75 years ago today, the first nuclear bomb was used in warfare, as the United States dropped "Little Boy" on Hiroshima, Japan. Three days later, the US did the same to the Japanese city of Nagasaki with a nuclear device known by the nickname "Fat Man." Together, the two bombs ushered in a quick end to World War II in the Pacific, with Japan surrendering on August 15, and formally signing the instrument of surrender on September 2, aboard the USS Missouri, harbored in Tokyo Bay.
The 13-kiloton blast on Hiroshima destroyed nearly 5 square miles of the Japanese city. Upwards of 70,000 died instantly, and tens of thousands later perished from injury and radiation sickness. Though no official count was ever undertaken, estimates near 150,000 total killed are common.
No other nuclear device has ever been used in military combat since the two that ended World War II. Today's nuclear weapons are orders of magnitude more powerful than the two dropped on Japan. According to a 2104 article by the Brookings Institute, the largest ballistic missile warhead in the US arsenal is 455 kilotons on the W88, carried by the Trident II SLBM. The B83 nuclear weapon, which is the largest nuclear weapon currently in the U.S. stockpile is estimated at 1.2 megatons, 1000 times more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb, "Little Boy."
While these explosions occurred 75 years ago, there's another explosion evident today, that being the one in the price of silver, which is up more than 50 percent in just the last 30 days.
Overnight, the price of an ounce of silver not only passed $27 an ounce, it surpassed $28 per ounce. As of this writing, the bid price on August silver futures is $28.22. As is the case with gold, getting physical metal at anywhere near the futures or spot prices is basically an impossibility.
For instance, there's little availability of gold in bars or coins of over one ounce at dealers worldwide. Typical prices for one ounce gold coins or bars carries a premium of roughly $100 beyond spot. Silver is even more dear, with 30-40% premiums common. Typical prices for one ounce coins or bars is $34 and higher.
Money Daily has outlined the reasons for silver and gold's spectacular gains this year in previous posts, mostly attributing the rise to destruction of fiat currencies by incessant central bank counterfeiting and negative real interest rates. Outstripping every other asset this year, precious metals are just beginning what is likely to become known as the greatest rally ever.
The Federal Reserve, trapped into a corner of their own making, cannot do anything except prop up their favored equity and fixed-income markets via special buying programs that are essentially illegal and serve only as a temporary reprieve for companies that are insolvent and should be headed to bankruptcy. Beyond the roughly 30-40% of listed companies that are technically "zombies" - meaning current profits are not enough to pay the interest on their debt - US and other significant international banks have been frantically ramping up their loan loss reserves while also having taken advantage of handouts from the Federal Reserve.
Gold and silver's ascent is a signal the the entire monetary system of the planet - all based on faith and credit - is about to collapse. As it is, stocks are only being kept afloat by the Federal Reserve's ZIRP and special bond-buying programs. Their next step is to buy stocks directly, another violation of their charter. The same is being done in Europe and Asia. Japan and Switzerland have been buyers of equities for years.
It's not just big money institutional investors who see the damage being done to the global currency regime. Ordinary people are losing faith in the dollar, euro, pound, Swiss franc, yen, and China's yuan, though the US dollar has been the hardest hit recently when measured against other currencies.
Gold has been making record highs against all other currencies for months and years. Just last week gold topped the all-time high against the dollar, signaling that the real rout of all currencies is just beginning. Silver hasn't even come close to its record high of $49 an ounce, though it certainly will, probably early in 2021, if not sooner. The rocket-like nature of silver's price explosion gives credence to current thinking that it is the gentleman's way of saying good-bye to other currencies.
There's an old adage that goes something like this:
Gold is the money of kings.
Silver is the money of gentlemen.
Copper is the money of commoners.
Debt is the money of slaves.
Smart money is on gold and silver replacing the fiat currencies within one to three years.
You can have your stocks, your bonds, your Federal Reserve Notes, but gold and silver are blowing them all away. If you don't own physical gold or silver or other tradable hard assets within the next few years, you're going to be out of luck and likely out of money.
Right now, the economic wheels are wobbling on their axles. When they finally fall off - and they will - chaos will ensue. We've seen nothing yet.
At the close, Wednesday, August 5, 2020:
Dow: 27,201.52, +373.05 (+1.39%)
NASDAQ: 10,998.40, +57.23 (+0.52%)
S&P 500: 3,327.77, +21.26 (+0.64%)
NYSE: 12,731.55, +119.46 (+0.95%)
Showing posts with label Federal Reserve System. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federal Reserve System. Show all posts
Thursday, August 6, 2020
Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Did You Fall For the Fakery? Fed Eases, Stocks Slide, Dollar Gains; Silver Overbought
Today, July 31, 2019, the FOMC of the Federal Reserve System cut the federal funds rate by 25 basis points, as expected.
What was unexpected was the response from the market, which stumbled badly on the news. It was a classic case of "buy the rumor, sell the news," herd mentality. The Fed did not have to cut rates, obviously, just as they were wrong to raise them every quarter by 25 basis points since December, 2015.
The Fed is still out in uncharted territory, unable to raise rates because the economy is just chugging along at less than three percent growth, which is fine, in reality. The trouble is that investors want more. They are chasing yield, but what they're really doing is pushing on a string, exacerbating an already overbought market at or near record highs.
Here's the truth of the matter:
The system broke in 2008 and it was not fixed, just patched up with lots of liquidity thanks to Uncle Sugars at the Fed, BoJ, PBOC, ECB, SNB.
Fiat is an arbitrary order. In other words, this is "money." It's not. Yen, euros, dollars are currency. The intrinsic value of all fiat is zero.
This fakery will continue until there's nothing left except mega-corporations, governments, central banks, and slaves (almost everybody).
Noting that we're phasing through a zombie economy, much like that of Japan, with an aging demographic, systemic debt problems, and myopic, corrupt governments worldwide, there is little the Fed or any central bank can do but to continue the fakery until the public is completely bereft of all assets. Then they will declare the global economy dead, start a new order, promise prosperity for everyone, and deliver a global depression.
There's no way around it. All developed nations are bankrupt. The central banks create money (actually, currency) out of thin air, sell it as debt to governments, at interest, collect their skim and enrich themselves. The central banks work for themselves, not the governments they shadily represent, nor the citizens who make use of the currency.
They have no way out. Government debts (the US is already $22 trillion behind) will never be repaid, so the central banks can only perpetuate the fraud until they can't.
As far as precious metals are concerned, they will continued to be whipped like a rented mule. The recent run-up was only a diversion, a ruse, designed to get more people to buy the stuff. Now, gold and silver will be sold off and the bankers will eventually accumulate at lower prices.
That is why I haven't changed my position or bought into the silver rally from $14.50 to $16.50 per ounce. The bulk of the move came about when the dollar was weakening. Now it is strengthening again, meaning you will buy less gold with the same amount of dollars. The math is simple.
All told, stocks are overbought. the metals are currently overbought, but not for long. Bonds have much more rally in them than may be evident superficially. The bond rally has been ongoing for 35 years and it's not going to stop here. The eventual end-point is negative rates, or NIRP (Negative Interest Rate Policy), as is the current regime in the rest of the world. More than $13 trillion in bonds are priced at negative yields, which tells much about the future prospects for developed nations (and semi-developed China and India).
I continue to be targeting silver for $12.35 by 2021 or sooner. If it goes above $20, that would be a shock and a sign that the global financial system is melting away faster than anyone thought, but it's not likely to happen.
The global economy is a train wreck in super-slow motion. It is unlikely to implode before 2021, so there is still time to prepare for TEOTWAWKI.
That is all for now. Good luck.
At The Close, Wednesday, July 31, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,864.27, -333.75 (-1.23%)
NASDAQ: 8,175.42, -98.19 (-1.19%)
S&P 500: 2,980.38, -32.80 (-1.09%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: 13,066.60, -120.61 (-0.91%)
Labels:
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gold,
interest rates,
silver,
TEOTWAWKI
Thursday, January 3, 2019
Stocks Slammed, Bonds Rally As Global Slowdown Fears Rise
Apple computer, maker of the iconic iPhone, was the cause of much of today's equity angst, as the tech giant warned that fourth quarter sales were likely to come in under revenue estimates.
Apple CEO Tim Cook issued a letter late Wednesday to investors advising that a slowdown in China sales would cause fourth quarter revenue to decline 4.8% year over year to $84 billion, well below analyst estimates. It's not that Apple is losing money - far from that - it's just not making as much as expected. Shares of Apple (AAPL) were down nearly 10% on the news, the largest one-day loss in six years.
Combined with a report from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) that had December's PMI fall by the most since the financial crisis of 2008, stocks were on the defensive all day long. The report concluded that December PMI fell from 59.3 to 54.1, a descent of 5.4%. While anything over 50 is considered expansion, the falloff is considered to be a harbinger of worse data to come, as many participants in the survey blamed trade tensions with China as a leading cause for the slowdown.
Thus, the 1000+ point gain from December 26 was cut down by two-thirds on Thursday, just a week later, sending the Dow and other major indices closer to bear market territory once again.
January has gotten off to a horrible start, as though December's rout hadn't ended, which, of course, would be correct. Losses on stocks are only just beginning. By March of this year, expect stocks to be another 10-15% lower than where they stand today, and, even then, with signs of a global slowdown flashing red, a bottom won't likely be put in until the market has flushed out all of the weak hands and sent fund managers scurrying in even greater numbers to cash and bonds.
Presently, the treasuries are telling an interesting story about the economy. While the Federal Reserve insisted on raising rates four times in 2019, the bond market has expressed extreme displeasure, sending the yield on the 10-year note to 2.56%, down ten basis points just today, marking the lowest yield since January of last year. Additionally, short-maturity bills spiked (thanks to Fed hikes at the low end) with the one-year yielding 2.50%, as compared to 2.39% for the 2-year and 2.37% for the five-year note. Inversion in accelerating at the short end of the curve.
While this is traditionally not the pairs that signal recession, that distinction belonging to the 2s-10s spread, it is highly unusual. Bond traders are saying they don't want to issue longer-term, for fear that the economy will weaken as time progresses. The 30-year also was slammed lower, yielding 2.92%, down five basis points from yesterday.
2019 is looking to be an even worse year for equity investors, and a rout in the stock market could cause panic to spread to many diverse levels of economic activity. A recession within the next three to twelve months is looking more a certainty with each passing day.
Dow Jones Industrial Average January Scorecard:
At the Close, Thursday, January 3, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 22,686.22, -660.02 (-2.83%)
NASDAQ: 6,463.50, -202.43 (-3.04%)
S&P 500: 2,447.89, -62.14 (-2.48%)
NYSE Composite: 11,190.44, -193.09 (-1.70%)
Apple CEO Tim Cook issued a letter late Wednesday to investors advising that a slowdown in China sales would cause fourth quarter revenue to decline 4.8% year over year to $84 billion, well below analyst estimates. It's not that Apple is losing money - far from that - it's just not making as much as expected. Shares of Apple (AAPL) were down nearly 10% on the news, the largest one-day loss in six years.
Combined with a report from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) that had December's PMI fall by the most since the financial crisis of 2008, stocks were on the defensive all day long. The report concluded that December PMI fell from 59.3 to 54.1, a descent of 5.4%. While anything over 50 is considered expansion, the falloff is considered to be a harbinger of worse data to come, as many participants in the survey blamed trade tensions with China as a leading cause for the slowdown.
Thus, the 1000+ point gain from December 26 was cut down by two-thirds on Thursday, just a week later, sending the Dow and other major indices closer to bear market territory once again.
January has gotten off to a horrible start, as though December's rout hadn't ended, which, of course, would be correct. Losses on stocks are only just beginning. By March of this year, expect stocks to be another 10-15% lower than where they stand today, and, even then, with signs of a global slowdown flashing red, a bottom won't likely be put in until the market has flushed out all of the weak hands and sent fund managers scurrying in even greater numbers to cash and bonds.
Presently, the treasuries are telling an interesting story about the economy. While the Federal Reserve insisted on raising rates four times in 2019, the bond market has expressed extreme displeasure, sending the yield on the 10-year note to 2.56%, down ten basis points just today, marking the lowest yield since January of last year. Additionally, short-maturity bills spiked (thanks to Fed hikes at the low end) with the one-year yielding 2.50%, as compared to 2.39% for the 2-year and 2.37% for the five-year note. Inversion in accelerating at the short end of the curve.
While this is traditionally not the pairs that signal recession, that distinction belonging to the 2s-10s spread, it is highly unusual. Bond traders are saying they don't want to issue longer-term, for fear that the economy will weaken as time progresses. The 30-year also was slammed lower, yielding 2.92%, down five basis points from yesterday.
2019 is looking to be an even worse year for equity investors, and a rout in the stock market could cause panic to spread to many diverse levels of economic activity. A recession within the next three to twelve months is looking more a certainty with each passing day.
Dow Jones Industrial Average January Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
1/2/19 | 23,346.24 | +18.78 | +18.78 |
1/3/19 | 22,686.22 | -660.02 | -641.24 |
At the Close, Thursday, January 3, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 22,686.22, -660.02 (-2.83%)
NASDAQ: 6,463.50, -202.43 (-3.04%)
S&P 500: 2,447.89, -62.14 (-2.48%)
NYSE Composite: 11,190.44, -193.09 (-1.70%)
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Stock Carnage Continues; NASDAQ Down 20%; Why It Is Happening
Stocks continued to sell off on Thursday, extending the December decline to dangerous levels.
The Dow has registered what is easily the worst month of 2018, while the NASDAQ joined the Dow Jones Transportation Index in bear market territory, down 20% from its August 29 high.
Pundits in the financial media are trying to assign blame wherever they can, on the Fed's recent rate hike, fear of a coming recession, the possible federal government partial shutdown, China's slump, a looming trade war. While those are contributing factors, the real culprits are the Federal Reserve and their cohorts in central banking in Japan, China, the ECB, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank.
These are the architects of the past decade's debacle of debt, beginning in the depths of 2008-09 and continuing through until today. Their schemes of zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), negative interest rate policy (NIRP) and quantitative easing (QE), which made money all-too-easily available to their willing friends in the C-suites of major corporations.
The corporations took the easy money, at rates of one to two percent or less, and repurchased their own corporate stock at inflated prices. Now that the executives have cashed out, milked dry their own businesses, they are upside-down, owning shares of stock purchased at 20, 30, 40 percent or more than they will sell for today.
2018 was the culmination of this global corporate theft, inspired by the gracious money printers at the Federal Reserve and other central banks. Over the past ten years, trillions of dollars, yen, yuan, euros, pounds and other currencies were brought into existence, lent to various large corporate interests in a variety of complex and/or simple transactions and now the gig is up, though one will never hear talk of this in the mainstream media.
What happens to a corporation that is holding shares it bought at $90, when the stock is selling for $60 and may be worth less than that? Nothing good, including cutbacks, rollbacks, layoffs, and the general demise of once-strong companies.
When these companies offer shares for sale - and they eventually will - they will realize losses and they will still have the loans from the central banking system to repay. Some will file for bankruptcy. Others will cut payrolls and expenses to the bone. The past ten years have been nothing short of complete and total corruption of the financial system, from top to bottom. This is why the selling has been intense and relentless and likely will not cease until stocks are 40 to 60 percent off the artificial highs created by reducing the number of shares available through stock buybacks.
It was a swell scheme that paid off handsomely for some of the top executives at many of the largest corporations, and the general public, the people with 401k or retirement or college funds tied to the stock market, are going to end up bag-holders, broke and dismayed, as well they should be.
If there is any justice in this world, the bankers will be fingered, the corporate executives tried and jailed, and money clawed back from their ill-gotten gains. But we all know from the 2008-09 experience that that will not happen. Nobody will be tried. Nobody will serve a single day in jail, and the Federal Reserve will continue on its merry way, inflating and deflating to their heart's content, stealing from the public as they have been since 1913.
That's all there is to it. Hopefully, you are not a victim, though in many ways, we all are.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
At the Close, Thursday, the solstice, December 20, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 22,859.60, -464.06 (-1.99%)
NASDAQ: 6,528.41, -108.42 (-1.63%)
S&P 500: 2,467.42, -39.54 (-1.58%)
NYSE Composite: 11,222.79, -149.05 (-1.31%)
The Dow has registered what is easily the worst month of 2018, while the NASDAQ joined the Dow Jones Transportation Index in bear market territory, down 20% from its August 29 high.
Pundits in the financial media are trying to assign blame wherever they can, on the Fed's recent rate hike, fear of a coming recession, the possible federal government partial shutdown, China's slump, a looming trade war. While those are contributing factors, the real culprits are the Federal Reserve and their cohorts in central banking in Japan, China, the ECB, the Bank of England and the Swiss National Bank.
These are the architects of the past decade's debacle of debt, beginning in the depths of 2008-09 and continuing through until today. Their schemes of zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), negative interest rate policy (NIRP) and quantitative easing (QE), which made money all-too-easily available to their willing friends in the C-suites of major corporations.
The corporations took the easy money, at rates of one to two percent or less, and repurchased their own corporate stock at inflated prices. Now that the executives have cashed out, milked dry their own businesses, they are upside-down, owning shares of stock purchased at 20, 30, 40 percent or more than they will sell for today.
2018 was the culmination of this global corporate theft, inspired by the gracious money printers at the Federal Reserve and other central banks. Over the past ten years, trillions of dollars, yen, yuan, euros, pounds and other currencies were brought into existence, lent to various large corporate interests in a variety of complex and/or simple transactions and now the gig is up, though one will never hear talk of this in the mainstream media.
What happens to a corporation that is holding shares it bought at $90, when the stock is selling for $60 and may be worth less than that? Nothing good, including cutbacks, rollbacks, layoffs, and the general demise of once-strong companies.
When these companies offer shares for sale - and they eventually will - they will realize losses and they will still have the loans from the central banking system to repay. Some will file for bankruptcy. Others will cut payrolls and expenses to the bone. The past ten years have been nothing short of complete and total corruption of the financial system, from top to bottom. This is why the selling has been intense and relentless and likely will not cease until stocks are 40 to 60 percent off the artificial highs created by reducing the number of shares available through stock buybacks.
It was a swell scheme that paid off handsomely for some of the top executives at many of the largest corporations, and the general public, the people with 401k or retirement or college funds tied to the stock market, are going to end up bag-holders, broke and dismayed, as well they should be.
If there is any justice in this world, the bankers will be fingered, the corporate executives tried and jailed, and money clawed back from their ill-gotten gains. But we all know from the 2008-09 experience that that will not happen. Nobody will be tried. Nobody will serve a single day in jail, and the Federal Reserve will continue on its merry way, inflating and deflating to their heart's content, stealing from the public as they have been since 1913.
That's all there is to it. Hopefully, you are not a victim, though in many ways, we all are.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
12/3/18 | 25,826.43 | +287.97 | +287.97 |
12/4/18 | 25,027.07 | -799.36 | -511.39 |
12/6/18 | 24,947.67 | -79.40 | -590.79 |
12/7/18 | 24,388.95 | -558.72 | -1149.51 |
12/10/18 | 24,423.26 | +34.31 | -1115.20 |
12/11/18 | 24,370.24 | -53.02 | -1168.22 |
12/12/18 | 24,527.27 | +157.03 | -1011.19 |
12/13/18 | 24,597.38 | +70.11 | -941.08 |
12/14/18 | 24,100.51 | -496.87 | -1437.95 |
12/17/18 | 23,592.98 | -507.53 | -1945.58 |
12/18/18 | 23,675.64 | +82.66 | -1862.92 |
12/19/18 | 23,323.66 | -351.98 | -2214.90 |
12/20/18 | 22,859.60 | -464.06 | -2678.96 |
At the Close, Thursday, the solstice, December 20, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 22,859.60, -464.06 (-1.99%)
NASDAQ: 6,528.41, -108.42 (-1.63%)
S&P 500: 2,467.42, -39.54 (-1.58%)
NYSE Composite: 11,222.79, -149.05 (-1.31%)
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
Stocks Tank On Fed Rate Hike (Thank You, Captain Obvious); Transportation Index In Bear Market
What a racket!
As if there was ever any doubt that the Fed would hike the federal funds rate another 25 basis points, stocks shot up at the open and maintained a very positive stance right up until 2:00 pm ET, when the Fed did what everybody knew they would do all along.
Seriously, who in their right mind was buying prior to the rate hike? People with money to burn?
To get an idea of the kind of lunatics trading stocks on Wall Street, the Dow was up just about 300 points at 1:57 pm. By 2:08 pm - following the policy announcement - it was essentially flat... and it went down from there, eventually losing 351 points, closing at a new low for 2018.
Over the same time span, the NASDAQ was up 65 points, but 11 minutes later was down 38. The same fate that befell the Dow was true for NASDAQ, S&P, and NYSE Composite: fresh 2018 lows.
The Transportation Index was absolutely devastated, closing at 9,147.66, down 297.81 points (-3.15%), pushing the transports into bear market territory, down 21% from its September high.
OK, so it was one of those "heads, Fed wins, tails, you lose," kind of deal. There was no way the Fed was going to surprise anybody. It's simply not their style. They telegraph everything they do, because they're so, so important to the proper functioning of the economy, and they never balk at even the most obvious data or implication. Balderdash.
The Fed should be run out of town just like all other central banks have been, but the US sheeple population has put up with this particular band of thieves for the past 105 years. The Fed is why we have booms and busts, never-ending inflation, recessions, absurdly high interest rates on credit cards, and incomes that just don't quite match up with expenses for much of the former middle class.
The good news about the Fed's rate increase is that it may be the last one for a while. They may hike a few times in 2019, or, depending on how the stock market and/or ec responds, they may not hike at all. Meanwhile, they'll keep losing money by unwinding their massive, overvalued bond portfolio of US treasuries and toxic mortgage-backed securities dating from the sub-prime glory days.
Elsewhere, crude oil rallied a little bit, gaining to $47 and change per barrel. Gold and silver were punished, though each was down less than one percent. The real lashing will come tomorrow or at the latest, by the end of the year.
Thus, the Fed, in its infinite wisdom (greed), decided that it would be in its own best interests to destroy the global economy by hiking the overnight and prime rate for the ninth time since 2015.
Happy days for some. tears and more pain to come for many more.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, December 19, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,323.66, -351.98 (-1.49%)
NASDAQ: 6,636.83, -147.08 (-2.17%)
S&P 500: 2,506.96, -39.20 (-1.54%)
NYSE Composite: 11,371.84, -130.32 (-1.13%)
As if there was ever any doubt that the Fed would hike the federal funds rate another 25 basis points, stocks shot up at the open and maintained a very positive stance right up until 2:00 pm ET, when the Fed did what everybody knew they would do all along.
Seriously, who in their right mind was buying prior to the rate hike? People with money to burn?
To get an idea of the kind of lunatics trading stocks on Wall Street, the Dow was up just about 300 points at 1:57 pm. By 2:08 pm - following the policy announcement - it was essentially flat... and it went down from there, eventually losing 351 points, closing at a new low for 2018.
Over the same time span, the NASDAQ was up 65 points, but 11 minutes later was down 38. The same fate that befell the Dow was true for NASDAQ, S&P, and NYSE Composite: fresh 2018 lows.
The Transportation Index was absolutely devastated, closing at 9,147.66, down 297.81 points (-3.15%), pushing the transports into bear market territory, down 21% from its September high.
OK, so it was one of those "heads, Fed wins, tails, you lose," kind of deal. There was no way the Fed was going to surprise anybody. It's simply not their style. They telegraph everything they do, because they're so, so important to the proper functioning of the economy, and they never balk at even the most obvious data or implication. Balderdash.
The Fed should be run out of town just like all other central banks have been, but the US sheeple population has put up with this particular band of thieves for the past 105 years. The Fed is why we have booms and busts, never-ending inflation, recessions, absurdly high interest rates on credit cards, and incomes that just don't quite match up with expenses for much of the former middle class.
The good news about the Fed's rate increase is that it may be the last one for a while. They may hike a few times in 2019, or, depending on how the stock market and/or ec responds, they may not hike at all. Meanwhile, they'll keep losing money by unwinding their massive, overvalued bond portfolio of US treasuries and toxic mortgage-backed securities dating from the sub-prime glory days.
Elsewhere, crude oil rallied a little bit, gaining to $47 and change per barrel. Gold and silver were punished, though each was down less than one percent. The real lashing will come tomorrow or at the latest, by the end of the year.
Thus, the Fed, in its infinite wisdom (greed), decided that it would be in its own best interests to destroy the global economy by hiking the overnight and prime rate for the ninth time since 2015.
Happy days for some. tears and more pain to come for many more.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
12/3/18 | 25,826.43 | +287.97 | +287.97 |
12/4/18 | 25,027.07 | -799.36 | -511.39 |
12/6/18 | 24,947.67 | -79.40 | -590.79 |
12/7/18 | 24,388.95 | -558.72 | -1149.51 |
12/10/18 | 24,423.26 | +34.31 | -1115.20 |
12/11/18 | 24,370.24 | -53.02 | -1168.22 |
12/12/18 | 24,527.27 | +157.03 | -1011.19 |
12/13/18 | 24,597.38 | +70.11 | -941.08 |
12/14/18 | 24,100.51 | -496.87 | -1437.95 |
12/17/18 | 23,592.98 | -507.53 | -1945.58 |
12/18/18 | 23,675.64 | +82.66 | -1862.92 |
12/19/18 | 23,323.66 | -351.98 | -2214.90 |
At the Close, Wednesday, December 19, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,323.66, -351.98 (-1.49%)
NASDAQ: 6,636.83, -147.08 (-2.17%)
S&P 500: 2,506.96, -39.20 (-1.54%)
NYSE Composite: 11,371.84, -130.32 (-1.13%)
Labels:
central banks,
correction,
Federal Reserve System,
FOMC,
inflation,
Nasdaq,
recession,
Wall Street
Monday, December 17, 2018
Global Stock Rout Deepens; Dow Loses Another 500 Points; NASDAQ Down 16.7% Since August
The pain is spreading, and it doesn't seem to be about to abate any time soon.
According to Dow Jones Market Data, the S&P 500 closed at its lowest level since October of 2017, the NASDAQ finished at its lowest since November of 2017, while the Dow closed at lowest level since March 23. Only a rally in the final 15 minutes of trading kept the Dow from closing at its lowest level of the year.
The Dow had plunged as low as 23,456.8 with just minutes to the closing bell, but short-covering boosted the industrials more than 100 points in the final minutes of trading. Not that it matters very much, but the closing low for the year was 23,533.20. Prior to that, the Dow closed at a low of 23,271.28 on November 15, 2017.
Both of those levels are likely to be subsumed, as the stock rout about to be hit with another dose of reality. Trumping anticipation, the Fed meeting which ends Wednesday afternoon at 2:00 pm ET, is almost certain to include a 25 basis point raise to the federal funds rate. On Friday, the federal government, unable to reach a suitable compromise on President Trump's border wall, will go into a partial shutdown.
Neither event - especially the federal shutdown - is of the earth-shattering variety, but they come at a very inopportune time for the market, which is struggling to find any good news upon which to hang a rally.
Europe is either in flames (France), in a bear market (Germany), or about to enter a recession thanks to the end of the ECB's brand of QE. Beyond that, there's the uncertainty of an orderly departure from the EU by Great Britain. The official date for Britain to separate itself from the EU is March, but there have been rumblings of an extension and more than just a little unrest from the island nation to the continent concerning what effect a member country departing will have on the solidarity of remaining members.
In China and Japan, an economic slowdown is already well underway, so it appears that the sellers have reason enough to move away from stocks, and rapidly. There are just too many negatives floating around geopolitical and financial circles for all of them to be resolved in the near term. Rather, these worries turn into realities which the market doesn't appreciate, such as the actual imposition of tariffs rather than mere rumors and threats of them. The same goes for the Fed's upcoming rate hike and the government shutdown. It's become a market that's twisted the old saw into "sell the rumor, sell the news." Everything is on sale and buyers have been heading to the sidelines beginning in February. Since October, the pace has picked up noticeably, but December threatens to be the worst month of the year for the Dow, at least.
For perspective, February's loss on the Dow was 1120.19 points.
March saw a decline of 926.09.
In October the Dow lost 1341.55 points.
So far this month, the Dow is lower by 1945.58 points, making the October through December (November's gain was 426.12 points) period worse than the February-March spasm.
The NASDAQ is down 16.7% since August 29. WTI Crude was seen at $49.45 per barrel, the lowest price since September, 2017.
Throughout the years of experimental financial chicanery of QE and ZIRP, and NIRP (negative interest rate policy) by the Federal Reserve and fellow central bankers following the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007-09, the question was always, "how is this all going to end?"
Now, we have the answer, firsthand, and, as many predicted, it's not pretty and likely to get worse.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
At the Close, Monday, December 17, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,592.98, -507.53 (-2.11%)
NASDAQ: 6,753.73, -156.93 (-2.27%)
S&P 500: 2,545.94, -54.01 (-2.08%)
NYSE Composite: 11,532.12, -223.27 (-1.90%)
According to Dow Jones Market Data, the S&P 500 closed at its lowest level since October of 2017, the NASDAQ finished at its lowest since November of 2017, while the Dow closed at lowest level since March 23. Only a rally in the final 15 minutes of trading kept the Dow from closing at its lowest level of the year.
The Dow had plunged as low as 23,456.8 with just minutes to the closing bell, but short-covering boosted the industrials more than 100 points in the final minutes of trading. Not that it matters very much, but the closing low for the year was 23,533.20. Prior to that, the Dow closed at a low of 23,271.28 on November 15, 2017.
Both of those levels are likely to be subsumed, as the stock rout about to be hit with another dose of reality. Trumping anticipation, the Fed meeting which ends Wednesday afternoon at 2:00 pm ET, is almost certain to include a 25 basis point raise to the federal funds rate. On Friday, the federal government, unable to reach a suitable compromise on President Trump's border wall, will go into a partial shutdown.
Neither event - especially the federal shutdown - is of the earth-shattering variety, but they come at a very inopportune time for the market, which is struggling to find any good news upon which to hang a rally.
Europe is either in flames (France), in a bear market (Germany), or about to enter a recession thanks to the end of the ECB's brand of QE. Beyond that, there's the uncertainty of an orderly departure from the EU by Great Britain. The official date for Britain to separate itself from the EU is March, but there have been rumblings of an extension and more than just a little unrest from the island nation to the continent concerning what effect a member country departing will have on the solidarity of remaining members.
In China and Japan, an economic slowdown is already well underway, so it appears that the sellers have reason enough to move away from stocks, and rapidly. There are just too many negatives floating around geopolitical and financial circles for all of them to be resolved in the near term. Rather, these worries turn into realities which the market doesn't appreciate, such as the actual imposition of tariffs rather than mere rumors and threats of them. The same goes for the Fed's upcoming rate hike and the government shutdown. It's become a market that's twisted the old saw into "sell the rumor, sell the news." Everything is on sale and buyers have been heading to the sidelines beginning in February. Since October, the pace has picked up noticeably, but December threatens to be the worst month of the year for the Dow, at least.
For perspective, February's loss on the Dow was 1120.19 points.
March saw a decline of 926.09.
In October the Dow lost 1341.55 points.
So far this month, the Dow is lower by 1945.58 points, making the October through December (November's gain was 426.12 points) period worse than the February-March spasm.
The NASDAQ is down 16.7% since August 29. WTI Crude was seen at $49.45 per barrel, the lowest price since September, 2017.
Throughout the years of experimental financial chicanery of QE and ZIRP, and NIRP (negative interest rate policy) by the Federal Reserve and fellow central bankers following the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007-09, the question was always, "how is this all going to end?"
Now, we have the answer, firsthand, and, as many predicted, it's not pretty and likely to get worse.
Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
12/3/18 | 25,826.43 | +287.97 | +287.97 |
12/4/18 | 25,027.07 | -799.36 | -511.39 |
12/6/18 | 24,947.67 | -79.40 | -590.79 |
12/7/18 | 24,388.95 | -558.72 | -1149.51 |
12/10/18 | 24,423.26 | +34.31 | -1115.20 |
12/11/18 | 24,370.24 | -53.02 | -1168.22 |
12/12/18 | 24,527.27 | +157.03 | -1011.19 |
12/13/18 | 24,597.38 | +70.11 | -941.08 |
12/14/18 | 24,100.51 | -496.87 | -1437.95 |
12/17/18 | 23,592.98 | -507.53 | -1945.58 |
At the Close, Monday, December 17, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,592.98, -507.53 (-2.11%)
NASDAQ: 6,753.73, -156.93 (-2.27%)
S&P 500: 2,545.94, -54.01 (-2.08%)
NYSE Composite: 11,532.12, -223.27 (-1.90%)
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Fed Chair Powell Currys Favor With Wall Street: Rates "Just Below" Neutral
In what can only be considered an obvious and well-intentioned nod to Wall Street, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, speaking at the prestigious Economic Club of New York, noted that the federal funds rate is "just below" the level that economists consider neutral, neither encouraging risk nor dissuading it.
Powell's remarks sparked a rally on Wall Street that was the best in eight months, and probably put to rest any ideas investors may have had of a bear market developing in stocks.
The Fed chairman is no doubt a stock picker and investor himself, so he's well aware of the kind of volatility that has been plaguing stocks in recent weeks. He also may have taken a bit of a queue from President Trump, who has been consistently complaining about the pace of recent Fed rate hikes.
What this means for interest rates is likely that the Fed will go ahead, as expected, and raise the federal funds and prime rates once more in December, and then take a wait-and-see approach going forward. The Fed had been expected to raise rates three more times in 2019, though that approach was largely nixed by Powell's dovish remarks today.
At the most, the Fed might raise rates twice in the coming year, though once or none at all might be closer to the mark. Fueled by easy money policies the past ten years, the stock market, being a key cog in the US economy, would be hard set if low lending rates were curtailed further.
While Wall Street cheered the development, the biggest winners should be consumers, who are addicted to credit and have seen credit card interest rates soar over the past two years as the Fed, like clockwork every quarter, raised rates to which many credit accounts are tied. A cessation of the rate hikes will come as a relief to anybody carrying a credit card balance.
Combined with gains from Monday and Tuesday, today's positive close pushed the Dow back into the green for the month, and the year.
Who said the Fed doesn't pay attention to the stock market?
Dow Jones Industrial Average November Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, November 28, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,366.43, +617.70 (+2.50%)
NASDAQ: 7,291.59, +208.89 (+2.95%)
S&P 500: 2,743.79, +61.62 (+2.30%)
NYSE Composite: 12,417.63, +229.56 (+1.88%)
Powell's remarks sparked a rally on Wall Street that was the best in eight months, and probably put to rest any ideas investors may have had of a bear market developing in stocks.
The Fed chairman is no doubt a stock picker and investor himself, so he's well aware of the kind of volatility that has been plaguing stocks in recent weeks. He also may have taken a bit of a queue from President Trump, who has been consistently complaining about the pace of recent Fed rate hikes.
What this means for interest rates is likely that the Fed will go ahead, as expected, and raise the federal funds and prime rates once more in December, and then take a wait-and-see approach going forward. The Fed had been expected to raise rates three more times in 2019, though that approach was largely nixed by Powell's dovish remarks today.
At the most, the Fed might raise rates twice in the coming year, though once or none at all might be closer to the mark. Fueled by easy money policies the past ten years, the stock market, being a key cog in the US economy, would be hard set if low lending rates were curtailed further.
While Wall Street cheered the development, the biggest winners should be consumers, who are addicted to credit and have seen credit card interest rates soar over the past two years as the Fed, like clockwork every quarter, raised rates to which many credit accounts are tied. A cessation of the rate hikes will come as a relief to anybody carrying a credit card balance.
Combined with gains from Monday and Tuesday, today's positive close pushed the Dow back into the green for the month, and the year.
Who said the Fed doesn't pay attention to the stock market?
Dow Jones Industrial Average November Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
11/1/18 | 25,380.74 | +264.98 | +264.98 |
11/2/18 | 25,270.83 | -109.91 | +155.07 |
11/5/18 | 25,461.70 | +190.87 | +345.94 |
11/6/18 | 25,635.01 | +173.31 | +519.25 |
11/7/18 | 26,180.30 | +545.29 | +1064.54 |
11/8/18 | 26,191.22 | +10.92 | +1075.46 |
11/9/18 | 25,989.30 | -201.92 | +873.54 |
11/12/18 | 25,387.18 | -602.12 | +271.42 |
11/13/18 | 25,286.49 | -100.69 | +170.27 |
11/14/18 | 25,080.50 | -205.99 | -35.72 |
11/15/18 | 25,289.27 | +208.77 | +173.05 |
11/16/18 | 25,413.22 | +123.95 | +297.00 |
11/19/18 | 25,017.44 | -395.78 | -98.78 |
11/20/18 | 24,465.64 | -551.80 | -650.58 |
11/21/18 | 24,464.69 | -0.95 | -651.53 |
11/23/18 | 24,285.95 | -178.74 | -830.27 |
11/26/18 | 24,640.24 | +354.29 | -475.98 |
11/27/18 | 24,748.73 | +108.49 | -367.49 |
11/28/18 | 25,366.43 | +617.70 | +250.21 |
At the Close, Wednesday, November 28, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,366.43, +617.70 (+2.50%)
NASDAQ: 7,291.59, +208.89 (+2.95%)
S&P 500: 2,743.79, +61.62 (+2.30%)
NYSE Composite: 12,417.63, +229.56 (+1.88%)
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
Monday's Big Bounce Sets Up For Extended Short-Term Rally, Continued Volatility
After last week's bloodletting, it was no surprise that bargain hunters emerged to open the week's trading, sending the markets through the roof right at the open and holding gains throughout the session.
With a four percent loss booked for the prior week, Monday's 1.5-2.0% gains amount to little more than a technical snap-back rally off some very fresh and very dangerous new lows. Early indications from brisk Black Friday weekend sales were the most likely catalyst for Cyber Monday buying, a reflection of what may be considered a robust economy backed by consumers with full wallets and plenty of room to spare on credit cards.
While the Fed has been tightening over the past two years, banks, credit card operations, and shadow banking entities have been cranking up the credit spigots, loosening lending standards and making more money available via an array of personal loans, small business offerings, refinancing, consolidations and other assorted credit vehicles. There certainly is no shortage of easy money in the consumer and small business space, nor in the higher levels of corporate finance.
Add to the consumer and business conditions wide-open spending by governments at all levels and the US economy appears robust, dynamic and unflinching. Never mind that the Fed is threatening to take away the punch bowl. There are more than enough willing participants and suppliers of easy money, many of them spring the mix with added enticements.
There are crosswinds in the capital markets which lead to wild swings in every manner of asset. The flavor of the day may change, but the underlying theme of easy money has not yet left the room. America is in a period that rivals the roaring twenties, the nifty sixties and even the greed-is-good nineties.
The party goes on until the elixir of fast, easy money is taken away, and that's not happening any time soon. Expect even more volatility through the holidays and into the new year.
Dow Jones Industrial Average November Scorecard:
At the Close, Monday, December 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,640.24, +354.29 (+1.46%)
NASDAQ: 7,081.85, +142.87 (+2.06%)
S&P 500: 2,673.45, +40.89 (+1.55%)
NYSE Composite: 12,181.60, +145.36 (+1.21%)
With a four percent loss booked for the prior week, Monday's 1.5-2.0% gains amount to little more than a technical snap-back rally off some very fresh and very dangerous new lows. Early indications from brisk Black Friday weekend sales were the most likely catalyst for Cyber Monday buying, a reflection of what may be considered a robust economy backed by consumers with full wallets and plenty of room to spare on credit cards.
While the Fed has been tightening over the past two years, banks, credit card operations, and shadow banking entities have been cranking up the credit spigots, loosening lending standards and making more money available via an array of personal loans, small business offerings, refinancing, consolidations and other assorted credit vehicles. There certainly is no shortage of easy money in the consumer and small business space, nor in the higher levels of corporate finance.
Add to the consumer and business conditions wide-open spending by governments at all levels and the US economy appears robust, dynamic and unflinching. Never mind that the Fed is threatening to take away the punch bowl. There are more than enough willing participants and suppliers of easy money, many of them spring the mix with added enticements.
There are crosswinds in the capital markets which lead to wild swings in every manner of asset. The flavor of the day may change, but the underlying theme of easy money has not yet left the room. America is in a period that rivals the roaring twenties, the nifty sixties and even the greed-is-good nineties.
The party goes on until the elixir of fast, easy money is taken away, and that's not happening any time soon. Expect even more volatility through the holidays and into the new year.
Dow Jones Industrial Average November Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
11/1/18 | 25,380.74 | +264.98 | +264.98 |
11/2/18 | 25,270.83 | -109.91 | +155.07 |
11/5/18 | 25,461.70 | +190.87 | +345.94 |
11/6/18 | 25,635.01 | +173.31 | +519.25 |
11/7/18 | 26,180.30 | +545.29 | +1064.54 |
11/8/18 | 26,191.22 | +10.92 | +1075.46 |
11/9/18 | 25,989.30 | -201.92 | +873.54 |
11/12/18 | 25,387.18 | -602.12 | +271.42 |
11/13/18 | 25,286.49 | -100.69 | +170.27 |
11/14/18 | 25,080.50 | -205.99 | -35.72 |
11/15/18 | 25,289.27 | +208.77 | +173.05 |
11/16/18 | 25,413.22 | +123.95 | +297.00 |
11/19/18 | 25,017.44 | -395.78 | -98.78 |
11/20/18 | 24,465.64 | -551.80 | -650.58 |
11/21/18 | 24,464.69 | -0.95 | -651.53 |
11/23/18 | 24,285.95 | -178.74 | -830.27 |
11/26/18 | 24,640.24 | +354.29 | -475.98 |
At the Close, Monday, December 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,640.24, +354.29 (+1.46%)
NASDAQ: 7,081.85, +142.87 (+2.06%)
S&P 500: 2,673.45, +40.89 (+1.55%)
NYSE Composite: 12,181.60, +145.36 (+1.21%)
Labels:
capital,
consumer credit,
easy money,
Federal Reserve System
Sunday, October 14, 2018
Weekend Wrap: Stocks Suffer Worst Week Since February As Earnings Arrive
What should be front of mind for investors this weekend and heading into the third trading week of the fourth quarter is whether the massive slip-sliding of the past week was, a) rehearsal for a full blown bear market; b) beginnings of a normal correction; or, c) a buying opportunity.
Pessimists amongst us will surely side with answer (a), noting that the bull market, now the longest ever, has to come to an end at some point, and that the various factors leading to its demise are obvious (rising interest rates, global contagion, trade and tariff paroxysm, currency confusion and convulsion).
Realists might prefer answer (b), because inflation is still tame, jobs are plentiful, unemployment is low, and interest rates are still below historical averages.
Optimists obviously will go with answer (c) because, well, you know, the market always goes up and there's money to be made.
There's a very good chance that the optimists are over-optimistic after US markets nose-dived through the worst week since February, wiping out almost all third quarter gains, leaving investors with the kind of feeling one gets about an hour after eating at McDonald's (if you've never done it, don't start now), a blase, indecisive feeling in the pit of one's stomach, as though eating was not what one should have done. In this case, that feeling may have come on Wednesday or Thursday, with Friday providing something of an Alka-Seltzer relief rally.
Even with the sizable gains to close out the week, all of the major averages suffered badly, and the condition may only be at a beginning. It would be difficult to pinpoint an exact culprit for the crime of this week's market turbulence, though the Federal Reserve is always a convenient scapegoat. Just ask President Trump, who said that the esteemed central bankers had gone crazy.
While adding 25 basis points to the federal funds rate every quarter - especially after they'd been affixed to near-zero for seven years - may not exactly define madness, there are those (such as Money Daily) who believe the Fed has overstepped its escape from years of the other madness now known as saving the global financial system from the ruinous aspects of the 2008-09 collapse.
Certainly, credit is excessive, especially the funding of corporate stock buybacks, which have reached a crescendo this annum, with more than a trillion dollars worth of corporate malinvestment on tap. The federal government has binged on debt to ungodly proportions and is getting even worse, while your average, everyday consumer has also ratcheted up the mortgage, student loan, car payment, and credit card bills to historic heights.
One could posit the expression, "nothing says white trash like a blue tarp" has an ancillary phrase in, "nothing says bubble like a new car in front of a new house with kids in college wearing new shoes."
Have we cumulatively reached the end of the road? Probably not. But, if last week's savviest stock sellers were on their marks, the road is likely to be a bumpy one through to the end of the year.
What was witnessed not just in US markets but around the world last week raised a fair share of eyebrows and lowered even more expectations. With earnings cranking up this coming week if will be most instructive to see which companies are punished, which ones prevail, and which ones offer excuses and/or outlooks suggesting more trouble ahead.
There's a lot of money sloshing around, and none of it is without a debt burden attached to it. There will be winners and losers in the fourth quarter, and, from the looks of it, tech, financials, and consumer stocks may tend to pull all the other sectors down with them.
Or, it just could be a buying opportunity, just five percent off of all-time highs, a dubious prospect.
Dow Jones Industrial Average October Scorecard:
At the Close, Friday, October 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,339.99, +287.16 (+1.15%)
NASDAQ: 7,496.89, +167.83 (+2.29%)
S&P 500: 2,767.13, +38.76 (+1.42%)
NYSE Composite: 12,439.42, +89.89 (+0.73%)
For the Week:
Dow: -1107.06 (-4.19%)
NASDAQ: -291.55 (-3.74%)
S&P 500: -118.44 (-4.10%)
NYSE Composite: -552.53 (-4.25%)
Pessimists amongst us will surely side with answer (a), noting that the bull market, now the longest ever, has to come to an end at some point, and that the various factors leading to its demise are obvious (rising interest rates, global contagion, trade and tariff paroxysm, currency confusion and convulsion).
Realists might prefer answer (b), because inflation is still tame, jobs are plentiful, unemployment is low, and interest rates are still below historical averages.
Optimists obviously will go with answer (c) because, well, you know, the market always goes up and there's money to be made.
There's a very good chance that the optimists are over-optimistic after US markets nose-dived through the worst week since February, wiping out almost all third quarter gains, leaving investors with the kind of feeling one gets about an hour after eating at McDonald's (if you've never done it, don't start now), a blase, indecisive feeling in the pit of one's stomach, as though eating was not what one should have done. In this case, that feeling may have come on Wednesday or Thursday, with Friday providing something of an Alka-Seltzer relief rally.
Even with the sizable gains to close out the week, all of the major averages suffered badly, and the condition may only be at a beginning. It would be difficult to pinpoint an exact culprit for the crime of this week's market turbulence, though the Federal Reserve is always a convenient scapegoat. Just ask President Trump, who said that the esteemed central bankers had gone crazy.
While adding 25 basis points to the federal funds rate every quarter - especially after they'd been affixed to near-zero for seven years - may not exactly define madness, there are those (such as Money Daily) who believe the Fed has overstepped its escape from years of the other madness now known as saving the global financial system from the ruinous aspects of the 2008-09 collapse.
Certainly, credit is excessive, especially the funding of corporate stock buybacks, which have reached a crescendo this annum, with more than a trillion dollars worth of corporate malinvestment on tap. The federal government has binged on debt to ungodly proportions and is getting even worse, while your average, everyday consumer has also ratcheted up the mortgage, student loan, car payment, and credit card bills to historic heights.
One could posit the expression, "nothing says white trash like a blue tarp" has an ancillary phrase in, "nothing says bubble like a new car in front of a new house with kids in college wearing new shoes."
Have we cumulatively reached the end of the road? Probably not. But, if last week's savviest stock sellers were on their marks, the road is likely to be a bumpy one through to the end of the year.
What was witnessed not just in US markets but around the world last week raised a fair share of eyebrows and lowered even more expectations. With earnings cranking up this coming week if will be most instructive to see which companies are punished, which ones prevail, and which ones offer excuses and/or outlooks suggesting more trouble ahead.
There's a lot of money sloshing around, and none of it is without a debt burden attached to it. There will be winners and losers in the fourth quarter, and, from the looks of it, tech, financials, and consumer stocks may tend to pull all the other sectors down with them.
Or, it just could be a buying opportunity, just five percent off of all-time highs, a dubious prospect.
Dow Jones Industrial Average October Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
10/1/18 | 26,651.21 | +192.90 | +192.90 |
10/2/18 | 26,773.94 | +122.73 | +315.63 |
10/3/18 | 26,828.39 | +54.45 | +370.08 |
10/4/18 | 26,627.48 | -200.91 | +169.17 |
10/5/18 | 26,447.05 | -180.43 | -11.26 |
10/8/18 | 26,486.78 | +39.73 | +28.47 |
10/9/18 | 26,430.57 | -56.21 | -27.74 |
10/10/18 | 25,598.74 | -831.83 | -859.57 |
10/11/18 | 25,052.83 | -545.91 | -1405.48 |
10/12/18 | 25,339.99 | +287.16 | -1118.32 |
At the Close, Friday, October 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,339.99, +287.16 (+1.15%)
NASDAQ: 7,496.89, +167.83 (+2.29%)
S&P 500: 2,767.13, +38.76 (+1.42%)
NYSE Composite: 12,439.42, +89.89 (+0.73%)
For the Week:
Dow: -1107.06 (-4.19%)
NASDAQ: -291.55 (-3.74%)
S&P 500: -118.44 (-4.10%)
NYSE Composite: -552.53 (-4.25%)
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Fed Raises Rates, Stocks Tank, Regular People Get Squeezed
Sometimes, there's just too much of a good thing.
Like booze, or sex, or food, or federal funds interest rate increases.
Yes, one of those is different from the others, but, if you're a big brain at the Federal Reserve, maybe not. People who live for an love money might have the same kind of reactions ordinary people have to normal stimuli from money-induced pleasure.
Keeping interest rates at near zero for such a long time, from 2008 to 2015, had to be hard on people at the Fed. There was a lot of stress during that time, and the FOMC governors and presidents of the regional banking hubs had to make up for their lack of money pleasure (ZIRP) by printing oodles of dollars out of thin air (QE). It was an artificial high, a necessary evil to some, and everybody knew it would have to come to an end.
Nothing brings a smile to the face of a banker, central or otherwise, than interest rate increases. It means more money in their silk-lined pockets.
Ordinary humans may not be able to comprehend the exhilaration of a 0.25% increase in the federal funds rate, but central bankers do. They revel in it. Imagine, with one simple policy announcement, making an extra $2.5 billion per year. That's real excitement. And that's just the interest on a trillion dollars. The Fed is handling one heck of a lot more than just a didly trillion. By golly, that's just pocket change.
Rest assured, there are a lot of bemused smiles at the Fed this afternoon. Probably some good old back-slapping, toasting with fine wine, and smoking of expensive cigars, such is the wont of the central banking elite. They've made themselves a mighty handy profit today, and you're paying for it, on your credit cards, mortgages, personal loans, car loans and leases and just about every other negotiable debt instrument you can think of. Business is paying the piper as well. In spades.
So, does the market reaction to the Fed's scheme surprise anybody? Nope. Higher interest rates are always bad for consumers, especially those carrying debt, which is just about everybody these days.
The major indices were cruising along with decent gains until the Fed's announcement at 2:00 pm EDT. After a pause and a slight rise, stocks began to slip. From it's intra-day peak at 2:15 pm, the Dow shed 231 points, the NASDAQ lost 78 points. The move was significant. The Dow has posted losses three days in a row. Correlation, in this case, seems to imply causation.
Wall Street investors aren't immune to the interest rate malaise. They know where their bread is buttered and some surely shifted some dough out of stocks and into bonds, or cash, or art, or expensive cars.
The Fed's insistence on raising rates every quarter has gotten to be a pretty definable pattern by now, but some people are beginning to question when it's all going to end and also, how it's going to end.
Will the stock market and all those juicy profits go down in flames? Hard to say, but a 3.10% yield on a ten-year treasury note ($31,000 a year risk free on a $1,000,000 investment) isn't hard to take, and, in the world of rich people with millions of dollars, yen, or euros to throw around, many will take it.
The rich just got a little bit richer. The poor didn't get any poorer, but the people in the middle (debtors) did.
Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, September 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,385.28, -106.93 (-0.40%)
NASDAQ: 7,990.37, -17.10 (-0.21%)
S&P 500: 2,905.97, -9.59 (-0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 13,102.68, -57.92 (-0.44%)
Like booze, or sex, or food, or federal funds interest rate increases.
Yes, one of those is different from the others, but, if you're a big brain at the Federal Reserve, maybe not. People who live for an love money might have the same kind of reactions ordinary people have to normal stimuli from money-induced pleasure.
Keeping interest rates at near zero for such a long time, from 2008 to 2015, had to be hard on people at the Fed. There was a lot of stress during that time, and the FOMC governors and presidents of the regional banking hubs had to make up for their lack of money pleasure (ZIRP) by printing oodles of dollars out of thin air (QE). It was an artificial high, a necessary evil to some, and everybody knew it would have to come to an end.
Nothing brings a smile to the face of a banker, central or otherwise, than interest rate increases. It means more money in their silk-lined pockets.
Ordinary humans may not be able to comprehend the exhilaration of a 0.25% increase in the federal funds rate, but central bankers do. They revel in it. Imagine, with one simple policy announcement, making an extra $2.5 billion per year. That's real excitement. And that's just the interest on a trillion dollars. The Fed is handling one heck of a lot more than just a didly trillion. By golly, that's just pocket change.
Rest assured, there are a lot of bemused smiles at the Fed this afternoon. Probably some good old back-slapping, toasting with fine wine, and smoking of expensive cigars, such is the wont of the central banking elite. They've made themselves a mighty handy profit today, and you're paying for it, on your credit cards, mortgages, personal loans, car loans and leases and just about every other negotiable debt instrument you can think of. Business is paying the piper as well. In spades.
So, does the market reaction to the Fed's scheme surprise anybody? Nope. Higher interest rates are always bad for consumers, especially those carrying debt, which is just about everybody these days.
The major indices were cruising along with decent gains until the Fed's announcement at 2:00 pm EDT. After a pause and a slight rise, stocks began to slip. From it's intra-day peak at 2:15 pm, the Dow shed 231 points, the NASDAQ lost 78 points. The move was significant. The Dow has posted losses three days in a row. Correlation, in this case, seems to imply causation.
Wall Street investors aren't immune to the interest rate malaise. They know where their bread is buttered and some surely shifted some dough out of stocks and into bonds, or cash, or art, or expensive cars.
The Fed's insistence on raising rates every quarter has gotten to be a pretty definable pattern by now, but some people are beginning to question when it's all going to end and also, how it's going to end.
Will the stock market and all those juicy profits go down in flames? Hard to say, but a 3.10% yield on a ten-year treasury note ($31,000 a year risk free on a $1,000,000 investment) isn't hard to take, and, in the world of rich people with millions of dollars, yen, or euros to throw around, many will take it.
The rich just got a little bit richer. The poor didn't get any poorer, but the people in the middle (debtors) did.
Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
9/4/18 | 25,952.48 | -12.34 | -12.34 |
9/5/18 | 25,974.99 | +22.51 | +10.17 |
9/6/18 | 25,995.87 | +20.88 | +31.05 |
9/7/18 | 25,916.54 | -79.33 | -48.28 |
9/10/18 | 25,857.07 | -59.47 | -107.75 |
9/11/18 | 25,971.06 | +113.99 | +6.24 |
9/12/18 | 25,998.92 | +27.86 | +34.10 |
9/13/18 | 26,145.99 | +147.07 | +181.17 |
9/14/18 | 26,154.67 | +8.68 | +189.85 |
9/17/18 | 26,062.12 | -92.55 | +97.30 |
9/18/18 | 26,246.96 | +184.84 | +282.14 |
9/19/18 | 26,405.76 | +158.80 | +440.94 |
9/20/18 | 26,656.98 | +251.22 | +692.16 |
9/21/18 | 26,743.50 | +86.52 | +778.68 |
9/24/18 | 26,562.05 | -181.45 | +597.23 |
9/25/18 | 26,492.21 | -69.84 | +527.39 |
9/26/18 | 26,385.28 | -106.93 | +420.46 |
At the Close, Wednesday, September 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,385.28, -106.93 (-0.40%)
NASDAQ: 7,990.37, -17.10 (-0.21%)
S&P 500: 2,905.97, -9.59 (-0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 13,102.68, -57.92 (-0.44%)
Sunday, June 24, 2018
Weekend Wrap: Dow Ends Losing Streak at 8, Week Was Rough For Stocks
In what could easily bee seen as a week of transition - either from fantasy to reality or speculation to fundamental investing - all of the major averages lost value, led by the Dow Industrials, which suffered its worst weekly loss (-2.03%) since mid-March.
Since the day before the Fed raised rates on June 13, the Dow had been in a free-fall, losing 860 points over a span of eight trading sessions, before receiving on Friday to post a somewhat insignificant, symbolic gain. It was almost as though the Dow Industrials were collectively saying, "we're OK, we're still here, don't worry," while all along the smart money was leaving in droves for either safety in bonds, higher yields in the risky NASDAQ, or the venerable hideout in the Hamptons for the summer. In some cases, all three avenues of escape were likely employed.
Not that any of them did anybody any good, as the NASDAQ took its first weekly spill in the past five and bonds vacillated around the unchanged mark for the week. The 10-year-note closed out the week at 2.90%, well below any expectations from the runaway inflation and "solid" economy promoted by the Federal Reserve. If inflation and the economy were truly getting away, bonds would surely reflect the condition, but they are instead contracting, with the yield curve continuing to point toward inversion, and, if not a complete recession within the next 6 months to two years, at least a slowdown or moderation.
Neither result would be particularly beneficial to the interests of the Fed, which has to try to keep a straight face while propagandizing the condition of the economy. Spreads on the 2s-30s contracted one basis point on the week, to 48; the 2s-10s dropped two basis points to 34, while the 5s-30s expanded from 25 to 27 basis points.
After last Friday's smackdown, precious metals saw little change over the course of the week, though silver (16.45) fared better than gold (1271.10). Persistent calls for a breakout among the prominent "bug" pundits have produced nothing but a series of short-term run-ups followed by timely price busts.
Oil was the place to be on Friday, when OPEC failed to announce expected production increases. On Saturday, however, with markets closed, OPEC and a number of oil-producing countries such as Russia, Mexico and Kazakhstan, agreed to share an increase of a million barrels per day.
How the increases would be shared was not immediately disclosed, but, the Saturday announcement is sure to snap back against the 3.74 (+5.71%) gain on Friday that pushed the price of WTI crude oil to $69.28 per barrel.
With summer officially arriving on Thursday (June 21), the pessimistic view of stocks could begin to prevail, as the adage of "sell in May" might more aptly be applied as "swoon in June."
The Dow slipped back to a point where it is more than 2000 points below the January high (26,616.71, January 26), and prospects going forward - as a drop-off in earnings is expected over the next three quarters - are not yet dire, though they may be characterized as "challenging."
A powerful (and very long) article on fiat money, gold, silver, and cryptocurrencies by former member of the US House of Representatives and candidate for president, Ron Paul, is on the Mises Institute website, here.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
At the Close, Friday, June 22, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,580.89, +119.19 (+0.49%)
NASDAQ: 7,692.82, -20.14 (-0.26%)
S&P 500: 2,754.88, +5.12 (+0.19%)
NYSE Composite: 12,639.57, +79.34 (+0.63%)
For the Week:
Dow: -509.59 (-2.03%)
NASDAQ: -53.56 (-0.69%)
S&P 500: -24.78 (-0.89%)
NYSE Composite: -95.07 (-0.75%)
Since the day before the Fed raised rates on June 13, the Dow had been in a free-fall, losing 860 points over a span of eight trading sessions, before receiving on Friday to post a somewhat insignificant, symbolic gain. It was almost as though the Dow Industrials were collectively saying, "we're OK, we're still here, don't worry," while all along the smart money was leaving in droves for either safety in bonds, higher yields in the risky NASDAQ, or the venerable hideout in the Hamptons for the summer. In some cases, all three avenues of escape were likely employed.
Not that any of them did anybody any good, as the NASDAQ took its first weekly spill in the past five and bonds vacillated around the unchanged mark for the week. The 10-year-note closed out the week at 2.90%, well below any expectations from the runaway inflation and "solid" economy promoted by the Federal Reserve. If inflation and the economy were truly getting away, bonds would surely reflect the condition, but they are instead contracting, with the yield curve continuing to point toward inversion, and, if not a complete recession within the next 6 months to two years, at least a slowdown or moderation.
Neither result would be particularly beneficial to the interests of the Fed, which has to try to keep a straight face while propagandizing the condition of the economy. Spreads on the 2s-30s contracted one basis point on the week, to 48; the 2s-10s dropped two basis points to 34, while the 5s-30s expanded from 25 to 27 basis points.
After last Friday's smackdown, precious metals saw little change over the course of the week, though silver (16.45) fared better than gold (1271.10). Persistent calls for a breakout among the prominent "bug" pundits have produced nothing but a series of short-term run-ups followed by timely price busts.
Oil was the place to be on Friday, when OPEC failed to announce expected production increases. On Saturday, however, with markets closed, OPEC and a number of oil-producing countries such as Russia, Mexico and Kazakhstan, agreed to share an increase of a million barrels per day.
How the increases would be shared was not immediately disclosed, but, the Saturday announcement is sure to snap back against the 3.74 (+5.71%) gain on Friday that pushed the price of WTI crude oil to $69.28 per barrel.
With summer officially arriving on Thursday (June 21), the pessimistic view of stocks could begin to prevail, as the adage of "sell in May" might more aptly be applied as "swoon in June."
The Dow slipped back to a point where it is more than 2000 points below the January high (26,616.71, January 26), and prospects going forward - as a drop-off in earnings is expected over the next three quarters - are not yet dire, though they may be characterized as "challenging."
A powerful (and very long) article on fiat money, gold, silver, and cryptocurrencies by former member of the US House of Representatives and candidate for president, Ron Paul, is on the Mises Institute website, here.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
6/1/18 | 24,635.21 | +219.37 | +219.37 |
6/4/18 | 24,813.69 | +178.48 | +397.85 |
6/5/18 | 24,799.98 | -13.71 | +384.14 |
6/6/18 | 25,146.39 | +346.41 | +730.55 |
6/7/18 | 25,241.41 | +95.02 | +825.57 |
6/8/18 | 25,316.53 | +75.12 | +900.69 |
6/11/18 | 25,322.31 | +5.78 | +906.47 |
6/12/18 | 25,320.73 | -1.58 | +904.89 |
6/13/18 | 25,201.20 | -119.53 | +785.36 |
6/14/18 | 25,175.31 | -25.89 | +759.47 |
6/15/18 | 25,090.48 | -84.83 | +674.64 |
6/18/18 | 24,987.47 | -103.01 | +571.63 |
6/19/18 | 24,700.21 | -287.26 | +284.37 |
6/20/18 | 24,657.80 | -42.41 | +241.96 |
6/21/18 | 24,461.70 | -196.10 | +45.86 |
6/22/18 | 24,580.89 | +119.19 | +165.05 |
At the Close, Friday, June 22, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,580.89, +119.19 (+0.49%)
NASDAQ: 7,692.82, -20.14 (-0.26%)
S&P 500: 2,754.88, +5.12 (+0.19%)
NYSE Composite: 12,639.57, +79.34 (+0.63%)
For the Week:
Dow: -509.59 (-2.03%)
NASDAQ: -53.56 (-0.69%)
S&P 500: -24.78 (-0.89%)
NYSE Composite: -95.07 (-0.75%)
Labels:
10-year note,
bonds,
Fed,
Federal Reserve System,
interest rates,
oil,
treasury curve,
WTI,
WTI crude
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Stocks Slide After FOMC Raises Federal Funds Rate
As was widely expected, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the Federal Reserve issued a policy directive to increase the federal funds rate to 1.75-2.00%, marking the seventh rate hike in the current cycle, bringing interest rates further toward normalcy while inching the economy closer to recession.
As every recession one the past 40 years has at least partially been aided by Fed rate increases, this time is no different, as the FOMC issued the second 25 basis point increase of the year, with prospects of another 50 basis point increase through the end of the year.
Conjecture has been steady that the Fed would hike rates either three or four times in 2018. Today's hawkish tone indicated that four equal 25 basis point increases is the most likely outcome, with 25 basis point hikes in September and December.
Stocks were wary going into the June meeting, which concluded today at 2:00 pm EDT and was followed by a press briefing from Fed Chairman Jay Powell, who did little to allay fears that the Fed would continue its reckless path in the face of what can best be called tepid economic data.
After the first rate hike in February, stocks nosedived, and they did a prelude to an encore performance after the announcement, though the losses were contained and ganged into the final few minutes of trading, the Dow suffering the biggest percentage decline and a nearly 120-point selloff.
The bond market took the news in stride, with the 10-year note barely budging, continuing to nose around the 3.00% yield level. Silver was the unanimous winner of the day, as gold's little sister initially fell, but then shot up 25 cents, ending the day one $17.00 the ounce for the first time since mid-April.
What lies ahead for markets the remainder of the week is an assessment of inflation (both CPI and PPI were up sharply in the most recent disclosures) and the overall economy. With trade wars looming larger than ever and productivity stalled, there exists a very good chance that a recession could be in the cards within the next six to 12 months, while scores of analysts weigh in on the dubious nature of the government's official gauges of inflation, unemployment and GDP.
Thursday's trade promises to be choppy, as sentiment is leaning toward being equally split between a bullish and bearish stance on stocks. Valuations maintain their loftiness, but money has to flow somewhere, and there are still plenty of fund managers looking for further gains this year.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, June 13, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,201.20, -119.53 (-0.47%)
NASDAQ: 7,695.70, -8.09 (-0.11%)
S&P 500: 2,775.63, -11.22 (-0.40%)
NYSE Composite: 12,785.75, -58.96 (-0.46%)
As every recession one the past 40 years has at least partially been aided by Fed rate increases, this time is no different, as the FOMC issued the second 25 basis point increase of the year, with prospects of another 50 basis point increase through the end of the year.
Conjecture has been steady that the Fed would hike rates either three or four times in 2018. Today's hawkish tone indicated that four equal 25 basis point increases is the most likely outcome, with 25 basis point hikes in September and December.
Stocks were wary going into the June meeting, which concluded today at 2:00 pm EDT and was followed by a press briefing from Fed Chairman Jay Powell, who did little to allay fears that the Fed would continue its reckless path in the face of what can best be called tepid economic data.
After the first rate hike in February, stocks nosedived, and they did a prelude to an encore performance after the announcement, though the losses were contained and ganged into the final few minutes of trading, the Dow suffering the biggest percentage decline and a nearly 120-point selloff.
The bond market took the news in stride, with the 10-year note barely budging, continuing to nose around the 3.00% yield level. Silver was the unanimous winner of the day, as gold's little sister initially fell, but then shot up 25 cents, ending the day one $17.00 the ounce for the first time since mid-April.
What lies ahead for markets the remainder of the week is an assessment of inflation (both CPI and PPI were up sharply in the most recent disclosures) and the overall economy. With trade wars looming larger than ever and productivity stalled, there exists a very good chance that a recession could be in the cards within the next six to 12 months, while scores of analysts weigh in on the dubious nature of the government's official gauges of inflation, unemployment and GDP.
Thursday's trade promises to be choppy, as sentiment is leaning toward being equally split between a bullish and bearish stance on stocks. Valuations maintain their loftiness, but money has to flow somewhere, and there are still plenty of fund managers looking for further gains this year.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
6/1/18 | 24,635.21 | +219.37 | +219.37 |
6/4/18 | 24,813.69 | +178.48 | +397.85 |
6/5/18 | 24,799.98 | -13.71 | +384.14 |
6/6/18 | 25,146.39 | +346.41 | +730.55 |
6/7/18 | 25,241.41 | +95.02 | +825.57 |
6/8/18 | 25,316.53 | +75.12 | +900.69 |
6/11/18 | 25,322.31 | +5.78 | +906.47 |
6/12/18 | 25,320.73 | -1.58 | +904.89 |
6/13/18 | 25,201.20 | -119.53 | +785.36 |
At the Close, Wednesday, June 13, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,201.20, -119.53 (-0.47%)
NASDAQ: 7,695.70, -8.09 (-0.11%)
S&P 500: 2,775.63, -11.22 (-0.40%)
NYSE Composite: 12,785.75, -58.96 (-0.46%)
Sunday, April 29, 2018
Weekend Wrap: If This Isn't A Bear Market, Then What Is It?
Is this a bear market?
Nobody wants to admit it, but the patterns are clear on the charts.
In the most recent week, all of the four major averages displayed the same kind of market action throughout, all ending in the red, from the Dow's 0.62% loss to the S&P's narrow, 0.01% decline.
All four are currently trading between their 50 and 200-day moving averages.
It's been three months since the averages made new highs, which just happened to be all-time highs, occurring more than nine years into the second-longest expansion in market history.
Even though the indices are not at correction levels (-10%), they are close, and the argument that a bear market is defined as a 20% drop is begging the question to a large degree. In the case that investors want to wait until stocks are another 10% lower, it will mean that the smartest investors got out early and those remaining will be eventual bag-holders, losing anywhere from 35-60% of their investments as the bear matriculates to lower and lower levels.
Since Dow Theory has confirmed bear market conditions, only the most hopeful or ignorant traders will cling to the belief that those all-time highs made three months ago will be surpassed somewhere down the road. The closing high on the Dow is 26,616.71, made on January 26. A rally of more than 2300 points would be needed to get back to that level.
Does anybody in their right mind see that happening?
Presidents of the various Federal Reserve System regional banks may try to make a case that the economy is strong and still growing, despite evidence to the contrary and their overwhelming desire to raise rates in the face of obviously weakening data.
Friday's first estimate of third quarter GDP might have been the straw that broke the back of the Fed's narrative, coming in below consensus guesses at a depressing 2.3%. When one backs out inflation and considers that almost all of the contributions to GDP - consumer, business, and government - are based on borrowed money, i.e., debt, the real GDP figure might be somewhere closer to -2.3%, consumer and business debt beginning to grow beyond sustainable levels, while government debt is already well past that point at $21 trillion.
There is little doubt that this is indeed a bear market and the flattening of the treasury interest rate curve is more evidence that a recession is just around the corner. Raising rates at this juncture - which the Fed plans on doing again in June - will only exacerbate an already stretched situation and actually contribute to causing the very recession the Fed wishes, publicly, to avoid. In truth, behind closed doors, the Fed presidents and governors of the FOMC know full well that a slowdown is coming, not just for stocks, but for the general economy. That's why they are in such a rush to raise rates: because they need the additional ammunition of being able to reduce rates when the recession comes.
Investors have had sufficient time to reallocate funds to safe havens. Sadly, the bulk of investments are held by pension and other funds, and the bag-holders are going to eventually be the millions of working people whose investments and livelihoods are inextricably tied to the market with little opportunity to allocate funds correctly nor the ability to leave the market completely.
Life has its ups and downs, and its fair share of joy and pain. The joy of the past nine years is about to be eclipsed by the pain of 2019-2022, a bear market and deep recession that will reveal - to some - the true state of the US and global economy, one that has been built on debt, low interest rates, non-stop issuance of fiat currency, stock buybacks, manipulation, and shady practices by the world's central banks.
Forewarned is forearmed.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
At the Close, Friday, April 27, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,311.19, -11.15 (-0.05%)
NASDAQ: 7,119.80, +1.12 (+0.02%)
S&P 500: 2,669.91, +2.97 (+0.11%)
NYSE Composite: 12,594.02, +11.12 (+0.09%)
For the Week:
Dow: -151.75 (-0.62)
NASDAQ: -26.33 (-0.37%)
S&P 500: -0.23 (-0.01%)
NYSE Composite: -13.13 (-0.10%)
Nobody wants to admit it, but the patterns are clear on the charts.
In the most recent week, all of the four major averages displayed the same kind of market action throughout, all ending in the red, from the Dow's 0.62% loss to the S&P's narrow, 0.01% decline.
All four are currently trading between their 50 and 200-day moving averages.
It's been three months since the averages made new highs, which just happened to be all-time highs, occurring more than nine years into the second-longest expansion in market history.
Even though the indices are not at correction levels (-10%), they are close, and the argument that a bear market is defined as a 20% drop is begging the question to a large degree. In the case that investors want to wait until stocks are another 10% lower, it will mean that the smartest investors got out early and those remaining will be eventual bag-holders, losing anywhere from 35-60% of their investments as the bear matriculates to lower and lower levels.
Since Dow Theory has confirmed bear market conditions, only the most hopeful or ignorant traders will cling to the belief that those all-time highs made three months ago will be surpassed somewhere down the road. The closing high on the Dow is 26,616.71, made on January 26. A rally of more than 2300 points would be needed to get back to that level.
Does anybody in their right mind see that happening?
Presidents of the various Federal Reserve System regional banks may try to make a case that the economy is strong and still growing, despite evidence to the contrary and their overwhelming desire to raise rates in the face of obviously weakening data.
Friday's first estimate of third quarter GDP might have been the straw that broke the back of the Fed's narrative, coming in below consensus guesses at a depressing 2.3%. When one backs out inflation and considers that almost all of the contributions to GDP - consumer, business, and government - are based on borrowed money, i.e., debt, the real GDP figure might be somewhere closer to -2.3%, consumer and business debt beginning to grow beyond sustainable levels, while government debt is already well past that point at $21 trillion.
There is little doubt that this is indeed a bear market and the flattening of the treasury interest rate curve is more evidence that a recession is just around the corner. Raising rates at this juncture - which the Fed plans on doing again in June - will only exacerbate an already stretched situation and actually contribute to causing the very recession the Fed wishes, publicly, to avoid. In truth, behind closed doors, the Fed presidents and governors of the FOMC know full well that a slowdown is coming, not just for stocks, but for the general economy. That's why they are in such a rush to raise rates: because they need the additional ammunition of being able to reduce rates when the recession comes.
Investors have had sufficient time to reallocate funds to safe havens. Sadly, the bulk of investments are held by pension and other funds, and the bag-holders are going to eventually be the millions of working people whose investments and livelihoods are inextricably tied to the market with little opportunity to allocate funds correctly nor the ability to leave the market completely.
Life has its ups and downs, and its fair share of joy and pain. The joy of the past nine years is about to be eclipsed by the pain of 2019-2022, a bear market and deep recession that will reveal - to some - the true state of the US and global economy, one that has been built on debt, low interest rates, non-stop issuance of fiat currency, stock buybacks, manipulation, and shady practices by the world's central banks.
Forewarned is forearmed.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
4/2/18 | 23,644.19 | -458.92 | -458.92 |
4/3/18 | 24,033.36 | +389.17 | -69.75 |
4/4/18 | 24,264.30 | +230.94 | +161.19 |
4/5/18 | 24,505.22 | +240.92 | +402.11 |
4/6/18 | 23,932.76 | -572.46 | -170.35 |
4/9/18 | 23,979.10 | +46.34 | -134.01 |
4/10/18 | 24,407.86 | +428.76 | +294.66 |
4/11/18 | 24,189.45 | -218.55 | +76.11 |
4/12/18 | 24,483.05 | +293.60 | +369.71 |
4/13/18 | 24,360.14 | -122.91 | +247.80 |
4/16/18 | 24,573.04 | +212.90 | +460.70 |
4/17/18 | 24,786.63 | +213.59 | +674.29 |
4/18/18 | 24,748.07 | -38.56 | +635.73 |
4/19/18 | 24,664.89 | -83.18 | +552.55 |
4/20/18 | 24,462.94 | -201.95 | +350.60 |
4/23/18 | 24,448.69 | -14.25 | +336.35 |
4/24/18 | 24,024.13 | -424.56 | -88.21 |
4/25/18 | 24,083.83 | +59.70 | -28.51 |
4/26/18 | 24,322.34 | +238.51 | +210.00 |
4/27/18 | 24,311.19 | -11.15 | +198.85 |
At the Close, Friday, April 27, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,311.19, -11.15 (-0.05%)
NASDAQ: 7,119.80, +1.12 (+0.02%)
S&P 500: 2,669.91, +2.97 (+0.11%)
NYSE Composite: 12,594.02, +11.12 (+0.09%)
For the Week:
Dow: -151.75 (-0.62)
NASDAQ: -26.33 (-0.37%)
S&P 500: -0.23 (-0.01%)
NYSE Composite: -13.13 (-0.10%)
Labels:
1Q,
bond yields,
Federal Reserve System,
GDP,
treasury bonds,
yield curve
Thursday, April 26, 2018
Stocks' Bounce Not Very Convincing; Bears Taking Control Of Market Sentiment
The Industrials ended a five-session losing streak on Wednesday, but, as dead cat bounces go, it didn't even register on the Boo-Boo Kitty scale, leaving the Dow Jones Industrial Average in the red for the month of April and still within whistling distance of correction territory (23,954).
If it hasn't become obvious to just about everyone on Wall Street that stocks are in some serious trouble after nine years of relentless stock buybacks and jerking up by Fed policies of ZIRP and QE, it should be quite clear now. With earnings season winding down, there's going to be nothing with which to prop up stocks - other than the usual central bank manipulation and other wily shenanigans - from the first week off May until the next FOMC meeting in June.
Stocks and the Fed are playing a dangerous game of chicken. If the Federal Reserve insists upon its path of raising interest rates every three or four meetings, stocks are going to tank. From the Fed's point of view, it probably doesn't matter what they do in the interest rate scheme, since they consider the business cycle to be at an end. That kind of thinking gives them full reign to raise rates, crash the markets, send the economy into recession (late 2018 or early 2019), so that they have sufficient ammunition to battle the downturn they created. It's a sickening policy from the prior century that badly needs replacing in the 21st.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, April 25, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,083.83, +59.70 (+0.25%)
NASDAQ: 7,003.74, -3.62 (-0.05%)
S&P 500: 2,639.40, +4.84 (+0.18%)
NYSE Composite: 12,517.86, +3.87 (+0.03%)
If it hasn't become obvious to just about everyone on Wall Street that stocks are in some serious trouble after nine years of relentless stock buybacks and jerking up by Fed policies of ZIRP and QE, it should be quite clear now. With earnings season winding down, there's going to be nothing with which to prop up stocks - other than the usual central bank manipulation and other wily shenanigans - from the first week off May until the next FOMC meeting in June.
Stocks and the Fed are playing a dangerous game of chicken. If the Federal Reserve insists upon its path of raising interest rates every three or four meetings, stocks are going to tank. From the Fed's point of view, it probably doesn't matter what they do in the interest rate scheme, since they consider the business cycle to be at an end. That kind of thinking gives them full reign to raise rates, crash the markets, send the economy into recession (late 2018 or early 2019), so that they have sufficient ammunition to battle the downturn they created. It's a sickening policy from the prior century that badly needs replacing in the 21st.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
4/2/18 | 23,644.19 | -458.92 | -458.92 |
4/3/18 | 24,033.36 | +389.17 | -69.75 |
4/4/18 | 24,264.30 | +230.94 | +161.19 |
4/5/18 | 24,505.22 | +240.92 | +402.11 |
4/6/18 | 23,932.76 | -572.46 | -170.35 |
4/9/18 | 23,979.10 | +46.34 | -134.01 |
4/10/18 | 24,407.86 | +428.76 | +294.66 |
4/11/18 | 24,189.45 | -218.55 | +76.11 |
4/12/18 | 24,483.05 | +293.60 | +369.71 |
4/13/18 | 24,360.14 | -122.91 | +247.80 |
4/16/18 | 24,573.04 | +212.90 | +460.70 |
4/17/18 | 24,786.63 | +213.59 | +674.29 |
4/18/18 | 24,748.07 | -38.56 | +635.73 |
4/19/18 | 24,664.89 | -83.18 | +552.55 |
4/20/18 | 24,462.94 | -201.95 | +350.60 |
4/23/18 | 24,448.69 | -14.25 | +336.35 |
4/24/18 | 24,024.13 | -424.56 | -88.21 |
4/25/18 | 24,083.83 | +59.70 | -28.51 |
At the Close, Wednesday, April 25, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,083.83, +59.70 (+0.25%)
NASDAQ: 7,003.74, -3.62 (-0.05%)
S&P 500: 2,639.40, +4.84 (+0.18%)
NYSE Composite: 12,517.86, +3.87 (+0.03%)
Wednesday, April 11, 2018
Stocks Continue See-Saw Movement After Outrageously Mindless Fed Minutes
As mentioned yesterday, sharp one-day gains (Dow was up 428 points on Tuesday) should be discounted, since a clear sign of a bear market was issued by the Dow Transportation Index on Monday.
That should be the overriding theme with any and all sharp moves higher (+1.00% or more), or, in more pedestrian terms, we've moved from Buy The Dip to Sell The Rip because there is little confidence amongst traders at this juncture.
Since this is also the heart of earnings season, expect some individual stocks to outperform and those with influence may help carry the market higher. Consensus is for very strong first quarter earnings reports and there is little reason to believe that they won't be good, though probably not as good as many are hoping.
From today's activity, it's clear that there is no follow-though on commitments by traders as the major indices were uniformly in the red today. The Dow Industrials are now clinging to a mere 76-point gain for the month, barely out of correction territory, following a first quarter that was a loser. Prospects for a second quarter rebound in the stock market appear to be increasingly slim and built on false hope from an equally false narrative.
It's also quite evident that the Federal Reserve System presidents and FOMC governors are either blind, stupid, or deceitful, because in the minutes from the March meeting - released today - they were unanimous in their opinion that the economy was improving and that inflation was growing when the actual condition only mildly supports either viewpoint. Outside the rose-colored offices of the Eccles Building it's easy to see a squeezed middle class, cities that are beginning to look more like third-world sh--holes, complete with tent encampments, than the modern, urban paradise the Fed imagines.
Additionally, with individuals and families tapped out and heavily in debt, price pressure is almost nowhere to be found, except at the gas pump and the local, state, and federal tax offices.
The economy is made of mostly smoke and mirrors, built on mountains of debt.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, April 11, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,189.45, -218.55 (-0.90%)
NASDAQ: 7,069.03, -25.27 (-0.36%)
S&P 500: 2,642.19, -14.68 (-0.55%)
NYSE Composite: 12,514.62, -51.35 (-0.41%)
That should be the overriding theme with any and all sharp moves higher (+1.00% or more), or, in more pedestrian terms, we've moved from Buy The Dip to Sell The Rip because there is little confidence amongst traders at this juncture.
Since this is also the heart of earnings season, expect some individual stocks to outperform and those with influence may help carry the market higher. Consensus is for very strong first quarter earnings reports and there is little reason to believe that they won't be good, though probably not as good as many are hoping.
From today's activity, it's clear that there is no follow-though on commitments by traders as the major indices were uniformly in the red today. The Dow Industrials are now clinging to a mere 76-point gain for the month, barely out of correction territory, following a first quarter that was a loser. Prospects for a second quarter rebound in the stock market appear to be increasingly slim and built on false hope from an equally false narrative.
It's also quite evident that the Federal Reserve System presidents and FOMC governors are either blind, stupid, or deceitful, because in the minutes from the March meeting - released today - they were unanimous in their opinion that the economy was improving and that inflation was growing when the actual condition only mildly supports either viewpoint. Outside the rose-colored offices of the Eccles Building it's easy to see a squeezed middle class, cities that are beginning to look more like third-world sh--holes, complete with tent encampments, than the modern, urban paradise the Fed imagines.
Additionally, with individuals and families tapped out and heavily in debt, price pressure is almost nowhere to be found, except at the gas pump and the local, state, and federal tax offices.
The economy is made of mostly smoke and mirrors, built on mountains of debt.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
4/2/18 | 23,644.19 | -458.92 | -458.92 |
4/3/18 | 24,033.36 | +389.17 | -69.75 |
4/4/18 | 24,264.30 | +230.94 | +161.19 |
4/5/18 | 24,505.22 | +240.92 | +402.11 |
4/6/18 | 23,932.76 | -572.46 | -170.35 |
4/9/18 | 23,979.10 | +46.34 | -134.01 |
4/10/18 | 24,407.86 | +428.76 | +294.66 |
4/11/18 | 24,189.45 | -218.55 | +76.11 |
At the Close, Wednesday, April 11, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,189.45, -218.55 (-0.90%)
NASDAQ: 7,069.03, -25.27 (-0.36%)
S&P 500: 2,642.19, -14.68 (-0.55%)
NYSE Composite: 12,514.62, -51.35 (-0.41%)
Monday, April 9, 2018
It's OVER! Dow Transports Confirm Dow Theory Primary Trend Change Bull to Bear
Right off the bat, here's the theme for today's trading: Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons 1964 hit, "Dawn."
For the uninformed, today's epic pump-and-dump collapse on all the major indices was more than just "the usual." It was, simply put, a day to be marked in financial history, the day the most phony, contrived and manipulated bull market that ever existed, died an overdue death and gave birth to a bona fide bear market, something most of today's millennial day-trading demons have never experienced.
Why would the death of a bull market and the beginning of a bear market be something suitable for celebration?
Good question.
Here's an even better answer: because the bull market, which started March 9, 2009 - nine years and one month, to the day - was one built on fumes and Fed happy talk, endless fiat money printing, rounds and rounds of Quantitative Easing (QE), artificially low interest rates approaching zero (ZIRP) and corporate stock buybacks of unprecedented quantity. Almost nowhere was there a single sign of real growth; much of the gains in stocks were due to buyback manipulation as gross revenue stagnated for nearly a decade.
It was a decade of fakery, of spoofing and high frequency trading as GDP never reached three percent until nearing the end, and never actually did for a full year, including 2017, the last. Almost all of the supposed growth in the "recovery" was due to inflation, nothing else. A false sense of security was promoted by the governors and presidents of the Federal Reserve System and their regional banks and the public gobbled it up.
Meanwhile, in the real world, mark to market had been replaced by mark to fantasy, and price discovery was banished from the equity world.
According to Dow Theory - a nearly infallible projecting tool - as the Dow Transportation Index closed today below the February 9 low of 10,136.61, at 10,119.36, confirming the primary trend change, the bull market can be properly buried and a bear market born.
For anyone unfamiliar with Dow Theory, the primary trend change goes like this:
New Closing Low
Interim High, Below Previous High
New Low Below Previous Low.
This simple pattern must occur on both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Index (confirmation), and here's how it happened.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average made a new all-time high on January 26, 2018 (26,616.71).
On February 8, it closed at 23,860.46 (new low).
On February 26, it closed at 25,709.27 (interim high, lower than previous high).
On March 23, the Industrials closed at 23,533.20 (new low, lower than previous low).
For confirmation, the Dow Jones Transportation Index had made it's new high on January 12, 2018 (11,373.38).
On February 8, it closed at 10,136.61 (new low)
On February 26, it closed at 10,769.84 (interim high, lower than previous high)
On April 9, the Transportation Index closed at 10,119.36 (new low, lower than previous low = primary trend change, bull becomes bear).
Why is this good?
This is good because markets in a stable, trustworthy financial system must have a mechanism to clear mal-investment. Otherwise, stupid money must be purged from the system in order to create real value.
For instance, Facebook, Google, and many other stocks should not be trading as high as they currently are. They are overvalued, promoted by shysters and traded up by fools, one fool greater than the previous one. In other words, this is money chasing an unrealistic return. In order to get back to a realistic, fair, honest market, these stocks must lose value. Some companies will achieve their true value, which is zero. Others will lose 20, 30, maybe even more than 50%. The market will sort out the winners (there will be a few) from the losers (there will be many).
In the end, stocks will be properly valued, but when that time is to come, nobody knows. The perma-bulls out there can take heart that bear markets generally last 14-18 months, some like the one during the Great Depression which began with the stock market collapse in 1929, last much longer. How deep this one will be depends on how quickly stocks revert to an undervalued position, because the market always overshoots on the upside and the downside. There will be a bottom, when it will be wise to buy stocks. The only winning position presently is to sell stocks at a profit, park the money in bonds or money markets and wait for the bottom, which, just like the primary change from bull to bear, will be repeated - in reverse - according to Dow Theory.
For those wishing for the good old days of January 26, a return to those levels may take four to seven years, possibly longer, and, judging by the general insanity plaguing the human race presently, one should prepare for the much longer period. There are mountains of bad investments and onerous debts to be flushed from the system, since they were not flushed out in 2008-09, only papered over by TARP, QE, and ZIRP.
If you must, cry in your beer over the death of the bull. The rest of us will be having a cold one with the new-born bear.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
At the Close, Monday, April 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,979.10, +46.34 (+0.19%)
NASDAQ: 6,950.34, +35.23 (+0.51%)
S&P 500: 2,613.16, +8.69 (+0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 12,380.55, +31.44 (+0.25%)
For the uninformed, today's epic pump-and-dump collapse on all the major indices was more than just "the usual." It was, simply put, a day to be marked in financial history, the day the most phony, contrived and manipulated bull market that ever existed, died an overdue death and gave birth to a bona fide bear market, something most of today's millennial day-trading demons have never experienced.
Why would the death of a bull market and the beginning of a bear market be something suitable for celebration?
Good question.
Here's an even better answer: because the bull market, which started March 9, 2009 - nine years and one month, to the day - was one built on fumes and Fed happy talk, endless fiat money printing, rounds and rounds of Quantitative Easing (QE), artificially low interest rates approaching zero (ZIRP) and corporate stock buybacks of unprecedented quantity. Almost nowhere was there a single sign of real growth; much of the gains in stocks were due to buyback manipulation as gross revenue stagnated for nearly a decade.
It was a decade of fakery, of spoofing and high frequency trading as GDP never reached three percent until nearing the end, and never actually did for a full year, including 2017, the last. Almost all of the supposed growth in the "recovery" was due to inflation, nothing else. A false sense of security was promoted by the governors and presidents of the Federal Reserve System and their regional banks and the public gobbled it up.
Meanwhile, in the real world, mark to market had been replaced by mark to fantasy, and price discovery was banished from the equity world.
According to Dow Theory - a nearly infallible projecting tool - as the Dow Transportation Index closed today below the February 9 low of 10,136.61, at 10,119.36, confirming the primary trend change, the bull market can be properly buried and a bear market born.
For anyone unfamiliar with Dow Theory, the primary trend change goes like this:
New Closing Low
Interim High, Below Previous High
New Low Below Previous Low.
This simple pattern must occur on both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Index (confirmation), and here's how it happened.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average made a new all-time high on January 26, 2018 (26,616.71).
On February 8, it closed at 23,860.46 (new low).
On February 26, it closed at 25,709.27 (interim high, lower than previous high).
On March 23, the Industrials closed at 23,533.20 (new low, lower than previous low).
For confirmation, the Dow Jones Transportation Index had made it's new high on January 12, 2018 (11,373.38).
On February 8, it closed at 10,136.61 (new low)
On February 26, it closed at 10,769.84 (interim high, lower than previous high)
On April 9, the Transportation Index closed at 10,119.36 (new low, lower than previous low = primary trend change, bull becomes bear).
Why is this good?
This is good because markets in a stable, trustworthy financial system must have a mechanism to clear mal-investment. Otherwise, stupid money must be purged from the system in order to create real value.
For instance, Facebook, Google, and many other stocks should not be trading as high as they currently are. They are overvalued, promoted by shysters and traded up by fools, one fool greater than the previous one. In other words, this is money chasing an unrealistic return. In order to get back to a realistic, fair, honest market, these stocks must lose value. Some companies will achieve their true value, which is zero. Others will lose 20, 30, maybe even more than 50%. The market will sort out the winners (there will be a few) from the losers (there will be many).
In the end, stocks will be properly valued, but when that time is to come, nobody knows. The perma-bulls out there can take heart that bear markets generally last 14-18 months, some like the one during the Great Depression which began with the stock market collapse in 1929, last much longer. How deep this one will be depends on how quickly stocks revert to an undervalued position, because the market always overshoots on the upside and the downside. There will be a bottom, when it will be wise to buy stocks. The only winning position presently is to sell stocks at a profit, park the money in bonds or money markets and wait for the bottom, which, just like the primary change from bull to bear, will be repeated - in reverse - according to Dow Theory.
For those wishing for the good old days of January 26, a return to those levels may take four to seven years, possibly longer, and, judging by the general insanity plaguing the human race presently, one should prepare for the much longer period. There are mountains of bad investments and onerous debts to be flushed from the system, since they were not flushed out in 2008-09, only papered over by TARP, QE, and ZIRP.
If you must, cry in your beer over the death of the bull. The rest of us will be having a cold one with the new-born bear.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
4/2/18 | 23,644.19 | -458.92 | -458.92 |
4/3/18 | 24,033.36 | +389.17 | -69.75 |
4/4/18 | 24,264.30 | +230.94 | +161.19 |
4/5/18 | 24,505.22 | +240.92 | +402.11 |
4/6/18 | 23,932.76 | -572.46 | -170.35 |
4/9/18 | 23,979.10 | +46.34 | -134.01 |
At the Close, Monday, April 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,979.10, +46.34 (+0.19%)
NASDAQ: 6,950.34, +35.23 (+0.51%)
S&P 500: 2,613.16, +8.69 (+0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 12,380.55, +31.44 (+0.25%)
Sunday, April 8, 2018
Weekend Wrap: First Week of 2nd Quarter Losing, Just Like February and March
This edition of the weekend wrap begins with a comment to an article on ZeroHedge
One need not read the article in question, only question the conclusion.
This article ignores the obvious.
The policy mistake was the March rate hike. It was either too soon, or completely mis-timed. One can assert, dependent upon where one is positioned, that any and all of the Fed's policies are mistakes, but that may be significantly overstating the case.
End-of-cycle dynamics? Give us all a break. The bull market began on March 9, 2009. It's now been nine years and one month, or 119 months, whichever you prefer. Nothing lasts forever, especially bull and/or bear markets.
The Dow Transportation Index (^DJT) is all one has to watch, since the Industrials have already broken below the Feb. 8 closing low.
According to Dow Theory - which, in matters of primary trends, has a track record approaching 100% - the transports need to confirm, and that number is 10,136.61 (yes, you should have that number memorized).
Where did the transportation Index close on Friday? 10,146.37. 10 points is all there is separating this market from turning bull to bear.
After Friday's mini-crash, stocks ended the week with a significant loss from where it started the week, the month, and the quarter, predictably, the NASDAQ being the worst performer.
Forget articles, commentary, and mainstream analysis. It's all noise. The Fed has made one policy error after another (keeping rates too low, too long, and, trying to raise rates in a weakened economy) and the bull market is ending. The close on the transports below 10,136.61 will tell you exactly when the market has turned, but it's not quite there yet. It could make the move on Monday, the 9th of April, but keen minds are looking at late may or June for the turn. Either way, the bull will be dead.
While there may be a bounce in the aftermath, it will not last and there is a good likelihood of a corollary recession 6-12 months beyond the turn.
That's all one needs to know.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
At the Close, Friday, April 6, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,932.76, -572.46 (-2.34%)
NASDAQ: 6,915.11, -161.44 (-2.28%)
S&P 500: 2,604.47, -58.37 (-2.19%)
NYSE Composite: 12,349.11, -222.83 (-1.77%)
For the Week:
Dow: -170.35 (-0.71%)
NASDAQ: -148.33 (-2.10%)
S&P 500: -36.40 (-1.38%)
NYSE Composite: -102.95 (-0.83%)
One need not read the article in question, only question the conclusion.
- markets have started pricing in a Fed policy mistake, or
- markets have started pricing in end-of-cycle dynamics.
This article ignores the obvious.
The policy mistake was the March rate hike. It was either too soon, or completely mis-timed. One can assert, dependent upon where one is positioned, that any and all of the Fed's policies are mistakes, but that may be significantly overstating the case.
End-of-cycle dynamics? Give us all a break. The bull market began on March 9, 2009. It's now been nine years and one month, or 119 months, whichever you prefer. Nothing lasts forever, especially bull and/or bear markets.
The Dow Transportation Index (^DJT) is all one has to watch, since the Industrials have already broken below the Feb. 8 closing low.
According to Dow Theory - which, in matters of primary trends, has a track record approaching 100% - the transports need to confirm, and that number is 10,136.61 (yes, you should have that number memorized).
Where did the transportation Index close on Friday? 10,146.37. 10 points is all there is separating this market from turning bull to bear.
After Friday's mini-crash, stocks ended the week with a significant loss from where it started the week, the month, and the quarter, predictably, the NASDAQ being the worst performer.
Forget articles, commentary, and mainstream analysis. It's all noise. The Fed has made one policy error after another (keeping rates too low, too long, and, trying to raise rates in a weakened economy) and the bull market is ending. The close on the transports below 10,136.61 will tell you exactly when the market has turned, but it's not quite there yet. It could make the move on Monday, the 9th of April, but keen minds are looking at late may or June for the turn. Either way, the bull will be dead.
While there may be a bounce in the aftermath, it will not last and there is a good likelihood of a corollary recession 6-12 months beyond the turn.
That's all one needs to know.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
4/2/18 | 23,644.19 | -458.92 | -458.92 |
4/3/18 | 24,033.36 | +389.17 | -69.75 |
4/4/18 | 24,264.30 | +230.94 | +161.19 |
4/5/18 | 24,505.22 | +240.92 | +402.11 |
4/6/18 | 23,932.76 | -572.46 | -170.35 |
At the Close, Friday, April 6, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,932.76, -572.46 (-2.34%)
NASDAQ: 6,915.11, -161.44 (-2.28%)
S&P 500: 2,604.47, -58.37 (-2.19%)
NYSE Composite: 12,349.11, -222.83 (-1.77%)
For the Week:
Dow: -170.35 (-0.71%)
NASDAQ: -148.33 (-2.10%)
S&P 500: -36.40 (-1.38%)
NYSE Composite: -102.95 (-0.83%)
Saturday, March 24, 2018
Stocks Crash Post-Fed Rate Hikes, But The Media Will Still Falsely Blame President Trump
Here are just a few of the headline items for the week that ended with two disastrous days after the FOMC policy rate decision to raise the federal funds rate to 1.50-1.75%, the sixth rate hike in the last 27 months and probably the one largest policy mistake in the history of the Federal Reserve System, an unconstitutional private banking system that has wreaked havoc on not only the economy of the United States of America, but of the entire planet.
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 426 points, closing out the week at it's lowest level since November 22, 2017. The Dow is off nearly 1500 points for the month of March, a worse decline than that of February. In just the past week, the Dow has shed some 1410 points, a 5.67% drop.
The S&P 500 fell 5.9% on the week, the biggest drop in more than two years.
The NASDAQ 100 plunged 7.3% in the week, the most since August 2015. All of the major averages are negative for the year, except for the NASDAQ.
Scapegoating the tariffs put forward by President Trump has been the sport of the week on the likes of CNN, NBC, CBS, ABC. Surely, the Sunday talk shows will be hooting and hollering over what bad judgement the president has shown, when, in fact, it is the Federal Reserve's radical policies over the past ten years that have caused major distortions on Wall Street, a false sense of security in stocks as sound investments, impoverishment of many retirees who were denied any meaningful interest income on their savings due to the Fed's zero interest rate policy that prevailed from 2008 though 2015.
Meanwhile, the Fed, in a position to cause much further damage to the economy by raising rates while the nation is heavily indebted, has done just so, and has not backed off from its planned position to unwind its bloated balance sheet, and actually increase its sales of securities in the second half of 2008.
While the tariffs President Trump has put forward are certain to cause some disruption in some segments of the economy, they are not, on their own merit, the ultimate cause for a stock market collapse, such as is occurring presently.
There can be no other culprit than the Federal Reserve for the recent stock market volatility and massive outflows from stocks. Their policies have been the guiding force before, during and after the Great Financial Crisis of 2007-09, so there should be no doubting that their policies are still guiding investment decisions.
The entire global economic structure is currently under assault by coordinated central bank intervention, ongoing massive stock and bond buying and selling beyond their charters, and the continuing issuance of debt as fiat money on a global basis.
From the US federal government to individual citizens, the signs of financial stress are at breaking points. The federal government, already "officially" $21 trillion in debt, on Friday passed an omnibus spending bill of $1.3 trillion, causing further debt issuance and higher debt servicing costs thanks to the Fed's rate increases.
Corporations, which have binged on stock buybacks since 2009 and most recently increased their level of indebtedness and slothful management with the recent repatriation of an estimated $2 trillion based on the tax reform enacted by congress and singed into law by the president recently.
Individuals are more indebted than ever before, with credit card and student debt at all-time highs, variable rate mortgages increasingly difficult to service while incomes have barely budged for the past 20 years.
Additionally, the tax burden on some of the wealthiest Americans, with incomes over $100,000 per year, is upwards of 50%, enslaving these people to endless payments for governments (local, state, and federal) that have displayed absolutely no fiscal restraint.
Continued declines in the stock market are going to impact pension funds throughout the world, both pubic and private. Most public pension funds are massively underfunded, and heavily invested in stocks. A severe downturn - which has just begun - will bankrupt these entities, causing them to renew on promises made to workers.
A heavily-concentrated media will assure the public that the stock market collapse is entirely the fault of one man, President Donald J. Trump, while the true criminals of extortion and debt slavery are the central banks and their private, unconstitutional banking system, which has been favored and kept afloat by a supine congress.
Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:
At the Close, Friday, March 23, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,533.20, -424.69 (-1.77%)
NASDAQ: 6,992.67, -174.01 (-2.43%)
S&P 500: 2,588.26, -55.43 (-2.10%)
NYSE Composite: 12,177.70, -199.69 (-1.61%)
For the Week:
Dow: -1413.31 (-5.67%)
NASDAQ: -489.32 (-6.54%)
S&P 500: -163.75 (-5.95%)
NYSE Composite: -606.68 (-4.75%)
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 426 points, closing out the week at it's lowest level since November 22, 2017. The Dow is off nearly 1500 points for the month of March, a worse decline than that of February. In just the past week, the Dow has shed some 1410 points, a 5.67% drop.
The S&P 500 fell 5.9% on the week, the biggest drop in more than two years.
The NASDAQ 100 plunged 7.3% in the week, the most since August 2015. All of the major averages are negative for the year, except for the NASDAQ.
Scapegoating the tariffs put forward by President Trump has been the sport of the week on the likes of CNN, NBC, CBS, ABC. Surely, the Sunday talk shows will be hooting and hollering over what bad judgement the president has shown, when, in fact, it is the Federal Reserve's radical policies over the past ten years that have caused major distortions on Wall Street, a false sense of security in stocks as sound investments, impoverishment of many retirees who were denied any meaningful interest income on their savings due to the Fed's zero interest rate policy that prevailed from 2008 though 2015.
Meanwhile, the Fed, in a position to cause much further damage to the economy by raising rates while the nation is heavily indebted, has done just so, and has not backed off from its planned position to unwind its bloated balance sheet, and actually increase its sales of securities in the second half of 2008.
While the tariffs President Trump has put forward are certain to cause some disruption in some segments of the economy, they are not, on their own merit, the ultimate cause for a stock market collapse, such as is occurring presently.
There can be no other culprit than the Federal Reserve for the recent stock market volatility and massive outflows from stocks. Their policies have been the guiding force before, during and after the Great Financial Crisis of 2007-09, so there should be no doubting that their policies are still guiding investment decisions.
The entire global economic structure is currently under assault by coordinated central bank intervention, ongoing massive stock and bond buying and selling beyond their charters, and the continuing issuance of debt as fiat money on a global basis.
From the US federal government to individual citizens, the signs of financial stress are at breaking points. The federal government, already "officially" $21 trillion in debt, on Friday passed an omnibus spending bill of $1.3 trillion, causing further debt issuance and higher debt servicing costs thanks to the Fed's rate increases.
Corporations, which have binged on stock buybacks since 2009 and most recently increased their level of indebtedness and slothful management with the recent repatriation of an estimated $2 trillion based on the tax reform enacted by congress and singed into law by the president recently.
Individuals are more indebted than ever before, with credit card and student debt at all-time highs, variable rate mortgages increasingly difficult to service while incomes have barely budged for the past 20 years.
Additionally, the tax burden on some of the wealthiest Americans, with incomes over $100,000 per year, is upwards of 50%, enslaving these people to endless payments for governments (local, state, and federal) that have displayed absolutely no fiscal restraint.
Continued declines in the stock market are going to impact pension funds throughout the world, both pubic and private. Most public pension funds are massively underfunded, and heavily invested in stocks. A severe downturn - which has just begun - will bankrupt these entities, causing them to renew on promises made to workers.
A heavily-concentrated media will assure the public that the stock market collapse is entirely the fault of one man, President Donald J. Trump, while the true criminals of extortion and debt slavery are the central banks and their private, unconstitutional banking system, which has been favored and kept afloat by a supine congress.
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 |
3/16/18 | 24,946.51 | +72.85 | -82.69 |
3/19/18 | 24,610.91 | -335.60 | -418.29 |
3/20/18 | 24,727.27 | +116.36 | -301.93 |
3/21/18 | 24,682.31 | -44.96 | -346.89 |
3/22/18 | 23,957.89 | -724.42 | -1071.31 |
3/22/18 | 23,533.20 | -424.69 | -1496.00 |
At the Close, Friday, March 23, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,533.20, -424.69 (-1.77%)
NASDAQ: 6,992.67, -174.01 (-2.43%)
S&P 500: 2,588.26, -55.43 (-2.10%)
NYSE Composite: 12,177.70, -199.69 (-1.61%)
For the Week:
Dow: -1413.31 (-5.67%)
NASDAQ: -489.32 (-6.54%)
S&P 500: -163.75 (-5.95%)
NYSE Composite: -606.68 (-4.75%)
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Fed Has Ventured Into Dangerous Territory With Most Recent Rate Hike
Whether Wednesday's 25 basis point hike in the federal funds rate will eventually become a seminal moment in economic history, only time will tell. On the surface, there are a good number of indications that the Fed, by increasing the overnight lending rate to 1.50-1.75%, may have finally blundered into a crucial policy error.
The hike being the sixth such rate increase of 0.25% in the past 27 months, the Federal Reserve has ventured into an area which has the potential to do more harm than good, as evidenced by the sudden turnabout in stocks after the rate decision was announced, and, more to the point, during Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's first press conference.
Stocks initially rose on the release, but gave back all of the gains, finally ending with complete capitulation as the trading day drew to a close, turning what was a brief 250-point gain into a lasting 45-point loss at the close.
What has equity investors puzzled and anguished is the Fed's insistence on their continued insistence on higher interest rates, despite economic data that shows quite clearly that inflation is nascent and growth largely a chimera, a construct of rose-colored projections of the general economy added to massive increases in government spending, which is, in the end, fully lacking in productive qualities.
Governors of the Federal Reserve, ensconced, as they are, within their cocoons of smug condescension, are either uninformed to the realities of life in the real world or purposely interpreting their trumped-up economic data as reflective of a booming economy.
The other possibility is that the Fed officials know that the economy - both domestic and global - is headed for recession, and they are preparing for the worst, employing the only tool they believe effective, the varying of interest rates with the intent to either slow lending and economic activity by raising them, or increase the same by lowering them.
Sadly, the Fed has the cart well out in front of the horse. Their rate increases will slow the economy, precisely at a time in which they should be doing nothing. Eventually, the Fed will have to reverse the direction of their myopic monetary monopoly, as the economy - which has been limping along at two percent growth or less for the past ten years - and lower rates, ushering in another era of mad money machinations, sending valuations of stocks out into the cosmos, while the public watches the explosion of wealth inequality soar to unimagined heights.
Besides the folly of raising rates in a weak economic environment, the Fed continues to preach that they are decreasing their massive balance sheet, rolling off their horde of somewhat dubious mortgage-backed securities and treasury bills, notes and bonds.
Having taken a path toward a rather rapid depletion of liquidity, Mr. Powell and his cohorts will soon find that themselves vilified and, with any hope, bankrupt.
Their continuing charade of being the "best and brightest" know-it-alls in the financial universe must come to an end soon, lest the entire global economic structure be collapsed into one giant heap of unplayable debt, impoverishing the world's billions of citizens while laying bare their own conceit, deceit, and utter depravity.
Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:
At the Close, Wednesday, March 21, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,682.31, -44.96 (-0.18%)
NASDAQ: 7,345.29, -19.02 (-0.26%)
S&P 500: 2,711.93, -5.01 (-0.18%)
NYSE Composite: 12,683.76, +20.12 (+0.16%)
The hike being the sixth such rate increase of 0.25% in the past 27 months, the Federal Reserve has ventured into an area which has the potential to do more harm than good, as evidenced by the sudden turnabout in stocks after the rate decision was announced, and, more to the point, during Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's first press conference.
Stocks initially rose on the release, but gave back all of the gains, finally ending with complete capitulation as the trading day drew to a close, turning what was a brief 250-point gain into a lasting 45-point loss at the close.
What has equity investors puzzled and anguished is the Fed's insistence on their continued insistence on higher interest rates, despite economic data that shows quite clearly that inflation is nascent and growth largely a chimera, a construct of rose-colored projections of the general economy added to massive increases in government spending, which is, in the end, fully lacking in productive qualities.
Governors of the Federal Reserve, ensconced, as they are, within their cocoons of smug condescension, are either uninformed to the realities of life in the real world or purposely interpreting their trumped-up economic data as reflective of a booming economy.
The other possibility is that the Fed officials know that the economy - both domestic and global - is headed for recession, and they are preparing for the worst, employing the only tool they believe effective, the varying of interest rates with the intent to either slow lending and economic activity by raising them, or increase the same by lowering them.
Sadly, the Fed has the cart well out in front of the horse. Their rate increases will slow the economy, precisely at a time in which they should be doing nothing. Eventually, the Fed will have to reverse the direction of their myopic monetary monopoly, as the economy - which has been limping along at two percent growth or less for the past ten years - and lower rates, ushering in another era of mad money machinations, sending valuations of stocks out into the cosmos, while the public watches the explosion of wealth inequality soar to unimagined heights.
Besides the folly of raising rates in a weak economic environment, the Fed continues to preach that they are decreasing their massive balance sheet, rolling off their horde of somewhat dubious mortgage-backed securities and treasury bills, notes and bonds.
Having taken a path toward a rather rapid depletion of liquidity, Mr. Powell and his cohorts will soon find that themselves vilified and, with any hope, bankrupt.
Their continuing charade of being the "best and brightest" know-it-alls in the financial universe must come to an end soon, lest the entire global economic structure be collapsed into one giant heap of unplayable debt, impoverishing the world's billions of citizens while laying bare their own conceit, deceit, and utter depravity.
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 |
3/16/18 | 24,946.51 | +72.85 | -82.69 |
3/19/18 | 24,610.91 | -335.60 | -418.29 |
3/20/18 | 24,727.27 | +116.36 | -301.93 |
3/21/18 | 24,682.31 | -44.96 | -346.89 |
At the Close, Wednesday, March 21, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,682.31, -44.96 (-0.18%)
NASDAQ: 7,345.29, -19.02 (-0.26%)
S&P 500: 2,711.93, -5.01 (-0.18%)
NYSE Composite: 12,683.76, +20.12 (+0.16%)
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