This is the kind of market that causes financial writers to suffer a severe case of "writers block," the disease that infests the creative part of the mind because there's simply no action in financial markets.
For the fourth day in a row, the major stock indices barely budged, but managed to produce marginal gains, except for the NYSE Composite, which was down slightly. The pattern was virtually the same, with a dip in the morning followed by a quick comeback and a flat to slightly rising curve through the session. One change was that the advance-decline line favored the downside, but guess what? Options expiry is next Friday, so expect the markets to continue climbing though the middle of next week. Bankers gotta eat, ya know?
There was a bit of news from Greece, where the government finally agreed to tougher austerity measures which will reduce wages, headcount, and pensions. The deal cleared the way for talks with the troika to resume, though there are still significant hurdles to be worked out with both the public funding sources and the private ones.
The agreement did little to move US markets, which have been stuck in a regimen of low volume and little movement all week (I mentioned that earlier, I know).
In the other major development of the day, the 50 state Attorneys General announced that their deal with the five major banks involved in the sub-prime, robo-signing mortgage and foreclosure fiasco had been finalized, with the holdouts from California, New York and Delaware finally coming around to see it the banks' way.
The $26 billion deal will provide little relief to underwater homeowners (maybe $1500-2000) and offers a $2000 cash bonus to people who lost their homes to fraudulent foreclosures between 2008-2011. Anyone who paid their mortgage on time, is currently in foreclosure or falls outside those chosen dates: out of luck.
That the deal was yet another windfall for the banks cannot be understated. These banks, through shoddy originations, poor (sometimes none) documentation, fraud and other nefarious tactics, bilked the American public, the US government and mortgage-backed securities bondholders of billions, if not trillions of dollars, worldwide. The paltry sum of $26 billion spread out over a three-year span is nothing more than a rounding error for these white-collar criminals.
If there's outrage to be heard from the general public, don't count on it amounting to much as the US populace has already put up with enough government and business malfeasance the past 12 years that the screamers and shouters are already worn out from 9/11, the security state, illegal wiretaps, TSA gropings, the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, etc. The list goes on and on and the American public has virtually resigned itself to the fact that resisting the influence of a broken, fascist federal government is tantamount to economic suicide and hardly worth the effort.
Little by little, the feds have taken away essential liberties granted by the constitution (that "piece of paper" as GW Bush called it) and are in the process of shredding every last ounce of fight and goodness that typified the America of yesteryear. It's depressing, but blatantly obvious that the direction of the country is careening quickly toward an oligarchy in which the well-connected, well-heeled are treated far differently than the poor working slobs. Money is power and the feds know this well. This is the most corrupt government in the world and neither the Democrats nor the Republicans have a monopoly on the corruptive power as they both drink from the same hose: that of the rich, in deference to the citizenry.
The only potential upside to the plight of the average American is that the federalistas are hopelessly incompetent, so compliance with all their rules, regulations, edicts and taxes can generally be avoided with a little bit of ingenuity and a good dose of umbrage. The downside is that as federal tax revenues decrease (a logical occurrence and already well underway), the bureaucrats and oligarchs will become even more oppressive and brutal. Those of us wishing to stay and fight or hope for the best had better be prepared for another decade of distrust, distortions and dishonesty from the top down, though, as Americans - and others - have been noted for in the past, defiance of officials and mendacious governance can be a powerful elixir for those who have been harmed.
Today's "settlement" with Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial (formerly known as GMAC) is nothing more than a cover for the inadequacies of our elected Attorneys General, who found it more expeditious to glad-hand their political donors than follow the rule of law. What a shame. America used to be such a nice place.
Dow 12,890.46, +6.51 (0.05%)
NASDAQ 2,927.23, +11.37 (0.39%)
S&P 500 1,351.95, +1.99 (0.15%)
NYSE Composite 8,081.25, -1.73 (0.02%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,148,275,750
NYSE Volume 4,058,775,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2687-2940
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 289-13 (no comment)
WTI crude oil: 99.84 (really?)
Gold: 1,741.20, +9.90
Silver: 33.92, +0.21
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Stocks Remain Sluggishly in Stall Mode Awaiting Greek Workout
Considering that there are nearly 7 billion people on Planet Earth, one wouldn't think that the economic fate of a country as small as Greece (population: 10,787,690 in the 2011 census) would rattle markets as much as the Hellenic nation has, but there's much more to the equation than just Greece and its populace.
If Greece is unable to come to terms with private and public financiers, and have their people agree to even more stringent austerity measures, there's the very real chance that Greece would formally default on its debt and thus be driven from the EuroZone. Ancillary to that argument is the suspicion that other derelict nations which use the Euro as their primary currency - countries such as Portugal, Spain, Italy, Belgium and Hungary - might also fall under the sway of separation from the Euro currency, a chain of events that would surely bring financial markets and whole economies to a state of panic and confusion.
So, while the unity party in Greece and Premier Lucas Papademos ponder their next moves, the world slowly turns.
Stocks were little changed for the third straight session in New York, treading water in a narrow trading range on a paucity of volume. However, if anything has been learned since the near-death experience of 2008, maybe the merry marketeers have discovered that slow is good.
Stocks have advanced at a snail's pace this week, with the Dow adding 19 points and change over the three days. Despite the angst over the situation in Europe, some are still finding equities worth buying and, yes, holding.
Should Greece formally default, it should not be the end of the world for US investors in particular. There's been plenty of time to decouple from Europe, though the effect of a cascading currency crisis would, almost certainly, have a deleterious aftermath.
On the opposite side of the equation is the hope-against-hope that the Greeks will accept austerity, private bondholders will take a 50-70% haircut and the troika will also manage to find a way to sweep the unpaid debts under the rug of international finance.
Since the ECB, IMF and our own Federal Reserve can just flip the money switch at will, there's little doubt that whatever the circumstances, and however dire the conditions for the people of Greece, the economic Ponzi scheme will continue without as much as a loud belch from the bowls of central bank vaults.
As it was in 2008 in America, little will change, although the though of visiting the home of the Acropolis and the Parthenon with American money at an exchange rate measured in cheap drachmas instead of overvalued Euros is rather appealing.
Dow 12,883.95, +5.75 (0.04%)
NASDAQ 2,915.86, +11.78 (0.41%)
S&P 500 1,349.96, +2.91 (0.22%)
NYSE Composite 8,083.47, +13.76 (0.17%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,952,598,125
NYSE Volume 4,050,664,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3218-2394
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 279-11
WTI crude oil: 98.71, +0.30
Gold: 1,731.30, -17.10
Silver: 33.70, -0.49
If Greece is unable to come to terms with private and public financiers, and have their people agree to even more stringent austerity measures, there's the very real chance that Greece would formally default on its debt and thus be driven from the EuroZone. Ancillary to that argument is the suspicion that other derelict nations which use the Euro as their primary currency - countries such as Portugal, Spain, Italy, Belgium and Hungary - might also fall under the sway of separation from the Euro currency, a chain of events that would surely bring financial markets and whole economies to a state of panic and confusion.
So, while the unity party in Greece and Premier Lucas Papademos ponder their next moves, the world slowly turns.
Stocks were little changed for the third straight session in New York, treading water in a narrow trading range on a paucity of volume. However, if anything has been learned since the near-death experience of 2008, maybe the merry marketeers have discovered that slow is good.
Stocks have advanced at a snail's pace this week, with the Dow adding 19 points and change over the three days. Despite the angst over the situation in Europe, some are still finding equities worth buying and, yes, holding.
Should Greece formally default, it should not be the end of the world for US investors in particular. There's been plenty of time to decouple from Europe, though the effect of a cascading currency crisis would, almost certainly, have a deleterious aftermath.
On the opposite side of the equation is the hope-against-hope that the Greeks will accept austerity, private bondholders will take a 50-70% haircut and the troika will also manage to find a way to sweep the unpaid debts under the rug of international finance.
Since the ECB, IMF and our own Federal Reserve can just flip the money switch at will, there's little doubt that whatever the circumstances, and however dire the conditions for the people of Greece, the economic Ponzi scheme will continue without as much as a loud belch from the bowls of central bank vaults.
As it was in 2008 in America, little will change, although the though of visiting the home of the Acropolis and the Parthenon with American money at an exchange rate measured in cheap drachmas instead of overvalued Euros is rather appealing.
Dow 12,883.95, +5.75 (0.04%)
NASDAQ 2,915.86, +11.78 (0.41%)
S&P 500 1,349.96, +2.91 (0.22%)
NYSE Composite 8,083.47, +13.76 (0.17%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,952,598,125
NYSE Volume 4,050,664,250
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3218-2394
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 279-11
WTI crude oil: 98.71, +0.30
Gold: 1,731.30, -17.10
Silver: 33.70, -0.49
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Light Volume, Low Volatility: Signs of Stagnation?
Since the dramatic rise to fresh multi-year highs this past Friday, the first tow days of this week have been nothing more than a major snooze-fest. Whatever the issue, stocks seemed stalled at these lofty levels, perhaps in anticipation of some new developments in the ongoing struggle to keep Greece functioning or possibly due to angst over the conditions in Iran, Syria, Egypt or some other place that seems ripe to explode.
The pattern for the last two days has been oddly similar, with stocks lower at the open, then a spike higher around 10:00 am ET, and a flattening out for the remainder of the session. The difference between yesterday and today is that yesterday's action kept the major indices in the red, while today's trade was mostly on the positive side of the ledger.
Tuesday was a little bit like Groundhog Day in that regard, and also due to Fed chairman Ben Bernanke delivering pretty much the same canned remarks to the Senate as he gave to the House last week.
A 24-hour general strike cripple Greece's already-impaired infrastructure so that negotiations on three fronts - dealing with private bondholders, dealing with funds from the troika, and acceptance of harsh austerity measures - were held mostly without much fanfare or publicity.
Greece's unity government (an oxymoron if ever there was one) needs to work out arrangements with each of their two parties of creditors, and with its own people, to secure another round of financing of 130 billion euro ($172 billion) before a scheduled March 20 payment on 14.5 billion euro of maturing debt.
Since it's obvious to everyone that Greece can't manage its own money, much less the bailout funds pumped into it just last Summer, the threat of default and expulsion from the Eurozone continues to weigh on Europe and the rest of the world.
It's a cruel game of chicken and Europe, in particular, is the worst for it.
One proposal that was floated by German Chancellor Angela Merkel is to force the Greek government to allocate interest payments into an escrow account, so their profligate ways won't threaten future debt payments, much like a teenager with a co-signer on an installment loan. If it wasn't so sadly true, such an attempt to reign in Greece's spendthrift ways might qualify as humor. Unfortunately, the tragedy that is 21st century Greece does not look like it's going to have a happy ending.
Dow 12,878.20, +33.07 (0.26%)
NASDAQ 2,904.08, +2.09 (0.07%)
S&P 500 1,347.05, +2.72 (0.20%)
NYSE Composite 8,069.70, +21.67 (0.27%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,784,894,750
NYSE Volume 3,727,102,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2959-2649
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 249-7 (wow)
WTI crude oil: 98.41, +1.50
Gold: 1,748.40, +23.50
Silver: 34.19, +0.44
The pattern for the last two days has been oddly similar, with stocks lower at the open, then a spike higher around 10:00 am ET, and a flattening out for the remainder of the session. The difference between yesterday and today is that yesterday's action kept the major indices in the red, while today's trade was mostly on the positive side of the ledger.
Tuesday was a little bit like Groundhog Day in that regard, and also due to Fed chairman Ben Bernanke delivering pretty much the same canned remarks to the Senate as he gave to the House last week.
A 24-hour general strike cripple Greece's already-impaired infrastructure so that negotiations on three fronts - dealing with private bondholders, dealing with funds from the troika, and acceptance of harsh austerity measures - were held mostly without much fanfare or publicity.
Greece's unity government (an oxymoron if ever there was one) needs to work out arrangements with each of their two parties of creditors, and with its own people, to secure another round of financing of 130 billion euro ($172 billion) before a scheduled March 20 payment on 14.5 billion euro of maturing debt.
Since it's obvious to everyone that Greece can't manage its own money, much less the bailout funds pumped into it just last Summer, the threat of default and expulsion from the Eurozone continues to weigh on Europe and the rest of the world.
It's a cruel game of chicken and Europe, in particular, is the worst for it.
One proposal that was floated by German Chancellor Angela Merkel is to force the Greek government to allocate interest payments into an escrow account, so their profligate ways won't threaten future debt payments, much like a teenager with a co-signer on an installment loan. If it wasn't so sadly true, such an attempt to reign in Greece's spendthrift ways might qualify as humor. Unfortunately, the tragedy that is 21st century Greece does not look like it's going to have a happy ending.
Dow 12,878.20, +33.07 (0.26%)
NASDAQ 2,904.08, +2.09 (0.07%)
S&P 500 1,347.05, +2.72 (0.20%)
NYSE Composite 8,069.70, +21.67 (0.27%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,784,894,750
NYSE Volume 3,727,102,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2959-2649
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 249-7 (wow)
WTI crude oil: 98.41, +1.50
Gold: 1,748.40, +23.50
Silver: 34.19, +0.44
Monday, February 6, 2012
As Greece Prepares for Potential Default, Markets Take Pause
The troubled nation of Greece took center stage again today, as talks to reach agreement on restructuring private and public debt reached yet another impasse and discussions between Primier Lucas Papademos and leaders of the recently-formed unity government also could not agree on austerity measures to be imposed in order to receive the next round of bailout money from the trokia - the EU, ECB and IMF.
Today, Papademos asked experts at Athens' finance ministry to compile a detailed analysis of what a Greek default would entail. The immediate response was that a bankruptcy of Greece would make what happened in Argentina more than a decade ago look like "a picnic."
With that backdrop, stocks opened sharply lower and remained in the red for the duration of the session, which marked the lowest volume day of the year. Rather than outright selling, traders seemed content to wait and watch developments in Europe, hoping that a default of Greece can be avoided. The major averages, though all down for the session, finished at or near their highs of the day.
Stocks are still up for the year. Today's pullback, like many before it, was minor and actually created more opportunities for day-traders than anyone else.
Dow 12,845.13, -17.10 (0.13%)
NASDAQ 2,901.99, -3.67 (0.13%)
S&P 500 1,344.33, -0.57 (0.04%)
NYSE Composite 8,041.85, -18.58 (0.23%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,648,986,500
NYSE Volume 3,310,194,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2293-3331
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 211-9
WTI crude oil: 96.91, -0.93
Gold: 1,724.90, -15.40
Silver: 33.71, -0.04
Today, Papademos asked experts at Athens' finance ministry to compile a detailed analysis of what a Greek default would entail. The immediate response was that a bankruptcy of Greece would make what happened in Argentina more than a decade ago look like "a picnic."
With that backdrop, stocks opened sharply lower and remained in the red for the duration of the session, which marked the lowest volume day of the year. Rather than outright selling, traders seemed content to wait and watch developments in Europe, hoping that a default of Greece can be avoided. The major averages, though all down for the session, finished at or near their highs of the day.
Stocks are still up for the year. Today's pullback, like many before it, was minor and actually created more opportunities for day-traders than anyone else.
Dow 12,845.13, -17.10 (0.13%)
NASDAQ 2,901.99, -3.67 (0.13%)
S&P 500 1,344.33, -0.57 (0.04%)
NYSE Composite 8,041.85, -18.58 (0.23%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,648,986,500
NYSE Volume 3,310,194,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2293-3331
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 211-9
WTI crude oil: 96.91, -0.93
Gold: 1,724.90, -15.40
Silver: 33.71, -0.04
Friday, February 3, 2012
Stocks Rocket Higher on January Employment Data
What a week for stocks!
Following Friday's 8:30 am ET release of January's non-farm payroll data - which showed a net gain of 257,000 jobs and the "official" unemployment rate dropping to 8.3% - stocks took off at the open and never looked back, with the major indices closing at or near 3 1/2-year highs. In fact, the NASDAQ closed at an 11-year high, dating back to the collapsing side of the dotcom bust.
While the Wall Street crowd saw reason to celebrate the headline number, drilling down into the data revealed some troubling, ongoing trends, not the least of which was the continuous and sharp decline in the labor force participation rate, otherwise known as the number of people in the labor market. That number, which has been falling since 2000, is now at a 30-year low. The federal government may want its citizens to believe labor conditions are improving, but the truth is that the number of people in America who actually work for a living has been shrinking for the last 11 years.
Meanwhile, out in the blogosphere (where the heck is Keith Olbermann, anyhow?) the big push up in employment and down in the unemployment number, along with growing distrust of all government-manufactured data, was cause for much debate and rancor. The best commentary and focus was provided by Zero Hedge, which is usually in the lead when it comes to dissecting government data designed to offer "hope and change."
Here are the best stories on what appears to be well-manufactured (read: total BS) non-farm payroll number:
Record 1.2 Million People Fall Out Of Labor Force In One Month, Labor Force Participation Rate Tumbles To Fresh 30 Year Low
Nonfarm Payroll Surge... On Gain From "Low Wage Jobs", Delay In Courier, Messenger Job Drop
Implied Unemployment Rate Rises To 11.5%, Spread To Propaganda Number Surges To 30 Year High
Final Nail In Today's NFP Tragicomedy: Record Surge In Part-Time Workers
and finally...
TrimTabs Explains Why Today's "Very, Very Suspicious" NFP Number Is Really Down 2.9 Million In Past 2 Months
And, unrelated, but still interesting, is this article about states considering alternatives to the US Dollar.
But, possibly the most underreported story of the day came out of New York, where Attorney General Eric Schneiderman filed a lawsuit against some of the biggest banks, and MERS,, alleging mortgage and foreclosure fraud.
So, stock jockeys are having their way, but, as expressed here yesterday, equities are certainly getting pricey, confirmed by today's move into even pricier territory.
It's only money, as they say, and you can't take it with you, though you can leave your debts behind.
Here's a good Super Bowl prediction. Enjoy the game.
Dow 12,862.23, +156.82 (1.23%)
NASDAQ 2,905.66, +45.98 (1.61%)
S&P 500 1,344.90, +19.36 (1.46%)
NYSE Composite 8,060.43, +115.00 (1.45%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,151,960,000
NYSE Volume 4,580,415,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4464-1168
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 561-19
WTI crude oil: 97.84, +1.48
Gold: 1,740.30, -19.00
Silver: 33.75, -0.43
Following Friday's 8:30 am ET release of January's non-farm payroll data - which showed a net gain of 257,000 jobs and the "official" unemployment rate dropping to 8.3% - stocks took off at the open and never looked back, with the major indices closing at or near 3 1/2-year highs. In fact, the NASDAQ closed at an 11-year high, dating back to the collapsing side of the dotcom bust.
While the Wall Street crowd saw reason to celebrate the headline number, drilling down into the data revealed some troubling, ongoing trends, not the least of which was the continuous and sharp decline in the labor force participation rate, otherwise known as the number of people in the labor market. That number, which has been falling since 2000, is now at a 30-year low. The federal government may want its citizens to believe labor conditions are improving, but the truth is that the number of people in America who actually work for a living has been shrinking for the last 11 years.
Meanwhile, out in the blogosphere (where the heck is Keith Olbermann, anyhow?) the big push up in employment and down in the unemployment number, along with growing distrust of all government-manufactured data, was cause for much debate and rancor. The best commentary and focus was provided by Zero Hedge, which is usually in the lead when it comes to dissecting government data designed to offer "hope and change."
Here are the best stories on what appears to be well-manufactured (read: total BS) non-farm payroll number:
Record 1.2 Million People Fall Out Of Labor Force In One Month, Labor Force Participation Rate Tumbles To Fresh 30 Year Low
Nonfarm Payroll Surge... On Gain From "Low Wage Jobs", Delay In Courier, Messenger Job Drop
Implied Unemployment Rate Rises To 11.5%, Spread To Propaganda Number Surges To 30 Year High
Final Nail In Today's NFP Tragicomedy: Record Surge In Part-Time Workers
and finally...
TrimTabs Explains Why Today's "Very, Very Suspicious" NFP Number Is Really Down 2.9 Million In Past 2 Months
And, unrelated, but still interesting, is this article about states considering alternatives to the US Dollar.
But, possibly the most underreported story of the day came out of New York, where Attorney General Eric Schneiderman filed a lawsuit against some of the biggest banks, and MERS,, alleging mortgage and foreclosure fraud.
So, stock jockeys are having their way, but, as expressed here yesterday, equities are certainly getting pricey, confirmed by today's move into even pricier territory.
It's only money, as they say, and you can't take it with you, though you can leave your debts behind.
Here's a good Super Bowl prediction. Enjoy the game.
Dow 12,862.23, +156.82 (1.23%)
NASDAQ 2,905.66, +45.98 (1.61%)
S&P 500 1,344.90, +19.36 (1.46%)
NYSE Composite 8,060.43, +115.00 (1.45%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,151,960,000
NYSE Volume 4,580,415,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4464-1168
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 561-19
WTI crude oil: 97.84, +1.48
Gold: 1,740.30, -19.00
Silver: 33.75, -0.43
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