Showing posts with label all-time highs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all-time highs. Show all posts

Monday, June 11, 2018

Dow Soars Past Rivals; Upcoming: Trump Talks, Fed Rate Decision (Weekend Wrap & Monday Briefing)

Ripping past rival indices, the Dow Jones Industrial Average scored its biggest point increase since January, adding 681 points while boosting its June increase to 900 points, also the best monthly gain since January.

Whether the bullish sentiment will prevail through the remaining 15 trading days of June may be addressed in the week ahead, one which will witness President Trump's negotiating skills at work when he meets with North Korea's Kim Jong-un in Singapore, an epic event that looks to end nearly seven decades of armed confrontation on the Korean peninsula.

Since taking the oath of office in January, 2016, Trump has made North Korea a significant priority, alternating between insulting tweets (calling Jong-un "Little Rocket Boy," for instance), displays of military force, and back-room preliminary negotiations through surrogates from China, Japan, South Korea and US diplomats.

Official negotiations begin Tuesday, 9:00 am Singapore time, which translates nicely to 9:00 pm Eastern Daylight Time, assuring that late-night political junkies will have their plates full for the better part of the week.

Also on the agenda for the upcoming week is the Tuesday-Wednesday FOMC policy rate meeting, in which the Federal Reserve will likely hike the federal funds rate another 25 basis points, an action which is likely to have great impact on stocks as well as bonds. After hiking rates earlier this year, Fed officials have gone to great lengths to keep their rate increase policy in front of investors and the general public, with various officials parroting the themes that the economy is strong and that now is the right time to increase lending rates.

As opposed to normal Fed operations being somewhat behind the curve, the current roster seeks to appear out in front of the economic realities, though critics maintain that all the Fed is doing is preparing for a looming recession, arming themselves with enough interest rate ammunition to staunch an eventual downturn.

If the Fed does as expected it will hike rates from 0.00 to 0.25 to 1.75% to 2%. This will be the second rate hike this year and the seventh move since the start of the tightening cycle which began in December 2015.

While the small increases have been well-spaced, it's assumed that the Fed will continue to increase rates every three months, meaning that they will hike again in September and once more in December.

The trouble with such an optimistic outlook is that an increase in their base rate to 2.25-2.50 by year-end would put increased pressure on the stock market, as treasury yields would likely rise to levels above and beyond those of many dividend-paying stocks, without the associated risk.

Another anticipated action this coming week is the response from G7 members following their weekend meeting in which President Trump insulted the leaders of other nations in person and via Twitter. Trump's claim that G7 countries like France, Canada, Germany, and Italy have long been taking advantage of the US via unfair trade practices. The US president has been slapping tariffs on friends and foes alike and the backlash in tit-for-tat tariffs has already been forwarded by Canada, with the EU nations likely to impose their own retaliatory trade taxes on US goods.

While the trade wars have been building, the financial media has routinely blamed the tension for declines in the stock market. However, as trade talk went ballistic in the past week, stocks continued their ascent without interruption, proving once again that snap analysis of stock market moves are nothing other than pure fakery by an inept, disingenuous media elite. Trading decisions are largely not the result of current events, but rather, are outward-looking, with longer-term event horizons than a few days or weeks.

The effects of trade interruptions, tariffs and retaliation are unlikely to be felt in any meaningful way for many months, making the premature effusions of guilt by presidential association by the financial and mainstream press a rather large canard.

So, the first full week of trading in June went spectacularly for stocks, with the NASDAQ breaking to new all-time highs on Wednesday, before profit-taking took it back down on Thursday. Friday's 10-point gain on the NAZ left it roughly 50 points off the new closing high.

As for the benchmark Dow Industrials, they are cumulatively 1300 points behind the January record high of 26,616.71. There is a great deal of ground to be made up in any effort to convince investors that the bull market will continue, while those of the bearish camp point to the range-bound cycle of the past three months following the cascading February fall.

June may turn out to be a watershed month for stock pickers, as tech stocks have regained much of their luster while financials have languished. Due to the somewhat incestuous nature of Wall Street trading, all boats may rise or fall in coming days as the second quarter draws to a close and fed managers square their books in anticipation of second quarter reports.

While the prior week may have been a banner for bulls, the week ahead promises to be full of surprises, intrigue and potential pitfalls for investors.

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

At the Close, Friday, June 8, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,316.53, +75.12 (+0.30%)
NASDAQ: 7,645.51, +10.44 (+0.14%)
S&P 500: 2,779.03, +8.66 (+0.31%)
NYSE Composite: 12,832.07, +43.56 (+0.34%)

For the Week:
Dow: +681.22 (+2.77%)
NASDAQ: +91.18 (+1.21%)
S&P 500: +44.41 (1.62%)
NYSE Composite: +211.24 (+1.67%)

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

Dow's Big Bear Market Rally Led Higher By Overvalued Boeing Shares

Monday's rally had everybody singing the praises of Treasury Secretary Mnuchin and the "on hold" status of trade negotiations with China. Supposedly, this gave the markets an "all clear" signal to buy more risk assets at elevated price levels (remember, the Dow is only off 6-7% from the all-time high of 26,616.71, January 26).

On the surface, a 300-point gain on the Dow provides a reason to cheer the market and the economy. Underneath the hood, however, the gears are grinding, sparks are coming from various frayed electrical components and the engine is sputtering and coughing. Any description of the US economy as anything better than sputtering should be viewed with resolute skepticism.

The big move on the Dow was fueled mostly by a rise in Boeing (BA), which was up 3.61% and is trading at the nosebleed level of 363 per share. For perspective, two years ago Boeing was trading at 127 per share. So, that's a triple for a company that is one of the more mature companies in America. Absurdly, Boeing is carrying a simple PE ratio of 27, a number normally reserved for high-growth companies.

Meanwhile, the seeming were out in force, disregarding the reality of a slowing, or, at best, sputtering economy (despite what you're reading or hearing) and stocks still well below the previous highs earlier in the year.

Monday's rally was nothing more than a media-inspired bear market rally. It had all the elements: only a few stocks led the way, the media was cheerleading all along, it was on a Monday.

Whatever your perspective of the market, there is little evidence that it is not massively overbought at any level above Dow 20,000. Trade wisely.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10
5/2/18 23,924.98 -174.07 -238.17
5/3/18 23,930.15 +5.17 -233.00
5/4/18 24,262.51 +332.36 +99.36
5/7/18 24,357.32 +94.81 +194.17
5/8/18 24,360.21 +2.89 +197.06
5/9/18 24,542.54 +182.33 +379.39
5/10/18 24,739.53 +196.99 +576.38
5/11/18 24,831.17 +91.64 +668.02
5/14/18 24,899.41 +68.24 +736.26
5/15/18 24,706.41 -193.00 +543.26
5/16/18 24,768.93 +62.52 +605.78
5/17/18 24,713.98 -54.95 +550.73
5/18/18 24,715.09 +1.11 +551.84
5/21/18 25,013.29 +298.20 +850.04

At the Close, Monday, May 21, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,013.29, +298.20 (+1.21%)
NASDAQ: 7,394.04, +39.70 (+0.54%)
S&P 500: 2,733.01, +20.04 (+0.74%)
NYSE Composite: 12,804.01, +86.59 (+0.68%)

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Peaks, Valleys and Trading Ranges: Stocks Stuck In Trader's Paradise

Another day, another volatile session with a 216-point trading range on the Dow has investors concerned, but traders - those commission-or-volume-based entities that make markets - ebullient.

The range of trade on the day was nothing of concern to anybody, since the levels are far from the extremes. Those extremes on the Dow, since February 8 include a February 26 high of 25,709 and a March 23 low of 23,533 and are dignified on charts as significant peaks and valleys. With the Dow closing somewhere betwixt and between is indicative of a market that simply cannot make up its own mind, since there are roughly equal parts sellers and buyers, but barely any conviction on either side.

Stocks will continue to trade in this 2100-point range until there is some decisive catalyst to lead them either higher or lower. Presently, there is nothing to encourage the bulls nor the bears that a breakout or breakdown is about to occur. What happens during these volatile but rangebound periods are fairly discernable patterns of behavior, most notably stocks bouncing higher off the 200-day moving averages of the various major indices, or correcting lower off the 50-day moving averages.

Stocks being tied to computers and the computers run by algorithms, programmatic trading is ensured.

There isn't much to be said or inferred from this sideways pattern, except that the range continues to be on the low side, with all-time highs from January 26 (26,616.71) becoming a smaller and smaller object in the rear view mirror of the stock market race car.

Nothing is likely to change this pattern until either the peak or valley is breached, though the odds are good that the valley breach will be the eventual winner, leading to a more vicious, faster-paced downturn.

That's not to say that the Dow could not add significantly from its current level. It's a distinct possibility, but one that would probably fail as the index approaches that February 26 peak.

Throw away all the fundamentals, dismiss all the geopolitical news, ignore all data and just focus on the chart. Sometimes - and now is one of those times - it is really that simple.

Dow Jones Industrial Average May Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
5/1/18 24,099.05 -64.10 -64.10
5/2/18 23,924.98 -174.07 -238.17
5/3/18 23,930.15 +5.17 -233.00
5/4/18 24,262.51 +332.36 +99.36
5/7/18 24,357.32 +94.81 +194.17

At the Close, Monday, May 7, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,357.32, +94.81 (+0.39%)
NASDAQ: 7,265.21, +55.60 (+0.77%)
S&P 500: 2,672.63, +9.21 (+0.35%)
NYSE Composite: 12,519.75, +26.40 (+0.21%)

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Facebook Helps Wall Street Rally; Amazon Posts Monster 1Q Surprise After Close

Facebook's (FB) blowout earnings were enough to propel markets forward for the day, but after the bell Amazon (AMZN) made serious noise when it absolutely crushed expectations, earning, in the first quarter, $3.27 per share on $51 billion in revenues for the quarter. Analysts had expected $1.27 per share on revenues of $49.96 billion. In the same quarter last year, earnings were $1.48 per share on $35.7 billion in revenue. Amazon was trading more than six percent higher in after-hours trading.

It's plain to see that Jeff Bezos of Amazon has taken internet technology and employed it to maximum capitalization. Traditional brick and mortar retailers have been failing and falling faster than the price of used shoes.

Amazon's monster quarter, combined with Friday's first estimate of first quarter GDP should be enough good news for a significant upside to close out the week. The timing could not have been better for the pushers of stock certificates, because February and March were down months for the Dow and other averages, and a third straight month of losses might have opened the selling floodgates wide.

With just two trading days remaining for the month, it's a safe bet that April will end in the black on the Dow, holding off, if only temporarily, the eventual sell-off everybody knows is coming. The Dow continues to wallow roughly 2000 points below the all-time high from January 26 (26,616.71). Expect the rally that started yesterday to continue into May, for a week or two. It should be good for 1000 Dow points at the minimum before it's exhausted. Look for pivot points upon which to place short bets, play puts or sell call options.

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

At the Close, Thursday, April 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,322.34, +238.51 (+0.99%)
NASDAQ: 7,118.68, +114.94 (+1.64%)
S&P 500: 2,666.94, +27.54 (+1.04%)
NYSE Composite: 12,582.90, +65.04 (+0.52%)

Thursday, April 12, 2018

Blackrock, Delta Boost Stocks; Dow Gaining Momentum As Syria Threat Fades

26,616.71

That's the only number any macro investor needs to know. That was the January 26 all-time high on the Dow.

Since that time, the world's most widely-followed stock index has fallen on some lean times, and getting back to its level days of glory isn't going to be easy, if at all possible over the near term.

Today was an effort to allay the fears of those looking at their 401k statements from the first quarter, which showed losses, possibly, for many, for the first time in years, perhaps as long as nine years.

Stocks continued to ramp higher throughout the day without any discernible news other than the usual flow of corporate earnings reports, most of which were positive, and the thought that President Trump won't actually send missiles into Syria. The tail is truly wagging the dog on this one.

The gain today on the Dow was close to 300 points. Putting that in perspective, if the Dow was to go straight up at the rate of 300 points per day, it would only take seven trading days to get back to the all-tme high.

But, how likely is that?

Not very.

What is likely is that the Dow will continue to gain through the month, as corporate earnings continue to fuel a rally, as visceral and fleeting as that may be. Something negative will come along to upset the status quo, as it usually doesn't, but investors are keen to ignore the negative and trade on the positive. That's because everybody likes to be positive, whether the reality supports it or not.

Examining a couple of representative corporate earnings reports, Delta (DAL) and Blackrock (BLK) stood out, both reporting before the bell.

Delta gained 74 cents per share, down from 77 cents a year ago. The stock gained 1.51 points (+2.93%). That's some wishful thinking there. The company is in the midst of a $5 billion stock repurchase, begun just over a year ago and scheduled to be completed by 2020. Putting this most-recent quarter in perspective, the company's EPS would be declining if the number of shares outstanding had held steady.

Blackrock was expected to hit 6.39 per share. The New York-based company's net income rose to $1.09 billion, or $6.68 per share, in the first quarter, up 28 percent from the year-ago period.

Adjusted for special items, BlackRock earned $6.70 per share. They have money (yours) and know how to put it to good use. The stock was up 7.70 (+1.47%) on the day. Blackrock executives - including CEO Larry Fink - are Washington and Fed insiders, expert at employing the most extreme accounting tactics, thus making up extraordinary investment opportunities. They are hardly saints, but they are well-protected.

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

At the Close, Thursday, April 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,483.05, +293.60 (+1.21%)
NASDAQ: 7,140.25, +71.22 (+1.01%)
S&P 500: 2,663.99, +21.80 (+0.83%)
NYSE Composite: 12,580.22, +65.63 (+0.52%)

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

The Market is a Yo-Yo; Don't Get Strung Out

There are only two directions in which the prices of assets can move: up or down. In it's current state, US stock indices are doing both, a condition which cannot persist for long before the establishment of a definite direction becomes apparent and dominant.

Thus far in the month of February - which has a mere six trading days remaining - there have been eight days of gains and five sessions ending with losses, each swing in either direction being rather magnanimous compared to the prior regime of low volatility and complacency.

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average arrived at the midpoint between the highs and lows for the month. On the 8th, the low reading was a cumulative loss of 2288 points. On Tuesday, the 20th, it closed with a loss of 1184 for the month, roughly a 50% retracing off the lows, ending a string of six straight winning session.

Tumultuous times cry out for straightforward thinking and diligent observation. Direction will soon be determined, and such direction can be employed as a springboard for trading over the upcoming six to 18 months.

At the present, nothing has been determined, but it is clear that stocks are finding a rough road back to all-time highs acquired late in January. Not that all gains are without drawbacks and whipsaws, but the measure will likely be in the breadth of gains and losses in individual stocks.

Tuesday's losses on the Dow were led by Wal-Mart (WMT) which fell by more than 10%, but it was by no means alone. Of the 30 blue chip components, only five gained on the day, and only one - Intel (INTC) - gained more than one percent.

One by one, as fourth quarter 2018 and full year earnings are announced, the Dow stocks are being sold off. Whether this emerges as a buying opportunity or a precursor to more asset shredding is a function of both market sentiment and the continuing narration of the Trump economy.

If the general economy is on the mend, then this episode of doom and gloom will be brushed off as a mere anomaly. On the flip side, should the darlings of Wall Street continue to underperform, more losses lay dead ahead.

Dow Jones Industrial Average February Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
2/1/18 26,186.71 +37.32 +37.32
2/2/18 25,520.96 -665.75 -628.43
2/5/18 24,345.75 -1,175.21 -1,803.64
2/6/18 24,912.77 +567.02 -1,236.62
2/7/18 24,893.35 -19.42 -1,256.04
2/8/18 23,860.46 -1,032.89 -2288.93
2/9/18 24,190.90 +330.44 -1958.49
2/12/18 24,601.27 +410.37 -1548.12
2/13/18 24,640.45 +39.18 -1508.94
2/14/18 24,893.49 +253.04 -1255.90
2/15/18 25,200.37 +306.88 -949.02
2/16/18 25,219.38 +19.01 -930.01
2/20/18 24,964.75 -254.63 -1184.64

At the Close, Tuesday, February 20, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,964.75, -254.63 (-1.01%)
NASDAQ: 7,234.31, -5.16 (-0.07%)
S&P 500: 2,716.26, -15.96 (-0.58%)
NYSE Composite: 12,763.34, -111.02 (-0.86%)

Note: Just heard that Reverend Billy Graham has passed away at the age of 99. A good man has gone to meet his maker.

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

How Long Before Stocks Regain Previous Highs?

The question before Wall Street's punters, planners and prognosticators is measuring the length of time it will take for the main indices to regain their prior all-time-high levels.

Just in case the recent downturn isn't of the long-term variety (a 50-50 proposition), the guesses and estimates range from a few weeks to a matter of months. However, if circumstance prevail to keep stocks lower - higher interest rates, bouncy economic data, unexpected geopolitical events - regaining the high ground could take years.

A couple of recent retreats and rises may prove instructive.

After the NASDAQ shattered the 5000 mark in 2000 (5,048.62, March 10, 2000), it subsequently crashed and burned, shedding roughly 75% of its value by March 9, 2009 (1,268.64). It didn't get all the way back to the previous top until April 25, 2015, when it closed at 5,056.06.

Even more recent, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average topped out at 14,164.53 on October 9, 2007, less than 18 months later it had fallen by more than 50%, to 6,547.05, bottoming out on March 9, 2009. Fueled by central bank largesse in the form of ZIRP and QE, the Dow rocketed back to prior highs until March 5, 2013, closing at 14,253.77 that day, a period - from top to top - of a mere five-and-a-half years.

From this recent data, it appears the tops and bottoms are generally features of Spring and Fall, so the most recent January highs may not signal the market's last hurrah but portend another quick rise back beyond and then a fall.

Whatever the case may be, it does appear that the second-longest bull market in history is nearing an end, and may, in fact, be done. How long it takes to get back, after the eventual crash, is an open question, and one that should be correctly assessed in terms of years, and probably more than a decade.

For the record, the Dow regained some of what it lost over the past two weeks, but it still has a fair a distance to travel back toward the all-time highs, a touch more than 1500 points.

Next week? Why not?

Dow Jones Industrial Average February Scoreboard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
2/1/18 26,186.71 +37.32 +37.32
2/2/18 25,520.96 -665.75 -628.43
2/5/18 24,345.75 -1,175.21 -1,803.64
2/6/18 24,912.77 +567.02 -1,236.62
2/7/18 24,893.35 -19.42 -1,256.04
2/8/18 23,860.46 -1,032.89 -2288.93
2/9/18 24,190.90 +330.44 -1958.49
2/12/18 24,601.27 +410.37 -1548.12

At the Close, Monday, February 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,601.27, +410.37 (+1.70%)
NASDAQ: 6,981.96, +107.47 (+1.56%)
S&P 500: 2,656.00, +36.45 (+1.39%)
NYSE Composite: 12,560.12, +154.30 (+1.24%)


Wednesday, January 17, 2018

Tail Wags Dog: Fed 'Beige Book' Provides Rationale for Dollar Buying

Wall Street professionals wiped off all the poop from yesterday's 300+ price collapse on the DJIA and set about to bidding up risky assets to even riskier levels, sending the Dow and other averages soaring to new all-time closing highs.

Making matters even more preposterous, sinister, or outlandish was the reading of the Fed's Beige Book at 2:00 pm ET, which sent the US Dollar index off three-year lows to near the highs of the day at 4:00 pm ET, the closing bell on Wall Street.

If there's a soul left on the planet that hasn't bowed to the power of the Federal Reserve and its host of central bank and commercial cronies, then that person is simply out-of-touch.

Silver and gold have wallowed near multi-year bottoms for four long years while stocks have gone absolutely ballistic. Paper promises are worth much, much more than solid gold or silver in today's phony funny money world.

It's almost enough to make one give up writing on the subject (pondered here nearly every damn day).

Today's gains on the Dow Industrials were the largest since the election of November 8, 2016.

At the Close, Wednesday, January 17, 2018:
Dow: 26,115.65, +322.79 (+1.25%)
NASDAQ: 7,298.28, +74.59 (+1.03%)
S&P 500: 2,802.56, +26.14 (+0.94%)
NYSE Composite: 13,352.39, +105.53 (+0.80%)

Monday, January 15, 2018

Goldilocks Stock Market Is Becoming Idyllic Unicorn Utopia

Party hats and noise-makers for everyone!

The major US indices closed the second Friday in January at record levels. Huzzah, huzzah, huzzah!

The most recent stock market maneuverings are enough to make people consider quitting their jobs, as their money invested is making more.

How much more? Well, anybody with $100,000 invested in, say, a Dow index fund, on the last day of trading in 2017 (December 29), is ahead by $4386 as of the close Friday, January 12. That's like making over $2000 a week, or more than $100,000 a year.

Back in the 2006, the heyday of the sub-prime mortgage mania, people in places like San Diego were literally quitting their jobs, simply because their homes had risen in value by so much, sometimes as much as 150-200%. People in tony neighborhoods with $250,000 homes were being offered $500,000, $600,000 and more.

Well, we all know how that turned out, but the point of making money, either in real estate, or stocks, or anything else for that matter, relies largely upon one's entry and exit points.

To say that sometime in January would be a good time to at least trim some of one's stock holdings would not be considered bad advice. However, who would want to give up on a stock market that appears to be heading to the moon, orbiting it and then taking off toward outer space. After the great returns of 2017 - and the eight years prior to that - it's become apparent that "buy and hold" is the preferred strategy.

That makes sense, since the ongoing bull market is the second longest in market history and nudging along toward the longest ever, having begun in 2009, when the Dow bottomed out at 7,278.38 on March 20th. Having already tripled in value, another solid year could push the Dow (and the other averages) to quadrupling levels.

In other words, if you had $100,000 invested in March of 2009, you'd have over $350,000 today, on your way to $400,000. If you had $500,000 back then, you'd be close to $2 million, and if you haven't cashed out and retired already, you're a fool. (Seriously, anybody who can't make $2 million last 30 years is an idiot. It's $66,666 a year, or $1282 a week. That should be more than enough, even if you aren't keeping some of it in bonds at two percent).

So, stocks continue to ramp higher and probably aren't coming down any time soon. Plenty of people are what they call baby boomers and they're retiring in droves, many of them pulling money out of retirement funds. No matter how much these people remove from the market, it won't matter. There will be new buyers lining up to take their places, bid stocks higher, reap profits.

It's really amazing. Next, unicorns and money trees will be abundant.

At the Close, Friday, January 12, 2018:
Dow: 25,803.19, +228.46 (+0.89%)
NASDAQ: 7,261.06, +49.28 (+0.68%)
S&P 500: 2,786.24, +18.68 (+0.67%)
NYSE Composite: 13,294.34, +83.57 (+0.63%)

For the Week:
Dow: +507.32 (+2.01%)
NASDAQ: +124.50 (+1.74%)
S&P 500: +43.09 (1.57%)
NYSE Composite: +191.11 (+1.46%)

Friday, January 12, 2018

Central Banks Have Complete Control Over Global Economies, Governments

US stock indices had their best showing of the new year on Thursday, with all the averages reaching new all-time highs.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is higher by 875 points in just the first eight sessions of 2018. That is extraordinary. It is so extraordinary that, at that pace - of a little more than 100 points per day - the Dow average would nearly double in value this year.

The gain would be over 20,000 points, putting the Dow Jones average somewhere in the range of 45,000 by year's end. In percentage terms, it would be up 80%. Anybody who has over 100,000 invested in stocks and is making less than $80,000 this year might as well take the year off. Why work when your money is doing so much of the heavy lifting?

Of course, that's a speculation. The Dow won't gain 80% this year, or will it?

Is the economy that good? Are US companies making that much money, that they are severely undervalued today?

Or, are central banks intervening in stock markets with money created out of thin air?

For answers, or, at least, hints, to the answers, see yesterday's post, or, any of the posts from the past eight or nine years which have tags or labels "central banks", "central bankers", or, "Federal Reserve."

At the Close, Thursday, January 11, 2018:
Dow: 25,574.73, +205.60 (+0.81%)
NASDAQ: 7,211.78, +58.21 (+0.81%)
S&P 500: 2,767.56, +19.33 (+0.70%)
NYSE Composite: 13,210.77, +104.17 (+0.79%)

Tuesday, December 26, 2017

Stocks Slide Into Christmas Break, But Finish Higher for the Week

Heading into the final week of 2017, stocks have been terrific performers for there year-to-date, with the major averages all having made multiple new highs throughout the annum.

With the exception of the Composite index, all the majors held the same pattern over the week leading up to Christmas, up sharply on Monday, followed by declines three of the next four days, Thursday being the odd up day. For the NYSE Composite, Wednesday was a gainer, while the other three fell.

Because of the outsize gains on Monday, all finished the week in the green, with the Composite leading the way, percentage-wise.

Though stocks have been superstars not only for the current year, but for the past nine years running, since the wicked days of the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) back in 2008-09, the past four days have been something of a disappointment, especially since the congress managed to push through a milestone tax reform bill and keep the government functioning for another month with a last-minute continuing resolution on Friday.

What may not be obvious to casual observers is just how stretched valuation have become. Year to date, the NASDAQ is up a whopping 28%, the Dow 23%, S&P 500 19%, and the NYSE Composite the laggard, up a mere 15%, a number which would be stellar most of the time.

Will stocks continue to climb in 2018. It's difficult to take a stand against stocks, but a small January pullback would not be out of the ordinary.

Anybody who sold this market short is likely eating cat food and living in a cardboard box, so it's doubtful any analyst will take a negative view heading into 2018. Someday, all of the smart guys on Wall Street are going to be wrong, but guessing what day that will be is a task for gamblers, not investors.

At the Close, Friday, December 22, 2017:
Dow: 24,754.06, -28.23 (-0.11%)
NASDAQ: 6,959.96, -5.40 (-0.08%)
S&P 500: 2,683.34, -1.23 (-0.05%)
NYSE Composite: 12,797.44, -2.77 (-0.02%)

For the Week:
Dow: +102.32 (+0.42%)
NASDAQ: +23.38 (+0.34%)
S&P 500: +7.53 (+0.28%)
NYSE Composite: +97.76 (+0.77%)

Thursday, November 30, 2017

Dow Gains, NASDAQ Falls, Bitcoin Up, then Down, Precious Metals Hammered

Dow stocks led the way on the second last day of November, as tech stocks (especially the FAANGS) were beaten down on the NASDAQ, suffering a loss of more than one percent - a rare occurrence these days.

Bitcoin ramped up over $11,000, before crashing. Silver and gold were flogged, as has been the case for too long as central banks struggle for survival in an increasingly fractured global environment.

Governments are still hanging onto their taxing powers, but it's becoming increasingly apparent in the West that promises made to workers - especially public employees - via pensions, are going to be revised.

The final day of the month signals new all-time highs as window dressing will be in effect. Republicans in congress hope to hold a vote on tax reform either Thursday or Friday. The margin of error for passing a bill is very slim as Republicans hold a small majority and all Democrats are expected to vote against any tax bill.

At the Close, Wednesday, November 29, 2017:
Dow: 23,940.68, +103.97 (+0.44%)
NASDAQ: 6,824.39, -87.97 (-1.27%)
S&P 500: 2,626.07, -0.97 (-0.04%)
NYSE Composite: 12,561.32, +41.09 (+0.33%)

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

All-Time Highs Becoming the Norm on Wall Street

Even though a potential government shutdown and another rate hike by the Fed are just weeks away, stock investors don't seem to care.

All the major indices rocketed out of the gate to impressive gains on Tuesday, eviscerating previous records.

As Wednesday morning approaches the opening bell, news that third quarter GDP was revised higher in the second estimate, to 3.3%, has futures kicking higher.

While Bitcoin surpassed $10,000 per coin on Tuesday night, the Dow might one-up the cryptocurrency by hurtling past 24,000 on Wednesday. The Dow Industrials passed the 22,000 mark on September 11, and cruised above 23,000 on October 18, so, ripping through 24,000 in just over a month wouldn't be much of a surprise.

At the Close, Tuesday, November 28, 2017:
Dow: 23,836.71, +255.93 (+1.09%)
NASDAQ: 6,912.36, +33.84 (+0.49%)
S&P 500: 2,627.04, +25.62 (+0.98%)
NYSE Composite: 12,520.23, +129.45 (+1.04%)

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Dow Soars To New All-Time High, Paced By Caterpillar, 3M

Led by two of its highest-priced components, the Dow Jones Industrial Average blasted to another new high on Tuesday.

Caterpillar (CAT) and 3M (MMM) announced strong third quarter results with the maker of heavy industrial and earth-moving equipment was up nearly five percent, while 3M rose almost six percent on the day.

With those two posting extraordinary gains and the remainder of the Dow 30 rather muted, the blue chip index vastly outpaced the other main indices, putting 24,000 within sight just days after breaking through the 23,000 mark.

The Dow closed above 23,000 for the first time on October 18 and is up nearly 500 points in just one week.

Investors continue to chase returns, and, in the case of Dow components, dividend yield. Both 3M and Caterpillar offer dividend yields rivaling the 10-year treasury bill and are considered by analysts to be among the safest of equities to hold in a portfolio.

The other indices all ended the session with gains, but at much lower percentages than the Dow.

At the Close, Tuesday, October 24, 2017:
Dow: 23,448.20, +174.24 (+0.75%)
NASDAQ: 6,597.09, +10.26 (+0.16%)
S&P 500: 2,567.98, +3.00 (+0.12%)
NYSE Composite: 12,405.13, +20.70 (+0.17%)

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Stocks Race to All-Time Highs... Again

It's getting to be like a broken record. All of the major indices leapt to all-time closing highs on Tuesday.

Presented without comment, because, really, what is one to say?

At the Close, Tuesday, October 3, 2017:
Dow: 22,641.67, +84.07 (+0.37%)
NASDAQ: 6,531.71, +15.00 (+0.23%)
S&P 500: 2,534.58, +5.46 (+0.22%)
NYSE Composite: 12,302.88, +38.21 (+0.31%)

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Janet Yellen Admits She May Not Know What She's Talking About

As Janet Yellen dispensed more gibberish about labor markets and inflation in a speech at the annual conference of the National Association for Business Economics, stocks drifted aimlessly, seeking some sense of direction from congress, the president, the Fed Chair, anybody.

The problem for the markets is that there isn't any other direction but down. In just the past few weeks, Houston, Florida and Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands have been wracked by hurricanes, NFL protests became more important than the games themselves, Kim Jong-un and President Trump continue to trade insults. These are not exactly headlines or stories that make people confident about buying stocks, mutual funds, ETFs or any of the other wealth-enhancing products offered by the Wall Street swindle machine.

In fact, since the FOMC meeting came to a close last Wednesday, stocks have done nothing but go lower. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down four straight days since the Fed confirmed that it would begin shrinking its balance sheet in October. Though the losses have not been great, they have been consistent. The blue chip index is off 128 points since closing at a record high of 22,412.59 on September 20.

The S&P 500 snapped a three-day losing streak, but only by 18 cents, finishing green for the first time since the Fed announcement. The NYSE Composite bucked the trend by making new highs on Friday, but has posted losses both days this week, and the NASDAQ finished higher on Tuesday, but is still down 42 points from FOMC day.

Yellen's remarks aren't of any help to markets seeking guidance. In here address today, she said the following:
"My colleagues and I may have misjudged the strength of the labor market, the degree to which longer-run inflation expectations are consistent with our inflation objective or even the fundamental forces driving inflation."
Essentially, statements like those are not going to inspire much confidence. Parsing the quote, she's basically saying all of the Fed's assumptions about the labor market, inflation and even the fundamentals of the economy itself may be wrong.

Wow. Just wow. And people actually listen to this witch doctor of finance for guidance and direction?

What's amusing, or scary, depending on your point of view, is the current madness is just the warm-up act to the Fed's actual sales of MBS and treasury bonds in upcoming months, a global garage sale that will commence over at least three to five years. Anything less would rapidly throw markets into a death spiral because of the number of assets, the size ($4.4 trillion) of the balance sheet and the lack of quality in the offerings.

For now, markets are taking it in stride, slowly adjusting to the new paradigm of rising interest rates in an environment of low inflation, slack wage demand and slow to no growth in GDP, globally.

If anything, the officials at the Fed should trade in their accountant vizors for dunce caps because they're sending the economy down a black hole with experimental policies and solutions to problems that don't already exist. Judging by past performance, the Fed will find a way to assure the business cycle is complete by plunging the economy into recession.

You can almost count on it.

At the Close, Tuesday, September 26, 2017:
Dow: 22,284.32, -11.77 (-0.05%)
NASDAQ: 6,380.16, +9.57 (+0.15%)
S&P 500: 2,496.84, +0.18 (+0.01%)
NYSE Composite: 12,127.93, -13.64 (-0.11%)

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Dow, S&P Close At Record Levels; FOMC Set to Raise Rates

Unfazed and unaffected by the recent tech dip, the 30 blue chips of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 each set new closing highs on Tuesday.

Stocks rebounded sharply after the surprise declines in the FAANG stocks Friday and aftershocks felt around the world in foreign tech markets.

Record highs are nothing notable in this market as stocks have been the (OGIT) only game in town for investors seeking profit and percentage gains.

The FOMC began their two-day meeting Tuesday, and wrap up Wednesday, with a policy announcement expected at 2:00 pm ET. It is anticipated that the board of governors will raise interest rates, but note that it may be the last raise in some time. The Fed may not increase the federal funds rate again until December or beyond.

At The Close, 6/13/17:
Dow: 21,328.47, +92.80 (0.44%)
NASDAQ: 6,220.37, 44.90 (0.73%)
S&P 500: 2,440.35, +10.96 (0.45%)
NYSE Composite: 11,796.79, +50.33 (0.43%)

Monday, June 5, 2017

Stocks Gain Again With No End in Sight

The rally continued this past week, despite a weak outlook for employment with the May NFP data coming in well short of estimates and the prior two months (March and April) revised lower.

As has been the case for the better part of the last eight years, stocks charted their own course, without regard to underlying fundamental data. As the market entered the first full week of June, the ancient adage of "sell in May and go away" did not apply. Stocks were higher (the DOW, NASDAQ and S&P all making new all-time highs) the past two weeks and up in eight of the last 11 overall.

Bonds are telling an odd story as well, with the 10-year note falling below 2.20% yield on Friday, the lowest level since the election. The action in bonds is unusual, considering that the Fed is prepared to and has hinted at raising the federal funds rate another 25 basis points at their June FOMC meeting, which will be held next week, on the 13th and 14th.

Entering Monday's trading, futures are pointing lower, though that means little, except that the expected levitation will be delayed a few minutes or maybe even a few hours.

At The Close, 6/2/17:
Dow: 21,206.29, +62.11 (0.29%)
NASDAQ: 6,305.80, +58.97 (0.94%)
S&P 500: 2,439.07, +9.01 (0.37%)
NYSE Composite: 11,718.70, +18.91 (0.16%)


For the week:
Dow: +126.01 (0.60%)
NASDAQ: +95.60 (1.54%)
S&P 500: +23.25 (0.96%)
NYSE Composite: +86.83 (0.75%)

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Stocks Up for the Week; Murky Outlook Going Forward

The last full week of May was a solid one for stock pickers, with all the major averages posting excellent weekly gains, despite a somewhat subdued session Friday.

The NASDAQ and S&P notched new all-time highs a couple of times, though the question remains as to just how much higher stocks can ascend given the weakness in macro data and tension in geopolitics.

The start of June is generally a quiet time for markets, but, with central banks backstopping any selloff with unlimited funding, the fun may last some time longer. June's FOMC meeting has been heralded as one in which the Fed may raise the federal funds rate to 1.00-1.25%, which would be a high-water mark since the GFC of 2008-09.

Money Daily disputes to contention of many analysts - 83% of which see a June rate hike - that a rate hike is imminent, due to glaringly obvious poor results in housing, personal income and spending, and industrial production, to name just a few.

Futures are pointing to a negative open in this holiday-shortened week.

At The Close, 5/26/17:
Dow: 21,080.28, -2.67 (-0.01%)
NASDAQ 6,210.19, +4.94 (0.08%)
S&P 500: 2,415.82, +0.75 (0.03%)
NYSE Composite: 11,631.87, -7.43 (-0.06%)

For the week:
Dow: +275.44 (1.32%)
NASDAQ: +126.49 (2.08%)
S&P 500: +34.09 (1.43%)
NYSE Composite: +89.18 (0.77%)

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Rally Continues; Assimilation Of Entire Global Economy By Central Bankers Is Nearly Complete

Just for the heck of it, look up a couple of things on your favorite search engine (ours is Bing; we've supplied the links):

The Crime of '73

Creature From Jekyl Island

President's Working Group on Financial Markets

Bank for International Settlements (BIS)

If it's not already obvious, the international cartel of banking has been at this game a long, long, long, time.

Just for fun, here's an article from FEE.org (Foundation For Economic Education) by Robert Higgs: Wartime Origins of Modern Income-Tax Withholding.

If you allow (and who hasn't?) the government to take your money before you ever see it, you're owned. Sure, your retirement fund looks good, but try adding up all the taxes you've paid the last ten years (spoiler alert:: you'll be shocked).

That's all for today, including new record closes for the S&P and NASDAQ.

At the Close, 5/25/17:
Dow: 21,082.95, +70.53 (0.34%)
S&P 500: 2,415.07, +10.68 (0.44%)
NASDAQ: 6,205.26, +42.23 (0.69%)
NYSE Composite: 11,640.73, +19.50 (0.17%)