Showing posts with label new highs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new highs. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2011

Stocks Pounded Again as No Catalyst Exists; BofA Gets a Taste of Own Medicine

After last week's carnage, traders lined up on Monday for what looks to be one of the duller trading weeks of the year, though the Greek bailout crisis in Euroland might change the scenario a bit.

There is scant economic news and the quarter doesn't end until June 30, so there are no corporate quarterly earnings reports on which to trade, which leaves markets in a situation nearly resembling "every man for himself."

Inasmuch as traders are a courageous lot, there was some horse-swapping in the session, though most of it was in the form of shedding assets because the US economy looks to be falling back upon itself and could be headed for another recession. QE2 ends abruptly just after options expiration on the 17th, so one could expect an even more severe downturn at that time.

Banks are once again in the cross-hairs. They led today's decline and are possibly among the worst risk assets to be holding at present, especially in the case of the big ones: JP Morgan, BofA, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo.

While many have taken to calling this a "soft patch" - which is just another term for "I have no idea because I only can make money when stocks go up" - more hardened economists see the current condition as analogous to the Fall of '08, as Greece (and maybe Spain, Portugal and Italy) takes the place of Lehman Brothers and another solvency crisis comes to bear.

However, it could be even deeper than that, with one of the major US banks finally throwing in the towel. In that case, it's likely to be Bank of America (BAC), which was highlighted in Fortune magazine on Friday.

In the article linked above, contributor Abigail Field - who has penned a number of solidly-researched pieces on the mortgage crisis - claims that the extent of sloppiness, incompleteness and outright fraud contained in mortgages originated and securitized by Countrywide (taken over by Bank of America in 2008) is likely much more severe and perverse than anyone had imagined and BofA wasn't letting on about it.

Bank of America is easily the one most crippled by the mortgage and foreclosure crisis and the extent of their losses may have been (probably is) grossly understated, both by the bank and by regulators. The sheer volume of bad loans, fraudulent documents and outright chaos in the mortgage servicing department of Bank of America would have taken down a smaller institution years ago, but BofA is the nation's largest bank and they've been aided continuously by the Federal Reserve, at taxpayer expense.

The severity of the crisis continues to dog the mega-bank at every turn and they may have to make the decision of off-board the entire Countrywide unit in order to salvage what remains of their institution. Of course, this is speculation, but the regulations still being written for the Dodd-Frank bill may be complete enough to call for an orderly winding down of the bank should it pose systemic risk, and surely it does.

To a lesser extent, Wells-Fargo (WFC) faces the same situation, as they managed to snatch up Wachovia - and all their no-doc, low-doc loans - during the turmoil of the financial crisis.

On the day, both stocks finished well into the red, with BAC falling to its lowest closing level since May 15, 2009, breaking below the close of 10.92 on November 30, 2010, losing 45 cents, to 10.83. Wells-Fargo (WFC) lost 0.60 to 26.26 and is close to making a double-bottom.

Today was a truly ugly day on Wall Street, as stocks simply lost value steadily, albeit slowly, throughout the session. The lows of the day were reached shortly after 3:00 pm and an abrupt rally fizzled in the final minutes. Nothing but reluctance to sell is keeping this market from an outright crash.

Dow 12,090.11, -61.15 (0.50%)
NASDAQ 2,702.56, -30.22 (1.11%)
S&P 500 1,286.17, -13.99 (1.08%)
NYSE Composite 8,115.87, -106.28 (1.29%)


Despite the modest declines, internals were shattered. Losers dominated winners, 5175-1436. The NASDAQ posted just 31 new highs, overwhelmed by 131 new lows. On the NYSE, there were just 27 new highs, but 65 new lows, putting the combined number at 58 new highs to 196 new lows. This is the third straight day of the lows beating the highs. On Thursday of last week, it was 115 to 76 and Friday saw 130-68, both in favor of new lows.

This is a very telling sign that we are about to enter a serious correction which should last months, at least through September. A ton of money has already fled stocks and more will follow. Volume was moderate, but only because there are fewer and fewer players every day.

NASDAQ Volume 1,826,802,125.00
NYSE Volume 4,034,310,000


Crude oil futures fell $1.21 to $99.01. Gold advanced $2.40, to $1544.80. Silver finished up 51 cents, at $36.80

Finally, in the video below, some justice was served in Florida, where Bank of America got their just deserts.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Stocks Take Another Hit, But, Why?

Major US indices fell for a fourth consecutive session - with the exception of the Dow, which eked out a 1-point gain on Monday - and there are likely several reasons why this downtrend has continued and actually accelerated, with the biggest drop coming today.

After all, it is the beginning of earnings season, and first quarter results are expected to be pretty good. But is the market looking down the road, or could investors be wary of margin squeezes caused by runaway commodity prices, or consumer depression caused by over-the-top gas prices?

One thing's for sure: the winter was a long and cold one, and nobody got a break from high heating bills in a majority of the heating states of the Northeast and Midwest. That certainly couldn't have helped household budgets much and a Gallup poll released today suggests that Americans are as displeased with current and future conditions as they were this time in 2009 and through the middle of 2010.

The poll showed that only 33% of respondents in March think the economy is "getting better." That's a drop from 36% in February and 41% in January.

Another possibility is that the now-month-old tragedy in Japan is also worsening, as officials raised the level of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant accident to 7, on a par with the disaster at Chernobyl, 25 years ago.

Perhaps the stock market wasn't really sold on the late-night budget deal reached on Friday night (We had expected this was only a continuing resolution and were right) and the potential that the deal could fall apart. Details are just beginning to trickle out that the cuts amount to much less than the $38.5 billion reported and that members of both parties, in bouth houses of congress, are displeased.

At Business Insider, Joe Weisenthal reports that the government might still shut down, this Friday. The AP has details from just where the phantom cuts are coming.

So, here we go again? The 2011 fiscal year ends September 30 (about 5 1/2 months from now), and the budget is still being trimmed, debated and flayed? This is no way to run a country, especially one as on the financial ropes as the USA. Get ready for more drama from the queens on Capitol Hill and at the White House.

The Hill has more detail on the cuts, which will go to a House floor vote on Thursday. The legislation is known as H.R. 1473, for those wishing to keep score at home.

Notwithstanding the aforementioned possibilities and potentialities, the Fed's ending of thier policy of handing over free money to Primary Dealers in June, via QE2, might be on the minds of many in the investment world. When that nearly $100 billion a month stops, so might Wall Street's 2-year-long party. In a related note, the Fed released it's schedule of banker handouts (POMO) for the remainder of April through May 12.

All of this news added up to some big drops in the equity markets, centered around just about 1% overall. Commodities were hit even harder (see below).

Dow 12,263.58, -117.53 (0.95%)
NASDAQ 2,744.79, -26.72 (0.96%)
S&P 500 1,314.16, -10.30 (0.78%)
NYSE Composite 8,360.46, -85.31 (1.01%)


Declining issues clobbered advancers again, 4883-1663, a nearly 3:1 ratio, the largest of the past four sessions. On the NASDAQ, new lows overtook new highs, 56-39, but it was the other way around on the stubborn NYSE, with new highs holding a slim edge over new lows, 41-20. A similar pattern was witnessed in March, with the new lows overtaking new highs on both indices for 4-6 days, but the supposed correction was cut short by a surprise rally that now seems to have run up against resistance and is failing fast. Volume was not spectacular, and would most accurately be described as moribund. Another few days of this, and another row over continuing funding to the federal government could put the kibosh on 2011 gains, short and long term.

NASDAQ Volume 1,798,176,500
NYSE Volume 4,735,433,500


Oil took another massive hit in price on Tuesday, with WTI crude futures falling $3.67, to $106.25, and even lower after NYMEX trading closed. That's a two-day drop of $6.52 per barrel and motorists can only hope the trend continues. There are a lot of speculators in the market, and estimates range from them making up anywhere from 10-40% of the oil price.

Of course, in a real world, with real world consequences coming from an actually-functioning Justice Department, that would otherwise be known as price-fixing. Since the Attorney General hasn't been seen in six or eight months, and is generally regarded as the worst ever, don't expect anything like even an investigation to commence any time soon. We hear the name of the AG is Eric Holder, but nobody's been able to confirm that.

Along with oil, a good number of food and grain commodities are coming off their highs. Corn, soybeans and wheat were down the most, with lean hogs and live cattle following the trend. Gold slipped $14.50, to $1,453.60. Silver fell 55 cents, to settle in at $40.07 per ounce.

It has been said that one day does not make a trend, and there's truth in that, but maybe four straight declines in major indices are significant enough for somebody to take notice. It's no secret that the US system is largely bankrupt and operating on fumes and smoke, so it might be just a matter of time for the markets to correct. Naturally, the meddling Fed has kept the rally going with oodles of cash, and just to be sure, they gave some to the wives of some already-rich bankers, as Matt Taibbi reports for Rolling Stone.

Fair warning: reading Taibbi's latest story might lead to vomiting or breaking of inanimate objects. Strap in securely, as this story reveals just how corrupt and unbalanced the entire bailout process has been and continues to be.

Paging Ron Paul, paging Ron Paul. The country is calling on you to run for president.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Today, the Collapse Began; Cash Reigns Supreme

While the headline numbers for today's trading on the major indices weren't all that startling, but the largely unnoticed event - an indicator which I watch like a hawk and report on daily - occurred today, as the new high - new low metrics completely reversed, with new lows taking the edge over new highs.

Of all the indicators which investment analysts cite in their mountains of research and charts, this simple indicator has proven to be the absolute best and most accurate for determining both bull and bear market direction, long term, and isn't long term what investing is supposed to be about, anyway?

The first time I made note of this simple indicator was when it turned negative in August, 2007, an innocuous time for many, but the actual beginning of the still-ongoing financial crisis. New lows took the edge from the new highs in that month and did not give up the advantage - on a day-by-day basis - until April of 2009, a span of some 20 months, a spectacular indicator, to be sure!

There were a handful of days in which there were more posted new highs than new lows, but through those 20 months, new lows led new highs nearly every trading day. When they turned over last year, with new highs surpassing new lows on a daily basis, I was slow to comprehend its meaning and power, but finally caught on in June as the markets embarked upon a truly breathtaking nine-month rally.

Today marked the second time new lows have surpassed new highs in the past two weeks. The first instance was on the day of the "flash crash" on May 6, nearly two weeks ago. Today, the move was decisive, with 167 new lows compared to only 90 new highs. It would bear to watch this indicator closely for the next ten trading sessions, to see if it continues to trend in this manner, but my gut feeling is that it has flipped and the market is heading for a renewed bout of bearishness, marked by sharp selling and equally sharp rallies off fresh bottoms.

Investors would be well advised to get out of equities as soon as possible, if not already in cash, equivalents or tools of trades as I have been suggesting for some time.

Dow 10,444.37, -66.58 (0.63%)
NASDAQ 2,298.37, -18.89 (0.82%)
S&P 500 1,115.05, -5.75 (0.51%)
NYSE Composite 6,927.21, -32.00 (0.46%)


Losing issues outstripped advancers by a colossal margin, 5030-1549, or better than 3:1, another indication of more pain to come for Bulls. Volume was also strong, indicating that the selling has not yet reached fever pitch.

NYSE Volume 7,827,840,000.00
NASDAQ Volume 2,588,426,750.00


Crude slipped to a seven-month low today before regaining its footing, adding 46 cents, to $69.87 per barrel at the close, though that gain was likely a knee-jerk reaction to the relentless selling the entire month of May which has brought the price down more than 15%.

If there was any indication of deflation, it was not only in the April CPI numbers released prior to the market's opening, which showed a decline of 0.1% (same as yesterday's PPI), but in the price of gold, which sold off considerably. The yellow metal plummeted $21.70, to $1,192.60. Silver suffered an even larger percentage loss, diving 76 cents, to $18.09.

As are all other commodities, they are trading vehicles, and while they may fare better than other asset classes, they are still not immune from the ravishes of deflation, which has been and continues to bombard global markets with price dislocations and a general lack of pricing power.

The race to the bottom is on again. Cash is king once more!

Friday, October 9, 2009

Blowing The Top Off

On strength in the health care and technology sectors, US equities managed to finish one of their best weeks of the year with a strongly positive session. IBM led the Dow to new 52-week and 2009 highs, while the S&P finished just .17 short of its high for the year, set back on September 22 (1071.66). The NASDAQ also closed within shouting distance of its 200 closing high, just 7 points short of 2146.30, also the close on September 22.

The major indices closed higher every day this week except for the Dow, which posted a 6-point loss on Wednesday. This sets up an interesting scenario for the first big week of earnings season. A number of highly-traded stocks report next week, including Charles Schwab (SCHW) on Monday; Intel (INTC) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) on Tuesday; JP Morgan Chase (JPM) on Wednesday; Citigroup (C), Cypress Semi (CY), Goldman Sachs (GS), Google (GOOG), IBM (IBM) and Nokia (NOK) on Thursday; and Bank of America (BAC) and General Electric (GE) on Friday.

Dow 9,864.94, +78.07 (0.80%)
NASDAQ 2,139.28, +15.35 (0.72%)
S&P 500 1,071.49, +6.01 (0.56%)
NYSE Composite 7,015.54, +24.87 (0.36%)


Advancing issues beat decliners, 3942-2445, though the gains were not as broadly-based as earlier in the week. New highs beat new lows, 482-45. Volume was significantly below the levels of the rest of the week, but nobody seemed to care, with stocks soaring, even on a day in which the markets decoupled from the dollar trade, which was strengthened through intervention by the Bank of Japan and some veiled comments from the Fed Chairman, friendly uncle Ben Bernanke.

NYSE Volume 4,310,388,500
NASDAQ Volume 1,900,588,625


Due to the strong dollar, moves in the commodity markets were muted, though oil managed to gain 8 cents, to $71.77. Gold kicked back from its three-day record run, losing $7.70, to $1,048.60. Silver relinquished 13 cents to close at $17.69.

Considering the conditions in the market, it was something magnificent to see the Dow soar to a new closing high, but the US economy appears to be something of a coiled spring, about to explode with growth in all directions. Companies have cut the workforce to the bone while recovering from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. While there are still voices of macro-economics who believe that our debt levels are too high (they are) and the banking sector too weak (probably not in comparison to the rest of the world) to promote significant expansion, companies and investors are not convinced. Most of the working population is working, though this latest recession and the accompanying stimulus may have created an even larger underclass of unproductive cretins living off the earnings of the producers.

The big fear is that unemployment stays at elevated levels for too long a period. The government, by its actions such as extending unemployment benefits and increasing welfare payments only serves to exacerbate the condition, and washington must reign in its own profligacy. Otherwise, the massive spending the feds have thrown at the problem will create an ever more severe economic crisis in which the government cannot meet the demands of the people it is sworn to serve.

It's likely a very positive development that the dollar exhibited some strength and that bonds have sold off, increasing yields. If anything, the market, especially bond yields, will telegraph the next Fed move to raise interest rates, which seems to be coming sooner rather than later, and would be a good sign of real recovery and strength.

What most economics fail to include in their calculations are the robust dynamics of the US economy and the magic of innovation, which usually serves as a spur to both economic and job growth. The government jawboning about clean and green energy is a step in the right direction, but the markets will be the ultimate arbitrageur of what works and what doesn't. New products continue to come to market, and that builds economic activity more than any feeble weak-dollar trade ever could.

The US economy appears poised to break out into a new era of prosperity and the market is forecasting that development. As trite and cliche as it may sound, those who say that it's a mistake to bet against the US economy are probably dead right.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Stocks, Commodities Belted; New Highs-Lows Indicator Calls Shot

After a week of listless trading which ended Friday with an upside-down condition between the headline number and the market internals, the measurement of new highs vs. new lows indicated that a reversal was at hand. On Friday, June 12, the Dow reached its highest level since January 6 of this year, and true to form, marked an interim market top from which a fall was not only predictable, but almost too obvious.

The Dow index was trapped between the last vestiges of a long bear market rally and the nearly-impossible condition of making new highs, converting to a new bull market. Since the transportation index failed to confirm the highs on the Industrial, there seemed to be no other direction but down, and on Monday, investors took the bearish signal and ran with it.

The major indices fall in line with the Dow decline, the worst hit being the Composite, with the broadest base of stocks. As usual, market participants tried to force a last-hour rally, as has been their behavior on nearly every down day, but their efforts failed to recover much of the ground lost during the session. At the low point of the day, the Dow was down 223 points, rallied from 3 pm to 3:45 pm to -175 points, but lost traction in the final 15 minutes of trade with all of the major indices ending near their lows for the day.

As concerns our most valued (and simple) indicator, the new highs-new lows measure went positive for five straight sessions, reversing a 21-month-old pattern, before rolling over into the negative (more new lows than highs) on Friday, in stark contradiction to the upside move on the Dow. Interestingly, the advance-decline line on Friday also went negative, nearly telegraphing Monday's direction.

Dow 8,612.13, -187.13 (2.13%)
NASDAQ 1,816.38, -42.42 (2.28%)
S&P 500 923.72, -22.49 (2.38%)
NYSE Composite 5,967.26, -181.35 (2.95%)


On the day, declining issues led advancers by an enormous margin, 5283-1174, (9-2); while new lows remained in control over new highs, 65-34. Volume was once more in the negligible range, close to levels seen last week, so, not influential. It may be that we are witnessing the summer level of activity on the market. Many participants may have already retreated to the sidelines, and will seek re-entry points at some later date. There are still large amounts of profits to be taken as the markets have not yet gone into "gran mal seizure" mode, though that may occur at any time.

Refreshingly, the new lows-new highs indicator rang true and maintained the negative bias from Friday, restoring faith in the one simple indicator that has been absolutely dead on throughout the market decline of the past 22 months.

NYSE Volume 1,150,418,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,178,292,000


While stocks were sliding, commodities were doing the same, with losses across the spectrum. Notable contrarians were Natural Gas and Pork Belly futures, both up sharply. Crude oil for July delivery fell $1.42, to $70.62. Further pullback, to the $55-62 level is expected, unless there's evidence of increased demand. One can safely assume that the recent rise in oil prices was the result of naked speculation of a seasonal variety, and thus, unlikely to produce long-lasting gains.

Gold was sent southward once more, dipping $13.20, to $927.50. Silver also took a large hit, losing 85 cents (a massive one-day loss), to $14.03. It's likely that the metals may remain somewhat range-bound, much of the trade dependent upon this week's PPI (tomorrow) and CPI (Wednesday) figures. If gains in both are sizable, that would indicate inflation, taking up all commodity prices, but there seems to be unfolding evidence that markets have cooled considerably and will remain moribund for the foreseeable future, making speculation difficult, it not foolish.

The world's economies are not as badly damaged as they appeared to be back in the fall of 2008, though the stresses to the overall global system has been significant. Market players are discovering that the recent rally in stocks may have been quite overdone and without justification, forcing many investors into a more defensive posture. Additionally, with the recent Treasury data indicating that foreign involvement has dried up considerably, there's increased pressure on bonds, forcing yields higher, and, thus, moving money away from riskier stocks and commodities.

Given the current conditions, there appears to be few places to make money, so a flight to the relative safely of bonds may be the preferred route for many.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

More Stocks Making New Highs

For the fifth consecutive day, new highs have exceeded new lows, today, by 91-69.

To some, that may sound like fairly mundane news, but to readers of this blog, it's an important turning point. Daily new lows have outnumbered new highs every day for some 21 months (with the exception of about 6 days) until last week.

So, has the spell been broken? Is the economy on the verge of recovery? Are we headed for a new bull market?

The answers, in order, are: YES, NO, and PROBABLY NOT.

Until the economy begins showing real signs of strength, such as, home prices increasing instead of declining, month-over-month; new jobs being created; corporate profits showing real improvement, not just "beat the (watered-down) street numbers"; and maybe getting the national debt under control, the US economy is in for a rough ride. While the solitary new lows-new highs indicator may be turning green, it's more likely because the new highs set in 2008, much like earnings forecasts, are of the low-bar variety. The new highs in '09 are likely well below the previous highs in '07 or '06. and, since the market was hammered so badly both in the fall of '08 and the first quarter of '09, there aren't many more new lows to be had. Some of the real losers have been delisted (see GM, etc.), while others are resting comfortably in the single digits.

As for a new bull market, well, such is the stuff of dreams and fairies. It would be more in the realm of Harry Potter to conger up a new bull market than for the economic conditions to present such a scenario. Stocks are currently overvalued, as will be seen some time later this summer or into the fall. Some selling would indeed be healthy right about now, though there is a general push-back from Wall Street, the federal government and mainstream media against any show of weakness. It's very odd, but much akin to the Japanese (or is it Chinese?) concept of "losing face," wherein one puts on the best show possible in order to appear wholesome, vibrant and strong.

Naturally, that's not what investing in equities is supposed to be about. It's supposed to consist of discounting future value, dividends and solid profitability, product lines and market share. Fundamentals of business and economy, dear Watson.

Dow 8,770.92, +31.90 (0.37%)
NASDAQ 1,862.37, +9.29 (0.50%)
S&P 500 944.89, +5.74 (0.61%)
NYSE Composite 6,163.13, +65.07 (1.07%)


As far as this week is concerned, the movement of the stock market has been kind of like a bad joke, or, watching paint dry. It's been a near-total waste of time. The big winner has been the NYSE Composite, up a whopping 80 points. The NASDAQ has put on 13 points; the S&P almost 5, and the Dow a miraculous 7 whole points!

Index traders are falling asleep at their desks, the excitement is so rare.

On the day, advancing issues outnumbered decliners, 4164-1405, though, while the disparity was large, the actual movement was tiny. You already know the score on the new highs vs. new lows, and volume was a little better than Wednesday's, which really doesn't say much. Investors worldwide are still awaiting some kind of pull-back, though it may be a long time in coming, if at all.

NYSE Volume 1,223,187,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,501,569,000


Oil hit a new high for the year, to nobody's surprise, rising $1.35, to $72.68. Gold was up as well, gaining $6.80, to $961.50, and silver added 27 cents, to $15.49. Commodity prices, outside of crude oil, have been trading up and down without much direction for the past three to four weeks, much like the stock market. The entire globe has been engulfed by an acute condition of indecisiveness, worse than any H1N1 Pandemic.

Tomorrow, we're hoping the market will be up, or down. Something to hang one's hat on would be welcome after a week of dullness.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Critical Turn for US Markets

Today marked a potentially critical turn for US equity markets, from a strict interpretation of a key indicator, that being the new highs - new lows measure.

On Monday and Tuesday, new highs surpassed new lows on the daily tally for the first time in six months. New lows have held the edge every day since September of 2007, save for five or six occasions. On those occasions in which new highs surpassed new lows during this period, once new lows took back the lead, stocks fell for a time until the new lows were 25-100 times the number of new highs, at which point a bottom was reached in the market.

Today, there were 50 new lows to 48 new highs, a technical win for the lows, indicating that a market turn is at hand. This is the strongest selling indicator that has been seen in the past three months. While it's obvious that stocks are severely overbought and have been for weeks, this sole indicator is all that's needed to predict the immediate future for stocks. They are ready to roll over and die. The extend of the carnage cannot be known, but within the next 3-6 trading days, there will be dramatic movement to the downside.

Market action today was somewhat hidden, though the real damage was done on the NYSE Composite, the largest index, and the one least prone to manipulation. While losses on the three majors were limited, the Composite was down 2.41%, nearly twice that of the S&P, three times the decline of the Dow and triple the NASDAQ on a percentage basis.

Dow 8,675.24, -65.63 (0.75%)
NASDAQ 1,825.92, -10.88 (0.59%)
S&P 500 931.76, -12.98 (1.37%)
NYSE Composite 6,033.90, -148.97 (2.41)


Declining issues far outpaced advancing ones, 4346-2059. That is a significant number, much moreso than the feeble tape-painting attempt on the Dow, which had been down as much as 140 points at 3:30 pm. Of course, the manipulators in the market made sure to limit the damage with a 75-point rally in the final half hour. It should be disregarded, as should every index, as they are absurdly valued at present. Consider that the Dow is still more than 2000 points higher than it was less than three months ago. The game is nearly up. Savvy investors will be locking in profits very soon as waves of selling are set to hit the market. Volume was on the low side, but still meaningless. The warmer weather and shakiness of the markets have removed many participants.

NYSE Volume 1,323,971,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,320,685,000


Commodities may have telegraphed the next move in stocks. After weeks of rallying, nearly all commodities sold off on the day, indicating that speculators are scurrying for safer havens in bonds and money markets. The catalyst may have been the ADP Employment Change report, which showed a loss of 532,000 private sector jobs lost in May, and also revised April from a loss of 491,000 to a 545,000 job loss. With the official Labor Department Non-Farms Payroll report for May due out prior to the market open on Friday, there is every possibility that the report will show further deterioration in the US employment market, not "incremental improvement" as the media and government officials have been touting.

Oil dropped $2.43, to settle at $66.12. Gold dipped $18.80, falling to $965.60. Even silver, the strongest commodity over the past three weeks, fell 65 cents, to $15.31 per ounce. Almost every commodity, from energy-related to foodstuffs, fell hard on the day. The grip of deflation is unmistakable.

There's another tsunami dead ahead. Government efforts to revive the economy have been minimal at best, and potentially harmful, at worst. Investors are nervous and big money is heading for the hills. Despite the positive spin which the government and media have tried to put on the economic picture, the reality is that the US economy is not gong to recover any time soon.

Look for sideways-down movement over the coming weeks, peppered with a couple of major downside days, with the Dow registering 200-400 point losses. Once the selling begins, it will not be easily stopped. The banks and their TARP money are pulling out - they have to - before they are stuck with losing positions. Before that happens they will unload on retail investors.

Happy days? Not for bulls.