Showing posts with label foreclosures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foreclosures. Show all posts

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Higher Day on Dollar Indifference

Stocks moved higher again on Thursday in tepid action, closing well off the highs made in the first fifteen minutes of trading. Once the Dow moved higher by 100 points at the open on the back of a rather poor unemployment report - up to 474,000 new claimants as opposed to 454,000 the week before - stocks quickly moved lower to test the gap-up open and then proceeded to trade in a 40 point range for the remainder of the session. With the trading volume low and lack of participation seen as a major detriment, stocks traded without conviction, just as they did on Wednesday.

Dow 10,405.83, +68.78 (0.67%)
NASDAQ 2,190.86, +7.13 (0.33%)
S&P 500 1,102.35, +6.40 (0.58%)
NYSE Composite 7,104.50, +36.88 (0.52%)


Advancing issues beat decliners, though by a slim margin again, 3327-3128, with most of the winners residing on the NYSE. There were 327 new highs, to just 55 new lows, with the margin expanding for the first time in five days. Volume was as dull as it has been all week long.

NYSE Volume 4,592,418,500
NASDAQ Volume 1,950,587,875


Oil took another small hit, down 13 cents, to $70.54, the lowest level since mid-October and the sixth straight session in which the price has declined. The slippery stuff traded briefly below $70 a couple of times during the session, though, like stocks, there was little to no influence from the dollar trade, which also traded in a narrow range of just 0.20, finally hitting the key 76.00 level just as the stock markets were closing. Gold finished highre for a change, breaking a string of losses with a gain of $5.50, to $1,126.40. Silver did likewise, up a peevish 3 cents, to $17.21.

The lack of interest in the dollar movement kept every trading vehicle in tight ranges. It's a very dull market, facing end-of-year issues, low participation rates and a slew of unresolved conditions, such as the US employment condition, debt issues from Dubai, to Greece, to Spain, increasing residential foreclosures and a sluggish worldwide recovery.

Tomorrow's end-of-week trading will be aided by guidance before the bell from November retail sales, which are expected to be modestly higher, though those expectations may still be out of line with reality. Even more important will be December retail sales, though those won't be fully known until well after the fact.

Therefore, investors are sailing a ship without much of a rudder and a broken compass. Stocks have been in a holding pattren since the end of earnings season, three weeks ago. Hopes for a "Santa Claus Rally" are fading about as quickly as Tiger Woods marriage vows.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

'Green Shoots' Shot Down

For weeks we've been hearing about how the economy is improving, though the data released hardly supported the theory.

Many economic numbers were slightly better than anticipated, and earnings for many companies beat watered-down expectations, but overall, evidence that the economy was actually on the mend was scant.

Today's release of retail sales figures for April sent investors scurrying to take profits and close down option positions en masse. Retail sales were off 0.4%, when expectations were a decline of just 0.2%. March figures were also revised lower. As those numbers hit the street prior to the market's opening, selling commenced right from the opening bell and didn't ease up much all day.

Separately, a report from Realty-Trac showed foreclosures hitting yet another record in April.

Dow 8,284.89, -184.22 (2.18%)
NASDAQ 1,664.19, -51.73 (3.01%)
S&P 500 883.92. -24.43 (2.69%)
NYSE Composite 5,666.47, -192.67 (3.29%)


The broad-based decline was confirmed by market internals. Decliners were handily ahead of advancing issues, 5602-936. The 6-1 ratio was the worst since the markets were bottoming out in early March. The steadfast new lows - new highs ratio remained stubbornly tilted downward, with 76 new lows to a mere 16 new highs, also a low number of new highs not evidenced since March. Volume was not fantastic, but solid and mostly on the sell side.

NYSE Volume 1,766,071,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,404,441,000


Crude oil fell 23 cents, to close at $57.79. Gold fluctuated, eventually finishing $2.00 higher, at $925.90. Silver took a breather after a more than $1.00 week-long run up, losing 20 cents, to $14.02.

The S&P fell for the third straight session, the longest such streak since a five-day losing skein February 24 - March 3. The consecutive declines are a strong signal of general weakness, as investors and working people struggle for clarity.

Just a week after the much-ballyhooed bank "stress tests" the markets seem to have soured, as rosy predictions of a quick turnaround have given way to more disciplined and rigorous outlooks that see the USA struggling for years to come. Government efforts to conceal bank losses have not be lost on average Americans, who feel short-changed, cheated and lied to by bankers and the political elite.

Investing over the past two months time has been an effort in near-total delusion. The US economy cannot be seen as improving when the Federal Reserve is monetizing Treasury debt as the federal government piles up mountains of unpayable notes overwhelming the public. Foreign investors have seriously curtailed Treasury purchases, especially China.

To make matters worse, the Obama administration seems hell-bent on socializing industry and demolishing what little is left of American entrepreneurism with odious taxes, regulations and heavy-handed wealth redistribution measures. Without a clear reversal of policy - from tax and spend to fiscal austerity - from government at all levels, the American public will continue to lose faith in government's promise to repair the private sector. Further Keynesian tinkering by the Fed and Treasury will only result in a deeper and longer lasting depression.

Make no doubt about it. We entered dangerous waters in 2007 and conditions have only worsened since. Government efforts to revive the economy with the magic bullet of increasing money supply and handouts have thus far only made the situation worse. Beware the summer months, but be even more attuned to the period between August and October. If real progress has not been made by then, expect living conditions in many US cities to deteriorate to near-third world status.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Stocks Tank Worldwide. Is This the Big One?

Are we setting up for The Big One?

While America was taking the day off in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., one of our nation's greatest defenders of liberty, equality and justice, markets around the world were crashing from the after effects of the credit crisis and now the looming confidence crisis in the USA.

This article tells most of the story, but the reality won't hit the US shores for another 12 hours. By the time US equity markets open, the Asian markets will have gone through another day and Europe's will be well into their afternoon sessions.

Some of the drops on Monday were shocking:
Britain's FTSE-100 -5.5%
France's CAC-40 -6.8%
Germany's DAX 30 -7.2.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng -5.5%

The meaning in all of this for US stocks is disturbingly real, since all of the declines worldwide are keyed to the fear of a US recession. As the so-called buyer of last resort, the US bears the blame and also will likely suffer consequences equal or worse than those of our fellow capital-intensive countries. After all, the recession is going to happen here first.

Shades of the Great Depression

While the actual causes of the Great Depression are still the focus of argument among economists, what remains clear is that most of the world was plunged into an economic abyss after the market crash in 1929.

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The actual extent of the damage to capital markets is still unclear at this point, and while not wanting to be alarmist, I've remained steadfast that the subprime mortgage blow-up was more of a trigger than an isolated event. So far, with the Dow already off more than 14% since the October peak, I've been right. And now it appears that we are in the second phase of a bear market, where losses are the steepest.

Where this is all headed is in the wrong direction. Using Fibonacci calculations of 33, 50 and 67% declines from the previous gain (roughly 6800 points), the declines would be of the order of 2244, 3200 and 4690 points on the Dow.

With the Dow already close to that 2244-point decline, I had expected a bounce and the gains on Friday morning might have been all there was. That makes the next stop around 11,000, and if that breaks down, somewhere around 9500 may be the bottom.

It could get worse, however, if, as anyone paying attention might recall, the stock market began its tremendous bull run at the start of the Iraq War in March of 2003. Considering the massive fiasco that campaign has devolved into, might there be some coupling of the market gains to the war "effort" and if so, what have we wrought but death, destruction and about a trillion dollars in wasted spending?

The last 4 1/2 years of "prosperity" might have been an illusion. If that's the case, we're in for some hard times indeed.

If the Dow drops below 9500 and begins to head for the 7500-8000 area, it could portend catastrophe, not only for the stock market but for the US and possibly all other economies.

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Retracing the missteps of the Great Depression, government was found either powerless or ineffective in stopping natural economic forces from occurring. We may be seeing a similar scenario today. Despite three rate cuts by the Federal Reserve amounting to a total of 1%, stocks still lost considerable value.

Now, world reaction to the US government's plan has been met with skepticism if not outright disapproval. Since investors and economists are generally better-equipped than government bureaucrats and politicians to read the "tea leaves" correctly, the instinctive selling by the cognoscente may have already begun. As usual, the really smart money has gotten out of the way earliest.

We may be in the earliest stages of a cataclysmic economic event. Remember, during the Great Depression we had the relative security of the gold standard. Such a limiting mechanism no longer exists in the leveraged world of floating currencies.

If we are indeed going to hell in a handbasket, the signs should be easy to discern and some have already appeared: inept politicians, secrecy and distrust within the banking community, a continuing decline in stocks with only brief respites, falling prices, falling currencies, disruptions in trade and commerce, business failures, bankruptcies, municipal budget pressures, massive real estate foreclosures from delinquencies on mortgages or taxes or both.

Inflation may turn out to be the least of our worries. The temporary advance in prices may turn out to be chimeric as the real devastation of slack demand takes hold in coming months. Inflation can be beaten back. A cyclical deflationary spiral is a demon for which nobody is prepared to confront, but we're fortunately not there yet.

A couple of months ago, I mentioned that some people might consider cashing out their IRA or retirement funds, even if it meant losing 20% of the portfolio's value as a penalty. Today, that almost looks like sound advice, especially if you're invested in an indexed fund. Since August or October, you may already be down close to that 20%. Wouldn't you rather have whatever's left in your control, rather than that of a fund manager who is likely to be chasing profits where none exist?

I am not a pessimist. I am a realist and I only present the views as a cautionary tale. If the worst is yet to come and the economic reality is more severe than most of us wish to imagine, it's far better to be forewarned than caught in the snare of an economy biting the dust.

Is sure hope my father reads this. Despite my constant warnings, he continues to play the market long and loses. I fear for his economic fate, but more for the welfare of those under 18 who don't already have a place at the table, but will be picking up the scraps.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Bad Finish

The end of the week always seems to provide some perspective, even if it occurs as an afterthought. I've been saying right along that the markets were shaky and Friday's figures indicate that I've been very much on the right track, so pay attention!

Head for the hills. Today was another in a continuing series of ugly trading sessions.

Dow 13,181.91 -281.42; NASDAQ 2,511.25 -64.73; S&P 500 1,433.06 -39.14; NYSE Composite 9,370.60 -248.73

Prior to the market opening, the Labor Dept. announced that July payrolls came in well below expectations of 135,000 new jobs, with the addition of just 92,000. According to some people's fudgy math, this translates into a 0.8% annual rate of growth which, by some accounts, would be sufficient to keep real GDP growth at the expected rate of 2.75% for the second half of the year. Dream on. The labor figures have been cooked, fried, refried, baked, grilled and fricasied to a point at which they are scarcely believable.

The day dawdled on until about 2:00 pm, when the floodgates opened and sellers spilled blood into the streets.

Market internals took a turn from nearly OK to horrific. Declining issues overwhelmed advancing ones at a 5-1 clip. New lows were once again beyond reason, with 792 issues (that's a whopping 13% of the whole market) hitting the skids. There were just 126 new highs.

Once again, the spreading contagion from the credit markets made it sensible to leave stocks alone. The US financial system, already under stress from years of government spending waste and an enormous trade deficit, is in tatters from the largely-unregulated mortgage business that is forcing people into foreclosure at record numbers.

While the big wigs in Washington - people like Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke - continue to spread the word that risks from the sub-prime mortgage mess are "contained" and "not serious", investors are taking whatever profits they have and leaving town.

The credit crunch even has people in the oil pits worried. Seriously, if there's going to be a recession - and it looks like it could be a long and serious one - there's no way oil will be able to maintain its current pricing structure. At some point, the demand side of the equation will send oil and gas prices tumbling. Crude for September delivery lost $1.38, closing at $75.48.

The precious metals finally made headway, as the future looks all the more certain - gloomy - which is good for gold bugs. Gold rose $7.80 to $684.40, while silver added 16 cents to $13.16. A good hedge would be to buy as much silver as possible as soon as you can.

Happy hunting.