Thursday, August 2, 2007

The PPT Plans to Save the Nation

They did it again.

It wasn't as dramatic as yesterday's 200-point move in 35 minutes, but there it was again, our guardians of the economy, the guiding hand of the Treasury, Federal Reserve, SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, acting in concert, pumped the Dow Jones Industrial Average another 120 points between 3:00 and 3:30 pm. They then allowed the market to readjust and close with another 100-point gain.

This time they took the NASDAQ along for the ride and left the S&P and the poor sister NYSE Composite behind; up, but by a lesser percentage than their favored 30 Dow stocks. The tally today was 25 gainers and just five losers within the Dow component stocks. Nice. Healthy. Bullscoot.

Dow 13,463.33 +100.96; NASDAQ 2,575.98 +22.11; S&P 500 1,472.20 +6.39; NYSE Composite 9,619.33 +46.28

The market internals were somewhat improved today, with advancers actually outdoing decliners by better than a 3-2 margin. New lows continued to lead new highs, however, 417-133. The markets are coming back toward equilibrium, but it's not going to last - the underlying forces of the sub-prime meltdown are simply too powerful.

Oil traded 33 cents to the upside, closing at $76.86. Gold and silver were up marginally, with silver right at $13.00 per ounce.

There are compelling reasons to buy into the metals, though those markets seem to be as manipulated - lower - as the Dow Jones. With Rupert Murdoch set to take the reins at the Wall Street Journal - a sad day for us all - the FOX is actually going to be in the hen house.

Make no mistake, the powers that be are in no mood to allow the Dow and other indices to drift lower. That said, it needs to be pointed out that the chances of making new highs are also quite remote. The credit markets are busting and the worst is still to come, right about time for a nice little election in the US, so the blame can be laid at the feet of the party soon to be (or already) in charge. History will be rewritten. It is every day, and it's all absolutely rubbish.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Dow Funny Business

Realistically, a 152-point rise on the Dow will divert most people's attention away from the systemic economic problems faced by the US economy and the cynical pumping of selected stocks by the PPT (Plunge Protection Team, Working Group on Financial Markets).

Anyone paying a little closer attention (like me) would notice that the Dow outperformed the NASDAQ and NYSE Composite by nearly a full percentage point on the day and dragged the S&P 500 up 0.72% due to the overlap between the indices.

Dow 13,362.37 +150.38 (1.14%); NASDAQ 2,553.87 +7.60 (0.30%); S&P 500 1,465.81 +10.54 (0.72%); NYSE Composite 9,572.87 +18.37 (0.19%)

Also, only two of the 30 Dow stocks finished in the red. Contrast that to the broader market, where declining issues led the way over advancers, 3748-2602, or roughly 3-2. Hmmm... a 28-2 upside trouncing by Dow stocks, but a 3-2 downside whipping for the overall market? Somebody's toying with us.

Surely. Absolutely. Without a doubt.

There were 861 new lows to just 95 new highs. So, where's the happy pill? The US equity market is about as phony as a Tennessee 3-dollar-bill. Maybe worse. A quick study of the Dow chart for Wednesday, August 1, tells the real story.

The Dow zig-zagged across the flatline until about 3:30, when the Dow was down about 50 points. Since the manipulators could not stomach another down day (make that 5 up and 6 down since the most recent record-high close), they pumped it a full 200 points in the final 35 minutes of trading. Nice! But not really. There are serious problems, as evidenced by the numbers just presented and the late day rally was designed to keep the stock market and our failing economy off the evening news and front pages of newspapers.

Speaking of newspapers, one should begin to be vary wary of anything emanating from the Dow Jones newswire, now that mogul Murdoch has his claws firmly entrenched. The deal was supposedly struck yesterday - or the day before - and it's just another knife into the already-exposed hide of American journalistic integrity. Forget that. You now simply cannot believe anything you read, anywhere. It's all subject to spin and headline writers, wrappers and margin noters. US media is a near-total sham. (Trust me. I at least try to give your the truth.)

While the markets were toying with our psyches, pressure on oil prices eased, losing $1.68 on the day, to close at $76.53. Thank goodness. And you can call off the gold rush. It was down $3.40 to $675.90. Silver dipped 6 cents to $12.96. Those minimal drops may be just small enough to pique some buying interest. Considering the coming banking fiasco, I'd be buying the metals here. A year from now, it could look like a very prudent move. Besides, there really isn't much downside risk in either gold or silver at these levels. You may not make a killing, but you shouldn't lose any value to inflation either.

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Credit Crunch

The continuing downfall of Wall Street's fanatical credit ponzi scheme is unmistakable. The housing sector implosion is spreading like wildfire, into corporate junk bonds, credit cards (have you gotten your "notice" yet? The one that says your interest rate is going up?), and mainstream mortgage lending.

The plain fact is that we're on the verge of a complete economic meltdown - caused by loose credit and regulatory policies - that not even the Secretary of the Treasury and his cohorts in the Working Group on Financial Markets (aka, the PPT, Plunge Protection Team) are powerless to stop it.

Dow 13,211.99 -146.32; NASDAQ 2,546.27 -37.01; S&P 500 1,455.27 -18.64; NYSE Composite 9,554.50 -68.68

Add to that over-arching concern the idea that the United States has been under the control of a gang of half-cocked thugs who have raided the Treasury, destroyed our military (to say nothing of the irreparable damage done to the nation of Iraq) and broken laws with impunity. The Congress has been unwilling to take the necessary action to remove these treasonous criminals from office and the media has been complicit in undermining the will of the people by simple avoidance of real news.

We're in one heck of a mess and even the titans of Wall Street are afraid. Well they should be. They stood by, taking profits and looking the other way for the past 6 years.

With the markets down another day - make that 6 of the last 10 - the unwinding has only begun. Anyone with any smarts is already 50-60% in cash or other liquid assets (a case of booze does count) or short or buying puts on the CBOE. Playing the downside is the only reasonable way to make money right now.

The damage was evident in our two key metrics: Decliners led advancers, 7-5 and new lows checked in at 657 to 133 new highs.

On top of all of this, oil futures for September delivery were up $1.38 to $78.21, an all-time high. Like salt in the wound, you have to pay more to get nowhere at any speed.

Gold was up $2.30 to $679.30; silver rose 11 cents to $13.02. From the looks of things, it might be the absolute right time to invest in the metals. The markets are a wreck and the books have been cooked.

Impeach or die.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Dead Cat Bounce

Investors shook off last week's monumental declines and searched for bargains amid the wreckage on Monday. All the major indices showed decent gains on relatively strong buying. There was certainly some resolve to Monday's rally, but whether or not it will last is another question altogether.

Dow 13,358.31 +92.84; NASDAQ 2,583.28 +21.04; S&P 500 1,473.91 +14.96; NYSE Composite 9,623.18 +114.95

Make no doubt about it, there's a big, big problem inside the sub-prime mortgage mess and it's leaking over into corporate borrowing and mainstream mortgage lending. The simplistic reassurances of people like Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson are masking a problem that goes to the heart of the world banking systems.

Money and credit has expanded worldwide at an astonishing rate and there's payback on the way. For a clue, watch merger and acquisition (M&A) activity over the next few weeks and months. It's already slowed down after a rash of big deals earlier in the year. Private capital has gone soft and conservative, and these people know what they're doing - it's their money, after all. CNN Money has a particularly propitious story on stalled funding for some big buyouts.

Over the next month and a half, expect more fallout, because drops like we witnessed last week do not occur in a vacuum. There's more to the story and it's a good bet that the invisible hand of the Plunge protection Team (PPT) was again at work today. Shortly after the markets opened, they took an unhealthy dip, but quickly bounced back to the positive. All of the indices hugged the flatline until just after noon, when all of them took off into positive territory for the remainder of the session, trademark market manipulation by the usual suspects.

As is the fashion of the market manipulators of the secretive Working Group on Financial Markets, they prefer small losses over long periods of time rather than big, spectacular, headline-grabbing declines.

Their unseen actions in the markets cause a sheep-like follow-along response, as evidenced today. Advancing issues gained the upper hand over decliners by a 3-2 ratio, though the new lows were still holding sway in a rather ponderous manner, with 746 bottom-outers to just 93 new highs. That's still out of balance and augurs ill for stocks going forward.

One-day rallies are not a cure-all, and the same conditions that contributed to last week's sell-off still exist. Without the PPT, the markets may very well have finished lower again today. The stated goals of the so-called PPT are:
Recognizing the goals of enhancing the integrity, efficiency, orderliness, and competitiveness of our Nation's financial markets and maintaining investor confidence


Keep an open mind and an open eye on how the markets - and, to a lesser degree, individual stocks - move in relation to events and non-events.

Since most companies have now already reported 2nd quarter earnings, the next six weeks will be a function more of emotion than fact and since the overall mood is still rather dubious about the future, sharp sell-offs may occur out of thin air. More likely are days of small double-digit-Dow losses, followed by some recovery, then the pattern repeating again. As it is, the Dow has traded lower 5 of the last 9 sessions and that measure bears close scrutiny. Should we actually be in a new bear market - which some analysts have suggested - the ratio of up days to down, in addition to the volume and point movements, will be a key divining tool.

Oil priced lower on the NY Mercantile Exchange, losing 19 cents to $76.83. Gold and silver both edged higher and continue to herald a breakout, though that's happened so many times in the past 18 months, nobody's giving it much credence.

Friday, July 27, 2007

Triple Bottom Breakdown

With no impetus to the upside, not even the shadowy Plunge Protection Team (the government's Working Group on Financial Markets headed by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson) could quell the selling on Wall Street as dissatisfaction with corporate earnings and the implosion of capital markets sent the Dow to another 200+ point loss, hauling down the other major indices with it.

The week, which began with a 92-point gain on the Dow on Monday, turned considerably uglier as earnings reports and bad economic news - primarily from the housing and credit sectors - sent Wall Street into spasms of cynical, unstoppable, selling. The week was one of the worst ever for the Dow, losing 735 points, with losses of more than 200 points on Tuesday and Friday, and a 311-point loss on Thursday.

Dow 13,265.47 -208.10; NASDAQ 2,562.24 -37.10; S&P 500 1,458.95 Down 23.71; NYSE Composite 9,508.23 -146.15

The other major indices - the S&P, NYSE Composite and NASDAQ fared equally poorly in the paroxysm of panic selling. The Dow on Friday confirmed (and broke through support) a triple bottom breakdown at 13,265.47, with similar recent closes on June 7th (13,266.73) and June 12th (13,295.01).

The pertinent questions at this juncture are, 1. How much worse can it get?; 2. Is there an interim support level?; 3. Can the PPT finally staunch the ebb by buying overvalued shares (and will they)?; and, 4. Is there any safe haven for investment dollars?

The quick answers are that it can get much worse, interim support exists in the 12,100-12,300 area, nobody really knows exactly what the PPT can or will do, and as for a safe haven, cash is looking mighty good right now.

There is really no magic bullet to change the outcome of the massive unwinding of a near-decade-long credit and asset binge. Government policies have created a system so fragile and fraught with risks - seen and unseen - that a financial disaster seems to be the most likely occurrence at this juncture.

The obvious truths are that the market was severely overbought (the Dow was up nearly 30% from a year ago at the start of the week), mortgage failures will continue to proliferate due to an complete lack of oversight by regulators, and the contagion from mortgages will likely become systemic, spreading into all manner of credit instruments.

The key consumer is tapped out, the middle class is shrinking and afraid, and the trickle-down economic policies of the past 20 years have created a monstrous economy with a super-rich class, an impoverished middle and a growing, teeming bottom. America has gone from the world's greatest creditor state to the worst debtor nation in a span of just 50 years.

In a few words, we're pretty much screwed and it's beginning to show up in our markets. A good start would be to impeach all the top officials of the current administration and begin imposing some new standards of conduct for banks and other financial institutions to restore confidence in our capital markets.

A change in government isn't going to be a cure-all - far from it - but the numbskull liars currently in charge likely have more of a vested interest in overseeing the destruction of capital rather than the creation of it.

Next week and during the month of August, when the next wave of selling begins in earnest, officials of the NASDAQ and NYSE may consider closing the markets for a week, allowing for some time to contemplate next moves and reassure a frightened public.

This is no time to be giddy. This market has been overstretched - the bull market is something of the order of 57 months old - and in a very, very precarious condition. The US economy is also an extremely sick patient. Extreme actions may be the best medicine.

Surprisingly, market internals were not nearly as dismal as yesterday's. Declining issues beat advancers by an 11-5 ratio. There were few bright spots as new lows submerged new highs, 706-85.

Just to make matters even more cheerless, oil futures rose $2.07 to close at $77.02, close to an all-time high. Gold and silver continued to decline, oddly, as market manipulation is running rampant. The precious metals should be showing strength at a time like this. instead they are dropping along with all other asset classes.

Get ready for a long, long downturn, similar to Japan's 20-year deflationary cycle. It's been predicted and the stock market is telegraphing it.

There were a good number of earnings reports issued on the day, none of them of much consequence considering the overall tenor of the markets.

Have a great weekend.