Whatever happened to the recovery? All of a sudden, nobody on Wall Street or in Washington is talking about "green shoots", improvement, growth or any of the associated nonsense that went along with the previous two years' worth of stimulus, easy Fed policy, bailouts and handouts.
But who's counting, anyway? Stocks fell for the sixth straight week, and, due to a sudden turnaround at 2:00 pm in the financial sector, the day's losses could have - and should have - been a whole lot worse. By now, the only people who don't know that we're in the throes of pure economic upheaval in its most base form - that of currency destruction - are the President (who took off early today, heading for a weekend at Camp David) and Larry Kudlow, who said last night on his CNBC show, The Kudlow Report, that he thought the "correction had run its course."
Naturally, both Larry and Mr. Obama are clueless, or hiding behind the facade of officialdom, because what's weighing most on stocks these days is the total distaste and/or disregard for all manner of equities by the general public. It should be apparent that most Americans either don't have the money to invest in stocks or have, and not liking the results, are completely out of the paper market and turning to cash, gold, silver, art, collectibles, or other commodities.
Nobody likes Wall Street's paper except Wall Street, and that's a fact well-known to anybody who's been following these things for more than the past couple of months. Wall Street paper is made up by Wall Street, distributed among themselves, and bought, sold, sliced and diced as many ways as humanly (or by computer) possible... until... there's nobody else to take the paper, and that's the condition we have today.
What other reason could there be for such a massive sell-off on such paltry, absolutely slush-fund-looking volume? The churn upwards has reversed course and the majors are now going to eat each other in a massive orgy of short-selling all the way to the bottom, wherever that might be.
In months ahead, look for blown up hedge funds, even more absurdly-underfunded pension funds and the near complete collapse of Wall Street's most-favored institutions. Some contend that the great unwind has already commenced, begun in earnest in 2007, completed in 2008 and the Spring of 2009. All that's occurred since has been a perverse show with no underlying value.
Whatever the case, stocks are no place to park money right now, and probably won't be for another few years, as the masters of the universe scramble to hold onto what little is left of the markets and the US economy.
A couple of side notes to benefit those who didn't see the carnage:
From Barron's Blog: "Financial stocks were falling in early trading, but shot up around 2 p.m. after CNBC reported that capital requirements for big banks will likely be less onerous than the market had been expecting."
That's just what we need, more leverage and easier capital requirements for the world's biggest banks. My, oh, my, what great leverage you have. Might as well make it 1000-1 and blow everything up.
Zero Hedge reports: Fed releases final POMO schedule of $60 billion.
Well, let's see how stocks fare without free money. Anybody not dreading July - the end of the Fed's slimy handouts to the banks - is living in a dream world, which would include 90% of the global population.
So, down we go. BTW: there have been other declines of six straight weeks, but the last one was in 2002. See you on the other side, if there is another side to this horrible story.
Dow 11,951.91, -172.45 (1.42%)
NASDAQ 2,643.73, -41.14 (1.53%)
S&P 500 1,270.98, -18.02 (1.40%)
NYSE Composite 8,016.39, -133.26 (1.64%)
As expected, declining issues buried advancing ones, 4462-1202. Our favorite indicator showed even more trouble ahead. New highs on the NASDAQ were subsumed by new lows, 24-163. On the NYSE, there were only 20 new highs and 95 new lows, which makes the combined total the worst since the lows overtook the highs, six sessions ago, 44-258. If history is any guide - and it's usually a good one - this indicator will not turn over for at least six months, probably longer. Once either the new highs or new lows take an edge, it's generally for an extended period. For instance, new highs held sway over new lows on a daily basis for nearly two years before this most recent change.
Volume was again pathetic. Calling it light would be quite the understatement.
NASDAQ Volume 1,978,513,625
NYSE Volume 3,972,811,750
In today's great downdraft, commodities didn't fare any better, WTI crude futures on the NYMEX tumbled $2.64, to $99.29. Gold was taken down $12.20, to $1532.10, if only because of fund managers scrambling to meet margin calls. Silver took the worst of the action, falling $1.37, to $36.20 per ounce.
Putting the recent slide into perspective, since April 29, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen by 858 points, still closing in on official correction territory, soon to become bear market territory. The Dow is less than 400 points from falling into negative territory for the year. The NASDAQ is already sporting a decline for all of 2011, closing today about nine points lower than where it ended 2010. It's lost 200 points since the market top, April 29.
As for the S&P, it's 93 points down over the past six weeks and is up a mere 13 points for the entire year. Time wasted, indeed. Does anyone now think that bailing out the too-big-to-fail banks was a good idea? Had the government done what was proper - that being nothing - and allowed the banks to go under and reorganize in other mysterious forms, the global economy would most likely be booming right now. Instead, we have a global catastrophe completely of their own making which is falling down upon their heads.
A pox on all their houses. Kick a banker to the curb today. They've been doing it to us since 1913.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Well, We All Knew This Was Coming
Nothing, in the world of the financial markets, moves in a straight line, so it was only a matter of time that the stock indices would cease falling and post a day of positive, "green shoots" results, and today was that day.
Call it whatever you like - PPT manipulation, dead cat bounce, oversold conditions, snap-back rally - it's nothing out of the norm for markets to do these kinds of things, and, taking a word from Fed Chaiman Ben Bernanke, it is likely a "transitory" event, like the wind, which passes on and blows in another time and place.
Even with today's sudden upsurge reversal of fortune, volume was horrid and stocks finished well off their highs, with widespread selling occurring in the final hour. That's likely because today's move was highly orchestrated by the usual suspects, with aid from the Fed (remember, QE2 isn't over yet). Bonds were flipped and turned into stock purchases, mostly in the very same names that control 80% of the trading on the exchanges. You know the names; no need to repeat them here.
Getting right down to it, after sustaining six straight days of losses, this was nothing about which to get excited, that's for sure. For instance, even factoring in today's gains, the Dow is still off a whopping 445 points since May 31, and 686 points since the top on April 29 (12,810).
Anyone suggesting that it is anything other than a one-day event should be barred from ever commenting on stocks or financial issues, in perpetuity. Selling stocks will resume sooner, rather than later.
Dow 12,124.43, +75.49 (0.63%)
NASDAQ 2,684.87, +9.49 (0.35%)
S&P 500 1,289.00, +9.44 (0.74%)
NYSE Composite 8,149.65, +68.30 (0.85%)
Internals were slightly improved, with advancing issues topping decliners, 3538-2116. The NASDAQ was good for 26 new highs and 119 new lows; the NYSE saw 31 new highs and 70 new lows, making our combined reading 57 new highs and 189 new lows, a fifth straight session with the lows leading the way.
Volume? Come on, now.
NASDAQ Volume 1,686,693,375
NYSE Volume 3,489,525,750
Over in the commodity space, the aberration known as crude oil futures gained $1.19, to $101.93. There is no good reason for the price of oil to be this high. A stable price of around 470-80 per barrel would be sufficient to satisfy all parties without putting unnecessary pressure on end-product consumers. If there's any one thing that will keep a slow economy from improving, it is high fuel or food prices and we have them both. Of course, the government, usually quick to impose its will wherever it pleases, does nothing about this. To put it simply, our elected officials at all levels have ceased representing the people of America long ago. In a few words, THEY SUCK.
Oddly enough, gold bugs saw right through the rise in equities and bought more, bringing the price up by $6.60, to $1544.40. Gold is still up 25% on the year. Difficult to argue with those kinds of returns. Silver was also bid higher, up 75 cents, to $37.55.
Tomorrow, the weekend. Thank goodness.
Call it whatever you like - PPT manipulation, dead cat bounce, oversold conditions, snap-back rally - it's nothing out of the norm for markets to do these kinds of things, and, taking a word from Fed Chaiman Ben Bernanke, it is likely a "transitory" event, like the wind, which passes on and blows in another time and place.
Even with today's sudden upsurge reversal of fortune, volume was horrid and stocks finished well off their highs, with widespread selling occurring in the final hour. That's likely because today's move was highly orchestrated by the usual suspects, with aid from the Fed (remember, QE2 isn't over yet). Bonds were flipped and turned into stock purchases, mostly in the very same names that control 80% of the trading on the exchanges. You know the names; no need to repeat them here.
Getting right down to it, after sustaining six straight days of losses, this was nothing about which to get excited, that's for sure. For instance, even factoring in today's gains, the Dow is still off a whopping 445 points since May 31, and 686 points since the top on April 29 (12,810).
Anyone suggesting that it is anything other than a one-day event should be barred from ever commenting on stocks or financial issues, in perpetuity. Selling stocks will resume sooner, rather than later.
Dow 12,124.43, +75.49 (0.63%)
NASDAQ 2,684.87, +9.49 (0.35%)
S&P 500 1,289.00, +9.44 (0.74%)
NYSE Composite 8,149.65, +68.30 (0.85%)
Internals were slightly improved, with advancing issues topping decliners, 3538-2116. The NASDAQ was good for 26 new highs and 119 new lows; the NYSE saw 31 new highs and 70 new lows, making our combined reading 57 new highs and 189 new lows, a fifth straight session with the lows leading the way.
Volume? Come on, now.
NASDAQ Volume 1,686,693,375
NYSE Volume 3,489,525,750
Over in the commodity space, the aberration known as crude oil futures gained $1.19, to $101.93. There is no good reason for the price of oil to be this high. A stable price of around 470-80 per barrel would be sufficient to satisfy all parties without putting unnecessary pressure on end-product consumers. If there's any one thing that will keep a slow economy from improving, it is high fuel or food prices and we have them both. Of course, the government, usually quick to impose its will wherever it pleases, does nothing about this. To put it simply, our elected officials at all levels have ceased representing the people of America long ago. In a few words, THEY SUCK.
Oddly enough, gold bugs saw right through the rise in equities and bought more, bringing the price up by $6.60, to $1544.40. Gold is still up 25% on the year. Difficult to argue with those kinds of returns. Silver was also bid higher, up 75 cents, to $37.55.
Tomorrow, the weekend. Thank goodness.
Wednesday, June 8, 2011
Stocks Continue Slide through Sixth Straight Session
Another day, another decline on US stock markets.
One should not be at all surprised by the development that stocks have found the path of least resistance to be lower. After all, they were goosed the past two years by almost $2 tillion in Federal Reserve subsidies and slippery dealings by the major banks.
Once again, stocks started out near their highs of the day, and, through a choppy session, ended in a massive sell-off into the close. The NASDAQ took the brunt of the beating, never making it out of negative territory the entire day. Again, this is unsurprising, as most of the momentum stocks which drove the two-year rally are indexed on the NASDAQ.
The bigger picture involves risk of all sorts, much of which is unquantifiable, such as the level of interest in, or general terms of, the bailout of Greece and whether or not the congressional clowns can come to some agreement on lifting the debt ceiling or not. Absent reliable information on either of those issues, and adding to the fact that there's scant economic data upon which to trade, stocks took another leg down in what is fast becoming a summer of discontent.
Perhaps the government agents and Wall Street wizards should be just happy to take their lumps in money, lest the American public come after them hammer and tong. They have destroyed not only the general economy of the nation, but have misused the public trust to a point at which there no longer is any.
The path to Dow 10,000 or S&P 1000 is likely going to be paved with the corpses of the major banks, still insolvent in many regards, especially Bank of America (BAC), which hit another tw-year low today, losing 0.11 to 10.54. Wells-Fargo (WFC), JP Morgan Chase (JPM), Citigroup (C), Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS) all took on water, though these stocks and the averages were all aided by a futile, though furious, late rally in the final fifteen minutes of trading.
Dow 12,048.48, -21.87 (0.18%)
NASDAQ 2,675.38, -26.18 (0.97%)
S&P 500 1,279.56, -5.38 (0.42%)
NYSE Composite 8,081.33, -50.34 (0.62%)
Despite the seemingly paltry losses, internals were crushed once again, and therein lies the problem with the markets. Almost everything is still overvalued and the reversal, by fear, extends to all equities. Declining issues hammered advancers, 4824-1767. On the NASDAQ, there were 22 new highs and 140 new lows, Over on the Big Board, 23 new highs, and 97 new lows, putting our totals at 45 new highs and 237 new lows, the fifth straight win for the lows, an expanding margin of difference and a sure sign the correction has further leg-stretching to do.
Volume perked up a bit from the previous two sessions, another indication that the selling pressure is intense and not about to abate.
NASDAQ Volume 2,038,875,125
NYSE Volume 4,442,987,500
Defying all logic, crude oil futures rose $1.65, to $100.74, as OPEC nations meet in Vienna, but came to no agreement on raising production quotas. It was another rough day from precious metals speculators, with gold down $6.90, to 1537.80, and silver off 17 cents, to $36.97.
Markets may get some relief from initial unemployment claims due out prior to the market open tomorrow, but counting on that is akin to betting the Cubs will make the playoffs. Not a sound bet.
One should not be at all surprised by the development that stocks have found the path of least resistance to be lower. After all, they were goosed the past two years by almost $2 tillion in Federal Reserve subsidies and slippery dealings by the major banks.
Once again, stocks started out near their highs of the day, and, through a choppy session, ended in a massive sell-off into the close. The NASDAQ took the brunt of the beating, never making it out of negative territory the entire day. Again, this is unsurprising, as most of the momentum stocks which drove the two-year rally are indexed on the NASDAQ.
The bigger picture involves risk of all sorts, much of which is unquantifiable, such as the level of interest in, or general terms of, the bailout of Greece and whether or not the congressional clowns can come to some agreement on lifting the debt ceiling or not. Absent reliable information on either of those issues, and adding to the fact that there's scant economic data upon which to trade, stocks took another leg down in what is fast becoming a summer of discontent.
Perhaps the government agents and Wall Street wizards should be just happy to take their lumps in money, lest the American public come after them hammer and tong. They have destroyed not only the general economy of the nation, but have misused the public trust to a point at which there no longer is any.
The path to Dow 10,000 or S&P 1000 is likely going to be paved with the corpses of the major banks, still insolvent in many regards, especially Bank of America (BAC), which hit another tw-year low today, losing 0.11 to 10.54. Wells-Fargo (WFC), JP Morgan Chase (JPM), Citigroup (C), Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS) all took on water, though these stocks and the averages were all aided by a futile, though furious, late rally in the final fifteen minutes of trading.
Dow 12,048.48, -21.87 (0.18%)
NASDAQ 2,675.38, -26.18 (0.97%)
S&P 500 1,279.56, -5.38 (0.42%)
NYSE Composite 8,081.33, -50.34 (0.62%)
Despite the seemingly paltry losses, internals were crushed once again, and therein lies the problem with the markets. Almost everything is still overvalued and the reversal, by fear, extends to all equities. Declining issues hammered advancers, 4824-1767. On the NASDAQ, there were 22 new highs and 140 new lows, Over on the Big Board, 23 new highs, and 97 new lows, putting our totals at 45 new highs and 237 new lows, the fifth straight win for the lows, an expanding margin of difference and a sure sign the correction has further leg-stretching to do.
Volume perked up a bit from the previous two sessions, another indication that the selling pressure is intense and not about to abate.
NASDAQ Volume 2,038,875,125
NYSE Volume 4,442,987,500
Defying all logic, crude oil futures rose $1.65, to $100.74, as OPEC nations meet in Vienna, but came to no agreement on raising production quotas. It was another rough day from precious metals speculators, with gold down $6.90, to 1537.80, and silver off 17 cents, to $36.97.
Markets may get some relief from initial unemployment claims due out prior to the market open tomorrow, but counting on that is akin to betting the Cubs will make the playoffs. Not a sound bet.
Labels:
BAC,
Bank of America,
Greece,
GS,
JP Morgan Chase,
JPM,
MS,
unemployment claims,
WFC
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Classic Bear Market Session Ends with Disappointment from the Chairman
There's nothing that makes a bear market more palatable than a recognizable chart pattern, and today's charts were the perfect examples.
To wit: up in the early going and down into the close, and that's exactly what the markets offered up today. There is no doubt that the bear market which began in August-October 2007 is alive and well and ready to take more money prisoner. Albeit the long interruption from March 2009 to May 2011, the long rally was nothing more than a cyclical upturn aided by trillions of dollars in free cash flow, courtesy the Federal Reserve.
Now that QE2 is coming to an abrupt end, the bears once again have their claws sharpened and are gnashing their teeth in anticipation of a tasty fete of equity fare.
Fittingly, the day ended with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke droning on in his monotone about world economic conditions and how the Fed is powerless to do anything about the weather. Yes, he did mention the weather. In essence, his speech before the International Monetary Conference in Atlanta offered nothing to the market; there was no new policy, no mention of further stimulus. In show biz parlance, he bombed, mightily.
Stocks were up early but began selling off around 2:00 pm, wiping out all gains by the close, except in the broad NYSE composite.
It was the fifth straight decline for the Dow, S&P and NASDAQ and a sure sign of more trouble for the embattled US economy ahead.
Dow 12,070.81, -19.15 (0.16%)
NASDAQ 2,701.56, -1.00 (0.04%)
S&P 500 1,284.94, -1.23 (0.10%)
NYSE Composite 8,131.69, +15.82 (0.19%)
Advancers finished slightly ahead of losers, 3174-2454, but new highs succumbed to the downdraft of new lows. On the NASDAQ, 21 new highs, 112 new lows. The NYSE was witness to 37 new highs and 60 new lows, making to combined total 58 new highs and 172 new lows, the forth straight session in which the new lows have outnumbered new highs, and a sure sign that the market is in a correction, soon to become known as the resumption of the bear market.
Volume was scant, though that in and of itself is nothing of a surprise. It exemplifies the general weakness in equities.
NASDAQ Volume 1,861,762,125
NYSE Volume 3,681,650,000
NYMEX crude oil futures for WTI gained 8 cents, closing at $99.09. Gold lost 30 cents, to $1543.60, while silver picked up 39 cents on the bid, at $37.19.
It's a slow week, though it is only the beginning of what appears to be shaping up as one slow, hot summer of declines. There is no catalyst for buying stocks. It is, however, a great time to stock up on gold, silver and other necessary household items one might need in case of emergency, like banks closing or a false flag terror scare or the end of the Euro, which is almost a certainty. The only thing uncertain about the demise of the Euro as a currency is the timing, but rest assured, when it does happen, it will send the global economy into a tailspin.
To wit: up in the early going and down into the close, and that's exactly what the markets offered up today. There is no doubt that the bear market which began in August-October 2007 is alive and well and ready to take more money prisoner. Albeit the long interruption from March 2009 to May 2011, the long rally was nothing more than a cyclical upturn aided by trillions of dollars in free cash flow, courtesy the Federal Reserve.
Now that QE2 is coming to an abrupt end, the bears once again have their claws sharpened and are gnashing their teeth in anticipation of a tasty fete of equity fare.
Fittingly, the day ended with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke droning on in his monotone about world economic conditions and how the Fed is powerless to do anything about the weather. Yes, he did mention the weather. In essence, his speech before the International Monetary Conference in Atlanta offered nothing to the market; there was no new policy, no mention of further stimulus. In show biz parlance, he bombed, mightily.
Stocks were up early but began selling off around 2:00 pm, wiping out all gains by the close, except in the broad NYSE composite.
It was the fifth straight decline for the Dow, S&P and NASDAQ and a sure sign of more trouble for the embattled US economy ahead.
Dow 12,070.81, -19.15 (0.16%)
NASDAQ 2,701.56, -1.00 (0.04%)
S&P 500 1,284.94, -1.23 (0.10%)
NYSE Composite 8,131.69, +15.82 (0.19%)
Advancers finished slightly ahead of losers, 3174-2454, but new highs succumbed to the downdraft of new lows. On the NASDAQ, 21 new highs, 112 new lows. The NYSE was witness to 37 new highs and 60 new lows, making to combined total 58 new highs and 172 new lows, the forth straight session in which the new lows have outnumbered new highs, and a sure sign that the market is in a correction, soon to become known as the resumption of the bear market.
Volume was scant, though that in and of itself is nothing of a surprise. It exemplifies the general weakness in equities.
NASDAQ Volume 1,861,762,125
NYSE Volume 3,681,650,000
NYMEX crude oil futures for WTI gained 8 cents, closing at $99.09. Gold lost 30 cents, to $1543.60, while silver picked up 39 cents on the bid, at $37.19.
It's a slow week, though it is only the beginning of what appears to be shaping up as one slow, hot summer of declines. There is no catalyst for buying stocks. It is, however, a great time to stock up on gold, silver and other necessary household items one might need in case of emergency, like banks closing or a false flag terror scare or the end of the Euro, which is almost a certainty. The only thing uncertain about the demise of the Euro as a currency is the timing, but rest assured, when it does happen, it will send the global economy into a tailspin.
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.
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.
Labels:
BAC,
Bank of America,
financials,
new highs,
New lows,
Wells-Fargo
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