Thursday, November 14, 2013

New Record Highs for Dow, S&P on Yellen Lovve-Fest Hearings

Wall Street has shown its liking for incoming Fed Chairman Yellen, so the congress better damn well approve him.

Dow 15,876.22, +54.59 (0.35%)
S&P 500 1,790.62, +8.62 (0.48%)
Nasdaq, 3,972.74, +7.16 (0.18%)
10-Year Note 2.70, -0.02
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3205-2398
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 423-63
WTI crude oil: 93.76, -0.12
Gold: 1,286.30, +17.90
Silver: 20.72, +0.28
Corn: 426.50, -3.25

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Stocks Rock; Yellen Ready to Kiss Up to Congress

Nice gains for the Dow and S&P, which both set new all-time high closes. The party won't stop, according to sources close to Mr. Yellen, who is expected to convince congress that the Fed needs to continue manipulating markets and driving the purchasing power of the dollar into oblivion with even more intervention and easy money policies.

Life , for working Americans, could be wonderful if the Fed can figure out how to induce any kind of wage inflation.

We are a hopeful nation.

Dow 15,821.63, +70.96 (0.45%)
S&P 1,782.00, +14.31 (0.81%)
Nasdaq 3,965.58, +45.66 (1.16%
10-Year Note: 2.68%, -0.05 (-1.83%)
NYSE Volume: 3,320,000
NASDAQ Volume: 1,769,363,821
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3777-1858
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 323-93
WTI crude oil: 93.88, +0.84
Gold: 1,268.40, -2.80, -0.336
Silver: 429.75, -2.50

Monday, November 11, 2013

Stocks Little Changed on Veteran's Day

With bond markets closed and many traders enjoying a three-day weekend by virtue of the Veteran's Day holiday, there was little to get excited about in equity markets or elsewhere.

The day's smallish gains were led by Consumer Cyclicals, Healthcare and Technology, counterbalanced by downside moves in Basic Materials and Telecoms, which lagged the market.

Volume was noticeably in short supply as was volatility, reverting back to levels seen this past summer. Despite the lack of interest, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at a new all-time high, with the NASDAQ and S&P sporting smaller gains.

New highs continued to outnumber new lows, though not as substantially as in recent weeks. The advance-decline line was nearly static, with winners beating losers by less than a hundred issues.

Commodities were largely flat-lining, though corn got a bit of a bid off recent 52-week lows.

Unless there's some earth-shaking development on Tuesday, tomorrow could be just as listless, as there are no meaningful economic data releases until Wednesday, and even then, those are hardly impacting.

Dow 15,783.10, +21.32 (0.14%)
Nasdaq 3,919.79, +1.67 (0.04%)
S&P 500 1,771.89, +1.28 (0.07%)
10-Yr Bond 2.75% 0.00
NYSE Volume 2,507,799,000
Nasdaq Volume 1,538,911,625
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 2840-2754
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 238-56
WTI crude oil: 95.14, +0.54
Gold: 1,281.10, -3.50
Silver: 21.28, -0.035
Corn: 434.75, +8.00

Friday, November 8, 2013

Green Arrows for Stocks as Non-Farm Payrolls Surprise

As the work-week ended, everything was up, except, of course, gold and silver, because we just can't have those ancient relics of real money ruining the fiat-fest currently underway.

After the government reported October non-farm payrolls up a shocking 204,000 in October and revised August and September reports upward as well, futures slid, in sympathy with the idea that the Fed would - due to the "strong" jobs figure - reconsider its $85 billion-a-month bond-buying binge and begin to taper such efforts.

However, once the markets opened, good news was once again good news, and stocks staged a massive rally, erasing all of the prior day's losses on the major indices, sending the Dow Industrials to another record close.

Mortgage rates rocketed higher on the news, as did treasuries, the 10-year note ripping upward by 13 bips.

The logic may be a bit twisted - then again, what, concerning Wall Street and our current "crisis management" economy isn't? - but here's the take: Sure, the effects of the government shutdown the first two weeks of October were minimized, and the economy was creating jobs, but the unemployment rate actually rose - from 7.2 to 7.3% - due to a decline in the labor force participation rate, which has steadily trended downward for the past decade, making what looked, on the surface, as good news, actually bad news for the economy, which is good news for stocks because the Fed will just keep buying up treasuries and MBS, sloshing even more cheap money into the already liquidity-bloated system.

As usual, bankers and their kindred traders, hedgies and speculators were the main beneficiaries, after selling yesterday on a move that suggests the payroll data was privately leaked, were able to buy on the cheap Friday morning.

That's about the only analysis that makes any sense, though rational, logical arguments aren't always adequate predictors of market economics and trading patterns.

The guys with the inside scoop always do better than Mr. and Mrs. Average Joe and Jane. And they do it every day, whether the market is up or down, because they own the data.

Dow 15,761.78, +167.80 (1.08%)
Nasdaq 3,919.23, +61.90 (1.60%)
S&P 500 1,770.61, +23.46 (1.34%)
10-Yr Bond 2.75%, +0.13
NYSE Volume 3,770,251,500
Nasdaq Volume 1,934,757,875
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 3706-1971
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 231-99
WTI crude oil: 94.60, +0.40
Gold: 1,284.60, -23.90
Silver: 21.32, -0.34
Corn: 426.75, +6.25

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Wall Street Pouts Despite Twitter IPO; Jobs Data on Deck

Busy day today for the gods of greed, buyers of bluster, falcons of fraud, purveyors of prevarication.

Wall Street was all a-twitter over the IPO of Twitter (TWTR), the latest Web 2.0 mega-fad company gone public, which opened today on the NYSE with a bang. The stock was issued at 26, but opened at 44, quickly ramped up above 50 per share and closed at 44.90, good for a 78% gain. The company - based on "tweets" of 140 characters - is valued at about 29 times sales, pretty rich, especially for a enterprise that's still losing money. Well, at least the founders are now billionaires... on paper.

Prior to the opening bell, there was a flurry of activity from across the Atlantic pond, as Europe's Mario Draghi, ECB president extraordinaire, announced key rate cuts of 25 basis points, leaving the base rate at .25 and the key lending rate at .50. Observers in America wondered what took the Euros so long, though one must consider that they have been in the business of wrecking their own economies and fleecing the public a lot longer than their American counterparts, so they can kick the old can-can a lot longer and down an even shorter road without causing much of a stir.

The response from traders across the continent and in the UK was resoundingly mixed, with the German DAX higher, Britain's FTSE lower and the French CAC-40 barely changed. Don't these people understand the concept of cheap money? Pikers, the lot of them, except, of course, for the stodgy, stingy, and oh-so-proper Germans.

At 8:30 am ET, the US blasted off a couple of economic indicators, releasing the first reading on third quarter GDP at a robust 2.8%, a ribald lie if ever there was one, but enough to scare the few remaining hairs off the head of Lloyd Blankfien and others of his balding ilk. Good news is once again bad news, it appears, and any growth approaching three percent in the US sends shivers up the spineless bankers' backs, because they believe their buddies, Mr. Bernanke and the incoming Mr. Yellen, may cease the easy money programs that has catapulted every dishonest banker into ever-higher tax brackets.

The most recent initial unemployment claims - which were down 9,000 from the previous week, at 336,000, remained stubbornly high, though apparently not quite high enough for the barons of buyouts. These dopes saw this as another sign of a strengthening US economy, so, shortly after the opening bell, stocks did an abrupt about-face and trended lower throughout the session, with little respite.

In other news, Goldman Sachs is under investigation for rigging foreign exchange (FOREX) trading and just about everything else they do, and, yesterday, the Blackstone Group began pitching its rent-backed securities.

Really. They did. And some people actually bought them.

The advance-decline line cratered, with losers leading gainers by a 7:2 ratio, and new lows continue to close the gap on daily new highs, a trend metric that may just flip over if today's losses are indeed presaging something un-funny about tomorrow's delayed October non-farm jobs data, due out an hour before the opening bell. The way to read this is that the government is likely to report that something in the range of 120-150,000 new jobs were created during the month, which would be more proof of economic improvement, exactly what the market doesn't want. Either that, or it's going to be a real stink-bomb, because the forecast is only for 100,000.

Business as usual, my friends. Monkey business, that is.

Dow 15,593.98, -152.90 (0.97%)
Nasdaq 3,857.33, -74.61 (1.90%)
S&P 500 1,747.15, -23.34 (1.32%)
10-Yr Bond 2.61%, -0.03
NYSE Volume 4,092,416,000
Nasdaq Volume 2,196,542,750
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ Advance - Decline: 1276-4371
Combined NYSE & NASDAQ New highs - New lows: 197-101
WTI crude oil: 94.20, -0.60
Gold: 1,308.50, -9.30
Silver: 21.66, -0.111
Corn: 420.50, -0.75