with the emergence of Occupy Wall Street and other such groups, populist movements seem to be spreading faster than government efforts to defame or derail the groups. One interesting development was Michael Moore's appearance on CNBC this morning.

While the interview was not a first for Moore on CNBC, the filmmaker and champion of the "little guy" was allowed on air for over 11 minutes, and made some strong points on the inequitable economic situation facing all but America's wealthiest people. The piece is well worth the viewing time, as Moore made his case to Carl Quintanilla, a reporter and anchor who might just have something of a conscience.



One other story of note on the day is James Turk's elegant arithmetic in making his case why gold should be $11,000 an ounce. (PS: at a 16:1 gold:silver ratio - the traditional ratio - that would make the current silver price of around $31 per ounce, seem even more ridiculous. Something along the lines of $687/ounce would be appropriate.

Dow 11,913.62, +104.83 (0.89%)
NASDAQ 2,699.44, +61.98 (2.35%)
S&P 500 1,254.19, +15.94 (1.29%)
NYSE Composite 7,547.63, +116.53 (1.57%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,988,391,000
NYSE Volume 4,291,371,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4660-1018
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 125-24
WTI crude oil: 91.27, +3.87
Gold: 1,652.30, +16.20
Silver: 31.64, +0.45

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Market Pops on Bogus ESFS Euro Report; Apple Misses, Tanks

You've got to love this market.

Any little statement or rumor that European Union leaders might throw significant money at their pan-continental debt crisis sends stocks soaring into the stratosphere, and today was one for the record books.

An unusually quiet day, stocks had regained a foothold after Monday's sudden reversal. But, shortly after 3:00 pm EDT, the UK's Guardian reported that France and Germany had agreed to boost the Euro bailout fund - the ESFS - to EURO 2 Trillion, a significant rise, and one that might just help kick the debt can down the road a few months, or even years.

Shortly after the story broke, however, Dow Jones reported that the 2 Trillion Euro figure was actually "still under debate," so, who really knows? At least the market machines and mechanics got what they wanted, a nice 100-point spike in the Dow in about ten minutes time and an S&P close over 1224. Mission accomplished. Now, move along, folks, nothing to see here.

In a day (week, month, year) full of bogus reports, before the open, Bank of America (BAC) reported 3Q earnings of 57 cents per share, but, because of the new math, which includes such exotic flavors as fair value adjustments on structured liabilities and trading Debit Valuation Adjustments (DVA), according to our friends at Zero Hedge, who usually have the best and most-believable dirt, BofA actually had earnings of 0.00, otherwise known as ZERO, Zilch, Nada, Nothing.

Of course, when CNBC and the rest of the supine financial media report, bare-faced, that the nation's largest bank by deposits more than doubled the analyst estimates (0.21) for the quarter, it was off to the races, with somebody shocking BAC shares up 10% by day's end, a stunning 0.61 gain, to the imposing figure of 6.62. While it's technically a 10% gain, it's still rather silly, considering the accounting nonsense being roundly applauded by the criminal bankster elite, and hardly any comfort to those who bought BAC when it was 7, or 8 or even 12. Make no mistake, we've entered the Twilight Zone of financial accounting and there's no turning back.

Along those lines, the Giant Squid otherwise known as Goldman Sachs (GS), also reported before the bell, but it's results were almost believable, showing a loss of 84 cents per share, with losses spread across the company's proprietary trading division, to the tune of $2.5 billion. Ouch. The market's response to the trending data of a company heading decidedly south: a gain of 5.25 (5%) to 102.25 and the financials led all other sectors in the faux rally du jour.

Also before the bell, PPI was reported to be up 0.8% in September on expectations of a rise of only 0.2%, which just happened to be how much the core PPI was up for the month. Somebody obviously missed the memo from the Fed that inflation was transitory, or something along those lines. Inflation in the US is running at an annual rate well over 6%, something the mainstream media hopes you don't notice.

One company which may be adversely affected by the loss of its CEO - the truly brilliant Steve Jobs - is Apple, which announced today after the bell that the company had an outstanding quarter as usual, but, uh, oh, they missed the estimates of 7.39 per share by a bit, reporting earnings for the quarter of 7.05 per share and also came up about a billion dollars short on the revenue end.

As of this writing, Apple shares were trading at 394.13, -28.11 (-6.66%). Not a very pretty picture there.

So, to recap, Goldman Sachs reports a massive loss, Bank of America releases what amounts to a fraudulent earnings report, inflation is about ready for lift-off into hyper-inflation and the market gets a jolly from a questionable report on the size of the European bailout fund. All good fun, no?

With Apple's miss in the after-hours and another couple of big banks - Morgan Stanley (MS) and PNC Financial Services (PNC) - due to report tomorrow, somebody might want to take a closer look at the number of companies that have missed or merely met estimates this earnings season, and maybe add in those who just plain fudged the numbers. But, not to worry, Cheesecake Factory (CAKE) and Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD) are also reporting tomorrow and should provide sufficient caloric excess to fuel another rally in the markets.

Wow! You cannot make this stuff up.

Dow 11,577.05, +180.05 (1.58%)
NASDAQ 2,657.43, +42.51 (1.63%)
S&P 500 1,225.38, +24.52 (2.04%)
NYSE Composite 7,341.73, +153.07 (2.13%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,988,896,750
NYSE Volume 5,669,232,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 5211
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 52-65 (Really? No kidding. extremely bearish)
WTI crude oil: 88.34, +1.96
Gold: 1,652.80, -23.80
Silver: 31.83, +0.01









Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Market Melt-up Continues for US Stocks

News from Europe that the Slovakian government would re-vote on extending additional bailout funds to banks via the ESFS was like a sugar-coated treat to the childish cretins of the Wall Street investment community.

Shortly after the close of markets in the US yesterday, the Slovakian parliament became the only one of 17 countries to turn down the additional relief package proposal, sending shock waves throughout the EU and the rest of the financial universe. The package needed the approval of all members. Within minutes, however, there was talk of a deal on a re-vote, paving the way for a steady flow of funds to repair badly-damaged and close to insolvent European banks which have bourn the brunt of rolling bailouts to Greece, Ireland, Portugal and soon, Spain and Italy.

There was widespread optimism that the Slovak parliament would rework the proposal to fit their agenda and save Europe from imminent collapse. As has been the case for so long with all things Euro-related, the overseeing body of the European Union (EU) and the European Central Bank (ECB), a slight shift or change in the rules always seems to be the tonic whereby the Euro remains a "viable" currency and staves off the collapse, first, of Greece, and eventually the entire structure upon which the Euro currency is based.

With such confidence that European leaders would tread along the same path upon which the US staved off financial armageddon in 2008 after the Lehman Bros. bankruptcy, stocks were sent higher throughout the session, assured that the classic Ponzi scheme of international finance has finally gone global.

Along that line of thinking, John Embry, Chief Investment Strategist of Sprott Asset Management, said, in an interview with King World News, that stocks could decline by 40% if the European crisis turns into a repeat of 2008, and added, "I think investors have to be aware of the degree of manipulation in all of the markets here and not make the mistake of being momentum players. They shouldn’t just try to go with what is working and jump on board because a lot of this is manufactured for the sake of appearances."

Exactly. Global leaders don't want to see another major disruption like that of 2008, because their main concern is holding onto the reins of power they have secured, even if it means lying about where money is coming from, going to, bank balance sheets, stress tests and just about everything else if it means they get to keep their high posts.

While banks and the people who run them are most responsible for economic calamities over the past few years, politicians share much of the blame, enabling the ill-conceived schemes of the financial class with endless bailouts, ruses and guarantees while much of the global economy is reduced to a pile of worthless, paper rubble.

There was some late-day selling - a chink in the globalist armor and yet another indication of manipulated markets as there was no move to quiet the rally - and stocks finished with only about half of the gains racked up over the session. For instance, the Dow Jones Industrials were up by 209 points at about 2:30 pm, but closed with a gain of just 102. It pays to be a tape watcher these days, as waves of both buying and selling can occur at any time on any given day, no matter the news.

Only on major company reported earnings after Alcoa kicked off 3Q earnings season with a substantial miss on income Tuesday. PepsiCo (PEP) reported before the open that it had earned 1.31 per share after some one-time items, beating the Street estimates by a penny. The gains were largely attributed to Pepsi's aggressive pricing policy in which the company boosted prices around the world on its popular soft drink and snack brands.

Therein lies the conceit and thinly-veiled deceit of Wall Street. PepsiCo saw margin compression in the quarter, as operating margin narrowed to 16.5 percent from 18 percent a year earlier. Earnings for the giant company - with revenue approaching $18 billion in the quarter - have been mostly flat for the past year. Price increases, workforce reductions, cost-cutting and balance sheet shenanigans are what drives this company these days. Growth is largely the result of internal manipulations, not market share increases. Over the past five years, growth has slowed to a mediocre 5.87% per year, though making even that low level over the past few years has been difficult.

Dow 11,518.85, +102.55 (0.90%)
NASDAQ 2,604.73, +21.70 (0.84%)
S&P 500 1,207.25, +11.71 (0.98%)
NYSE Composite 7,263.69, +102.43 (1.43%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,998,280,250
NYSE Volume 5,355,361,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 5250-1511
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 41-35 (a reversal, which should not last)
WTI crude oil: 85.57, -0.24
Gold: 1,682.60, +21.60
Silver: 32.79, +0.79

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Dow Five Day Rally Ends; Alcoa Misses 3Q Earnings

From the first indication given by Alcoa (AA) after the bell on Tuesday, this earnings season may not be in investors' best interests.

The world's largest manufacturer of aluminum products reported earnings per share of 15 cents, on analyst expectations of 22 cents per share. Revenue was above estimates, at $6.42 billion on estimates of $6.22 billion, but higher costs and some sluggish sectors crimped income down to $172 million for the quarter.

Chairman and CEO Klaus Kleinfeld made a couple of interesting comments regarding the quarter's results on CNBC, shortly after the data release. Kleinfeld said that "fear is taking a toll," noting the overwhelming sentiment that investors were wary of the crisis in Europe and a potential global recession and noted that Alcoa was a "competent company in a very nervous world.

The stock was being hammered lower in after-hours trading, down

After Monday's huge upside rally, markets seemed hesitant on Tuesday, and stocks traded in choppy, range-bound fashion. The Dow moved less than 80 points from the lows to the highs on the day.

Another factor keeping trading to a minimum on light volume was the debate in Slovakia on the vote to approve an expanded Eurozone bailout fund. Shortly after markets closed in New York, Slovakian lawmakers on Tuesday rejected participating in an expanded euro rescue fund, significant because the measure needed unanimous approval from all 17 currency members.

With tiny Solvakia standing up against bank bailouts and more depreciation of the Euro against major currencies, the breakup of the Euro seems all but academic at this point. It's become clear over the past few months and years that only the Northern European countries are fiscally balanced and able to cope with market pressures, while those in the South - particularly Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal - do not share the same financial disciple as displayed by say, the Germans.

Without expanded emergency capabilities, European banks will face a liquidity and solvency crisis similar to what happened in the US in the aftermath of the Lehman Bros. collapse and the contagion from it will almost certainly spread globally, though to what degree is as yet unknown.

The Slovakian Parliament decision and Alcoa's big miss on earnings should make for interesting trading on Wednesday in all markets, from Asia to Europe to the US.

Dow 11,416.30, -16.88 (0.15%)
NASDAQ 2,583.03, +16.98 (0.66%)
S&P 500 1,195.54, +0.65 (0.05%)
NYSE Composite 7,161.26, -12.19 (0.17%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,684,082,875
NYSE Volume 4,318,042,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3717-2705
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 37-60
WTI crude oil: 85.81, +0.40
Gold: 1,661.00, -9.80
Silver: 32.00, +0.02

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Here We Go Again: Europe, US Equity Markets Smashed

Like a pop band performing an encore number, the wild, swing days of last week are here with us again, doing a sophisticated limbo beneath the various 200-day moving averages. The continent formerly known as Europe slowly is sinking into a combination of economic atrophy and social anarchy while the country previously preferred to as the greatest democracy ever invented, the USA, shifts and contorts like a belly dancer with stomach cramps and gas.

One could take their pick today from a generous selection of tawdry economic news and data, beginning with the story reported by Zero Hedge that an unnamed European bank (speculation is that its either Societe General or an Italian or Austrian bank) borrowed $500 million from the ECB's emergency lending window at a 1.1% rate.

That got the entertainment kicked off in Europe with a notable bang, as the major bourses in the land of socialism held blood-letting sessions with the national indices down between 4 and 6%, Germany's DAX leading the way lower with a 5.82% decline.

By the time markets opened in New York, futures were careening headlong into the abyss after initial unemployment claims were reported at 408,000 in the most recent reporting period and July CPI came in with a whopping 0.5% rise - a 6% annualized inflation rate - which took almost everybody - except possibly President Obama, who was preparing for a two-week stay at Martha's Vineyard - by surprise, especially after Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told us all that inflationary pressures were "transitory" (he also confided to Representative and presidential candidate Ron Paul that gold was not money... such a witty fellow).

Were that not enough for the market to digest, a couple more tasty morsels were delivered just a half hour into the trading session. Existing home sales for July were reported at an annualized rate of 4.67 million, after a 4.84 million read last month, but the real hot pepper came from the Philadelphia Fed's Manufacturing Index, which, after posting a tepid 3.2 reading in July, came in - on expectations of a 1.0 reading - at... wait for it... minus 30.7 (yes, -30.7), the lowest number in 2 1/2 years and now on scale with New York's Empire Index which last week posted an equally disturbing negative read of -7.7 on Monday.

Naturally, nobody gave a whit about the New York number, but the Philly fiasco was just too magnificent to ignore. Stocks, already down significantly, swiftly dove further, with the Dow Jones Industrials losing 170 points in the ten minutes following the double dose of decrepitude.

The sudden collapse of index prices was stunning to view, though the gaping maws of CNBC's on-air personalities provided dark comic relief. Stocks drifted for the rest of the day, but managed to stage a last-ditch rally with just ten minutes left in the session, boosting the Dow about 100 points into the close, just in time for options expiry on Friday.

Dow 10,990.58, -419.63 (3.68%)
NASDAQ 2,380.43, -131.05 (5.22%)
S&P 500 1,140.65, -53.24 (4.46%)
NYSE Composite 7,079.41, -339.53 (4.58%)


Declining issues decimated advancers, 6094-634, a nearly 10:1 ratio. New lows overpowered new highs on the NASDAQ, 253-2 (yes, two, as in 2 new 52-week highs), while on the NYSE there were also just two (2) new highs, against 208 new lows. The combined figure of 4 new highs and 461 new lows verifies our repeated suggestion that the highs-lows indicator is as reliable a simple instrument as is available and is currently suggesting that the now-confirmed market correction will shortly morph into a a full blown bear market as Europe and the United State plunge into the fearsome double-dip recession, if not already there.

Volume, despite the ridiculous assumptions made throughout the day by CNBC's dapper Bob Pisani (I really do watch too much TV) that today's volume was not significant, was, in fact, quite strong, and with good reason, as banks in Europe and the US took the brunt of the selloff. European banks were hardest hit, with losses between 6 and 11% on the day.

NASDAQ Volume 2,785,477,500
NYSE Volume 7,141,215,000


Meanwhile, the oil crazies were unloading their gooey stuff as quickly as possible, sending WTI futures down nearly six percent, dropping $5.20, to $82.38.

There were bright spots, and those were in precious metals. Gold rocketed $28.20 to another record price of $1,822.00, while silver tried desperately to keep pace, gaining 38 cents, to $40.69.

As for Friday, one should expect a little more of the same, though it is worth noting that these wickedly manipulated markets have a penchant for turning on a dime, as they did last week. Eventually, however, this all ends in tears, as the Euro will be soon dispatched to currency hell, where it belongs, taking the world economy into a place nobody wants to be.

Smoke 'em if you got 'em and live it up while you can. By Christmas, this could be really, really, really, really, really, and I do mean really, ugly.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

No Rest for the Wicked; Stocks Fall Again

Conditions in Europe have not really changed much since yesterday's news of a crisis in Italy's continuing funding, except that Greece - before even receiving all of its most recent bailout money - already has put out its hand for more.

The word for the deepening debt crisis in Europe most-bantered about these days is contagion, the likelihood that issues of underfunding and failing to meet obligations by sovereign governments will spread. Here's a tip: contagion is already in effect. A few years ago Iceland defaulted on debt, refused to take austerity and cash from the IMF and is well on its way to a newfound prosperity without the rigors of international finance and fractional reserve banking.

However, on the continent, Ireland, Greece, and now Italy are suffering strains of the same disease - that of over-promising (mostly on government employee pensions and benefits) and failing to pull in enough revenue in taxes, fees and levies to pay out promptly and graciously. Portugal and Spain are not far behind, and the tiny nation of Belarus has already defaulted and devalued its currency. Belgium is also a basket case.

Contagion is here and its happening now.

What this really means is two things: 1) The European Union is in its death throes after just 11 years of existence, and, 2) Many of the largest banks in Europe are nearing the end of their government-supplied rope and will hang.

And maybe there's a third link to the disaster that is modern Europe: people will cheat, steal, riot, and eventually revolt. Forget collecting taxes. Government officials will be happy if they escape with the clothes on their backs and a few thousand Euros to see them safely out of their respective countries. Whether or not the contagion has enough virulence to travel across the Atlantic Ocean and infect the United States is a matter for politicians and their media lackeys, because the United States is the world's largest debtor with a total debt (on the books, not including the unfunded liabilities of Social Security, Medicade and Medicare) well beyond its annual GDP, making the United States the worst of all nations with a debt-to-GDP ration of over 100%.

Not only is the USA a basket case gone full retard, the debt is growing larger every day, and every day the Obama administration and the congress dithers over raising the debt ceiling (they all agree that the US cannot default), the situation worsens. We are in the midst of the most enthralling and frightening economic condition of all time. Many, many grave errors have occured over the past thirty years, not the least of which was the hollowing out of our industrial base which provided good jobs for millions of Americans. Those jobs went to Mexico and then to Southeast Asia and China. They are gone, many for good, and there is no way to bring them back soon.

It brings up an interesting proposition, supposing that the mindless cretins we call our "leaders" in Washington haggle and argue right up to the August 2nd deadline. Who gets stiffed in the case of a default? Would the US actually stop paying its military? Social Security recipients? Food stamp mouth-breathers? How about China?

There are no good answers, only bad and horrible conclusions. The answer is China. Stiff the Chinese on their $1.8 billion or so in bond holdings and go to war, as war solves all problems in a way. Both countries get decimated in a protracted struggle or blow each other and the rest of the Northern Hemisphere away in a nuclear holocaust. The first way is slow, painful and regrettable. The second is quick and completely devastating, and since neither side would likely opt for MAD (mutually assured destruction), the first choice is rather obvious.

Will it happen? Hopefully not. And there's the very good chance that the politicians, controlled by the banking and industrialist interests, would opt on stiffing seniors. What the heck, they're old and going to die soon anyway, why not just accelerate the process. And wipe out the food stamp class as well. They contribute nothing, so starve them to death. Nice scenarios, no?

Whatever happens over the next few weeks, nothing is really going to be solved. Even if the government officials decide on a compromise of $3 trillion in budget cuts over ten years, the annual deficit will probably be close to a trillion dollars each and every year. They're only cutting $300 billion a year out of the budget. It's kind of like using a sponge to empty a bucket. It works, but not very well. By 2022, the national debt will have grown to over $24 trillion, and that's if they work out a compromise that cuts some of the deficit and tax revenues remain steady for the next ten years, two possibilities that are not very good bets.

In other words, you, me, your kids, their friends, your neighbors and their neighbors are royally screwed unless we begin taking off the rose-colored shades and rid ourselves of the infliction known as normalcy bias pretty soon. Normal is going away. Austerity, poverty and desperation will become rampant, as they're already spreading across the land and are in place in Europe.

Not to sound like the whack-job on the street corner, shouting, "prepare or die," it is time to hunker down and get serious about the issues plaguing the globe, most of which start and end at your local bank branch, which is probably a Chase, Bank of America or Wells Fargo. They're the problem, have been the problem and will continue to be the problem until they are forced to meet their realities and be broken up, though that will not happen. We're beyond that, and, with the politicians thinking more about elections in 2012 rather than whether or not there will be a nation and an engaged electorate at that time, the chances of complete systemic breakdown are greater than they were in 2008, when the unthinkable almost happened. This time, there will be no bailout, because it will be the government going under.

Whether that's a good thing or not will be for historians to judge, but one thing's for certain: we cannot continue along this path much further without some kind of catastrophe. It's coming faster than anyone can imagine.

As for the markets, the major indices bounced along the flat line for most of the session, with the NASDAQ (where the highest risk stocks reside) taking the worst of it. There was a slight bounce after the Fed released the minutes from the last FOMC meeting, in which it was revealed that the Fed governors were torn between more stimulus and raising rates. There cannot be a greater divide of opinion, which, at such a critical time, is a very, very bad omen and portends more mistakes by the Fed straight ahead.

That bounce lasted only a few minutes as stocks fell to their worst levels of the day into the close. It was truly ugly and sets up some very dicey trading for the remainder of the week. Even as earnings are rolling out from a variety of companies, interpreting economic data is going to be a challenge. PPI is out on Thursday along with initial unemployment claims, and Friday, a veritable stew of data comes forth: CPI, Industrial Production, Capacity Utilization, the Empire Index for NY state and the Michigan gauge of consumer sentiment. Things could get very messy down on the trading floors. Good time to stock up on tissues and handkerchiefs because there's likely to be a bit of sweating and some crying before the week is out.

Dow 12,446.88, -58.88 (0.47%)
NASDAQ 2,781.91, -20.71 (0.74%)
S&P 500 1,313.64, -5.85 (0.44%)
NYSE Composite 8,192.75, -35.98 (0.44%)


Declining issues outpaced advancers, 3806-2726. There were 56 new highs and 37 new lows on the NASDAQ. The NYSE showed 46 new highs and 37 new lows. Combined, there were 102 new highs and 74 new lows. Not much margin for error as the tide seems to be turning very bearish, very quickly. Today's volume was a bit perky, with much of it occurring in the final two hours' rush for the exits, another disturbing sign.

NASDAQ Volume 2,028,997,125
NYSE Volume 4,215,946,500


For those of us who drive combustion engine vehicles, another knife in the back from our friendly oil producers, who drove the price of WTI crude up another $2.28, to $97.43. Gold, however, made a new all-time high at $1,562.30, gaining $16.20 on the day. Silver added 35 cents to $36.10.

With gold and silver rising, stocks falling, and, by the way, the 10-year note down to a yield of 2.87% - from 3.12% a week ago - all signs point to a very rough patch dead ahead. The flattening of the yield curve is happening at an unprecedentedly rapid pace. The clowns in Washington better come to a deal soon, like tomorrow, because financial armageddon awaits. The same goes for the millionaire players and billionaire owners of the NFL. People are tired of gamesmanship and waiting.

Now is the time for decisive action.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Euro Debt Crisis Exacting Heavy Toll on Global Markets

Make no mistake about it, today was the start of the great reckoning. The beginning of the end of easy money policies, of kicking the can down the road, of failing to come face-to-face with the reality of the global credit crisis that began in 2008 and never really ended.

Oddly enough, it comes on a day in which the US President, Mr. Obama, is headed to Europe for a meeting of the G-8, in which the globalist governors will mete out whatever they see fit for the peasantry of their populous nations. It's a little like playing Russian roulette with all the chambers loaded. You're going to get it no matter how lucky you are.

The interesting aspect of the day's trading happened not specifically today, but actually last Friday, when futures went limit down shortly after the US close. It was a weekend warning shot that the powers in control would be taking their various pounds of flash come Monday. And they did, sending markets around the planet down by one, two and three per cent.

Here in the USA, one-month lows were the order of the day, though that's hardly exciting news. The pertinent take-away is that the great unwind of asset values has begun - or resumed - as the major indices finished the session today less than 4% off their recent multi-year highs.

What was notable was the changing of the guard on the new highs - new lows indicator. For more than two years - with only slight variations - new highs have exceeded new lows on both the NYSE and the NASDAQ. Today, new lows outnumbered new highs on the NASDAQ and the gap narrowed on the NYSE. Even though this is not the first time this has happened recently, its frequency and narrow range makes it a particularly potent indicator at this point in time. Once this turns, it tends to remain in place for quite a while, periods between changes in leadership are measured in years.

Market movements are often subtle and difficult to pinpoint, though this one has been telegraphed for quite some time. The debt condition of Greece, Portugal, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Ireland are unsustainable situations as is the salve of QE2 and ZIRP here in the US. Japan, literally and figuratively, has been swept off the face of leading economic nations and uprisings across the Middle East and North Africa (called the MENA region, for short) threaten the global economy.

Even the leaders of the most powerful nations know that this little game of chicken, complete with artificial stimuli, bailouts, buybacks, swaps, jawboning and other gimmicks cannot proceed forever. Europe must get serious about its long-term structural deficiencies and the US must confront the debt limit and its own burgeoning solvency problem, and both must do so quickly. Thus, preparedness for financial armageddon is underway, and, if one listens closely to the pundits and analysts populating the airwaves and internet, most are calling upon investors to take a pause, pare back on stocks and raise cash, which is, in the parlance of Wall Street, like saying, "run for your life!"

There's an opportunity for the globalist agenda to sail through this period of austerity, consolidation and downgrading of the private sector fairly unscathed, but be assured that the plan is afoot and the stock indices will bear the brunt of what will amount to a massive global deflation. In a year or two, they will once again announce victory over the forces of debt and monetary destruction and proceed to blow the bubbles once more.

In this environment, no asset class is safe, though cash and equivalents, gold and silver, are good starting points. Growth will be minimal, as measured by GDP, if positive at all, and the opportunity for fresh recessions are abundant. Today was just another in a series of well-timed warning shots. Prepare or die.

Dow 12,381.26, -130.78 (1.05%)
NASDAQ 2,758.90, -44.42 (1.58%)
S&P 500 1,317.37, -15.90 (1.19%)
NYSE Composite 8,236.55, -120.98 (1.45%)


Losers soared over winners on the session, 5257-1342, a 4:1 ratio, though hardly a complete rout. It could have been much worse. On the NASDAQ, 37 new highs, but 86 new lows. The NYSE recorded 51 new highs and 44 new lows, the smallest gap in nearly two months. Taken together, the 88 new highs do not reach up to the 130 new lows, and that is the important set of figures to watch, the combined number. Continued weakness has been forecasting a more serious tumble for the past two months. Volume, despite the massive decline, remained at severely low levels. Once again, the major players have been unable to draw in the usually-gullible public, which is tapped out and wants no part of the Wall Street circus. Thus, they play amongst themselves, like a pack of starving wolves who will eventually turn upon each other.

NASDAQ Volume 1,806,104,625
NYSE Volume 3,761,192,500


Crude took another turn down, the front-end NYMEX contract for WTI losing $2.40, to $97.70. Gold managed a gain of $3.70, to $1517.20, while silver advanced by only a penny, to $35.07.

The major indices completed three straight weeks of negative results on Friday. Monday's opening gambit to the downside portends worse to come. March Durable Goods Orders data on Wednesday and the second 2nd quarter GDP estimate on Thursday will most likely add to the sense of pervasive desperation.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Skimming Off the Fear Factor

Another week in the books for the crippled economy saw stocks rise on a better-than-expected jobs report and commodities take a bit of a breather as the dollar and bonds both gained.

for the week, the major averages were down anywhere from 1.3% to 1.7%, with the Dow faring best and the S&P the worst.

For analysis of the control factor in all trading, see this morning's post.

When the BLS' non-farm payroll report came out prior to the opening bell, futured roared back to life and equity markets opened sharply higher. The Dow was up as many as 175 points, but the rally fizzled as renewed weakness in Europe prompted a flight to safety to the US dollar.

News that Greece was pondering a move to leave the EU, or at least abandon the Euro as its main currency, kept the Euro sliding right into the weekend.

As the dollar gained strength, trades came off in risk assets, mainly equities, as investors were once again cheered then spooked by forces other than fundamentals.

Dow 12,638.74, +54.57 (0.43%)
NASDAQ 2,827.56, +12.84 (0.46%)
S&P 500 1,340.20, +5.10 (0.38%)
NYSE Composite 8,425.90, +28.50 (0.34%)


Advancing issues finished well ahead of decliners on the day, 4144-2356. New highs beat new lows on the NASDAQ, 68-36. The story was more exaggerated on the NYSE, where 133 new highs towered over 15 new lows. Volume was back in the doldrums, following heavy flight volume the previous two sessions.

NASDAQ Volume 2,007,823,250
NYSE Volume 4,907,953,500


After being whipsawed into submission, a few brave souls ventured back into the commodity trade, but it was definitely not for the faint of heart. NYMEX WTI crude oil continued to sell off, losing another $2.62, to finish out the week in NY at $97.18.

Gold bugs were welcomed back with open arms, as the shiny yellow metal yielded a gain of $19.30, to stand at $1492.40 as of this writing. Silver was less warmly received, but still managed to bounce of the lows and add 65 cents, to $35.31, though there is still concern another round of trimming is yet on the way.

The calendar for next week is rather light until Thursday, which kicks off with unemployment claims, PPI and retail sales, followed on Friday with the monthly CPI figures and the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index. With first quarter earnings now winding down, the markets will be looking for clues for direction, as this week's action has left many dazed and confused.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

All Global Markets Feeling the Pinch; Jobs, Housing Apply Pressure

Maybe I was a bit too harsh in recent postings, calling US stock exchanges things like, "the laughing stock of the world," and "overtly manipulated."

This was the conclusion I came to after seeing this headline: Europe shares fall, ending 9-day rally; BP slides, as I had no idea that the European bourses had embarked upon such a ridiculous rally. Knowing they had been advancing in recent days, along with the Euro itself, seemed commonplace, until the headline shook me out of the doldrums and back to reality.

It makes a great deal of sense, realistically, that the Euro-zone nations would ply the same heavy-handed collusion that makes US markets zig, zag, sway to and fro on a moments notice, with or without news or even rumors, until after the fact. All of the European economies and those in North America are under the same gun: they must print money or die, as their currencies become more and more worthless pieces of paper. Accordingly, officials at the various central banks must look dutiful, despite knowing their vain efforts will eventually come to naught.

A nine-day rally across the continent is thus no surprise, merely an extension of the supra-market powers held by the major banks and financial institutions, blessed by the central banking cartel. Their only option is to inflate assets, create money and pray that they may liquidate their own assets and run to a developing nation before the populace comes for them with pitchforks in hand and torches ablaze.

This makes even more sense in light of Monday's faux rally, based entirely on hopes that China's revaluation of the Yuan might stimulate some economic activity for their beleaguered economies. Apparently, most of the insider financiers forgot that China is primarily an importer of raw materials and an exporter of finished goods, and that condition doesn't necessarily stack up to much of anything positive for the Euro-Anglo-American alliance, which has gone from Empire to empty over the past 60 years.

China continues on a powerful growth pathway, along with India, Brazil, Russia and many other previously-underdeveloped countries which now benefit from globalization without the excessive burden of decades worth of unfunded liabilities in health care and pensions. One can also throw Japan into the failing-developed world mix, since they began an accelerated path of destruction nearly twenty years ago and haven't been able to shake off persistent deflation in their internal economy.

Once it was clear that European markets were heading South, it didn't take long for the US to follow the lead on Tuesday. With the S&P and Dow crossing over the flat line throughout the morning and early afternoon, the NASDAQ finally succumbed and headed permanently into the red zone after 2:00 pm as stocks closed at or near session lows for the second straight day. Losses in all the major US indices accelerated through the closing hour of trade. The Dow and S&P closed below their respective 200-day moving averages, while the NASDAQ finished precariously hovering over its own 200-day MA.

Adding to the nightmarish scenario was more data suggesting another round of price declines in the US housing market, though much different in quality from the subprime bust of 2008-2009. The new paradigm is closely related to jobs, which still are not being created in the private sector and likely won't. No jobs means no mortgage payment and further defaults and foreclosures for the major banks.

The vicious deflationary cycle is gaining momentum on the back of deplorable employment and housing environments. Today's release of existing home sales for May by the NAR evidenced a 2.2% decline month-over-month. The weak housing market is being exacerbated by continued weakness in the jobs market and resetting of millions of adjustable rate mortgages sold from 2005-2006, most of which carry a balloon second loan set to expire - and need to be refinanced - this year and next.

With employment conditions as poor as they are, many homeowners in this condition will not be able to secure bridge financing and will fall into default and foreclosure, adding more of a glut to an already-over-saturated residential market. The result will be another breakdown in price by anywhere from 10-25%, depending on the market.

Dow 10,293.52, -148.89 (1.43%)
NASDAQ 2,261.80, -27.29 (1.19%)
S&P 500 1,095.31, -17.89 (1.61%)
NYSE Composite 6,858.95, -119.91 (1.72%)


Declining issues continued to dominate advancers, just as they had on Monday, 5054-1483, but the bearish camp had additional ammunition for their argument Tuesday as new lows nearly surpassed new highs, losing out narrowly, 105-93. Volume was decidedly thin, though velocity may not be an issue during what seems to be setting up as a long, hot summer of decline.

NYSE Volume 5,205,686,000
NASDAQ Volume 1,801,127,500


Commodities did little better than equities on the day. Oil lost 61 cents, to $77.21, while gold added a marginal gain of 20 cents to finish at $1,239.90. Silver added 9 cents in price, to $18.90.

Stocks continue to be highly speculative, volatile and risky in this environment and no place for retirement savings, which is, unfortunately, where most of Americans are invested, either through their own 401K plans or state-funded pensions. Another severe downturn in stocks could easily spark a panic similar to the one in 2008, though this time the consequences may be even more severe.

The doomsday scenario may take as long as another five to seven years in which to be played out, so many investors and hard-working middle class Americans may still have time to fortify their financial defenses.

Reiterating the advice of the past year and a half: Cash and equivalents, arable land and tools of trade are suitable long-term investments for financial survival.

A double dip in virtually all important measures of economic activity seems almost a certainty at this point. Stocks could tumble as much as 30% by year's end, if not more.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Major Market Madness as EU Faces an Abyss

Greece has exploded into near-anarchy. Most of Southern Europe is about to enter similar circumstances, as Italy, Spain and Portugal face the same kind of debt crisis that is sweeping the globe. Ireland and Iceland have already felt the wrath of economic unwinding and the panic doesn't stop at small-country borders.

The unprecedentedly-swift breakdown which occurred today on US stock markets is a symptom of a wider contagion, a currency, central bank, sovereign confidence crisis.

Around 2:00 pm, with stocks already suffering significant losses and live video of protesters being attacked by riot police in Athens airing worldwide, markets turned even more dire, doubling their losses in a matter of minutes. By 2:15, the wheels were off as the Dow fell from 250 points down to a 990-point loss in the blink of an eye. For about 10 minutes, markets were in freefall. Traders reported a near-complete capitulation, with buyers completely absent from the market in almost all stocks.

Once again, however, the slide was staunched by some heavy-handed trading in futures and the more-than-likely subterfuge of the major investment banks and their allies in crime, the government-approved President's Working Group on Financial Markets (Plunge Protection Team. i.e., the PPT). As quickly as the markets fell, the rebounded. The Dow recovered to a loss of roughly 400 points and seemed to stabilize at that point. After a wild 15 minutes of trading that left everybody stunned and questioning exactly what happened, the markets churned onward toward the close, ending with massive losses, nonetheless.

Dow 10,520.32, -347.80 (3.20%)
NASDAQ 2,319.64, -82.65 (3.44%)
S&P 500 1,128.15, -37.72 (3.24%)
NYSE Composite 7,011.92, -246.10 (3.39%


The substantial declines on the day were more than bourn out by the internal indicators. Declining issues completely overwhelmed advancers, 6015-742, or, by a margin of about 9:1. It was one of the biggest one-day routs in recent years, and there have been a good number of those. The key measure was the number of new highs to new lows, which completely flipped over from a year-long trend. There were 612 new lows to 196 new highs, a complete reversal, which, if history is any kind of guide, is a loud siren that the bears are firmly back in control.

Another screaming indicator was the day's volume, literally off the charts. This is the kind of volume seen only at the extremes, likely one of the 5 or 10 highest-volume days in the history of US stock markets. Since the direction was decidedly to the downside, more selling should be expected in days to come.

NYSE Volume 11,772,131,000.00
NASDAQ Volume 4,292,823,500.00


Concerning the heavy selling that sent stocks into a short-lived abyss, the commentators on CNBC cited such simplistic theories as a computer glitch, false prints and other preposterous theories, all along avoid the obvious truth: the economic crisis did not end in March of 2009, when stocks began a year-long rally. Financial markets are still fragile, one might say, tenuous, and only clandestine moves by insiders kept stocks from recording a record sell-off.

At some point, CNBC or another expert may release a story explaining the sudden downturn on the back of a rogue trade or computer malfunction. Any such story should be viewed with an additional dose of skepticism if only because of the various levels the major indices broke through during the panic. All of them shattered their 50-day moving averages during the session and closed well below them. Markets have been trending lower for the better part of the past two weeks and this kind of momentum-turning-to-panic trading cannot be discounted as a one-off event.

The likelihood of further market declines in the very near term and extending into the longer term is very high. The debt-deflation bomb has not yet run its course. Not until massive amounts of money and companies are liquidated will the disease be purged from the global economy. Expect widespread panic in European markets as countries fall like dominoes with a side-effect around the world. US markets will not be spared, as the US is only the best among peers at this juncture. Major economies will survive, though France, Germany, Great Britain and the USA will be severely crippled by year's end.

Our beloved "recovery" has been a complete fabrication, fueled by the media and the mechanics of commerce in Washington and on Wall Street. Individual investors have largely shunned equities in favor of bonds and tangible assets such as gold, which was an outside winner on the day. Greece and the rest of the Southern European countries are financially on death's door, facing complete default. Soon, one will capitulate and flee the European Union and denounce the Euro. When that occurs, the ten-year experiment at cross-border governance will be essentially over. The EU will disintegrate and the Euro will be completely unwound. The main hope is that troops do not begin excursions into neighboring nations, as has been the centuries-old history of Europe.

Even today, as it has been throughout the life of the EU, the stronger Norther economies have considerable enmity toward their Southern neighbors. The chance of the entire continent devolving into skirmishes over currencies would neither be unexpected nor unprecedented. Wars are usually how nations resolve major financial squeezes and Europe is certainly in one now.

Besides the dire conditions in Europe, the Gulf oil spill remains unchecked and tomorrow's non-farm employment report - to be released to the public at 8:30 am ET - doesn't offer much optimism. Most of the supposed 185,000 jobs created in April will be attributed mostly to government hiring of temporary census workers and the whisper campaign is that not as many were needed due, ironically, of the efficiency of the operation. Should the non-farm number fall significantly below expectations - a real possibility - an immediate continuation of the plunge will probably occur.

The best hope is for the proverbial, "dead cat bounce," which might ease tensions temporarily, until, at best, the next round of crisis selling. So severely strained and wrought with fraud, inter-leveraging and toxicity, financial markets have entered a semi-permanent state of crisis. When this chapter of global finance is finally unwound, the world won't end, but the pain will have spread deeper and wider than anyone could have expected.

For the baby boomer generation, the nightmare may have only begun. Those without high debt may find themselves in better positions than many of their over-leveraged peers.

Some of the numbers emerging from this historic day in finance (and underscoring the idea that this was not a one-off event):

Crude oil futures continued their steady decline, losing another $2.86, to close at $77.11, the lowest print in months. Safe-haven gold improved by $22.30, climbing above the $1200 mark to finally settle at $1,196.90. Silver couldn't keep pace, losing 2 cents, to $17.49.

All of the major indices have suffered huge blows over the past two weeks, and all closed below their 50-day moving averages.

The Dow Jones Industrials are less than 100 points higher for the year. For the year, the NASDAQ is up only 50 points, the S&P ahead by just 13 points, the NYSE Composite - the broadest index - is down 173 points, all of that loss, and more, occurring today.

All of the 30 Dow components closed lower, many of them with 3.5 to 4.5% losses. Citigroup touched a low of 3.90, closing at 4.01, as all financial stocks were pounded lower.

Treasuries and the US dollar were sharply higher. The dollar index hit fresh highs while the Euro broke down to 14-month lows against the greenback. The benchmark 10-year treasury closed at a 3.40% yield, 55 basis points lower than just a month ago.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Recovery Fake Out: America Becoming Zombie Nation

Television has a mesmerizing effect on people. It offers the uncanny ability to either engross the viewer or put them to sleep. On that latter point, just ask the hosts of late-night shows, like Jay Leno, who do their audience counts within the first fifteen minutes of the show because after that, Americans are nodding off "en masse."

TV is a kind of drug for the modern masses. Viewers tend to believe just about anything they see or hear on the tube, so when the major networks and their cable outlets keep chirping that the US economy is on the road to recovery, people automatically go along. After all, who wants to believe that the recent economic crisis - that actually had its roots in the late 90s - isn't already over? Nobody wants to be the party-pooper. We all need to get moving toward a brighter future. Right?

Well, some of us aren't convinced, especially since we've seen little evidence that the government or Wall Street has done anything to prevent another global economic meltdown like the one we witnessed in the fall of 2008, and since $8-12 trillion worth of extended benefits to the Wall Street zombie financial firms and another nearly $1 trillion in excess government spending (most of which went to near-bankrupt state treasuries), has produced no new jobs and few tangible results that look even remotely like a growing economy.

No, the troika of Wall Street, Washington and the well-kept, neat-and-tidy media non-investigators have pulled the wool over America's eyes again. And why not? As a nation, gullible Americans keep trusting governments, investment advisors and media pundits who say things are "getting better" even when we see no evidence of such in our personal lives. Have you or your spouse or any of your friends gotten a raise lately? Are firms fighting over the services of you or your buddies? Are you turning down lots of job offers? Are malls and strip centers opening new stores? Are restaurants and small businesses expanding? Are local, state and federal governments concerned more about dealing with tax-receipt surpluses or bone-crushing deficits?

Are prices going up so fast you can't seem to keep up? (Don't answer that yet.) Or are they somewhat stable in most areas? Food and fuel prices have remained fairly constant for over a year now.

Truth of the matter - sorry to keep harping on this, but nobody seems to get it - is that the downturn hasn't ended. In fact, it may be in a debt-induced state of near-term denial. Sure, Wall Street and stocks in general have recovered magnificently, but they did so on the back of billions of dollars worth of government no-interest loans (bailouts) and trillions worth of guarantees. It's what they do. They were given money and told to invest and spend. It wasn't that difficult of a task.

Right now, though, doubt is creeping back into the formula. Stocks may have reached an emotional and intellectual peak, a point at which neither enthusiasm nor analysis would lead an astute investor to buy. Then there's Goldman Sach, Greece and the rest of Europe to worry about, to say nothing of that growing oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico.

Of course, behind the scenes are millions of unsold homes in bank inventories, more foreclosures soon to come down the pike and those 8 million unemployed people on extended, extended benefits who still can't find reasonable work.

We also cannot leave out the Treasury and the Fed...

According to a new missive from Agora Financial (I neither support or decry their positions, and I am in no way affiliated with them), the US Treasury has already borrowed money from these sources:

Little Luxembourg, no bigger than Rhode Island, gave us $104.2 billion. Russia has us on the hook for another $120 billion. Brazil, nearly $140 billion. Secretive banks in the Caribbean, nearly $190 billion...

Those thugs that run Iran, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria, Indonesia, and Venezuela? So far — along with a half-dozen other oil-producing nations — they've got us dangling for another $191 billion in I.O.U.s.

Great Britain just loaned us $214 billion. D.C. borrowed $523 billion from bankrupt state governments. And, as if the bank bailouts weren't bad enough, we're in hock another $630 billion to Wall Street financial firms and other buyers.

Japan owns a $712 billion slice of America. China owns a staggering $776 billion call on our capital. And guess who tops the list? The Fed itself, which uses dollars they print to buy up $4.785 TRILLION of their own debt, just to keep the prosperity illusion alive.


All they're saying is that your pension plans may soon be obliterated by either a massive crash, debt explosion or spiraling inflation. The smart money is on the first two. Inflation is still a decade away. It simply cannot occur within the framework of a struggling economy with high unemployment (the government's own U6 reading is at 17%).

After Monday's wild ride upside, Tuesday was a real bummer, bringing Greece and most of Europe back into focus. Globablly, markets were hammered and the US was not spared by PPT intervention, late-breaking "good" news or any of the usual clandestine tricks. This one looks like the real deal. Unless Friday's April jobs report is a real hummer, stocks and the economy will continue down, probably slumping through the remainder of the second quarter, into the third.

Dow 10,926.77, -225.06 (2.02%)
NASDAQ 2,424.25, -74.49 (2.98%)
S&P 500 1,173.60, -28.66 (2.38%)
NYSE Composite 7,337.25, -205.87 (2.73%


The tone of today's decline was stark. declining issues overwhelmed advancers, 5611-1013. New highs eked out a small advantage over new lows, the smallest margin in many months, 169-98. That's a scary notion: that there may be more daily new lows than new highs some time soon. We had become so accustomed to seeing a huge gap there, but that particular metric, if it turns over, could be forecasting a major downturn. Volume was magnificent, close to the highest levels of the year, another ominous sign.

NYSE Volume 7,379,542,500.00
NASDAQ Volume 2,869,652,750.00


Oil was sent lower by speculators spooked by a weaker Euro, dropping $3.45, to $82.74. Gold trended lower for a second straight day, down $14.10, to $1,168.60, while silver took a spanking, losing $1.00, to $17.82.

This is not a pretty picture. despite $trillions of stimulus worldwide, massive bailouts and extraordinary measures by governments around the planet, nothing has been able to keep the global economy from continuing to contract. The recent upturn in GDP is mostly a chimera, short-lived and over-hyped. Nobody went bust except the bottom of the market: families, individuals and small businesses. All of the big firms were saved and are now operating as zombies. They have no real life of their own. All their numbers are crooked or cooked or both and the mood - not just in America, but globally - is dour.

We're at a critical turning point, and if there's no "sell in may and go away," a "June Swoon" is almost certain.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Get Away Day on Strong Dollar, Options Expiration

As is usually the case, foreign markets reacted to Wednesday's Fed statement with more conviction and honesty than US media and economic pundits. Here in the USA, the widely-accepted response to the Fed was that the statement contained nothing new, and that money would continue flowing freely, courtesy of extraordinarily low interest rates fostered by Fed accommodation.

In the Far East, Asia and Europe, the response was vastly different and it had far-ranging effects on US equities. Most foreign currencies - especially the Euro, Pound Sterling and Yen - fell sharply against the US Dollar as leaders and market participants overseas saw the Fed announcement for what it really was: an early warning that accommodative policies would soon end. With the rise of the dollar, those enganged in the risk trade (shot the dollar, long stocks) on Wall Street were stung and forced into selling off a wide swath of positions, sending the markets to their worst one-day slide in over a month.

Contributing to the decline was options expiration on Friday, which raised volatility and exacerbated a descent which really needed little help. In the horse-racing business, they call day's like these "get-away days," as owners sell off unwanted or damaged horse flesh in claiming races or to private parties, raising cash for their next foray. So it was on Wall Street today, with investors exiting unwanted positions and trimming back on strong ones. Some, however, were selling everything to cover their short positions against the US Dollar.

Dow 10,308.26, -132.86 (1.27%)
Nasdaq 2,180.05, -26.86 (1.22%)
S&P 500 1,096.07, -13.11 (1.18%)
NYSE Composite 7,063.75, -117.02 (1.63%)


The decline was broad-based, with declining issues far outpacing advancers, 4851-1780. The relationship of new highs to new lows was flattened, with the highs at 227, to 73 lows. Volume, which was extraordinarily high on the NYSE, is indicating that the selling may only have begun, though there are still enough unhedged bulls about to keep declines in order.

NYSE Volume 6,782,270,000
Nasdaq Volume 1,928,465,625


Commodities were hard hit, as is the usual case with dollar strength. Oil dropped only a penny by the close, though it traded down as much as $1.40 during the day. Gold fell $29.00, to $1,107.20, while silver dipped 49 cents to $17.20.

In general, the day's trade was tied almost exclusively to dollar strength, a counter-trend trade that may have legs. The number of short positions in the dollar is immense, and if there are continuing signs that the US economy is improving rapidly - and there are some - the unwinding of these positions and the corresponding sell-off in stocks could be profound in a classic short-squeeze, likely engineered by a concerted effort by central banks with more at stake than equity positions.

The message may become all-too-clear if central banks work together to promote dollar stability and global strength: Stocks be dammed; whole economies are of far more importance. It's a dicey situation, though a correction may not exceed a 15% in equity values, not a bad haircut, but more of a trim after the robustness during the liquidity-driven rally of the past 9 months.

Overall, the markets are functioning well, and an unwinding of the short dollar - long stocks trade may be just the tonic needed to promote overall prosperity. Wall Street needs to give some heed to Main Street, which is still suffering.

There were a number of positive signs beyond the Fed announcement from Wednesday. After new unemployment claims disappointed with a 7,000 net rise from a week ago, to 480,000, the Philadelphia Fed Index reported a healthy rise, from 16.7 in November to 20.4 in December, and the Conference Board's Index of Leading Economic Indicators posted an increase of 0.9% for November, ahead of expectations (0.7%).

There is no economic data due out tomorrow and options traders must close positions by noon. There was a positive quarterly report by Research in Motion (RIMM) after the bell, which may provide some impetus to the upside in the tech space, though it appears that much of the trading for 2009 has concluded and new highs for the markets are unlikely until January.

Friday, June 8, 2007

You Knew Friday Would Be Good, Didn't You?

After taking a three-day beating, US investors struck back with a vengeance, sending the Dow up more than 150 points in a broad-based rally that took all indices higher.

Dow 13,424.39 +157.66; NASDAQ 2,573.54 +32.16; S&P 500 1,507.67 +16.95; NYSE Composite 9,826.07 +105.13

Even though the volume wasn't quite as brisk as yesterday's, it's worth pointing out that money is on the move. The same stocks that were beaten down on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday were not bought up on Friday. Sector rotation - and migration from blue chips to techs - and repositioning is what this week was all about.

Investor confidence was buoyed this morning by news that the trade balance in April shrank to a point that we imported only $58.5 billion more than we export. Most analysts were looking for upwards of a $63 billion imbalance. While the number is still shocking, any improvement is positive for the US business and labor markets, and, to some degree, the country as a whole.

Advancing issues overwhelmed decliners by better than 2-1, and while new lows still outdid new highs (159-108), that reading is less frightening than a day ago. Understandably, stocks were moving in both directions, but there was still some leftover selling to be done on some of the dogs. What would be good to see in the high-low reading is a period of fluctuation, indicative of a market settling in, readying for another leg higher, which is undeniably in the cards.

The dollar strengthened against the Euro on the day, which was another good sign and the price of crude was drubbed back to a more realistic level, losing $2.17 to close the week at $64.76.

Once again, the metals took a beating. Gold was down a whopping $14.90 to $650.30. Silver lost 44 cents to close at $13.04. This signals defeat for the proponents of $800 gold and $20 silver. That bull has all but died a painful death.

Overall, it was a week of readjustment, albeit lower, but the markets are primed for some colossal gains in coming months.