In the immortal words of The Great One, Jackie Gleason, "...and away we go!"
Stocks leapt out of the gate on a modest January non-farm payroll report, which showed the US economy created 167,000 new jobs in the month, but it was the revisions which really inspired a great deal of confidence going forward and propelled the Dow Jones Industrial Average above 14,000 for the first time since October of 2007.
While the headline number was nothing special, but hardly a disappointment, the revision to November - from from 161,000 to 247,000, and December - from 155,000 to 196,000 - were massive, the November revision of 86,000 alone worth roughly a half-month's worth of payroll gush.
The Dow flirted with the 14,000 mark repeatedly throughout the session, but finally pushed higher in the final thirty minutes of trading, leaving the benchmark average less than 150 points from its all-time high.
Other major indices responded in like manner, most up roughly in the range of one percent on the day.
Skeptics abound, many calling for a correction soon, others deriding the rally as nothing more than the natural outcome of relentless stimulation via zero interest rates and massive bond buying by the Federal Reserve. Still others point to the sluggish real economy, barely doddering along at two percent per annum.
Like it or not, the stock market is not the general economy, which, incidentally, is not faring all that badly. Bankruptcies are not at alarming levels, small business creation is beginning to find legs and consumer spending (much of it on credit and through government transfers) has been remarkably solid.
Though headwinds abound, Wall Street continues to sail forward. January was absolutely boffo - the best since 1997 - and February got off with a bang.
One final note heading into Super Bowl weekend: Fearless Rick says lay the points and go with the 49ers, a win will produce great delight to younger brothers worldwide.
Dow 14,009.79, +149.21(1.08%)
NASDAQ 3,179.10, +36.97(1.18%)
S&P 500 1,513.17, +15.06(1.01%)
NYSE Composite 8,966.79, +83.00(0.93%)
NASDAQ Volume 1,968,694,250
NYSE Volume 4,053,908,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 4846-1644
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 668-33 (remarkable!)
WTI crude oil: 97.77, +0.28
Gold: 1,670.60, +8.60
Silver: 31.96, +0.607
Friday, February 1, 2013
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Red Alert: Markets Leak Lower Second Straight Session
The 0.1% decline in fourth quarter 2012 GDP appears to have been taken a bit more seriously than first expected, as stocks fell for the second consecutive session on Thursday. Adding to the dour sentiment on the US economy, initial unemployment claims spiked to 368,000 after last week's multi-year low of 330,000 was seen as initially buoyant but now looks to be more of an aberration than a harbinger of things to come.
Stocks were higher in the morning, but drifted through the day, eventually ending lower despite a furious, failed attempt to paint the tape in the final ten minutes of trading. Of the major indices, only the NASDAQ was close to the break even mark, closing down fractionally.
Chicago PMI for January was a major surprise, coming in at 55.6 on expectations of 50.0%, but even this was not enough to bolster the markets.
The real story came in terms of personal income, which sported a gain of 2.6% in December, a boon for the average consumer, a bane for business, but overall, likely a wash, as the reading was prior to government's decision to roll back the temporary cut in Social Security deductions. Wage earners are seeing less in their paychecks while oil, fuel and food are beginning to show signs of ramping up in price, a formula not apparently anticipated by by the Fed/government/business brian trust which wants to control everything from guns, to stock prices to health insurance premiums.
There's an eventuality about all of this control-orientation that reeks of collapse, anarchy and non-compliance from the general populace. If not for food stamps, rent subsidies and other socialist mechanisms polluting the formerly-free markets, the economy would have been dead and buried long ago.
As for the skimmers on Wall Street, their attempts to manage the markets lower amid weakening expectations are, for now, succeeding, though on this final day of trading in January - one of the best months ever for stocks - there was little in the way of window dressing, the usual ritual of fund managers seeking to impress clients.
With non-farm payroll data due out prior to Friday's opening bell, everything is on hold, though sentiment seems to be turning a bit more negative than usual. Estimates are for a net increase of 200,000 jobs created in December, after ADP reported a gain of 192,000 on Wednesday, counting only the private sector.
Washington's been eerily silent of late, supposedly getting down to work on immigration and possibly other pressing issues, but debate will soon liven over a budget, something congress and the president has failed to address for four years.
A big discrepancy in the Advance-Decline line - 3546-2897 - the opposite of what one would expected on a negative trading day, indicates that investors were busily unloading losers and scrambling for safety. Consumer stocks, in addition to energy, healthcare and transportation were the largest sector losers, with utilities and services the only sectors slightly positive.
Wall Street's tea leaves will tell more tomorrow, and if hiring was less than expected in December, downward pressure will remain in charge and perhaps be amplified.
Dow 13,860.58, -49.84 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 3,142.13, -0.18 (0.01%)
S&P 500 1,498.11, -3.85 (0.26%)
NYSE Composite 8,892.59, -11.73 (0.13%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,134,474,750
NYSE Volume 4,027,212,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3546-2897
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 316-39
WTI crude oil: 97.10, -0.84
Gold: 1,663.80, -16.10
Silver: 31.42, -0.60
Stocks were higher in the morning, but drifted through the day, eventually ending lower despite a furious, failed attempt to paint the tape in the final ten minutes of trading. Of the major indices, only the NASDAQ was close to the break even mark, closing down fractionally.
Chicago PMI for January was a major surprise, coming in at 55.6 on expectations of 50.0%, but even this was not enough to bolster the markets.
The real story came in terms of personal income, which sported a gain of 2.6% in December, a boon for the average consumer, a bane for business, but overall, likely a wash, as the reading was prior to government's decision to roll back the temporary cut in Social Security deductions. Wage earners are seeing less in their paychecks while oil, fuel and food are beginning to show signs of ramping up in price, a formula not apparently anticipated by by the Fed/government/business brian trust which wants to control everything from guns, to stock prices to health insurance premiums.
There's an eventuality about all of this control-orientation that reeks of collapse, anarchy and non-compliance from the general populace. If not for food stamps, rent subsidies and other socialist mechanisms polluting the formerly-free markets, the economy would have been dead and buried long ago.
As for the skimmers on Wall Street, their attempts to manage the markets lower amid weakening expectations are, for now, succeeding, though on this final day of trading in January - one of the best months ever for stocks - there was little in the way of window dressing, the usual ritual of fund managers seeking to impress clients.
With non-farm payroll data due out prior to Friday's opening bell, everything is on hold, though sentiment seems to be turning a bit more negative than usual. Estimates are for a net increase of 200,000 jobs created in December, after ADP reported a gain of 192,000 on Wednesday, counting only the private sector.
Washington's been eerily silent of late, supposedly getting down to work on immigration and possibly other pressing issues, but debate will soon liven over a budget, something congress and the president has failed to address for four years.
A big discrepancy in the Advance-Decline line - 3546-2897 - the opposite of what one would expected on a negative trading day, indicates that investors were busily unloading losers and scrambling for safety. Consumer stocks, in addition to energy, healthcare and transportation were the largest sector losers, with utilities and services the only sectors slightly positive.
Wall Street's tea leaves will tell more tomorrow, and if hiring was less than expected in December, downward pressure will remain in charge and perhaps be amplified.
Dow 13,860.58, -49.84 (0.36%)
NASDAQ 3,142.13, -0.18 (0.01%)
S&P 500 1,498.11, -3.85 (0.26%)
NYSE Composite 8,892.59, -11.73 (0.13%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,134,474,750
NYSE Volume 4,027,212,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3546-2897
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 316-39
WTI crude oil: 97.10, -0.84
Gold: 1,663.80, -16.10
Silver: 31.42, -0.60
Labels:
Chicago PMI,
GDP,
non-farm payroll,
unemployment claims
UPDATE: Stocks Near Record Highs as GDP Goes Negative
Editor's Note: We're back up and running with a new computer, after ten days of muddling through with three old Macs.
Wednesday was a pivotal day for US stocks as the government reluctantly reported that GDP shrank in the fourth quarter (remember, hurricane Sandy will be blamed for disappointing holiday retail sales) as defense spending fell by the largest amount in 40 years and inventory growth lagged.
The talking heads across the CNBC and Bloomberg networks blamed the "unexpected" decline of 0.1% mostly on the defense spending, a result of congress' inaction on the budget process and potential for sequester cuts to kick in shortly.
Federal Reserve officials, completing a two-day meeting, noted the economy had "paused" due to weather-related disruptions and other "transitory factors." Nothing like a Fed Open Market Committee that continues to furiously pump dollars into the coffers of the banks and keep interest rates artificially low calling climate change "disruptions" and employing the "transitory" verbiage to mask an incredibly weak nominal economy.
What is not so well hidden in the report is the lack of replenishment of inventories. Through the holiday season, retailers were adamant about reducing overhead, slashing prices and keeping costs to bare-bones levels, opting to wait until later to order new goods. The lack of confidence going forward exacerbates the slow "recovery" further, putting pressure on manufacturers (those few remaining on US shores) to cut prices and make concessions on delivery and payment dates and rates.
The setup is deflationary at worst, erratic at best, but continues to point up issues developing from the federal government's plan to kick the fiscal can down the road a bit further instead of tackling the nation's debt and deficit problems head-on.
As for stocks, they did an about-face after the Fed's afternoon announcement that they would change absolutely nothing, reiterating their intent to purchase $85 billion a month in MBS and Treasury issuance, the inflationary frontage against the winds of stagnation. The Fed also will keep rates artificially low, boosting home sales, but doing little for bank profits. Their attack on the monetary system continues to hamper business investment while inflating real estate through low interest rates. With no exit strategy in place, the only place the Federal Reserve and the government are kicking that can of deflation is directly into a brick wall of deflation and recession. The negative GDP print for the fourth quarter of 2012 is exactly what their policies will produce down the road, though the decline will be vastly greater.
It's important to note that with one quarter of negative GDP already on the books (though revisions will likely change that to a positive integer), another consecutive quarter in the red is the textbook definition of a recession. Regardless of whether the downturn is isolated in one or two areas, the overall picture remains clouded, manipulated and quietly desperate.
There's no good way out of a financial crisis, such as that which occurred in 2008, but the Keynesians in Washington have kept the plates spinning, frantically turning the sticks of quantitative easing and heavy-handed deficit spending. These policies have an end at some point, the question being whether the end will come by their own hands or be forced by the merciless invisible one of Mr. Market.
Optimists will point out - correctly so - that even though the economy is staggering along, it is still vibrant and productive. However, to think that corporate profits are a one-way street to the heavens is a folly on par with thinking the sub-prime housing bubble would never burst.
There's going to be a short-term pullback in both housing and stocks, both having been bid up too high, too fast, on artificial stimulus, a condition approaching that of 2005-07. While the near term cannot be characterized as horrifying, it is most certainly unstable and unsure, and profits will be taken at nose-bleed levels. The chances of a short duration correction are high, those of a cyclical turn to a bear market less likely, though the current bull is now entering its 48th month, worth noting that the turn in 2007, which led directly to a crash in the fall of 2008, was on the heels of a 53-week-long bull run.
Out in the fantasy land known as economic and stock market predictions, the sounds are of quiet groaning accompanied by squeamish forecasts of 2% growth in GDP for 2013 and an S&P ramping toward 1550. While the general public and regional economies twist in the wind under the thumb of higher taxes and tighter regulations, making business development a non-starter, Wall Street will continue to binge on the Fed's free money, the punch bowl that Chairman Bernanke will not take away, and the government debt will continue to be monetized by that same Fed.
Both of these conditions cannot continue indefinitely, but those in control continue to deny the possibility that anyone will feel any economic pain, no matter how slight.
Thus, it would not be at all surprising to see stocks continue to rise in the face of stagnant or deteriorating conditions in the real economy. Either the stock market wakes up to reality or the current bull trend will wind up being the longest in recorded history, all built on an inflationary bubble of the Fed's creation.
It is false to believe that these conditions can continue indefinitely. There is a price to be paid for every manipulation and falsehood presented to the markets and the fallacy of current policies suggests that the price will be enormous.
Wednesday was a pivotal day for US stocks as the government reluctantly reported that GDP shrank in the fourth quarter (remember, hurricane Sandy will be blamed for disappointing holiday retail sales) as defense spending fell by the largest amount in 40 years and inventory growth lagged.
The talking heads across the CNBC and Bloomberg networks blamed the "unexpected" decline of 0.1% mostly on the defense spending, a result of congress' inaction on the budget process and potential for sequester cuts to kick in shortly.
Federal Reserve officials, completing a two-day meeting, noted the economy had "paused" due to weather-related disruptions and other "transitory factors." Nothing like a Fed Open Market Committee that continues to furiously pump dollars into the coffers of the banks and keep interest rates artificially low calling climate change "disruptions" and employing the "transitory" verbiage to mask an incredibly weak nominal economy.
What is not so well hidden in the report is the lack of replenishment of inventories. Through the holiday season, retailers were adamant about reducing overhead, slashing prices and keeping costs to bare-bones levels, opting to wait until later to order new goods. The lack of confidence going forward exacerbates the slow "recovery" further, putting pressure on manufacturers (those few remaining on US shores) to cut prices and make concessions on delivery and payment dates and rates.
The setup is deflationary at worst, erratic at best, but continues to point up issues developing from the federal government's plan to kick the fiscal can down the road a bit further instead of tackling the nation's debt and deficit problems head-on.
As for stocks, they did an about-face after the Fed's afternoon announcement that they would change absolutely nothing, reiterating their intent to purchase $85 billion a month in MBS and Treasury issuance, the inflationary frontage against the winds of stagnation. The Fed also will keep rates artificially low, boosting home sales, but doing little for bank profits. Their attack on the monetary system continues to hamper business investment while inflating real estate through low interest rates. With no exit strategy in place, the only place the Federal Reserve and the government are kicking that can of deflation is directly into a brick wall of deflation and recession. The negative GDP print for the fourth quarter of 2012 is exactly what their policies will produce down the road, though the decline will be vastly greater.
It's important to note that with one quarter of negative GDP already on the books (though revisions will likely change that to a positive integer), another consecutive quarter in the red is the textbook definition of a recession. Regardless of whether the downturn is isolated in one or two areas, the overall picture remains clouded, manipulated and quietly desperate.
There's no good way out of a financial crisis, such as that which occurred in 2008, but the Keynesians in Washington have kept the plates spinning, frantically turning the sticks of quantitative easing and heavy-handed deficit spending. These policies have an end at some point, the question being whether the end will come by their own hands or be forced by the merciless invisible one of Mr. Market.
Optimists will point out - correctly so - that even though the economy is staggering along, it is still vibrant and productive. However, to think that corporate profits are a one-way street to the heavens is a folly on par with thinking the sub-prime housing bubble would never burst.
There's going to be a short-term pullback in both housing and stocks, both having been bid up too high, too fast, on artificial stimulus, a condition approaching that of 2005-07. While the near term cannot be characterized as horrifying, it is most certainly unstable and unsure, and profits will be taken at nose-bleed levels. The chances of a short duration correction are high, those of a cyclical turn to a bear market less likely, though the current bull is now entering its 48th month, worth noting that the turn in 2007, which led directly to a crash in the fall of 2008, was on the heels of a 53-week-long bull run.
Out in the fantasy land known as economic and stock market predictions, the sounds are of quiet groaning accompanied by squeamish forecasts of 2% growth in GDP for 2013 and an S&P ramping toward 1550. While the general public and regional economies twist in the wind under the thumb of higher taxes and tighter regulations, making business development a non-starter, Wall Street will continue to binge on the Fed's free money, the punch bowl that Chairman Bernanke will not take away, and the government debt will continue to be monetized by that same Fed.
Both of these conditions cannot continue indefinitely, but those in control continue to deny the possibility that anyone will feel any economic pain, no matter how slight.
Thus, it would not be at all surprising to see stocks continue to rise in the face of stagnant or deteriorating conditions in the real economy. Either the stock market wakes up to reality or the current bull trend will wind up being the longest in recorded history, all built on an inflationary bubble of the Fed's creation.
It is false to believe that these conditions can continue indefinitely. There is a price to be paid for every manipulation and falsehood presented to the markets and the fallacy of current policies suggests that the price will be enormous.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Money Daily Recovers from Computer Crash, Back to Normal on Thursday
Editor's Note: Money Daily is still recovering from its computer issue, but the new machine is in place and a complete report on what turned out to be an important day in the public markets will be posted tomorrow (Thursday) morning. We regret any inconvenience.
Dow 13,910.42, -44.00 (0.32%)
NASDAQ 3,142.31, -11.35 (0.36%)
S&P 500 1,501.96, -5.88 (0.39%)
NYSE Composite 8,904.32, -31.32 (0.35%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,031,129,750
NYSE Volume 4,042,243,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2182-4279
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 494-27
WTI crude oil: 97.94, +0.37
Gold: 1,679.90, +19.10
Silver: 32.18, +0.993
Dow 13,910.42, -44.00 (0.32%)
NASDAQ 3,142.31, -11.35 (0.36%)
S&P 500 1,501.96, -5.88 (0.39%)
NYSE Composite 8,904.32, -31.32 (0.35%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,031,129,750
NYSE Volume 4,042,243,000
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2182-4279
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 494-27
WTI crude oil: 97.94, +0.37
Gold: 1,679.90, +19.10
Silver: 32.18, +0.993
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Stocks Nearing All-Time Highs: Time to Jump In?
Yesterday, we posed the question whether this dull market could actually be a good thing, and answered with a qualified maybe.
It's maybe on a number of levels, ranging from time horizons to what kind of investor one is to what levels of risk one would be willing to accept to the high-end macro-view in a world with low bond yields, scary geopolitical events and the usual economic crises popping up every few years.
Today's action was anything but dull, especially for the bulls, who are enjoying one of the greatest months of January in market history.
Stocks have been up roughly 75% of the time, and, with only two trading days left, the smiles are wide from Wall Street nearly to Main Street.
The Dow is rapidly approaching 14,000, closing in on all-time highs, so just about anyone - from the casual investor in mutual funds to the heaviest of heavy hitters in the hedge fund world - who has taken the wild ride from the depths of 2008-09 to the present is flush with profits.
Those who have derided the sub-prime crisis and all subsequent crises as near end-of-the-world experiences (a view widely held on this blog), have been left with little to show other than a pocketful of gold or silver, maybe some real estate and other hard goods.
Not that there's nothing wrong with hard assets, but then stock are putting in 16% gains, like last year, one has to wonder just how long the Fed and the government can keep kicking the can down the road before everything blows up.
The best answer is that they can kick it as far as public perception will allow it. Owing a great deal to normalcy bias - in which one is comfortable with the status quo - the politicians and bankers have a huge advantage. The general public largely wants things to remain somewhat the same and they have and will put up with overly-generous swaths of greed, corruption and avarice, so the rich get richer while the politicians pay no price for their follies.
The point is that over the past four years, stocks have done quite well, and, if you've missed the move, well, hope is that you've done well elsewhere.
As long as the Fed is fixing policy at ridiculous levels, it might be prudent to wade into the waters of Wall Street, buy selectively, and hang on for the ride.
This is, however, the top of the run, though there's no guarantee that it couldn't run even higher, and, in fact, it probably will. That thinking runs contrary to the first tenet of wise investing: buy low, sell high.
The market is highly manipulated and leveraged, the politicians are tools of the bankers, but, they like stocks the most, so, it's a difficult call if going against the tide.
Bottom line is to stick with whatever strategy is working. If you're into gold or land or art or private placements, and it's working, stay there. But, if you have some play money, the returns on stocks over just about any six-month to one-year period in the past four have be easy money.
Dow 13,954.42 Up 72.49 (0.52%)
NASDAQ 3,153.66 Down 0.64 (0.02%)
S&P 500 1,507.84 Up 7.66 (0.51%)
NYSE Composite 8,935.64 Up 55.62 (0.63%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,052,649,125
NYSE Volume 4,198,815,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3759-2669
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 459-17
WTI crude oil: 97.57, +1.13
Gold: 1,660.80, +7.90
Silver: 31.18, +0.404
It's maybe on a number of levels, ranging from time horizons to what kind of investor one is to what levels of risk one would be willing to accept to the high-end macro-view in a world with low bond yields, scary geopolitical events and the usual economic crises popping up every few years.
Today's action was anything but dull, especially for the bulls, who are enjoying one of the greatest months of January in market history.
Stocks have been up roughly 75% of the time, and, with only two trading days left, the smiles are wide from Wall Street nearly to Main Street.
The Dow is rapidly approaching 14,000, closing in on all-time highs, so just about anyone - from the casual investor in mutual funds to the heaviest of heavy hitters in the hedge fund world - who has taken the wild ride from the depths of 2008-09 to the present is flush with profits.
Those who have derided the sub-prime crisis and all subsequent crises as near end-of-the-world experiences (a view widely held on this blog), have been left with little to show other than a pocketful of gold or silver, maybe some real estate and other hard goods.
Not that there's nothing wrong with hard assets, but then stock are putting in 16% gains, like last year, one has to wonder just how long the Fed and the government can keep kicking the can down the road before everything blows up.
The best answer is that they can kick it as far as public perception will allow it. Owing a great deal to normalcy bias - in which one is comfortable with the status quo - the politicians and bankers have a huge advantage. The general public largely wants things to remain somewhat the same and they have and will put up with overly-generous swaths of greed, corruption and avarice, so the rich get richer while the politicians pay no price for their follies.
The point is that over the past four years, stocks have done quite well, and, if you've missed the move, well, hope is that you've done well elsewhere.
As long as the Fed is fixing policy at ridiculous levels, it might be prudent to wade into the waters of Wall Street, buy selectively, and hang on for the ride.
This is, however, the top of the run, though there's no guarantee that it couldn't run even higher, and, in fact, it probably will. That thinking runs contrary to the first tenet of wise investing: buy low, sell high.
The market is highly manipulated and leveraged, the politicians are tools of the bankers, but, they like stocks the most, so, it's a difficult call if going against the tide.
Bottom line is to stick with whatever strategy is working. If you're into gold or land or art or private placements, and it's working, stay there. But, if you have some play money, the returns on stocks over just about any six-month to one-year period in the past four have be easy money.
Dow 13,954.42 Up 72.49 (0.52%)
NASDAQ 3,153.66 Down 0.64 (0.02%)
S&P 500 1,507.84 Up 7.66 (0.51%)
NYSE Composite 8,935.64 Up 55.62 (0.63%)
NASDAQ Volume 2,052,649,125
NYSE Volume 4,198,815,500
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3759-2669
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 459-17
WTI crude oil: 97.57, +1.13
Gold: 1,660.80, +7.90
Silver: 31.18, +0.404
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