Showing posts with label GOOG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOOG. Show all posts

Sunday, May 10, 2020

WEEKEND WRAP: Fed Fiat Funny Money Has Managed to Short-Circuit the Crisis, for Now

Against a backdrop of Great Depression-like numbers - 33 million Americans out of work and an "official" unemployment rate of 14.7% - equity investors enjoyed a remarkably positive week, with all major indices rising by at least 2.50%, with the NASDAQ leading the way with a six percent gain.

The NASDAQ's advance was not only remarkable, but it is also ludicrous. The tech-heavy index has advanced beyond both its 50 and 200-day moving averages and is within 720 points of its all-time high. Investors in the speculative sector of the market have either divorced themselves from reality or are seeing something the rest of the world is missing. Money has to go somewhere, even money from the Federal Reserve, released to companies across the investing spectrum, but most of it appears to be heading toward Silicon Valley.

No doubt, chasing momentum has amplified the absurd move to the NASDAQ, which is likely a dangerous precedent. Many of the companies moving higher sport P/E ratios well above the norm, even the norm in a major bull market, a position that was shattered eight weeks ago.

Some of the standouts in the nebulous NASDAQ unicorn universe include Alphabet, parent of Google (GOOG), bottomed out at 1056.62 on March 23, and closed Friday at 1388.37.

Netflix (NFLX) fell out at 298.84 on March 16, but has since rebounded to Friday's close of 435.55.

Amazon (AMZN) reached an all-time high of 2474.00 on April 16, after dropping to 1676.61 on March 12, an amazing gain of 47.6% in just over a month. Amazon may be a superb, dynamic company, but it's arguably extremely overvalued, with a P/E of 113.

Facebook (FB) finished at 146.01 on March 16 and closed at 212.35 on Friday.

Some investors have been getting fat while the larger economy has, for the most part, imploded.

As almost all states (47 of 50 as of Saturday, May 9) have at least partially reopened their businesses and relaxed stay-at-home and other restrictions on the populace, anecdotal reports show that business is still a long distance from anything approaching normal, i.e., prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Wall Street is pushing a narrative that the country and the economy is all well and good, the recovery - in terms of stock prices - well underway, even as cases of coronavirus are still prevalent and rising in some cases and deaths continue at a run rate of over 1,000 a day. How well that works out for investors won't likely be known for some time. For now, investors, and the companies getting the most attention, are sitting pretty.

Crude oil continued to be under pressure from both a supply glut and slack demand, hovering in the mid-20s throughout the week. The June contract on WTI crude rose from $19.78 last Friday (May 1) to $24.74 a barrel this Friday (May 8). The contract expires within two weeks and there hasn't really been much improvement on the supply side of the equation, though demand has improved as the United States and most other countries around the world have begun getting back to business.

The treasury curve steepened over the course of the week. The entire complex is covered by 129 basis points as of Friday, up from 117 the prior week. All of the yield gains were at the long end. As money rushed out of bonds and back into stocks on Friday, the 10-year note added six basis points, to 0.69. The 30-year bond yield gained from 1.31 to 1.39.

Precious metals continued to be among the most-desired asset class since the onset of the pandemic. Both gold and silver are selling at massive premiums (up to $200 for gold, 40-80% for silver) and dealers are still experiencing supply issues with many popular items out of stock, though available to order. Delivery times have come back a bit, with gold and silver in quantity available within two weeks of placing orders.

Here are representative recent prices (5/9-5/10) on eBay for standard gold and silver coins and bars (prices include shipping):
Item: Low / High / Average / Median
1 oz silver coin: 24.45 / 38.00 / 30.58 / 30.48
1 oz silver bar: 23.00 / 30.95 / 26.77 / 26.20
1 oz gold coin: 1,750.00 / 1,946.65 / 1,854.84 / 1,841.99
1 oz gold bar: 1,799.99 / 1,871.52 / 1,843.90 / 1,851.47

In cryptocurrency-land, the Bitcoin Halving approaches. Fr those unfamiliar with the concept, the "halving" is the predetermined moment when Bitcoin’s block subsidy gets cut in half. The halving of Bitcoin’s block subsidy occurs every 210,000 blocks (approximately every four years) and is a key feature of Bitcoin. It is because of the Halving that there is a capped supply of 21 million bitcoin that will ever exist. The halving is scheduled to take place Monday at approximately 6:49 pm ET.

Bitcoin surpassed the $10,000 mark in US dollars, but fell back to the $8850 range in anticipation of the event.

And, just to throw another spanner into the works, the government of Argentina failed to reach agreement with creditors by its self-imposed Friday deadline, essentially defaulting on $65 billion worth of bonds, though talks between the two sides are continuing. Argentina will formally default on May 22, as it missed a $503 million payment last month and the grace period is expiring.

Talks were extended through Monday in hopes that Argentina could avoid its ninth sovereign default.

At this juncture, everything is at risk. According to recent economic data, the global economy is flat on its back. Most developed countries are either in a recession or about to enter one. The response to the coronavirus has ramped up unemployment and knocked down GDP estimates.

Thanks to massive infusions of capital from the Fed and other central banks to both business and individuals, the crisis has been managed to a degree, but the future remains a guessing game. Whether or not QE to infinity will save the day - and the underlying currencies - is a real gamble.

At the close, Friday, May 8, 2020:
Dow: 24,331.32, +455.43 (+1.91%)
NASDAQ: 9,121.32, +141.66 (+1.58%)
S&P 500: 2,929.80, +48.61 (+1.69%)
NYSE: 11,354.34, +232.68 (+2.09%)

For the Week:
Dow: +607.63 (+2.56%)
NASDAQ: +516.37 (+6.00%)
S&P 500: +99.09 (+3.50%)
NYSE: +295.77 (+2.67%)

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Stocks Slip Amid Mixed Earnings, Awaiting FOMC Interest Rate Decision

Stocks took a breather the day after the S&P 500 set a new all-time closing high, slumping slightly on various earnings results that were a mixed bag.

Google parent, Alphabet (GOOG), started the dour mood after the close on Monday by missing EPS estimates by a wide margin. General Motors (GM) was another big name that fell short, reporting $1.20 per share against analyst estimates for $1.31. There were plenty of smaller firms reporting solid or neutral results for the third quarter, but the large caps dominated the news flow.

Drops on the main indices were contained, not unusual following a healthy upsurge. Waiting upon the Federal Reserve's FOMC policy decision announcement Wednesday afternoon (2.00 pm ET), trading was muted but not depressing.

When the market opens Wednesday, earnings reports will already have been released for some other big names, including Yum! Brands (YUM), General Electric (GE), and Sotheby's (BID).

Apple (AAPL), Starbucks (SBUX), and Facebook (FB) report after the close.

In between earnings releases and calls, the Fed will provide most of the excitement on Wednesday.

At the Close, Tuesday, October 29, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 27,071.42, -19.30 (-0.07%)
NASDAQ: 8,276.85, -49.13 (-0.59%)
S&P 500: 3,036.89, -2.53 (-0.08%)
NYSE Composite: 13,209.63, +23.20 (+0.18%)

Monday, September 17, 2018

Apple Leads Dow, Stocks Lower On Valuation, Dividend Yield Concerns

It's not like Apple (AAPL) isn't a rock-solid stock. The Cupertino, California-based company which has given the world smartphones, smart watches and really zippy computers isn't the world's largest company by market cap for nothing.

The issue is more one of value over speculation. Apple is fully-capitalized, has doubled in price in less than two years, but the kicker might be the dividend of 2.92 is less than one-and-a-half percent (1.30%), while the 10-year treasury note is currently yielding three percent and probably is going to be higher in coming months.

Those numbers have to give serious investors pause to reflect on whether the tech giant - a mature company, not an instant start-up by any means - can continue to provide appreciation value in excess to their dividend. T-bills offer yield with nearly zero risk. All stocks carry risk to the downside, and Apple may have peaked a few weeks ago when it hit an all-time high of 228.35 at the September 4 closing bell.

Investing isn't a game of chasing winners, it's a matter of timing, though most advisors will deny the thought of market-timing. Proper discipline would have one buying Apple when it looks like it's cheap. With a P/E of just under 20, it's close to being expensive, so some players are obviously taking chips off the table while the gains are fresh and probably taxed at the long-term capital rate. It would make sense to do so. There are other stocks which may perform better in the near future and the allure of risk-free money at three percent is strong.

Whatever the reason, Apple has been leveling off, but the selling got serious on Monday, with volume above 36 million shares, about 10 million higher than average. The stock closed down 5.96 points (-2.66%), leading all Dow components as the Dow and NASDAQ suffered outsized losses, the NASDAQ especially, down nearly 1.5%.

Google (GOOG) also took a pretty big hit on Monday, losing 16.48 (1.41%), as did tech darling, Netflix (NFLX), which was broadly sold, -14.21 (3.90%), to 350.35.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average saw an even split with 15 gainers to 15 losers, but of the six stocks that trade for more than 200 per share, five of them declined, led by Apple. The others were Boeing (BA), UnitedHealth (UNH), Goldman Sachs (GS) and Home Depot (HD). The sole 200+ share price winner was 3M (MMM), which finished at 209.53, up 1.65 points (+0.79%).

Markets overall took a bit of a beating on Monday, though it wasn't enough for anybody to start yelling 'fire' on Wall Street. That may come when the Fed meets next week (September 24-25) and announces the third rate hike of 2018. That may prove to be more this market can bear.

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

At the Close, Monday, September 17, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,062.12, -92.55 (-0.35%)
NASDAQ: 7,895.79, -114.25 (-1.43%)
S&P 500: 2,888.80, -16.18 (-0.56%)
NYSE Composite: 13,031.91, -18.61 (-0.14%)

Thursday, September 13, 2018

Stocks Flatlined In Bifurcated Trading; Can Reform MAGA?

Maybe investing should be a little more like Wednesday's activity: boring. Slow. Uninteresting, aside from the continuance of the Dow-NASDAQ dichotomy.

Back in the mid-90s, with the advent of the internet and the CNBCs of the world, stock trading became more akin to fantasy sports than serious investing. Day-trading became the norm, volatility increased and the natural outcome was to favor professionals who had the tools, skills, and patience to ply the market with the requisite aptitude and attitude.

Today's algo-driven compression chamber that is called a "market" is a far cry from the staid and simple concepts of just a generation ago. Prior to the internet explosion of online brokerages and sophisticated strategies, buy and hold was the norm. Investment advisors - at least the honest ones not tied to commissions or performance - put people's money into solid companies with deep backgrounds, decades of dividend payments and reasonable price-earning ratios.

Investors today throw money at companies such as Tesla (TSLA), which hasn't made a dime in earnings. That nomenclature was also the trademark of the dotcom boom and bust. Pets.com, Beyond.com and other pie-in-the-sky, profitless, promising companies fell to the waysides in 2000 after being hyped non-stop on message boards and from boiler room operations such as those prominently featured in movies like "The Wolf of Wall Street."

Not to say that there aren't new-age companies that deserve the backing of the investing public, but it's a crowded space, and valuations on companies like Google (Alphabet, GOOG), Amazon (AMZN) and others are out in the stratosphere somewhere, reflecting future growth of mammoth proportions which may or may not come to fruition.

That's probably why the aforementioned Dow-NASDAQ see-saw exists. Investors in Dow stocks (30 blue chips) are quite a bit more circumspect and conservative than the punters and speculators on stocks covered by the NASDAQ. They're also more likely to hold - or even add to positions - during downturns rather than sell outright and go looking for the next momentum-chasing darling of the day.

In the past, rules and regulations on banking and investment houses kept speculation at reasonable levels. All of that changed with the internet, 24-hour financial news, and, most importantly, changes to the Glass-Steagall act under President Bill Clinton in 1999. Clinton signed into law the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed SOME of the provisions of the Glass-Steagall Act, most notably, those measures which kept the banking business separate from the investment business.

Certainly, the new requirements struck a blow for free markets as the original Glass-Steagall act of 1933 was a response to wide-open conditions which contributed to the Great Depression. But, Clinton's new liberalness may have been a step too far. Since the enactment of Gramm-Leach-Bliley, the US economy has suffered the dotcom crash, the Great Financial Crisis of 2008-09, and various distortions of Federal Reserve policies like ZIRP (Zero Interest Rate Policy) and QE (Quantitative Easing).

Now that the Fed seeks to unwind its bloated balance sheet and normalize interest rates, perhaps it's time to call out the real culprit of financial repression: widespread advantageous policies for the banking sector which crowd out and frustrate individual efforts. While a democratization of the investing world has occurred to some degree with crowd-sourcing, the regulations surrounding the nascent rise of small offerings continue to throttle companies and potential investors with needless rules and strictures.

In a true free market, there would be 1/10th the number of regulations in place today, and most of them would be foisted upon the high-profile trading houses of Wall Street, not the start-up companies that must wade through SEC regulations and countless pages of blue sky laws.

For America to be great again, maybe boring isn't the way to go, but unfair rules which favor the well-heeled over start-ups might need to be examined and revised.

In the meantime, despite the promise of crowd-sourcing and online trading, small investors will continue to be subject to unfair trading practices which puts the interests of Wall Street far ahead those of Main Street.

At the close, Wednesday, September 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,998.92, +27.86 (+0.11%)
NASDAQ: 7,954.23, -18.25 (-0.23%)
S&P 500: 2,888.92, +1.03 (+0.04%)
NYSE Composite: 12,990.10, +37.80 (+0.29%)

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

FAANGs Whacked Again As Investors Pull Back From Tech Space

Netflix was murdered in trading on Wednesday as investors reacted to a report by Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty that Apple plans to launch a competing video service though the company has to date made no announcement.

It was enough to take seriously, and money flowed out of Netflix (NFLX) to the tune of a 22.42-point decline, off a whopping 6.17% at the close. Apple's stock barely budged, but in fact was down 1.49 (-0.65%).

A day after topping $1 trillion in market cap, Amazon (AMZN) shed 44 points to close at 1994.82, a solid two-percent decline.

Alphabet (GOOG), parent of Google was lower by 10.82 (-0.88%), and Tesla lost nearly three percent, closing at 280.74, reaching its lowest closing point since May 25.

Facebook lost nearly four points to finish the day at 167.18, a four-month low.

All of this trading occurred while tech executives were brought before congress to testify in a wide-ranging probe of the unregulated social media space. Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey faced congressional scrutiny before a select committee of senators and House representatives. It's political theater at its very best, with lawmakers preening and getting in good soundbites in the lead to the midterm elections in two months.

Wishing for nothing less than to regulate free speech on the internet, congress is unlikely to have much impact upon the operation of the social media behemoths. As private enterprises, these mammoth companies are free to do as they please, from banning users who upset their dilettante views to promoting largely socialist idealism.

While the hearings make for some useful political jabbing, the congress shows by its naive use of forums such as these that they are as much a part of the problem as the companies themselves. Since most politicians use social media platforms to promote their particular agendas, dragging big company executives to Capitol Hill is more red herring than serious hearings.

While congress browbeats, investors are keenly aware that some of these companies are seriously overvalued. Tesla, for instance, is down 100 points in less than a month's time, exceeding a 25% decline. Facebook is off 50 points since July 25 and is likewise trading under bear market conditions, down nearly 24% over the last six weeks.

With the current round of tech profit-taking having a serious effect on investor confidence in the space, the staid stocks of the Dow gained slightly on the day, barely moving the needle. Elsewhere, stocks were roiled worldwide, as emerging market conditions continue to deteriorate.

The September swoon is gathering momentum and a more severe decline may be dead ahead for US stocks despite a booming economy and low unemployment. The main problems are rising interest rates and fundamental overvaluation issues.

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

At the Close, Wednesday, September 5, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,974.99, +22.51 (+0.09%)
NASDAQ: 7,995.17, -96.07 (-1.19%)
S&P 500: 2,888.60, -8.12 (-0.28%)
NYSE Composite: 12,968.55, -1.31 (-0.01%)

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Stocks Stagnate Prior To Google's Blowout Report

Stocks continued to loll around the unchanged mark to open the week's trading. The major indices have not moved much at all in the past week, though there could be a sudden lift after Alphabet, parent of Google (GOOG), reported second quarter earnings that smashed expectations.

The $5 billion fine leveled against Google the for antitrust violations by the European Union will barely dent the company's reported $100+ billion in cash and marketable securities.

While Google may stand alone atop the tech heap, it may need help lifting the rest of the market off the mark. Investors appear to be awaiting the report on second quarter GDP before making definitive decisions regarding stock purchases or sales.

Dow Jones Industrial Average July Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
7/2/18 24,307.18 +35.77 +35.77
7/3/18 24,174.82 -132.36 -96.59
7/5/18 24,345.44 +181.92 +85.33
7/6/18 24,456.48 +99.74 +185.07
7/9/18 24,776.59 +320.11 +505.18
7/10/18 24,919.66 +143.07 +648.25
7/11/18 24,700.45 -219.21 +429.04
7/12/18 24,924.89 +224.44 +653.48
7/13/18 25,019.41 +94.52 +748.00
7/16/18 25,064.36 +44.95 +792.95
7/17/18 25,119.89 +55.53 +848.48
7/18/18 25,199.29 +79.40 +927.88
7/19/18 25,064.50 -134.79 +793.09
7/20/18 25,058.12 -6.38 +786.71
7/23/18 25,044.29 -13.83 +772.88

At the Close, Monday, July 23, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,044.29, -13.83 (-0.06%)
NASDAQ: 7,841.87, +21.67 (+0.28%)
S&P 500: 2,806.98, +5.15 (+0.18%)
NYSE Composite: 12,794.05, +4.14 (+0.03%)

Monday, June 25, 2018

Dow, NASDAQ Hammered As Investors Continue Flight, FAANGs Pounded; What a Mess!

How's this for a healthy economy?

Facebook (FB): 196.35, -5.39 (-2.67%)
Amazon (AMZN): 1,663.15, -52.52 (-3.06%)
Apple (AAPL): 182.17, -2.75 (-1.49%)
Netflix (NFLX): 384.48, -26.61 (-6.47%)
Google (Alphabet, GOOG): 1,124.81, -30.67 (-2.65%)


...and, for good measure,

Tesla (TSLA): 333.01, -0.62 (-0.19%)

Tesla gets special consideration because its demise will be swift, painful and awe-inspiring for a variety of reasons. First, the company is run by a person (Elon Musk) who is almost certainly bi-polar, meaning he's brilliant, but eventually a nut-case, like a Pee Wee Herman on steroids. Second, the company has mountains of debt which will not likely be serviced in an orderly manner. Third, the cars keep bursting into flames. Fourth, and possibly most important, the competition in the eVehicle category is fierce and will swallow up the upstart. Everybody from Porsche, to BMW, to Jaguar has invested heavily in battery powered vehicles and these companies have more expertise and money than little Tesla.

Telsa is one of those companies that is wildly overvalued and ripe for a fall. It was spared today because nobody has any nterest in selling it just yet. They're all along for the ride (pardon the pun). When the bugs start getting squashed on the windshield, so to speak, it will be epic. Tesla's EPS is a humorous (if you're not an investor) -13.97 per share. Yep, they're losing money on every car they sell, and they don't make it up on volume. This one's a definite long-term short.

As for the rest of the market, one can only assume that seasoned veterans of the investing business see what's ahead. Trade wars don't help, but they're certainly not the only cause. Stock buybacks will prove to be disastrous once the price drops become permanent (soon, within months or weeks). The FAANGs in particular have been responsible for up to 75% of the recent gains on the NASDAQ, and they're based on nothing more than herd behavior. The stocks were hot, everybody got in. When everybody tries to get out, days like today are the result. Expect more of them over the next 3-5 months.

Lest one needs reminding, the Dow confirmed bear market conditions on April 9, and that HAS NOT CHANGED. Nor will it. Stocks will continue to be out of favor for the foreseeable future. Selected, mostly-defensive stocks will fare better than the recent high-flyers, but most money managers who can are turning aggressively to cash because they see no way out of an end-of-cycle bust scenario.

The market decline, top to bottom, could take another 12 to 18 months, having begun in February of this year and we haven't even hit recession yet, which is likely to occur in the fourth quarter of this year or the Q1 2019, though a third quarter negative read is not yet off the table, though unlikely.

The initial panic phase caused by the February correction on the Dow was only the beginning. The Dow is closing in on a second correction at 23,954. It will have to fall below 21,292 to be officially called a bear market (-20%), but by then, it's probably too late for many, who will be forced to take the ride down to wherever it finally rests. Anybody paying attention has already been on alert and hopefully divesting with profits.

While the next market bear bottom will be substantially lower than where it is today, it is unlikely to be the end of the world, though to many, it will seem like it. The current phase is slower and more grinding, such as witnessed over the past two weeks. The Dow has only seen one close to the upside in the last 10 sessions, and this was the largest decline since May 29 (-391.64), though there have been more than enough triple-digit declines and gains in the interim and surely more to come.

Today's drop on the Dow wiped out all of June's gains and is within 140 points of flushing the gains from April (+50) and May (+252), which would make the second quarter a loser, just like the first, although, with nothing to backstop markets here, still be not equal than the losses experienced in the first quarter. There's only four more trading days left in the quarter and the scramble is underway to shed losers and find safe havens.

Good luck with that.

Next stop for the Dow, on the downside, is somewhere between 22,700 and 23,300. It should get a bounce of maybe 400-600 points from there, but the trend is surely to the downside for the near and long term.

The treasury yield curve flattened just a touch on the day, with two particularly interesting flavors. The 5s-10s spread is now a measly 12 basis points (2.75%, 2.87%). That's not much of a premium on the benchmark 10-year note over the five. Why wait an additional five years to get your money back at basically the same rate? The 10s-30s spread is only 16 bips (3.02%). That's flat. As a pancake. If the 5s-10s invert, all hell breaks loose, and it's not out of the question that it could happen, soon, possibly within weeks.

Anybody holding gold or silver should be selling if not altogether out by now. The PMs have been a poor choice since 2012, but the silver lining is that they will be even cheaper in coming months. The metals, through the magic of rampant manipulation by central banks, are mirroring stocks presently, and, as they did during the GFC of 2008-09, will be ripped lower on redemptions and hustles for cash, but will likely be the first to recover.

It's advisable to sell out of PMs now and buy them back at a lower price come later this year. Gold may hit $950, and silver $13.50 before any bounce.

Invest wisely. Drink Kambucha. Drive a Porsche.

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
6/25/18 24,252.80 -328.09 -163.04

At the Close, Monday, June 25, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,252.80, -328.09 (-1.33%)
NASDAQ: 7,532.01, -160.81 (-2.09%)
S&P 500: 2,717.07, -37.81 (-1.37%)
NYSE Composite: 12,481.60, -157.97 (-1.25%)

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Stocks Split as Dow Flirts with 25,000 Mark

The Dow Industrials and the NYSE Composite ended the day lower on Tuesday, while the S&P 500 and NASDAQ posted gains.

All of the moves were muted, amounting to nothing more than market noise, except for the frothy NASDAQ, which posted an all-time closing high at 7637.86, barely - by 0.59 points - topping the previous high from mid-May.

The soaring NASDAQ should remind veteran traders of the red-hot dot-com market of 1999 and early 2000, which ending in tatters, cascading lower in March of 2000 in one of the greatest stock market routs of all time.

It took the NASDAQ a full 13 years to regain those 2000 highs, with an additional collapse in 2007-09. If anybody is thinking that the NASDAQ is once again running full throttle on hope and hype, they're probably in the cautious camp that has seen this kind of market madness before.

The leading stocks of the NASDAQ are the usual suspect, overvalued companies - the FAANGS - and traders will be riding their valuations for as long as the good times roll. The obvious question is how long before these titans of technology roll over.

Nothing lasts forever, including stock manias based on companies that have recently come under fire for misdeeds and faulty business practices and products. Tesla (TSLA), Facebook (FB), Starbucks (SBUX), and Alphabet, parent of Google (GOOG) have each had bouts of bad publicity, though the fallout hasn't readily struck their valuations.

Amazon (AMZN) and Apple (AAPL) are testing their upper ranges, adding some supposed value nearly every day. Apple is approaching a valuation of one trillion dollars, while Amazon is not far behind. Is any company worth a trillion dollars? That is a lot of money.

Meanwhile, the Dow continues to plow along just below 25,000, a figure it has achieved only one time since March 13. While 25,000 is still 1600 points below the all-time high on that index, it appears to be a psychological barrier that may prove difficult to surpass and maintain.

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

At the Close, Tuesday, June 5, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,799.98, -13.71 (-0.06%)
NASDAQ: 7,637.86, +31.40 (+0.41%)
S&P 500: 2,748.80, +1.93 (+0.07%)
NYSE Composite: 12,658.70, -15.21 (-0.12%)

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

Stocks Tumble As Investors Flee Overvalued Stocks

Today was yet another example of the kind of days which are typical in a bear market, and make no mistake, this is the early phase of what could become a raging bear which will strip stocks of 40-60% of their valuations. Stocks were higher in the early trading and slumped in the afternoon, with the Dow Industrials closing at its lowest level in three weeks.

With today's losses, the Dow has plunged into negative territory for the month, following back-to-back declines for February and March. Even earning reports are not enough to keep stocks elevated, especially after Alphabet (parent of Google, GOOG) posted what appeared to be strong numbers only to reveal increasing expenses, crushing profit margins.

Dow component 3M (MMM) led the decline after posting earnings per share of $2.50, which missed analyst estimates of $2.52, and were 16% higher than the $2.16 posted in the year-ago period. The stock was blasted, losing 14.77 points (-6.84%) to end the day at 201.11.

Caterpillar was close behind in the loss column, down -9.80 points (-6.36%).

Alphabet dropped a stunning -47.47 (-4.45%) to close out the session at 1,019.98.

Only six of 30 Dow stocks managed gains on the day. The NASDAQ and other major indices were also badly damaged.

The prevailing trend this earnings season has been that whatever a company posts, it's probably not good enough for anybody seeking to get out of a position, as risk aversion has suddenly become popular once again, especially with yields on the ten-year-note approaching three percent and precious metals (gold, silver) at bargain basement prices.

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

At the Close, Tuesday, April 24, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,024.13, -424.56 (-1.74%)
NASDAQ: 7,007.35, -121.25 (-1.70%)
S&P 500: 2,634.56, -35.73 (-1.34%)
NYSE Composite: 12,513.91, -96.87 (-0.77%)

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

FAANGs, NASDAQ Under Assault as Investors Book Profits

Profit-taking in tech stocks continued on Monday as high-flying, high-p/e companies known affectionately as the FAANGs (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, and Google) were subjected to relentless, high-volume selling.

For the record, here's how these tech darlings fared on Monday:
Facebook (FB) 171.47, -3.63 (-2.07%)
Apple (AAPL) 169.80, -1.25 (-0.73%)
Amazon (AMZN) 1,133.95, -28.40 (-2.44%)
Netflix (NFLX) 184.04, -2.78 (-1.49%)
Alphabet (Google, GOOG) 998.68, -11.49 (-1.14%)

General holders of these stocks are not yet alarmed over the losses which began a week ago, following the last-gasp ramping over Black Friday and Cyber Monday, because the companies have been among the best performers since January.

What is apparent is that investors are taking profits made in these stocks - none of which, other than Apple, offers dividends - and investing largely in Dow companies, all of which provide dividends to shareholders.

There's nothing unusual about what analysts typically call "sector rotation," except that the movement is quite pronounced. The S&P and Dow have outperformed the NASDAQ for six straight sessions.

With the markets less than two hours from the opening bell on Tuesday, futures are diverging wildly, with Dow futures up in the range of 130 points, while NASDAQ futures are falling by 90 points or greater.

At the Close, Monday, December 4, 2017:
Dow: 24,290.05, +58.46 (+0.24%)
NASDAQ: 6,775.37, -72.22 (-1.05%)
S&P 500: 2,639.44, -2.78 (-0.11%)
NYSE Composite: 12,634.89, +20.33 (+0.16%)

Monday, December 4, 2017

Dow Posts Best Week Of Year; NASDAQ Falls

Confused?

In what was the best performance week of the year for the Dow (a nearly three percent gain), the NASDAQ lost more than one half percent.

The math is fairly simple. Outside of Apple (AAPL), which is a component of Dow 30 stock, the FAANGs (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google) all got beaten down.

Facebook (FB) lost 1.78%.
Netflix (NFLX) was down 0.41%.
Amazon (AMZN) fell 1.44%, and Google (GOOG) dropped 1.10%. Additionally, another of the high-fliers, Tesla (TSLA) shed 0.75%.

Those stocks make up a mammoth portion of the total volume on the NASDAQ, thus nullifying any gains by all other stocks on the index.

Fear not, however, holders of high P/E paper, because since the Senate tax legislation was cleared Saturday morning by a narrow margin, all is well in the land of the free. Monday morning futures are pointing to a moon shot open.

For the Week Ending December 1, 2017:
Dow: +673.60 (+2.86%)
NASDAQ: -41.57 (-0.60%)
S&P 500: +39.80 (+1.53%)
NYSE Composite: +192.63 (+1.55%)

Sunday, November 19, 2017

US Equites In Danger Zone After Very Volatile Week

The US economy isn't exactly on its back, but it also isn't growing by the phony 3+ percent the government reported in the past two quarters.

Speaking strictly from an economist's perspective, the US government GDP figures include grossly-inflated government spending and just about every spare dollar their statisticians can unearth from the mainland, Alaska and Hawaii.

GDP-watching is a Wall Street phenomena, serving the interests of the corporatists who need to return dividends or share growth to stockholders. Thus, it adds impetus to the argument that investing in US corporations is a good idea. That may or may not be true, depending largely upon which corporation is attracting the investing dollars.

Obviously, the FAANGs (Facebook (FB), Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX), and Google (Alphabet, GOOG) have been the most attractive of the past six to eight years, while quite a few have faltered. Most of the stocks making gains since the GFC of 2007-09 have been the result of massive stock buybacks, a dubious distinction, as these high-fliers are the ones most prone to collapse in the case of a market rout.

They've diluted their shares and have deployed capital in one of the worst ways, buying back shares in order to boost EPS (earnings per share). Having fewer shares available while keeping profits at roughly the same level improves EPS, but it does not expand the business potential. Banks and financials are especially guilty in this regard. They're over-leveraged and will pay a price, but their executives and shareholders are happy little clams, for now.

When the share price falls, and dividends are slashed, the shareholders will be singing a different tune. The executives will be long gone because they've proven to care only about their own pockets and bonuses.

In any case, stocks ran through a very volatile week, punctuated by a massive dead-cat-bounce rally on Thursday which stanched some of the losses incurred since all-time highs the previous Tuesday.

There could be a waterfall effect developing, because confidence is waning. The holiday shopping season - which is demonstrably longer than last year's - should provide a boost, but the economy is lurching closer to two important events: the December Fed meeting and the expected rate hike, and another round of negotiations in congress over the debt ceiling limit, both mid-month.

Elsewhere, oil remains at elevated levels, above $55/barrel for WTI crude, gold and silver were bounced around but appear ready for a breakout (as they have too many times in the past four years, with nothing to show), bonds were flatter still.

At the Close, Friday, November 17, 2017:
Dow: 23,358.24, -100.12 (-0.43%)
NASDAQ 6,782.79, -10.50 (-0.15%)
S&P 500: 2,578.85, -6.79 (-0.26%)
NYSE Composite: 12,302.89, -0.39 (0.00%)

For the Week:
Dow: -63.97 (-0.27%)
NASDAQ: +31.85 (+0.47%)
S&P 500: -3.45 (-0.13%)
NYSE Composite: -19.71 (-0.16%)

Monday, June 12, 2017

What Happened Friday? A Shaky Trend Is Developing

Strangely enough, the skyrocketing NASDAQ took a serve turn for the worse on Friday, dropping a massive 113 points at the same time the Dow was setting a new record with an 89-point gain and the NYSE Composite tacked on 65 points.

What drove the NASDAQ to its knees on Friday were the stocks known as FAANGs - Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, and Google - taking hits to their massively-overvalued share prices.

Here's the ugly reality
Facebook (FB) -5.11 (-3.30%); Apple (AAPL) -6.01 (-3.88%); Amazon (AMZN) -31.96 (-3.16%); Netflix (NFLX) -7.85 (-4.73%); Alphabet (parent of Google) (GOOG) -33.58 (-3.41%).

One-day, three-to-five-percent declines in any equity is usually a big deal. Having all of these institutionally-widely held stocks take a nosedive like that on a single day is a large, red, flashing warning sign that something is fundamentally wrong with the market, the economy, maybe even the world.

These shares weren't dumped all at once because somebody was taking profits. Volume was three times normal. Everybody was booking gains, and probably with good reason. The price/earning ratios for these tech darlings are unsustainable. Netflix leads the way with a P/E of 204, followed by Amazon, at 184, according to Yahoo Finance. Google seems modest by comparison, at 32. Facebook is 38, and Apple looks downright cheap with a P/E around 17.

So, only two of these stocks are wickedly overpriced, using standard metrics, but they all suffer some similar characteristics: They are all tech companies, based on the West coast, run by billionaire founders (excepting Apple, though Tim Cook was surely an heir apparent to Steve Jobs). The only other company that comes to mind with these characteristics is Microsoft (MSFT). The company founded by Bill Gates took a pretty good hit on Friday, down 1.63 (-2.27%).

Does this suggest that the "big one" is about to shake out the left coast, battering California from LA to San Jose with aftershocks up the coast to Seattle? And just how would anybody know that? OK, that theory falls into the category of tin-foil hat conspiracy theory, but, if Cali shakes, rattles and rolls someday soon, Money Daily will take credit for calling it (that's a joke, son).

Outside of Friday's tumult, general economic data has not been encouraging. First quarter GDP was 1.2% (second estimate), which is pretty close to stall speed. The US - and largely the global - economy has been anything but robust since the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2008-09. Captains of finance at places like the World Bank, the Fed, ECB, and elsewhere have been touting "recovery" for eight years, wherein none, in fact, has occurred, unless one peers only at stock charts all day. While stocks have soared on easy money accommodation, he same cannot be said of Main Street's outlook. Retail stores are closing everywhere in America, small business has already been dumped into the trash bin of history, and new company creation has hit a 27-year low. Additionally, the Fed is hell-bent on raising rates for the second time this year when the FOMC meets on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.

What's troubling about the fall of the FAANGs is that these companies have largely benefitted off the backs of consumers, monopolizing markets and cannibalizing profits to the C-suite executives. Now, the largest shareholders - pension, mutual, and hedge funds - may be taking their money elsewhere, either to cash, bonds, or, maybe just to more stolid, established, dividend-paying stocks. It's tough to know, groupthink among the elites being difficult to gauge or define.

Whatever the case, with the smallish losses on the Dow and S&P earlier in the week followed by a fallout in the most speculative stocks establishes a trend, which, for now, we can only identify as "shaky."

With most stocks and indices hovering near all-time highs, shaky is not a word one would normally associate with risk-taking. The time to run is when the avalanche is first seen at the top of the mountain, not when it barrels into the lodge.

At the Close, 6/9/17:
Dow: 21,271.97, +89.44 (0.42%)
NASDAQ 6,207.92, -113.85 (-1.80%)
S&P 500 2,431.77, -2.02 (-0.08%)
NYSE Composite: 11,744.73, +65.78 (0.56%)

For the Week:
Dow: +65.68 (0.31%)
NASDAQ: -97.88 (-1.55%)
S&P 500: -7.30 (-0.30%)
NYSE Composite: +26.03 (0.22%)

Monday, May 15, 2017

Stocks Little Changed For Week With Tech Titans Continuing Leadership

Taken as a whole, the week on Wall Street was about as exciting as a Gheorghe Zamfir concert, without the music.

Stocks gyrated through very narrow ranges, extending a pattern that have prevailed - with only minor aberrations - since late March. In that span of time the major averages are roughly even on a daily and weekly basis, the major exception being the NASDAQ, which continues to climb without regard to fundamentals, driven largely on an odd combination of momentum, hope, faith, greed and a noticeable absence of fear, pricing out major tech companies, especially Alphabet (GOOG), parent of Google; Amazon (AMZN); Apple (AAPL); and Facebook (FB).

Those four companies have outperformed the broader market and carried the whole of Wall Street with it. In an investing environment largely devoid of critical analysis, these "no-brainers" of tech 2.0 or 3.0, or whatever moniker one wishes to place upon the rapid multiple expansion in this space, a few stocks make for giddy headlines.

The facts be damned; all of the investment money from funds and pension plans are routinely flowing into this small piece of the pie, crowding out smaller firms which operate without the largess of the Wall Street elite connected by the hip to the Federal Reserve.

It's a troubling scenario which bears watching closely as the bull market continues to run at its own pace. With the Fed and central bank cronies underwriting the entire market, there's a fakery here that is reminiscent of the tightly-held mainstream media.

Happy hunting!


At the Close, 5/12/17:
Dow: 20,896.61, -22.81 (-0.11%)
NASDAQ: 6,121.23, +5.27 (0.09%)
S&P 500: 2,390.90, -3.54 (-0.15%)
NYSE Composite: 11,547.05, -16.55 (-0.14%)

For the week:
Dow: -110.33 (-0.53%)
NASDAQ: +20.47 (0.34%)
S&P 500: -3.54 (-0.15%)
NYSE Composite: -68.54 (-0.59%)

Thursday, January 14, 2016

Rally Falls Short in Final Hour; NASDAQ Still Down for the Week; Investors Not Biting on FANGs

Of the hardest hit stocks, many of them, including some of the tech all-stars, such as Facebook (FB), Amazon.com (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX), and Alphabet (Google, GOOG), otherwise known as the FANGs have been mercilessly sold off since December, and, likely, for good reason.

Overall, their price-earnings ratios are stratospheric, they don't actually make anything, Amazon, in particular, rarely turns a profit, and they don't offer dividends, only appreciation in stock price as their sole saving grace.

Take away the increasing stock price and what have you got? Losses as far as the eye can see, and traders have recently shied and run away from these four horsemen of the internet.

The big winner today was Facebook, which gained nearly three percent, but is still down close to 10% overall. The others didn't fare quite so well. Amazon gained close to 2%, though it is still down over 12% since December 30. Netflix added back just 0.5%, and is down close to 20% since highs made the first week of December. Google, the best of the bunch, with regular profits and solid earnings quarter after quarter, gained 2% and is only down about 8% since after Christmas.

Fourth quarter earnings are coming due for the bunch of them, and market participants will be eager to note any difficulties experienced during the holiday period, though Amazon could surprise, as more and more people flocked to the web for holiday shopping in the past year.

Otherwise, it was a hopeful day on Wall Street, though the massive rally sparked by St. Louis Fed governor James Bullard's comments that the low price of oil was an impediment to the Fed's 2% inflation target, and thus, the Fed may "rethink" its interest rate hike policy for 2016.

While lower oil - and consequently gas - prices are good for everyone except possibly the oil companies and the Fed, Bullard's jawboning served to send the markets soaring on the day, wiping out much of Wednesday's steep losses.

However, the rally fell short in the final hour, as traders exhausted their buying optimism.

Not much should be made from today's trade. Stocks are still moribund and stuck well below all-time highs. The hope of making back the losses of the past two weeks is slim, and anyone thinking the indices will retrace all the way back to all-time highs made in May 2015 is whistling past the grave.

Unless earnings for the fourth quarter are utterly surprising to the upside, expect the pattern of wild swings to continue. Global markets are still in trouble, as is the worldwide currency crisis, reaching from Japan to China, Australia, Europe and even to Canada, where the looney has lost significantly to the dollar due to the downturn in the price of oil.

It's indeed unfortunate that so many keys of economics are locked to the price of oil, because, by most measures, the price is going to stay low or lower for an extended period of time, pushing all other prices down with it. At the apex of the deflationary spiral, oil, which powers more than just machines, pushes down prices for virtually all products, from manufactured to agricultural.

The rally today erased the loss for the week on the Dow, left the S&P virtually unchanged, and the NASDAQ with a 26-point loss. Friday will determine whether the week ends with a positive or negative tone.

The day's action:
S&P 500: 1,921.84, +31.56 (1.67%)
Dow: 16,379.05, +227.64 (1.41%)
NASDAQ: 4,615.00, +88.94 (1.97%)


Crude Oil 31.09 +2.00% Gold 1,077.20 -0.91% EUR/USD 1.0867 -0.14% 10-Yr Bond 2.0980 +1.55% Corn 358.25 +0.07% Copper 1.98 +1.12% Silver 13.85 -2.20% Natural Gas 2.14 -5.69% Russell 2000 1,025.67 +1.53% VIX 23.95 -5.04% BATS 1000 20,474.30 +1.64% GBP/USD 1.4412 -0.07% USD/JPY 118.0400 +0.34%

Thursday, January 30, 2014

3.2% Fourth Quarter GDP Sparks Relief Rally

Nothing really changed since Wednesday. The Fed is still going to purchase $65 billion in treasuries and mortgage-backed securities in February, $20 billion less than they did in December and in each month of 2013.

As a result, emerging markets are still struggling with reduced liquidity and runs on their various currencies.

We learned, prior to the opening bell, that fourth quarter GDP increased by 3.2%, slightly less than expected, and that 19,000 more people signed up for unemployment benefits last week, pushing the total to 348,000, the highest in about a month.

The unemployment number was widely disregarded and blamed - like everything else these days - on the weather, as the market saw plenty of alpha in a buy-the-dip mentality in what has been a down January and a choppy week of scary trading.

How the markets recover the losses incurred over the past three weeks is the big question, especially with the Fed stomping on the QE brakes. Earnings season has been nothing to get excited about, especially when, after the bell, Google and Amazon reported some very mixed results.

Google (GOOG) missed on the bottom line but beat on revenues, posting profits of just $12.01 per share on expectations of $12.26,reporting actual sales of $16.86 billion on forecasts for $16.75 billion. Shares of the giant search and technology company. Despite the miss, shares were traing about four percent higher in the after hours.

Amazon (AMZN) reported earnings of 51 cents per share, short of estimates of 69 cents, a big swing and a miss. Revenues were just short of estimates - up 20% from a year ago - at $25.59 billion when analysts were seeking $26.08 billion. Shares of the shopping megalith were down between four and eight percent in after-hours trading.

With January concluding tomorrow, it's a slam-dunk that the month will end lower, setting expectations for the full year back to "reasonable" levels. The current churn is that the "January Barometer" is not all that reliable for predicting full-year results. Of course, were stocks higher at this juncture, the barometer would be hailed as the most accurate of all investing tools and stock jockeys would be adjusting their year-end estimates towards the moon.

And, with stocks juiced, straight off the opening bell, what better time could there have been to slam gold and silver lower, as they were, unjustifiably. Still, from the perspective of gold and silver holders and buyers, the precious metals, even with higher premiums everywhere, are considered bargains at current prices.

Such is the world in a contrived environment controlled by issuance of play money to the world's elite. Fundamentals being what they are, however, reality may make a comeback in the weeks and months ahead.

DOW 15,848.61, +109.82 (+0.70%)
NASDAQ 4,123.13, +71.69 (+1.77%)
S&P 1,794.19, +19.99 (+1.13%)
10-Yr Note 100.46, +0.27 (+0.27%) Yield: 2.70%
NASDAQ Volume 1.94 Bil
NYSE Volume 3.54 Bil
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4329-1390
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 156-67
WTI crude oil: 98.23, +0.87
Gold: 1,242.20, -20.00
Silver: 19.13, -0.426
Corn: 434.00, +6/00

Friday, October 19, 2012

Reality Catching Up to Wall Street on Earnings Misses, Fears

Around June, this author told a particularly self-absorbed, furtive individual that there would be a market "event" shortly before the presidential election, designed to offer the impression that the economy, under president Obama, was failing in multitudinous ways, designed to usher in Mitt Romney as the next occupant of the White House.

Until today, that prediction seemed somewhat unreasonable, as stocks have risen sharply during the summer months, but, as third quarter earnings - in addition to various warnings from the likes of the IMF and World Bank - are proving, the US and global economies are far from what anyone would consider healthy.

Today's sharp sell-off was the product of many misses and warnings by huge multi-national companies that either missed earnings and/or revenue estimates or issued warnings for the months ahead.

Among those companies that fell short of Wall Street's lowered estimates after Thursday's close and prior to Friday's open were McDonald's (MCD), Microsoft (MSFT), Google (GOOG), high-flying Chipolte Mexican Grill (CMG), and General Electric (GE). The misses came behind similar poor showings from Intel (hit a 52-week low today) and IBM, earlier in the week and proved quite a few sell-side analysts correct in predicting that this quarter would be very rough from an earnings perspective.

Truth be told, even those companies beating earnings estimates are not beating by much, with some exceptions, and are generally hitting targets that are lower than the previous years numbers, which, as the market is a continuous-discounting mechanism, means stocks are going in reverse, with earnings falling, not growing.

That alone should explain today's deep, across-the-board, declines, but also brings into question the entire philosophy behind central bank easing and money printing on a global scale. Sure enough, easy money has propped up banks and companies and a multitude of stocks and indices, but the end result of funny fiat money always reverts to a point at which currencies become worthless and derivative instruments, such as stocks, and, further out, bonds, lose value and we could be nearing the conclusion of the failed stimulative experiment that's fixed nothing since the crash of 2008.

Speaking of crashes, today's drop pales by comparison to what occurred 25 years ago to the day, the well-known stock market crash of 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 23%. It was a seminal market event that will probably (hopefully) never be repeated, as there are supposedly more safeguards and triggers - to say nothing of the PPT - to prevent such a disastrous one-day event.

That is not to say that markets, stocks and indices cannot fall hard over periods of time, though it is far too soon to call today's action the beginning of such a a downward spiral. However, with tech stocks and industrials feeling the heat from investors in an earnings season that has been short on enthusiasm and long on fear, the coming weeks, especially with the November elections as a backdrop, could produce some calamities such as have already been seen in individual stocks, many of which were grossly overvalued and highly speculative, Chipolte and Apple come immediately to mind.

Checking the charts, it's useful to point out that the Dow and S&P broke through their 50-day moving averages and closed just about right on them, a position last seen a week ago, before Monday and Tuesday's "savior" rallies pushed equities back to something of a triple top, which has now broken down in a dramatic reversal. Today's declines on the two indices were the worst since mid-June. Shortly thereafter, both indices progressed above their 50-day MA, but have now returned to the roost, setting up a very unsettling weekend and a potential breakdown on Monday or further on during the week.

As for the NASDAQ, today's worst percentage loser, that index has been screaming red for a month, having busted through its 50-day MA eight sessions ago. Any further deterioration in the beloved NAZ could trigger a serious correction, as it is already down 7% in the past month.

Looking ahead to next week, earnings reports are due out on some big names, such as Cattepillar (CAT), Las Vegas Sands (LVS), Yahoo (YHOO) and Texas Instruments (TXN) on Monday; 3M (MMM), Coach (COH), Facebook (FB) and United Parcel Service (UPS) on Tuesday; and, on Wednesday, Boeing (BA), Eli Lilly (LLY), General Dynamics (GD), Lockheed Martin (LMT) and O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY).

Those mentioned above are but a smattering of companies reporting, in what will be the busiest week of earnings season. CNBC and Bloomberg will be looking for rays of hope, while investors may have a more wary eye toward more companies missing on earnings and revenue.

One economic data point worth noting was existing home sales for September, falling 1.7% to an annual run rate of 4.75 million, well below most estimates.

Until then, the long weekend waiting game, and, on Monday night, the final presidential debate, followed on Wednesday another FOMC rate policy decision, which will probably be nothing more than a formality.

Naturally, there will be the usual can-kicking and posturing from Europe, which still cannot come up with plans for either Greece or Spain, which may or may not be part of the plan to hold off the bad news until after our elections. One can hardly wait.

That is all... for now.

Dow 13,343.51, -205.43 (1.52%)
NASDAQ 3,005.62, -67.25 (2.19%)
S&P 500 1,433.19, -24.15 (1.66%)
NYSE Composite 8,324.14, -118.68 (1.41%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,194,602,500.00
NYSE Volume 3,851,036,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1168-4339
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 166-117
WTI crude oil: 90.05, -2.05
Gold: 1,724.00, -20.70
Silver: 32.10, -0.771

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Stocks Continue Roller Coaster Ride; Google Pops on Earnings

In this space a couple of days ago, it was theorized that stocks were not offering directional signs to investors, and that was on a nearly 200-point drop on the Dow.

Since then, just two days hence, the major indices have erased those ugly losses and added to the upside, with gusto.

Despite the highest number of initial unemployment claims since January (380,000) being announced prior to the opening bell stocks started a slow progression to the upside which lasted all session long, no doubt spurred on by the whirring computer algos which, as machines, only do as they are programmed.

The paucity of trades didn't slow the market in the least, as volume was, as per usual, non-existent for the most part. Somewhere in between the flat PPI reading (no kidding, PPI was unchanged for March) and Google's first quarter earnings announcement, somebody let slip a rumor of more QE from the Fed, or something like that, at the computer-traders lapped it up like so much cheery data, even though none of the recent spate of speeches by Fed governors included any mention of further easing, except on an iffy basis, that being a severe downturn in the economy.

The markets being more akin to a roller coaster rather than the usual casino-like environment of late, the day-trading brokerages and hedge funds had a field day skewering shorts until they screamed for mercy.

As for the aforementioned Google (GOOG) earnings report, the company - which reported after the bell - blew away estimates by earning $10.08 per share, well beyond the expected $9.66 offered by analysts. The company also announced a 2-for-1 stock split, though the proposal will not be voted on until June, though it is widely considered that it will meet with shareholder approval.

The beat goes on, despite occasional dissonance along the way.

Wells Fargo (WFC) and JP Morgan Chase (JPM) are next up on the earnings parade, reporting well before the bell on Friday morning.

Dow 12,986.58, +181.19 (1.41%)
NASDAQ 3,055.55, +39.09 (1.30%)
S&P 500 1,387.57, +18.86 (1.38%)
NYSE Composite 8,039.95, +127.10 (1.61%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,491,138,875
NYSE Volume 3,543,994,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4410-1193
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 103-39
WTI crude oil: 103.64, +0.94
Gold: 1,680.60, +20.30
Silver: 32.52, +1.00

Friday, January 20, 2012

Nice Day for Dow Industrials, Thanks to IBM; Housing Fix Not In

Stocks continued their happy saunter through the cold of January, with the Dow Jones Industrials posting another nearly-100-point gain, thanks in large part to IBM (up 7.98 to 188.50 (+4.42%) on solid 4th quarter earnings reported after the bell Thursday), which accounted for half of the Dow's gain all by itself.

The other indices lagged far behind the Blue Chips, courtesy of Google's (GOOG) worst earnings miss in six years, reporting a profit of $2.7 billion on revenue of $10.6 billion, well below Wall Street non-GAAP estimates of $9.50 per share versus an estimate of $10.46. Whoops! Shares of the internet behemoth were down 53.58 points, a loss of better-than eight percent.

Two other tech titans - Microsoft (MSFT) and Intel (INTC) - reported excellent quarters, helping to keep the montl-long rally going. The Dow, S&P and NYSE Composite were up each of the four trading days this week; the NASDAQ fell just short, losing 1.63, despite a valiant, last-half-hour rally.

Despite the outstanding gains from the last half of December through today, there are signs of trouble, and the fact that today marked options expiry, may lead to declines next week as more companies report. With just about 20% of the S&P 500 having reported, only 55% have beaten expectations, a ten year low. The average for the past ten years has been that 62% of companies beat street estimates. Considering that the big banks have all reported already - and all of them matched or beat - this does not bode well for the bulk of reporting companies which are set to report over the next two weeks.

Meanwhile, the Dow is back at levels last seen in mid-July, today's close just missing (four points) making a six-month high. It will be interesting to see if the Dow can crack through next week and continue onward toward exceeding the 2011 high of 12810.54 made on April 29. Yes, it's getting a bit frothy. The word for next week is likely to be "overbought," as in "we're market pumping day-traders who don't give a hoot about fundamentals, just making a profit."

So far, the advance-decline and new highs-new lows indicators are showing no sign of an impending correction, but, with the Dow up nearly 1000 points in just the past four weeks, a short correction would be something a healthy market would fully appreciate.

One other item that may be a canary in the coal mine is the nice rise in gold over the past few weeks, including a healthy advance today, and, finally, silver caught a bid over the past few sessions, finally breaking and holding over the artificial resistance at $30/ounce.

On CNBC today, the network featured a series of reports on housing, calling it, somewhat inappropriately, "The Big Fix." Hottest among the topics was the government plan to sell off Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's inventory of foreclosed homes (REO) to investor groups which will turn these single-family homes scattered across the country into rental units.

As is usual with government's half-baked plans, there are a rash of questions and arguments against, primarily centered around the whole fairness issue of kicking families out and then reselling - at what should be huge discounts - to well-heeled investors more concerned with turning profits than restoring blighted neighborhoods. The plan is still in the formative stages, but there are indications that the government will allow the investors to rent to whomsoever they please, which would include welfare and other social program recipients, meaning that homeowners ought to be on guard for the ghetto-ization and balkanization of their McMansion neighborhoods, such as is the case in other socialized nations, notably France, where the ghettos are in the suburbs, far from the uber-rich in the well-maintained cites.

One other problem is that the banks - if they actually do the right thing and write down these loans - will be facing far larger write-downs on bulk sales than anticipated. Since the US economy has been predicated for the past six years on keeping the banks free from losses, the government plan looks like a classic election-year crash and burn before it even gets going.

Dow 12,720.48, +96.50 (0.76%)
NASDAQ 2,786.70, -1.63 (0.06%)
S&P 500 1,315.38, +0.88 (0.07%)
NYSE Compos 7,829.34, +9.97 (0.13%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,979,837,250
NYSE Volume 3,911,913,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3289-2274
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 182-26
WTI crude oil: 98.46, -1.93
Gold: 1,664.00, +9.50
Silver: 31.68, +1.17

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Harrisburg, PA Bankrupt, Max Keiser, Angela Merkel, Nicolas Zarkozy, Switzerland WIR, Google Earnings

Stocks vacillated today somewhat like they're supposed to in normal times, though these are no normal times in which we are living. Tape-watching in the age of high frequency trading and intellectual dispiritedness has an intoxicating allure and can become addictive.

Sparing the details, stocks were lower in the morning and staged a half-hearted rally on low volume in the afternoon. Sound familiar? Yes, computers. Kind of just going with the flow, or lack thereof. These last two days of trading could also be interpreted as outward manifestations of the liquidity, solvency and currency confidence crises as various macro sectors of the global economy grind inexorably toward a perceived halt, the term "perceived" included to indicate that markets are not entirely frozen, that there is always some urchin of trade lurching about, no matter how unwieldy the underlying system.

A few news items:
From Wednesday: City of Harrisburg, PA, capitol of Pennsylvania, declares bankruptcy. This is a sad, though poignant story of our times. A city of 46,000 with about $500 million worth of bad debt, or, debt that won't be repaid. Will there be a follow-on effect? Actually, there has to be and the situation is fluid, with the state trying to tell the Harrisburg City Council that they cannot declare bankruptcy. But they did, anyway...

Google Earnings (after the bell, today) - nice, 26% profit increase and other nice metrics. They're rocking, but for search, Bing is better.

Also after the bell, Fitch puts Barclays Bank plc, BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse AG, Deutsche Bank AG, The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Morgan Stanley and Societe Generale on Rating Watch Negative. At the same time, Fitch has placed the short-term IDRs of four of the banks on Rating Watch Negative.

Dow 11,478.13, -40.72 (0.35%)
NASDAQ 2,620.24, +15.51 (0.60%)
S&P 500 1,203.66, -3.59 (0.30%)
NYSE Composite 7,229.08, -34.61 (0.48%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,683,142,125
NYSE Volume 4,397,526,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2755-3644
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 20-35 (reversal signal)
WTI crude oil: 84.23, -1.34
Gold: 1,668.50, -14.10
Silver: 31.67, -1.12


I love it when a plan comes together and the clip of the Kaiser Report below fits like a favorite pair of jeans. Plenty from which to watch, enjoy and learn.