Showing posts with label bear market. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bear market. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2018

Fearless Rick Called The Bear Market; Contributing To A Fund? You Are A Bag-Holder

There are very few people who ascribe to the discipline of Dow Theory.

I, Fearless Rick, am one of them. I am also the only person I know who has read Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations," and I am currently re-reading sections of that lengthy tome because it's important to understand.

I'm making these statements not to blow my own horn, but to point something out that readers of this blog and the millions of non-readers should acknowledge.

When I wrote this post on April 9, I had complete confidence in what I was delivering. There were no caveats, what-ifs, or other murky scenarios by which I could hedge my declaration that the bull market in stocks was over and that the next 18 months to three or four years would be losers for stock holders.

It's nearly a month later - and three months since the Dow Jones Industrial Average topped out at 26,616.71 (sorry, that number has been hard-wired into my brain) on January 26 - and nothing has changed. Stocks are still hovering between their 50 and 200-day moving averages. In fact, since the Dow Transports confirmed the bear market, the Dow Industrials are up - as of today's close - a whopping 184 points, a gain of less than one percent over the past 15 trading days.

Thus, I am here to say that it sure looks like I nailed it, called it, that I'm absolutely right. This is a bear market, and it will be a bear market until the Dow Industrials find some bottom and the Dow Transports confirm the primary trend change back to the bullish side.

And I will tell you when that happens and not a moment sooner.

I'm pointing this out because I've grown a little bit weary of toiling in obscurity while outright frauds like Dennis Gartman get to bloviate on CNBC in stultified language how "we" erred on the bullish side, or how he's "long gold in yen terms," or other such nonsense. He is getting paid to tout garbage. I get nothing, not even faint praise, when I'm absolutely right, 100%.

OK, so maybe I'm having a little hissy fit here, but I'm not going to lower my voice, nor am I going to stop speaking my mind, making my calls and writing this daily blog. My reward is out there somewhere, I just hope I get some of it before I get to heaven.

As for today's action in the markets, it was the same old saw that I've been commenting upon in previous blogs: up at the open, then a long, slow decline into the red, a typical and obvious chart pattern that the mainstream media will not ever acknowledge because they and their Wall Street banker masters want you to continue contributing to their ponzi schemes, at your own peril.

Fund holders will be the eventual bag-holders of this bear market. They'll lose anywhere from 30 to 60% of their portfolio if they don't reallocate their investments out of growth stocks and ETFs and into something more sustainable, whatever that may be. Bonds are probably a good spot as yields are rising. Commodities may not be bad, depending on the asset mix. Cash is more than likely to be king. You can send me some by clicking here.

We are entering a period in which it is more important to preserve capital than risk it and hope for gains. Hope is not an investment strategy. Watching your magic fund sink month after month is not pleasant, and being a bag-holder while the smart money runs for the exits is not what any rational person would do.

As anyone can clearly see, after taking losses in February and March, the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished with a gain of 50.81 points. That's not a gain, that is a rounding error, a pimple, a dot. It didn't even beat inflation. You lost money over time.

Get out, reallocate, or die.

Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/3/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75
4/4/18 24,264.30 +230.94 +161.19
4/5/18 24,505.22 +240.92 +402.11
4/6/18 23,932.76 -572.46 -170.35
4/9/18 23,979.10 +46.34 -134.01
4/10/18 24,407.86 +428.76 +294.66
4/11/18 24,189.45 -218.55 +76.11
4/12/18 24,483.05 +293.60 +369.71
4/13/18 24,360.14 -122.91 +247.80
4/16/18 24,573.04 +212.90 +460.70
4/17/18 24,786.63 +213.59 +674.29
4/18/18 24,748.07 -38.56 +635.73
4/19/18 24,664.89 -83.18 +552.55
4/20/18 24,462.94 -201.95 +350.60
4/23/18 24,448.69 -14.25 +336.35
4/24/18 24,024.13 -424.56 -88.21
4/25/18 24,083.83 +59.70 -28.51
4/26/18 24,322.34 +238.51 +210.00
4/27/18 24,311.19 -11.15 +198.85
4/30/18 24,163.15 -148.04 +50.81

At the Close, Monday, April 30, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,163.15, -148.04 (-0.61%)
NASDAQ: 7,066.27, -53.53 (-0.75%)
S&P 500: 2,648.05, -21.86 (-0.82%)
NYSE Composite: 12,515.39, -78.64 (-0.62%)

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Weekend Wrap: Friday Fumble Leaves Stocks With Minor Gain For Week, Month

Hammered lower on Friday, stocks across the spectrum finished out the week holding relatively minor gains with the Dow Scoreboard showing a 350-point advance for the month.

On a percentage basis, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJIA) was the weakest performer of the major indices with a gain of just 0.42%. After winning moves on Monday and Tuesday, stocks traded to the downside the final three days of the week as solid earnings failed to allay fears that the nine-year-old bull market had topped out in January and that any gains at this juncture might be wiped away in another cascade to the negative.

Ever-hopeful investors were still buyers, though volumes have diminished over the past few weeks as some seek the safety of bonds or more defensive positions in stocks.

A three-day losing streak to close out the week does not auger well heading into the final full week of trading on US markets. With February and March both ending in tears for the bulls, Monday's trading will likely set the tone for the remainder of the week and the month. If April's early strength continues to fade, the sight of three consecutive losing months for equity investors could turn the mostly orderly selling into more panicked disposal of assets.

While it would be folly to predict even one days' movement, the general direction may have already been established. With a downward tilt and the majors clinging to the 50-day moving average across the spectrum, it may be easier to call the market direction for the next three to six months. In conditions such as those present and the markets entering what are traditionally slow months, betting on sideways to lower could prove to be the prescient strategy.

After April, earnings flow will diminish from a steady stream to a trickle, with most of the important companies (banks, techs) having already reported, leaving a void and a downside bottom that will almost surely be tested within the next 30-60 days. June's FOMC meeting also looms largely, like a debt shadow overhanging already overpriced stocks. With the Fed determined to raise interest rates again, the threat of higher borrowing costs choking off the nascent growth theme is becoming more and more real.

Elsewhere, treasury bonds were on the move again, with yields on the 10-year-note approaching three percent by week's end. Also getting considerable notice is the commodity complex, led by oil, as prices for WTI crude reaching three-year highs, taking precious and base metals along for the ride to the upside. So important is the price of oil and gas that the president tweeted about it on Friday morning, putting a temporary cap on gains with his fiery comments.

As President Trump and others in the financial community know all too well, higher gas prices act as a tax on the American consumer and could do significant harm to the economy since nearly 70% of GDP is based on consumer spending. If the bulk of the money from the tax cuts recently passed go directly into gas tanks due to higher prices, there's little left to spend on other things, and that's also a real concern.

The week ahead should focus on oil and commodities. Any further upside to the price of crude oil could be seen as very damaging, though bulls in the precious metals arena are champing at the bit for an overdue breakout from the recent dismal price range.

All things considered, stocks seem somewhat imperiled by potentially better opportunities elsewhere and the continuing debate over whether the bull market has topped. The longer the Dow shies from the January 26 highs (26,616.17) the more compelling the case becomes for those calling this the beginning of a painfully episodic bear market.

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

At the Close, Friday, April 20, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average, 24,462.94, -201.95 (-0.82%)
NASDAQ: 7,146.13, -91.93 (-1.27%)
S&P 500: 2,670.14, -22.99 (-0.85%)
NYSE Composite: 12,607.16, -64.32 (-0.51%)

For the Week:
Dow: +102.80 (+0.42%)
NASDAQ: +39.48 (+0.56%)
S&P 500: +13.84 (0.52%)
NYSE Composite: +61.11 (+0.49%)

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Stocks Continue Rising As Geo-Political Tensions Ease, January Top Still Distant

The Dow Scorecard shows strong gains for April, yet a long way from returning to all-time highs set on January 26 of 26,616.71. Etch that number into your brain. In the near term, for all intents and purposes, as long as the Dow remains below that level, you should consider this a bear market.

Longer term, the market will resolve the issue. If the Dow makes another fresh low below the one put in on February 8 (23,860.46) or March 23 (23,533.20), it's near 100% certainty that this is a bear market. It's important to be positioned correctly, but at the present time, many traders are confused. Even some followers of Dow Theory, which confirmed a primary trend change to bear market conditions on April 9, are not convinced. All manner of arguments have been made, calling the confirmation false, due to extraordinary conditions, such as President Trump wanting to bomb Syria.

Such talk is pure hubris and rubbish, not worth the breath to speak of in real analytical terms. Geo-political risks are always paramount in markets; the current condition is nothing out of the ordinary.

For the present, this is a bear market and the recent gains, even if they run for days and weeks, are to be considered exit points for those who are still engaged in the equity game. Bonds, cash, tangible goods are preferred at this time.

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

At the Close, Tuesday, April 17, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,786.63, +213.59 (+0.87%)
NASDAQ: 7,281.10, +124.81 (+1.74%)
S&P 500: 2,706.39, +28.55 (+1.07%)
NYSE Composite: 12,705.76, +77.55 (+0.61%)

Monday, April 16, 2018

Stocks Close Out Week on Sour Note, But Still Post Weekly Gains

For the superstitious, Friday the 13th was not a disaster, but it wasn't particularly pleasant either, as stocks spent the entire session underwater, unable to follow through on gains from the previous day.

The up-and-down, give-and-take between bulls and bears has been a feature of the equity markets since late January. Thus far in April, the Dow has finished with gains in six session, closing down in four. An overview of the market presents a picture of a market without direction, as geo-political events, fundamental conditions, and economic data collide.

Being the middle of earnings season, the bulls appear to have at least a short-term advantage, especially since the US - along with France and Great Britain - chose to launch targeted attacks on Syria late Friday, giving markets ample time to digest the ramifications, which, at this point, appear limited.

Heading into the third full week of the second quarter, earnings from top companies will provide the catalyst for traders. There's a widely-held assumption that companies are going to put up good - if not great - first quarter reports, aided by tax benefits from the overhaul provided by congress and the president in December.

This would be a good week to take account of positions and perhaps take some profits off the table. Markets tend to be a little less volatile and generally trade higher during earnings seasons.

There isn't a FOMC rate policy meeting during April, and the May 1-2 meeting is probably going to result in no action being taken. The next Fed-driven stock market move won't be until the June 12-13 affair, when the Fed is expected to raise the federal funds rate another 25 basis points. While it doesn't sound like much, it will be the seventh such hike since the Fed got off the zero-bound in December 2015. It will push the rate to 1.75-2.00%, a significant figure sure to have an impact not only on stocks, but on the finances of individuals, families, businesses and governments.

Presently, this is the proverbial calm before the storm.

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

At the Close, Friday, April 13, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,360.14, -122.91 (-0.50%)
NASDAQ: 7,106.65, -33.60 (-0.47%)
S&P 500: 2,656.30, -7.69 (-0.29%)
NYSE Composite: 12,546.05, -34.17 (-0.27%)

For the Week:
Dow: +427.38 (+1.79%)
NASDAQ: +191.54 (+2.77%)
S&P 500: +51.83 (+1.99%)
NYSE Composite: +196.94 (+1.59%)

Monday, April 9, 2018

It's OVER! Dow Transports Confirm Dow Theory Primary Trend Change Bull to Bear

Right off the bat, here's the theme for today's trading: Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons 1964 hit, "Dawn."



For the uninformed, today's epic pump-and-dump collapse on all the major indices was more than just "the usual." It was, simply put, a day to be marked in financial history, the day the most phony, contrived and manipulated bull market that ever existed, died an overdue death and gave birth to a bona fide bear market, something most of today's millennial day-trading demons have never experienced.

Why would the death of a bull market and the beginning of a bear market be something suitable for celebration?

Good question.

Here's an even better answer: because the bull market, which started March 9, 2009 - nine years and one month, to the day - was one built on fumes and Fed happy talk, endless fiat money printing, rounds and rounds of Quantitative Easing (QE), artificially low interest rates approaching zero (ZIRP) and corporate stock buybacks of unprecedented quantity. Almost nowhere was there a single sign of real growth; much of the gains in stocks were due to buyback manipulation as gross revenue stagnated for nearly a decade.

It was a decade of fakery, of spoofing and high frequency trading as GDP never reached three percent until nearing the end, and never actually did for a full year, including 2017, the last. Almost all of the supposed growth in the "recovery" was due to inflation, nothing else. A false sense of security was promoted by the governors and presidents of the Federal Reserve System and their regional banks and the public gobbled it up.

Meanwhile, in the real world, mark to market had been replaced by mark to fantasy, and price discovery was banished from the equity world.

According to Dow Theory - a nearly infallible projecting tool - as the Dow Transportation Index closed today below the February 9 low of 10,136.61, at 10,119.36, confirming the primary trend change, the bull market can be properly buried and a bear market born.

For anyone unfamiliar with Dow Theory, the primary trend change goes like this:
New Closing Low
Interim High, Below Previous High
New Low Below Previous Low.

This simple pattern must occur on both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Index (confirmation), and here's how it happened.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average made a new all-time high on January 26, 2018 (26,616.71).
On February 8, it closed at 23,860.46 (new low).
On February 26, it closed at 25,709.27 (interim high, lower than previous high).
On March 23, the Industrials closed at 23,533.20 (new low, lower than previous low).

For confirmation, the Dow Jones Transportation Index had made it's new high on January 12, 2018 (11,373.38).
On February 8, it closed at 10,136.61 (new low)
On February 26, it closed at 10,769.84 (interim high, lower than previous high)
On April 9, the Transportation Index closed at 10,119.36 (new low, lower than previous low = primary trend change, bull becomes bear).

Why is this good?

This is good because markets in a stable, trustworthy financial system must have a mechanism to clear mal-investment. Otherwise, stupid money must be purged from the system in order to create real value.

For instance, Facebook, Google, and many other stocks should not be trading as high as they currently are. They are overvalued, promoted by shysters and traded up by fools, one fool greater than the previous one. In other words, this is money chasing an unrealistic return. In order to get back to a realistic, fair, honest market, these stocks must lose value. Some companies will achieve their true value, which is zero. Others will lose 20, 30, maybe even more than 50%. The market will sort out the winners (there will be a few) from the losers (there will be many).

In the end, stocks will be properly valued, but when that time is to come, nobody knows. The perma-bulls out there can take heart that bear markets generally last 14-18 months, some like the one during the Great Depression which began with the stock market collapse in 1929, last much longer. How deep this one will be depends on how quickly stocks revert to an undervalued position, because the market always overshoots on the upside and the downside. There will be a bottom, when it will be wise to buy stocks. The only winning position presently is to sell stocks at a profit, park the money in bonds or money markets and wait for the bottom, which, just like the primary change from bull to bear, will be repeated - in reverse - according to Dow Theory.

For those wishing for the good old days of January 26, a return to those levels may take four to seven years, possibly longer, and, judging by the general insanity plaguing the human race presently, one should prepare for the much longer period. There are mountains of bad investments and onerous debts to be flushed from the system, since they were not flushed out in 2008-09, only papered over by TARP, QE, and ZIRP.

If you must, cry in your beer over the death of the bull. The rest of us will be having a cold one with the new-born bear.

Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/3/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75
4/4/18 24,264.30 +230.94 +161.19
4/5/18 24,505.22 +240.92 +402.11
4/6/18 23,932.76 -572.46 -170.35
4/9/18 23,979.10 +46.34 -134.01

At the Close, Monday, April 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,979.10, +46.34 (+0.19%)
NASDAQ: 6,950.34, +35.23 (+0.51%)
S&P 500: 2,613.16, +8.69 (+0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 12,380.55, +31.44 (+0.25%)

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Stocks Stage Rebound; Cat-and-Mouse Game Continues Between Bulls and Bears

Is it a bull market? Is it a bear market?

At this juncture, it's a good probability that neither the bull nor bear label is appropriate. At best, one could call the market transitional, or, at worst, confused.

The continuing tug-of-war escalated the past two days as the Dow took a 400-point ride in each direction, ending with a small, 70-point loss to kick off the second quarter.

If none of this makes sense, recall the oft-used quote:
The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.
Attributed to either legendary John Maynard Keynes or contemporary Gary Shilling, it's worth keeping in mind as markets gyrate. Here is an interesting discussion concerning the quote.

Perhaps John Pierpont Morgan said it best, when asked what the market would do:
It will fluctuate.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/2/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75

At the Close, Tuesday, April 3, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,033.36, +389.17 (+1.65%)
NASDAQ: 6,941.28, +71.16 (+1.04%)
S&P 500: 2,614.45, +32.57 (+1.26%)
NYSE Composite: 12,367.07, +150.36 (+1.23%)

Sunday, April 1, 2018

Weekly Recap: Stocks Get a Boost to End Month, But Still Finish Down for March

Call it window dressing, because that's pretty much what the final trading day of March will amount to, being that the markets have been battered and buffeted up and down - mostly down - for the past two months, gains on the Thursday prior to a three-day weekend should be considered a non-event.

As the March scorecard below shows, the big losses on the 22nd and 23rd could not be recouped, despite a bounce-back on Monday, the 26th, of nearly 670 Dow points. Combining the February and March declines, the Dow lost more than 200 points in those two months, and ends March more than 2500 points off the January 26 all-time high (26,616.71).

Of particular focus now are the declines following the most recent federal funds rate hike from Wednesday, March 21. Just after the 2:00 pm EDT announcement that day, the Dow rose to 24,977.65, making the drop post-FOMC a full 874 points, despite the bounce-back Monday (26th) and the close-out dead-cat-like bounce on Thursday, the 29th.

Also, keeping the chartists busy is the Dow Jones Transportation Index (^DJT), which nearly signaled bear market conditions on Wednesday, the 28th, three times dipping below the magic mark indicated by the February 8 close of 10,136.61 before finishing up with a slight positive bent. Thursday's 200+ point gain on the transports was more window dressing, short covering or outright central bank dip buying, giving the market some degree of confidence, even though there realistically should be little.

Anybody with an eye on the chart of the Transportation Index sold be keenly aware of the intra-day low on February 8, an awe-inspiring bottom at 9,806.79. Likewise, the intra-day low on the Industrial side was a jaw-dropping 23,360.29, on February 9.

The Industrials have already surpassed the February closing low of 23,860.46, finishing March 23 at 23,533.20. Therefore, according to Dow Theory, the only element missing from calling this market a bear - signifying a primary directional change - is for the Transportation Index to close below it's recent low to confirm.

As arcane and confusing as that may sound, the rigors of Dow Theory are almost never wrong when it comes to indicating primary changes. One only need check the stats from 2000 and 2008 (and many times before that) to see how that this signal is very accurate.

Not to say that the Dow and even more so, individual stocks, can't continue to dive to lower and lower depths, but it would be hard to see such a scenario developing without a significant slide on the Transportation Index.

Putting March in perspective, the losses here are notable, as March is traditionally a strong month for investors, with an average gain on the S&P 500 - according to this calculator - of 1.11% from 1950 to the present, outdone only by the months of April (1.34%), November (1.39%) and December (1.53%). If equities continue to show weakness through April it might come as a surprise, but, even if it doesn't, the months of May through September are traditionally the weakest, with cumulative returns of just 0.22% over that 1950-2017 span. August and September are actually negative for that time period, posting losses of 0.27% and 0.64%, respectively.

While those figures are for the S&P, they serve as something of a proxy for the Dow, so if a bear market is to eventually emerge (and these things often take some time to develop), there's a high probability that the bull could hang on until August, significant, as the first estimate of Q2 GDP would print late July.

For the week, the NASDAQ was by far the weak performer, the only index incapable of exceeding a two percent gain over the four-day period. It wasn't even close, as the NASDAQ gained only 1.01%, unsurprising, since the NASDAQ had been significantly out-performing the other indices.

All of this number-churning should come as a relief for both bulls and bears. As April unfolds, there may be an easing up in volatility, and some gains to be had, but the ominous signs of an overpriced and subsequently weakening stock market are proliferating, the general economy notwithstanding. This offers some time to adjust strategies before what seems to be an obvious downdraft coming this summer.

That may be a huge speculation, but that's what makes a market.

Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
3/1/18 24,608.98 -420.22 -420.22
3/2/18 24,538.06 -70.92 -491.14
3/5/18 24,874.76 +336.70 -154.44
3/6/18 24,884.12 +9.36 -145.08
3/7/18 24,801.36 -82.76 -227.84
3/8/18 24,895.21 +93.85 -133.99
3/9/18 25,335.74 +440.53 +306.54
3/12/18 25,178.61 -157.13 +149.41
3/13/18 25,007.03, -171.58 -22.17
3/14/18 24,758.12 -248.91 -271.08
3/15/18 24,873.66 +115.54 -155.54
3/16/18 24,946.51 +72.85 -82.69
3/19/18 24,610.91 -335.60 -418.29
3/20/18 24,727.27 +116.36 -301.93
3/21/18 24,682.31 -44.96 -346.89
3/22/18 23,957.89 -724.42 -1071.31
3/23/18 23,533.20 -424.69 -1496.00
3/26/18 24,202.60 +669.40 -826.60
3/27/18 23,857.71 -344.89 -1171.49
3/28/18 23,848.42 -9.29 -1180.78
3/29/18 24,103.11 +254.69 -926.09

At the Close, Thursday, March 29, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,103.11, +254.69 (+1.07%)
NASDAQ: 7,063.44, +114.22 (+1.64%)
S&P 500: 2,640.87, +35.87 (+1.38%)
NYSE Composite: 12,452.06, +143.17 (+1.16%)

For the Week:
Dow: +569.91 (+2.42%)
NASDAQ: +70.78 (+1.01%)
S&P 500: +52.61 (+2.03%)
NYSE Composite: +274.36 (+2.25%)

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Stocks Little Changed As Dow Transports Flirt With Bear Market Confirmation

As outlined in yesterday's special note, the bull market has come perilously close to rolling over into a vicious bear market, or, in Dow Theory terminology, the primary trend is about to change.

Key to this chartist theory is the 20-component Dow Jones Transportation Index, which has been falling in price right along with the other major indices, but needs one more little push to the downside to confirm the change in primary change, that being the point at which the transportation index closes below its previous closing low of 10,136.61.

Twice, early in Wednesday's session, the transports slipped below the magic mark, and approached it again in the final hour, falling to 10,136,26, before the short-covering crowd came in to rescue the bulls and prolong the agony of waiting for what will someday be known as the "turning point."

While there are all manner of economic and geopolitical risks extant, it's impossible to know exactly what will trigger the final cascade into bear-market-land, though investors need not necessarily be concerned unless one's time horizon is relatively short. That's because, according to experts, who are uniformly almost always wrong, bear markets last, on average, about 16 months, and the time taken to recover all of the losses back to the "turning point," is roughly three years.

Regardless of one's position or opinion on finance and economy, one thing is certain: February and March have been different from the 106 previous months of this long-in-the-tooth bull market. They have been outright losers, changing the prevailing sentiment from buy the dip to sell the rip.

Collectively, the 30 stocks comprising the Dow Jones Industrial Average are nearly 2800 points from their all-time-high from January 26, and that's a wall of worry that may be too high to climb.

Trading for March concludes on Thursday, as Good Friday is a recognized holiday.

Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
3/1/18 24,608.98 -420.22 -420.22
3/2/18 24,538.06 -70.92 -491.14
3/5/18 24,874.76 +336.70 -154.44
3/6/18 24,884.12 +9.36 -145.08
3/7/18 24,801.36 -82.76 -227.84
3/8/18 24,895.21 +93.85 -133.99
3/9/18 25,335.74 +440.53 +306.54
3/12/18 25,178.61 -157.13 +149.41
3/13/18 25,007.03, -171.58 -22.17
3/14/18 24,758.12 -248.91 -271.08
3/15/18 24,873.66 +115.54 -155.54
3/16/18 24,946.51 +72.85 -82.69
3/19/18 24,610.91 -335.60 -418.29
3/20/18 24,727.27 +116.36 -301.93
3/21/18 24,682.31 -44.96 -346.89
3/22/18 23,957.89 -724.42 -1071.31
3/23/18 23,533.20 -424.69 -1496.00
3/26/18 24,202.60 +669.40 -826.60
3/27/18 23,857.71 -344.89 -1171.49
3/28/18 23,848.42 -9.29 -1180.78

At the Close, Wednesday, March 28, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,848.42, -9.29 (-0.04%)
NASDAQ: 6,949.23, -59.58 (-0.85%)
S&P 500 2,605.00: -7.62 (-0.29%)
NYSE Composite: 12,308.90, +6.36 (+0.05%)

Wednesday, March 28, 2018

Warning on Dow Theory Primary Trend: Watch the Dow Jones Transportation Index

This is a special note to followers of Dow Theory.

Presently, one must pay attention to the Dow Jones Transportation Index (^DJT). It has to close below 10,136.61, the Feb. 9 close, to confirm a change in the primary trend from Bull to Bear.

The Industrials already made the move this Friday past, but, according to Dow Theory (which is like 95% accurate - or better - when it comes to signaling primary directional changes), the Transports must confirm.

If it happens today (currently around 10,190) or tomorrow, bear in mind that markets are closed Friday (commemorating the day Jesus was crucified) and Sunday, the day Jesus rose from the dead, according to the Bible.

Far from bible-thumping, chronic venial sinners should bear in mind that Jesus may have risen from the dead, but the stock market probably won't.

Anyhow, when the transports confirm, then you'll have the answer to whether or not this is/was a turning point in the stock market.

Added, 10:48 am EDT: Transports have fallen below the target close for the second time today. The first fall was all the way down to 10,112.05, shortly after the opening bell. The most current drop has apparently bottomed (for now) at 10,121.22. Current conditions warrant monitoring the Transportation Index into the close.

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

So, Now There's No Trade War?

Last week, all the financial media pundits could talk about was how President Trump was going to destroy the economy with his ill-advised tariffs, specifically targeting China, that great purveyor of cheap products that alternatively poison animals, emit toxic gasses, or break upon normal use (see Chinese nails, drill bits, concrete).

Well, over the weekend, the narrative somehow changed. Everything with China is "all good, nothing to see here, move along." And that's exactly what the slavish traders on Wall Street went about doing on Monday, sending the major indices soaring in one of the greatest one-day advances of all time.

The improvement on the NASDAQ was the ninth-largest ever. Interestingly, the eight advances bettering that number all occurred in the year 2000, except number one, which was a gain of 324.83 points in January of 2001. All of those gains were made in a bear market, after the NASDAQ dotcom bubble had burst.

On the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the 669.40 point gain was the largest since 2008, notably a period in which the economy was entering the Great Financial Crisis. Monday's advance was the third-best in market history.

The timing of news in relation to the market is becoming somewhat suspect, almost as if somebody was gaming the system. A similar move was just over a month ago, on February 6th, when the Dow gained 567.02 points a day after it fell a record 1,175.21 points (a Monday) and two days before it fell by the second-most ever, 1,032.89 (Thursday).

Putting a little more perspective on the matter, the Dow remains down 826 points in the month of March and is still 2400 points lower than the all-time high close on January 26 (26,616.71) and in the red for the year, albeit only 500 points down.

Therefore, Monday's gains should not be viewed in a vacuum. No single day should. It pays to have perspective, especially since Dow Theory confirmed a major trend reversal - from bull to bear - as of Friday's close (23,533.20), which was lower than the February 8 finish at 23,860.46.

Chasing this bull will eventually lead directly into the path of a very hungry bear.

Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
3/1/18 24,608.98 -420.22 -420.22
3/2/18 24,538.06 -70.92 -491.14
3/5/18 24,874.76 +336.70 -154.44
3/6/18 24,884.12 +9.36 -145.08
3/7/18 24,801.36 -82.76 -227.84
3/8/18 24,895.21 +93.85 -133.99
3/9/18 25,335.74 +440.53 +306.54
3/12/18 25,178.61 -157.13 +149.41
3/13/18 25,007.03, -171.58 -22.17
3/14/18 24,758.12 -248.91 -271.08
3/15/18 24,873.66 +115.54 -155.54
3/16/18 24,946.51 +72.85 -82.69
3/19/18 24,610.91 -335.60 -418.29
3/20/18 24,727.27 +116.36 -301.93
3/21/18 24,682.31 -44.96 -346.89
3/22/18 23,957.89 -724.42 -1071.31
3/23/18 23,533.20 -424.69 -1496.00
3/26/18 24,202.60 +669.40 -826.60

At the Close, Monday, March 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,202.60, +669.40 (+2.84%)
NASDAQ: 7,220.54, +227.88 (+3.26%)
S&P 500: 2,658.55, +70.29 (+2.72%)
NYSE Composite: 12,433.15, +255.45 (+2.10%)

Thursday, March 22, 2018

Stocks Slammed After Fed Rate Hike; Dow Reaches Correction Level, More Pain Looms

Being as they are truly ugly - and predictable (see yesterday's post and many more before that for reference) - it might be appropriate to post just the numbers.

However, beyond the usual blathering nonsense from the financial "talking heads" in TV-land, it would be imprudent to not point out that the Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen just into correction, down 10.30% from the all-time-high closing price of January 26 of this year.

With today's losses, the Dow is now down more than 1000 points for the month of March, after a collapse of 1100 points in February. This puts the blue chip average on track to reach bear market status by sometime between May 15 and June 21. The magic number for a 20% drop off the high is 21,293.37.

Think it can't happen? Reference the dotcom collapse of 2000, the GFC of 2008-09, or the crash in October 1929 whittled to the Great Depression.

Naturally, markets do not respond in straight lines, so there is the possibility of some gains between now and the next big political event, the mid-term elections in November. If the major averages are not in bear country by that time, there's something fundamentally wrong with any and all systems of market prediction.

The Dow has receded beyond the previous interim low, 24,538.04, and is very close to the absolute near-term bottom of February 8, of 23,860,46 (less than 100 points away).

Three of the four major averages are in the red for 2018, the lone survivor being the NASDAQ, sporting a gain of less than 300 points. With that in mind, further losses should be felt hardest in the NASDAQ, as it is front-loaded with tech and financial stocks. Being the most volatile of the indices, the NASDAQ could come under severe pressure as early as Friday (tomorrow), though a dead-cat bounce to end the week is also an understandable scenario.

with the Fed's rate hike being the proximate cause of the most recent selling, it's now behind the market, but so long as the Fed talks up rate increases and balance sheet unwinding it will bleed from stocks. The entirely false narrative of "recovery" and "growth" will become more vilified and ridiculed as weak economic data continues to roll forward. Estimates of first quarter GDP have fallen precipitously in recent days, as it is generally the worst period for GDP due largely to weather, and, this Winter has lingered longer than most (it's already Spring). There's snow on the ground and cold temperatures throughout the Northeast and into the Midwest.

The advance estimate of first quarter GDP will be announced the last week of April, on the 27th. It would be expected that any gains between here and then will be wiped away rather quickly when the figure comes in at something South of two percent.

Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
3/1/18 24,608.98 -420.22 -420.22
3/2/18 24,538.06 -70.92 -491.14
3/5/18 24,874.76 +336.70 -154.44
3/6/18 24,884.12 +9.36 -145.08
3/7/18 24,801.36 -82.76 -227.84
3/8/18 24,895.21 +93.85 -133.99
3/9/18 25,335.74 +440.53 +306.54
3/12/18 25,178.61 -157.13 +149.41
3/13/18 25,007.03, -171.58 -22.17
3/14/18 24,758.12 -248.91 -271.08
3/15/18 24,873.66 +115.54 -155.54
3/16/18 24,946.51 +72.85 -82.69
3/19/18 24,610.91 -335.60 -418.29
3/20/18 24,727.27 +116.36 -301.93
3/21/18 24,682.31 -44.96 -346.89
3/22/18 23,957.89 -724.42 -1071.31

At the Close, Thursday, March 22, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,957.89, -724.42 (-2.93%)
NASDAQ: 7,166.68, -178.61 (-2.43%)
S&P 500: 2,643.69, -68.24 (-2.52%)
NYSE Composite: 12,377.39, -306.37 (-2.42%)

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Stocks Dumped Again As FOMC Meeting Portends Higher Interest Rates

The most obvious cause for Monday's sharp selloff has to be the widely-anticipated 25 basis point hike in the federal funds rate which should become official when the FOMC concludes its March meeting on Wednesday.

Getting out in front of the Fed's move was paramount, as stocks slid in early going, gaining a little back in the afternoon. The Dow plunged nearly 500 points intra-day, bottoming out at 24,453.14 just prior to 3:00 pm EDT.

Anybody playing the market net short has to be pleased with recent results while bulls may be looking to gore any bear marketer caught on the loose.

What bears (no pun intended) watching is what happens on the actual announcement (Wednesday, 1:00 pm EDT) and thereafter. If the slide continues, the Dow will soon enter correction territory again with the next stop a full blown bear market, which would signal the end of a nine-plus-year bull run.

For now, it's safe to say that the Dow won't be seeing much in the way of positive progress unless the Fed surprises and leaves rates unchanged, a very doubtful expectation.

Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
3/1/18 24,608.98 -420.22 -420.22
3/2/18 24,538.06 -70.92 -491.14
3/5/18 24,874.76 +336.70 -154.44
3/6/18 24,884.12 +9.36 -145.08
3/7/18 24,801.36 -82.76 -227.84
3/8/18 24,895.21 +93.85 -133.99
3/9/18 25,335.74 +440.53 +306.54
3/12/18 25,178.61 -157.13 +149.41
3/13/18 25,007.03, -171.58 -22.17
3/14/18 24,758.12 -248.91 -271.08
3/15/18 24,873.66 +115.54 -155.54
3/16/18 24,946.51 +72.85 -82.69
3/19/18 24,610.91 -335.60 -418.29

At the Close, Monday, March 19, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,610.91, -335.60 (-1.35%)
NASDAQ: 7,344.24, -137.74 (-1.84%)
S&P 500: 2,712.92, -39.09 (-1.42%)
NYSE Composite: 12,651.46, -132.93 (-1.04%)

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Friday's Moonshot Sends Stocks to Positive for March, Year-to-Date

After losing nearly 500 points the first two trading days of March, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rebounded to positive for the month - and the year - with gains every day excepting Wednesday, when the Dow shed another 82 points. However, the big days occurred on Monday, with a gain of 336 points, and Friday, when the Dow and other major averages put the dismal days of February and March mostly behind them, as the industrials skyrocketed 440 points.

Amazingly, all of this optimism came in spite of endless growling over President Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs and synchronized shouting - from the halls of congress and the canyons of lower Manhattan - about an impending trade war.

Friday's burst higher was credited largely to the impressive February non-farm payroll report, which was a blockbuster, showing 313,000 new jobs created and a 4.1% unemployment rate in the shortest and coldest month of the year, numbers nobody could claim as anything other than positive, the mere hint of good news now capable of sending the stock market back to dizzying, overvalued heights.

Indeed, the NASDAQ closed at an all-time high, though the other indices still have a way to go to exceed the marks set on January 26, though another week like this one, with gains of more than 2.8% on each of the individual indices, would smash the old records on the S&P 500, and get the Dow and NYSE Composite within spitting distance.

How likely that is to happen is a matter of some conjecture, as the FOMC meets March 20 and 21, and is expected to raise the federal funds rate another 25 basis points. This is seen as a headwind to continued expansion, but, with seven days to trade up to the release of the new "policy," the day-trading demons of the financial world will have plenty of time to ramp up and then deflate, choosing either to sell the news or buy into the continuing expansion narrative, even as the bull market passed the nine-year mark on Friday.

There's been no absence of volatility or fluctuation to start off 2018, with massive gains in January, huge losses in February, and possibly an evening out in March. To those who believe the bull is weary, standing on only two legs, the word is "so what," with the punditry claiming - rightly so - that bear markets only last, on average, 12-14 months. What they do not want to discuss is the depth of those bear markets, nor the time taken to get back the losses incurred.

The past two bears, in 2000-2001 and 2007-2009, are good cases in point, using the Dow as the barometer, even though, in the case of the 2000 crash, it was the NASDAQ that collapsed more than anything, which could again be the case should history repeat.

On December 1, 1999, the Dow closed at 11,497.12, and bottomed at 7,591.93 on September 1, 2002, making the duration of the bear market a full 34 months, or nearly three years. It wasn't until September of 2006 that the index surpassed the old high (11,679.07), a period of nearly seven years from peak to peak, a period which seemed like eternity for some. Of course, the bull had been underway since the bottom in '02, and finally apexed in October of '07, blowing through 14,000 before beginning to pull back. (For the record, it took the NASDAQ 13 years to exceed it's pre-crash 2000 highs.)

The ensuing collapse fell just short of catastrophic calamity, as the housing market went bust, along with its many derivative trades, taking all of corporate America down for the count, with the Dow closing at 6,547.05 on March 9, 2009, a date which could arguably be called the end of the '07-09 bear market (16 months) and the beginning of the Fed-inspired bull run to the present, now 114 months old, the second-longest expansion in market history, with gains from the bottom to the recent peak quadrupling the investment, truly an inspiring, incredible, nearly inexplicable accomplishment.

The average of the last two bear markets supplies a possible scenario. If the bear market began in February (which we humans will only know at some later date), the bear would run through March of 2020, or 25 months, the average length of the last two bear markets. It's at least worth consideration, because two years of losses might actually be enough time to clear the decks of much of the excess debt and mal-investment (and there's been lots of it) of the past nine years. Anything longer would be mostly unbearable, not only to Wall Street, but to the average Jane and Joe Americans, who have suffered enough at the start of this century. Likewise, anything shorter would look like another band-aid for the corrupt banking and political system of cronyism and back-handedness toward the taxpaying public.

The mammoth gains over the past nine years are exactly why one should give pause and contemplation to the continuance of the bull market. In market terms, one would be buying at the highs if one would plunge in today, and why would anybody who saw $100,000 turn into $400,000, or a million into four million, even consider adding to positions?

Perhaps the view that President Trump will single-handedly usher in a era of increased prosperity and profit with his blustering "Make America Great Again" push can partially explain any euphoria surrounding the currency of the stock market and it's possible that he might be on the right track, even though he faces many hurdles and obstacles, not the least of which stem from his own party, people in his own administration, opponents on the Democrat side of the aisle and skeptics on Wall Street.

But, it's been proven time and again, Wall Street will play along with Washington if it serves their interest, which is, succinctly, more profits, and higher stock prices. This pits the speculators, gamblers, and traders of the world against the entrenched government "deep state," which cannot stomach Mr. Trump and is prepared to do anything within its power to besmirch and/or impeach him, including sending the stock market into a tailspin, making fundamental analysis of stocks, bonds, and just about any other investment vehicle, not only an exercise in economics, but in politics, as well.

Economic data has shown a mixed, slightly positive picture; politicians are hell=bent on discrediting the president, and, behind it all, an ocean of debt created by the Fed and their cohort central banks needs to be unwound, brought under control, and eventually retired, an exercise only the Fed has recently begun, with the ECB and Bank of Japan too to follow. The wild card is China, where the PBOC has created literal cities built on nothing but debt and speculation.

All that makes for one tricky trade.

Dow Jones Industrial Average March Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
3/1/18 24,608.98 -420.22 -420.22
3/2/18 24,538.06 -70.92 -491.14
3/5/18 24,874.76 +336.70 -154.44
3/6/18 24,884.12 +9.36 -145.08
3/7/18 24,801.36 -82.76 -227.84
3/8/18 24,895.21 +93.85 -133.99
3/9/18 25,335.74 +440.53 +306.54

At the Close, Friday, March 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,335.74, +440.53 (+1.77%)
NASDAQ: 7,560.81, +132.86 (+1.79%)
S&P 500: 2,786.57, +47.60 (+1.74%)
NYSE Composite: 12,918.82, +173.81 (+1.36%)

For the Week:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: +797.68 (+3.25%)
NASDAQ: +302.94 (+4.17%)
S&P 500: +95.32 (+3.54%)
NYSE Composite: +360.83 (+2.87%)

Friday, February 23, 2018

Rally Fails As Bear Market Chart Patterns Emerge

One of the clearest chart indicators of bear markets is the "higher open, lower close" condition, which has been showing up in the daily charts on a regular basis of late.

Thursday was another in a steady stream of such charts, with the Dow higher by nearly 360 points by midday, only to lose more than half of the gains by the closing bell.

Another pattern - more often indicating broken or tired markets - is split decisions, wherein the major averages diverge as discretion becomes more prevalent. The NASDAQ, which extended its losing streak to four days on Thursday, ended the session in the red while the other indices were up.

These recurring patterns are worth noting at this juncture, though not entirely indicative of overall market direction. In general, however, the decline which began at the beginning of February has not been surmounted and continues to hold stocks below recent highs, a condition which will resolve itself at some point in the near term.

Timing markets such as this one would be a heady task, and probably result in more pain than necessary. It is likely that investors are already taking positions and executing them prior to any definitive directional signal, making the case that bearishness may already hold a winning position over the long-standing bull market proponents.

Time will tell.

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
2/21/18 24,797.78 -166.97 -1351.61
2/22/18 24,962.48 +164.70 -1186.91

At the Close, Thursday, February 22, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,962.48, +164.70 (+0.66%)
NASDAQ: 7,210.09, -8.14 (-0.11%)
S&P 500: 2,703.96, +2.63 (+0.10%)
NYSE Composite: 12,711.75, +16.22 (+0.13%)

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

How is Your Money Doing? Here's the February Dow Scoreboard, Day 5

In the sports world, all manner of statistics and scenarios are routinely trotted out in attempts to reinforce how one team or player is better than another. All of this analysis is done every day on TV and radio talk shows, but the in the final analysis, as so perfectly expressed by the king of sports talk radio, Jim Rome, is "scoreboard," as in, who won the game, no matter the stats.

The same kind of metric can easily be applied to stocks and investments, as it no doubt should be. Thus, there's no need for analysis, no need for bald-headed, econo-speak commentators, no need for inverse correlations, causations, or extrapolations. All that matter can be found in the daily closing prices for individual stocks, or for individual stock indices, such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the measure by which everybody measures success.

Over the past four trading sessions, there's been more than sufficient ammunition for all kinds of wild speculation and analysis of what happened and why, and there may be a thousand reasons why the Dow and other indices were slaughtered last Friday and again this Monday. The more simplistic answers appear in the comeback sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday, which failed to recoup all of the losses. Thus, it's all in the scoreboard, i.e., the daily closes on the Dow. Nothing more, nothing less. No analysis necessary. You either won or you lost.

Let's just track the Dow through the month of February and see how well those precious stocks are doing.

Here are the only numbers that matter:

Dow Jones Industrial Average dates, closing prices, gains or losses:

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

So, as can clearly be seen, even adding in the smallish gain on Feb. 1, the Dow is down a massive amount. The contention here at Money Daily is that there has been a sea change in the market. Not only is a correction in the works (-10%), but a bear market (-20%) is quickly developing. We'll keep tracking so you at home can keep score on your "investments."

At the Close, Wednesday, February 7, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average, 24,893.35, -19.42 (-0.08%)
NASDAQ: 7,051.98, -63.90 (-0.90%)
S&P 500: 2,681.65, -13.49 (-0.50%)
NYSE Composite: 12,714.83, -30.62 (-0.24%)

Wednesday, June 7, 2017

A Disturbance in the Farce? Stocks End Lower Second Straight Session

Stocks turn red for the second straight session, this being the first full week of June, suggesting that there may be a revised adage for the new Wall Street, "Sell in June and avoid the swoon?"

Obviously, two days of smallish losses does not constitute a trend. Three days might. A close on the Dow below 20,600 would. Not only would that be a nearly three percent decline (OMG!), but it would be below the previous low close, a line of demarcation that could signal the oncoming of a bear market.

Those who deny the possibility of a bear market are either under the age of eight and have never seen what one looks like, or has forgotten prior bear markets, which generally occur when stocks are overstretched, overvalued and/or overbought.

To imagine that after eight years of somewhat spectacular gains that investors might disinvest and actually pull some of their support from the lofty prices of stocks on the Dow, NASDAQ, S&P, et. al., is not so far-fetched. It's happened before. It will, in all likelihood, happen again.

Trying to time such an event is the task of fools. With the FOMC ready to raise interest rates again, despite the incongruous activity in the bond markets (10-year-note yield at seven month lows, 2.15%), continued declines may become not a nuisance, but a feature this summer, one of the big hits that Hollywood will miss completely.

At The Close, 6/6/17:
Dow: 21,136.23, -47.81 (-0.23%)
NASDAQ 6,275.06, -20.63 (-0.33%)
S&P 500 2,429.33, -6.77 (-0.28%)
NYSE Composite: 11,671.46, -22.22 (-0.19%)

Friday, March 11, 2016

It's a Bear! It's a Bull! No, It's a Blur Market

Money Daily has sought to explain the crooked, maligned markets since 2006, without success, though today, at last, a breakthrough may be at hand.

At last, a definition with which everybody can agree.

After yesterday's quad-engulfing candlestick on the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), which would surely, under normal circumstances (whatever qualifies as normal since 2008, nobody is sure) qualify as a key reversal day, markets would have none of it, unless one is to be persuaded to believe that the reverse of a constant grind higher is a quick slam higher.

Up is down, Down is up. Slavery is liberty and all that 1984-ish doublespeak. (h/t to George Orwell)

Are we in a bear market? Hardly. A bull market? Doubtful.

Thus, we inaugurate the Blur Market, wherein all fundamentals are obfuscated by statistics, corrupt data from the BLS, manic pumping from the PPT, the machinations of the ESF (Exchange Stabilization Fund), jawboning from the likes of Mario Draghi, Shinzo Abe, Janet Yellen, Stanley Fisher or James Bullard.

It's a market driven by algorithms, unseen by human eyes, throttled up and down by unseen scientists in hidden caverns. The blur market is so fast, microseconds are not quick enough to front-run it. High Frequency Traders (HFTs) fight for nanoseconds of advantage. Didot typefaces print prices in a dadaist diaspora.

There's only one number that matters: 2,130.82

That was the all-time high close on the S&P 500, May 21, 2015. We are just about two months away from that being a year ago, so, are we headed to another all-time high or not?

If we are, the bull market lives on. If not, a bear market is in the cards.

For now, we're in a 'tween market. Not bear, nor bull, but something in between, a 'tween, or a beull or a bulear. Something like that. Maybe we could just call it a blur market, which works on a number of levels.

So, let us. It's all a BLUR.

Friday's massive rise capped the fourth straight week of gains on the major indices. For the Dow, up 7.5% in just the past 20 sessions, Friday's gains put the rally at a solid 1200 points. For the week, the DJIA was up 206.54 (1.21%); the S&P added 22.20 (1.11%); and the NASDAQ posted a gain of 31.44 (0.67%). Friday made certain that the rally did not end, at least on a weekly basis.

While impressive, this looks like nothing more than a cynical cyclical rally, with nothing but hot air and central bank jawboning behind it.

The Friday Blur:
S&P 500: 2,022.19, +32.62 (1.64%)
Dow: 17,213.31, +218.18 (1.28%)
NASDAQ: 4,748.47, +86.31 (1.85%)

Crude Oil 38.51 +1.77% Gold 1,259.50 -1.04% EUR/USD 1.1152 -0.23% 10-Yr Bond 1.9770 +2.49% Corn 364.50 +0.48% Copper 2.24 +1.06% Silver 15.62 +0.49% Natural Gas 1.83 +2.18% Russell 2000 1,086.77 +2.14% VIX 16.55 -8.31% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4383 +0.66% USD/JPY 113.78 +0.56%

Thursday, February 4, 2016

There Are Still Stock Buyers, But They're Few and They're Wrong

Stocks in the US staged a half-hearted rally on Thursday, with virtually no news - good, bad or otherwise - to support the move, so, as they say in whispered tones, the market is trading on vapors.

Tomorrow's expected 185-195,000 January NFP may not have as much significance as previous iterations of the market's most-massaged number. There are other issues pressuring stocks that are of more importance. Also, with unemployment - according to "official" sources - very tame, only a huge beat or a huge miss could be cause for stocks to respond going into the weekend.

The money would be on "big miss," as Challenger, Gray and Christmas, the firm that monitors job layoff announcements in the US (and is a fairly reliable source), saw a 218% jump in announced job cuts in January, as employers issued more than 75,000 pink slips during the month.

Those figures aren't likely to be well-represented in the BLS figures on Friday, as the Labor Department has, over the years, garnered quite a reputation for seasonal adjustments and massive post hoc revisions, due, in the main, to the convoluted manner in which they arrive at their contrived conclusions.

In other words, the January non-farm payroll figures should be faded, no matter what they announce at 8:30 am tomorrow.

Gold and silver continued to rally strongly on Thursday, with gold crossing the $1150 rubicon and silver streaking toward $15/ounce, which, by the way, is still the bargain of the century (buy low, sell high, remember?)

Part of the reason for the metals to be heading higher is the decline in the dollar, which is down 4% on the week against competing currencies.

With the Super Bowl just a few days off, traders may tread lightly on Friday, with more interested in covering the spread then covering their clients' losses.

With the tiny uptick today, there's evidence of some level of buying interest, though it seems pretty non-committal and sparse, likely due to the fact that the Dow is still a solid 2000 points from all-time highs and those were set in May, 2015, which happens to be nine months ago.

If it looks like a bear, smells like a bear, it just could be a bear. Most people don't taunt bears. People on Wall Street may appear brave, but there's surely no shortage of stupidity.

Today's hopeful mess:
S&P 500: 1,915.45, +2.92 (0.15%)
Dow: 16,416.58, +79.92 (0.49%)
NASDAQ: 4,509.56, +5.32 (0.12%)

Crude Oil 31.68 -1.86% Gold 1,156.30 +1.31% EUR/USD 1.1215 +1.16% 10-Yr Bond 1.8640 -0.90% Corn 369.00 -0.54% Copper 2.12 +1.26% Silver 14.90 +1.16% Natural Gas 1.97 -3.14% Russell 2000 1,014.79 +0.44% VIX 21.84 +0.88% BATS 1000 20,644.48 +0.45% GBP/USD 1.4589 +0.0041% USD/JPY 116.7550 -1.09%

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

This Crash Has Been Interrupted... for now

While the world's richest and most-influential types were sipping Valpolicella, stuffing themselves full of petit fours at the World Economic Forum in Davos, markets around the world were in turmoil.

Wednesday saw Asian markets fall completely out of bed, with the Nikkei falling into bear market territory for the first time, and Hong Knog's Hang Seng Index off by nearly 750 points and four percent. For a change, it wasn't the Shanghai SSE leading the way. It was down a mere one percent.

Spilling over into the European session, the feeling continued, just as it had almost every day of the new year. The Dax was a relative out-performer, with the German shares off just 2.82%, better, by comparison, than the FTSE 100 (-3.46) and the CAC 40 (-3.45). In effect, the day was a massive loss for holders of European stocks.

In the US, stocks were slammed at the opening bell, a knee-jerk reaction to the worldwide carnage, and the three major indices continued lower until just after noon, with the Dow recording a loss of 566 points.

But, all of a sudden, something changed. The Dow, S&P and NASDAQ all began moving the other way, as if somebody had turned a loose screw or flipped a faulty switch, metaphors which may be closer to the truth than anyone would admit to, in the age of HFT and sophisticated algos.

The afternoon was all about erasing the embarrassment of the morning session, and it was done with considerable gusto and untold amounts of money from god-know-whom-or-where. The NASDAQ erased a 125-point decline, moving steadily higher to edge into positive territory in the final hour, though it could not hold onto gains, falling back into the red in the final 20 minutes of trading.

The losses in the other two indices were a little stickier, though the Dow improved dramatically, finishing down by just short of 250 points. The S&P lost 22.

So, what happened? Nothing, really, except that short sellers took profits midday, then sat back and counted their money, supposedly. The smart money - and there always is smart money - is currently on red. And it's going to stay there until the selling stops, which, if the past two weeks are any indication, won't be any time soon.

For instance, the Dow still has 1200 points to get to bear market territory. The NASDAQ and S&P are similarly down about 15% from their highs (last May) and will need a little more time. Don't be surprised if there's a snap-back rally with some ferocity over the next two days as options expire on Friday.

What may be of more technical interest (no pun intended) is the yield on the ten-year note, which closed today under 2.00% for the first time in nearly a year. Following the federal funds rate hike in December, rates were supposed to rise. They've gone in the opposite direction, to the Fed's dismay. Look for the Federal Reserve to call an emergency meeting in the not-so-distant future if the selling doesn't abate shortly.

S&P 500: 1,859.33, -22.00 (1.17%)
Dow: 15,766.74, -249.28 (1.56%)
NASDSAQ: 4,471.69, -5.26 (0.12%)

Crude Oil 26.76 -5.97% Gold 1,101.20 +1.11% EUR/USD 1.0891 -0.18% 10-Yr Bond 1.9840 -2.51% Corn 368.00 +0.07% Copper 1.98 +0.13% Silver 14.17 +0.35% Natural Gas 2.14 +2.58% Russell 2000 999.31 +0.45% VIX 27.59 +5.91% BATS 1000 19,792.43 -1.24% GBP/USD 1.4193 +0.22% USD/JPY 116.9350 -0.60%

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Stocks Bounce, But Rally Is Short-Lived Following MLK Holiday

Oddly buoyed by bad data out of China (missed GDP estimates at 6.9%), stocks made a half-hearted attempt to stem some of the losses it took in the first two weeks of the year, rising by about one percent across the three major indices early, but the rally could not find its legs and sellers soon took over, sending the NASDAQ into negative territory for the ninth time in 11 sessions this year.

While there's still eight trading days remaining in the month, the January Barometer merits mention at this juncture if only because the month, as a whole, seems to be lost.

Readers will be reminded that the January Barometer - which posits that "as goes January, so goes the year" - has a roughly 90% correlation. The only question now for traders seems to be not whether the year of 2016 will be a bad one, but just how bad it will end.

Indications continue to suggest that the correction is far from over and the potential of an outright bear market is only being kept off the table due to some select large cap stocks. 65% of stocks on the S&P 500 are already in a bear market, i.e., off 20% or more, and the Russell 2000 is down more than 20% from previous highs.

Equities may have gotten a one-day reprieve from some non-committal buyers of the dip, but that strategy seems to have worn out its welcome. Seasoned traders are becoming more and more risk-averse, seeking the safety of large caps with steady dividends, strong balance sheets (there aren't many), and, as the 10-year-note is telling us quite plainly, fixed income investments.

Today's volatility included a 270-point round trip for the Dow, which was down more than 100 points midday. Wednesday may prove more challenging as markets approach the traditional options expiry on the third Friday of the month, at the end of the current week.

Today's Closing Quotes:
S&P 500: 1,881.33, +1.00 (0.05%)
Dow: 16,016.02, +27.94 (0.17%)
NASADAQ: 4,476.95, -11.47 (0.26%)

Crude Oil 28.59 -2.82% Gold 1,090.70 +0.01% EUR/USD 1.0908 +0.17% 10-Yr Bond 2.0350 +0.10% Corn 368.50 +1.45% Copper 1.97 +1.11% Silver 14.07 +1.29% Natural Gas 2.08 -0.76% Russell 2000 994.87 -1.28% VIX 26.05 -3.59% BATS 1000 20,041.25 -0.13% GBP/USD 1.4160 -0.66% USD/JPY 117.6320 +0.18%