Markets are closed on Friday in observance of Good Friday (who said we weren't a religious nation?), so the paltry returns on equites ended a dull week in the red, the first time a week has ended negative since mid-February.
Prior to the open on Thursday, durable goods for February were released and the numbers were far from encouraging.
Durable Goods New Orders (Ex-Transports) fell 0.5% YoY, extending its losing streak to 13 months. All segments of the durable goods report saw negative month-over-month direction with headline -2.8%. Prior data was revised lower, Capital goods orders fell more than expected (-1.8% MoM).
Durable goods new orders down -2.8%, exp. -3.0%; prior revised down to 4.2% for Jan. from 4.7%
New orders ex-trans. down 1%, Exp. -0.3%; prior revised to 1.2% from 1.7%
Capital goods orders ex-aircraft down 1.8%, Exp. -0.5%, prior revised to 3.1% from 3.4%
Capital goods shipments ex-aircraft down 1.1%, Exp. +0.3%, prior revised to -1.3% from -0.4%
That was about all the market could stand and not puke up more gains.
On Friday, with markets closed, the government released the final estimate for 4th quarter 2015 GDP, posting a figure that was above all estimates, a suspicious gain of 1.4%. This spurious number followed a first estimate of 0.7% in January and a second estimate at an even 1.0% in February. Apparently, everything is improving in the alternate reality that is Washington D.C. (please, please, indict Hillary). It has been pointed out by various writers that GDP is a poor measurement of the health of an economy. Such as this current reading, which is heavily influenced by health care costs and soaring rents, in addition to the hedonic adjustments and other blunt instruments of deception, the numbers end up meaning little in terms of the common man, woman or family.
Lastly, we'd like to share this fine post from the blog Viable Opposition, with readers of Money Daily:
The Long Wave and the Failure of Central Banks. Highly recommended reading and a great chart at the end.
Posts such as this - and the general appeal of the blog overall - points up why the establishment is failing and fearful of the rising tide of populism. Bloggers don't get paid for appearances on CNBC or Bloomberg but their views and opinions are often superior, better researched, unbiased and non-political than what the mainstream media tries to sell as gospel.
God (or Donald Trump) save us.
For the week:
Dow: -86.57 (0.49%)
S&P 500: -13.64 (0.67%)
NASDAQ: -22.14 (0.46%)
Thursday's Finish:
S&P 500: 2,035.94, -0.77 (0.04%)
Dow: 17,515.73, +13.14 (0.08%)
NASDAQ: 4,773.50, +4.64 (0.10%)
Crude Oil 39.63 -0.40% Gold 1,217.20 -0.56% EUR/USD 1.1180 -0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.90 +1.33% Corn 369.25 +0.20% Copper 2.24 -0.02% Silver 15.19 -0.57% Natural Gas 1.89 +1.12% Russell 2000 1,079.54 +0.36% VIX 14.73 -1.41% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4152 +0.23% USD/JPY 112.8450 +0.42%
Friday, March 25, 2016
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Topped Out? Stocks, Oil Fall On Stronger Dollar
Concerned over fears that the Fed might actually raise rates at the April FOMC meeting, investors took some long-overdue profits after five straight weeks of gains on the S&P and Dow Jones Industrials.
Nearly everything else was in the red on the day as the dollar strengthened against major currencies, most notably the British Pound, sent reeling over fears that UK residents might vote - in an upcoming June referendum - for Britain to leave the EU, a new poll showed.
Such cracks in the facade of the status quo are troubling for elite investors clinging to their one and two-percent dividends in stocks and bonds while the rest of the world crumbles under the weight of central bank intransigence.
Adding to the worries are the recent attacks by ISIS in the heart of the EU, Brussels, where Tuesday's terrorist bombings occurred at the airport and in a subway station just blocks from the EU parliament building.
Gold, silver, bond yields and oil also fell sharply on the day as a reassessment of priorities seems to be underway. The rout of Hillary Clinton by Idaho and Utah by insurgent candidate, Bernie Sanders, also weighed. Ted Cruz and Donald Trump split the vote on Tuesday, as Cruz captured all delegates in Utah and Trump took home the prize in Arizona's winner-take-all primary.
Oil stockpiles expanded for a fifth straight week, as the US glut expanded by 9.4 million barrels last week to 532.5 million barrels, an amount triple what analysts had expected.
While one day's slipshod results may not be nearly enough data to imply anything other than market noise, the alternative argument figures that, having made back all the losses for the year, it's time to book early profits and head for safer havens. Bonds, where yields fall as their price improves, seems to be wagging the tail of the stock market at present. The benchmark 10-year note has rallied for the better part of a month, though it still remains below two percent since dipping under that line on February 1st.
With the rest of the developed world embracing negative interest rates at the short end of the curve (though Japan's now-inverted curve has the ten-year JGB lower than the overnight rate), the Us continues to try to buck the trend by implying rate hikes ahead.
Nothing could be further from the truth. The Fed has already seen what a mere 25 basis point hike in the federal funds rate produced - a sharp decline in stock prices - and they're not about to embark upon that trip now that those losses have been retaken.
As many analysts have pointed out, the Fed is trapped, with an economy not strong enough to warrant rate increases and a base rate too low to offer any resistance to recessionary or deflationary forces. Their only resource available in the case that the economy creaks and cracks is negative rates, a subject they have already publicly broached.
Today's Setback:
S&P 500: 2,036.71, -13.09 (0.64%)
Dow: 17,502.59, -79.98 (0.45%)
NASDAQ: 4,768.86, -52.80 (1.10%)
Crude Oil 39.80 -3.98% Gold 1,220.80 -2.23% EUR/USD 1.1182 -0.32% 10-Yr Bond 1.88 -3.10% Corn 367.25 -0.74% Copper 2.24 -2.23% Silver 15.27 -3.90% Natural Gas 1.78 -4.29% Russell 2000 1,075.70 -1.97% VIX 14.94 +5.43% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4116 -0.71% USD/JPY 112.4155 +0.07%
Nearly everything else was in the red on the day as the dollar strengthened against major currencies, most notably the British Pound, sent reeling over fears that UK residents might vote - in an upcoming June referendum - for Britain to leave the EU, a new poll showed.
Such cracks in the facade of the status quo are troubling for elite investors clinging to their one and two-percent dividends in stocks and bonds while the rest of the world crumbles under the weight of central bank intransigence.
Adding to the worries are the recent attacks by ISIS in the heart of the EU, Brussels, where Tuesday's terrorist bombings occurred at the airport and in a subway station just blocks from the EU parliament building.
Gold, silver, bond yields and oil also fell sharply on the day as a reassessment of priorities seems to be underway. The rout of Hillary Clinton by Idaho and Utah by insurgent candidate, Bernie Sanders, also weighed. Ted Cruz and Donald Trump split the vote on Tuesday, as Cruz captured all delegates in Utah and Trump took home the prize in Arizona's winner-take-all primary.
Oil stockpiles expanded for a fifth straight week, as the US glut expanded by 9.4 million barrels last week to 532.5 million barrels, an amount triple what analysts had expected.
While one day's slipshod results may not be nearly enough data to imply anything other than market noise, the alternative argument figures that, having made back all the losses for the year, it's time to book early profits and head for safer havens. Bonds, where yields fall as their price improves, seems to be wagging the tail of the stock market at present. The benchmark 10-year note has rallied for the better part of a month, though it still remains below two percent since dipping under that line on February 1st.
With the rest of the developed world embracing negative interest rates at the short end of the curve (though Japan's now-inverted curve has the ten-year JGB lower than the overnight rate), the Us continues to try to buck the trend by implying rate hikes ahead.
Nothing could be further from the truth. The Fed has already seen what a mere 25 basis point hike in the federal funds rate produced - a sharp decline in stock prices - and they're not about to embark upon that trip now that those losses have been retaken.
As many analysts have pointed out, the Fed is trapped, with an economy not strong enough to warrant rate increases and a base rate too low to offer any resistance to recessionary or deflationary forces. Their only resource available in the case that the economy creaks and cracks is negative rates, a subject they have already publicly broached.
Today's Setback:
S&P 500: 2,036.71, -13.09 (0.64%)
Dow: 17,502.59, -79.98 (0.45%)
NASDAQ: 4,768.86, -52.80 (1.10%)
Crude Oil 39.80 -3.98% Gold 1,220.80 -2.23% EUR/USD 1.1182 -0.32% 10-Yr Bond 1.88 -3.10% Corn 367.25 -0.74% Copper 2.24 -2.23% Silver 15.27 -3.90% Natural Gas 1.78 -4.29% Russell 2000 1,075.70 -1.97% VIX 14.94 +5.43% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4116 -0.71% USD/JPY 112.4155 +0.07%
Labels:
10-year note,
Brussels,
crude oil,
EU,
Fed,
gold,
JGB,
silver,
treasury bonds
Stocks Settled In Aftermath of Brussels Terror
The terror bombings at the Brussels airport and in the subway system kept a lid on stocks Tuesday.
S&P 500: 2,049.80, -1.80 (0.09%)
Dow: 17,582.57, -41.30 (0.23%)
NASDAQ: 4,821.66, +12.79 (0.27%)
Crude Oil 41.22 -0.72% Gold 1,248.80 +0.02% EUR/USD 1.1217 -0.22% 10-Yr Bond 1.94 +0.62% Corn 370.00 +0.14% Copper 2.29 +0.07% Silver 15.90 +0.09% Natural Gas 1.86 +1.91% Russell 2000 1,097.34 -0.11% VIX 14.17 +2.76% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4214 -1.09% USD/JPY 112.3750 +0.21%
S&P 500: 2,049.80, -1.80 (0.09%)
Dow: 17,582.57, -41.30 (0.23%)
NASDAQ: 4,821.66, +12.79 (0.27%)
Crude Oil 41.22 -0.72% Gold 1,248.80 +0.02% EUR/USD 1.1217 -0.22% 10-Yr Bond 1.94 +0.62% Corn 370.00 +0.14% Copper 2.29 +0.07% Silver 15.90 +0.09% Natural Gas 1.86 +1.91% Russell 2000 1,097.34 -0.11% VIX 14.17 +2.76% BATS 1000 20,682.61 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4214 -1.09% USD/JPY 112.3750 +0.21%
Monday, March 21, 2016
Sluggish Beginning To Week Has Stocks Cautious, Business Stalled
With little information upon which to base trading other than the recent dovish sentiments expressed by central banks, stocks in the US moved in a tight trading range to start the week.
The lack of volatility was something of a surprise, given that investors and speculators have been given the green light by Yellen and Co., though perhaps upon closer inspection, getting ahead of breakeven for the year has some of the more seasoned veteran traders taking a pause.
By just about any metric, stocks on the S&P and NASDAQ are highly overvalued, with most P/E estimates averaging in the low 20s on both exchanges. Dow Industrials are just a little less highly-valued, though some, such as Caterpillar (CAT) are showing severe signs of globalization stress.
CATs problems remain on the revenue side of the ledger, as the company hasn't met targets since the financial calamity of 2008. Global growth being as slow as it has been - and especially such in mining, infrastructure, and major construction, CATs bailiwick - the company is simply unable to deliver results like those during the housing and credit bubble.
That's largely the case for major industrial companies, which have weathered the storm via stock buybacks, close attention to labor levels, and an outright strike on capital improvements. While this short-term strategy may be worthwhile from quarter to quarter, in the long run, these companies have to get back to growing and maintaining their core business interests. Uncertainty - despite the easy credit conditions which are prevalent - concerning global monetary policy is keeping the lid on capital investment.
Worse yet, and this is not seen in any of the macro-metrics, is the paucity of new business development, either in the way of spin-offs or entrepreneurial endeavors. Small business, saddled by an onerous regulatory regime, high taxation and pressure on state legislatures to increase minimum wages, is stifling business formation.
These conditions cannot maintain for too long, lest the markets revolt, consumers retrench, and recession becomes reality.
Today's impish gains:
S&P 500: 2,051.60, +2.02 (0.10%)
Dow: 17,623.87, +21.57 (0.12%)
NASDAQ: 4,808.87, +13.23 (0.28%)
Crude Oil 41.68 +1.31% Gold 1,244.30 -0.80% EUR/USD 1.1245 -0.20% 10-Yr Bond 1.92 +2.78% Corn 369.00 +0.54% Copper 2.29 +0.31% Silver 15.86 +0.31% Natural Gas 1.82 -4.72% Russell 2000 1,098.58 -0.28% VIX 13.79 -1.64% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4373 -0.62% USD/JPY 111.8770 +0.34%
The lack of volatility was something of a surprise, given that investors and speculators have been given the green light by Yellen and Co., though perhaps upon closer inspection, getting ahead of breakeven for the year has some of the more seasoned veteran traders taking a pause.
By just about any metric, stocks on the S&P and NASDAQ are highly overvalued, with most P/E estimates averaging in the low 20s on both exchanges. Dow Industrials are just a little less highly-valued, though some, such as Caterpillar (CAT) are showing severe signs of globalization stress.
CATs problems remain on the revenue side of the ledger, as the company hasn't met targets since the financial calamity of 2008. Global growth being as slow as it has been - and especially such in mining, infrastructure, and major construction, CATs bailiwick - the company is simply unable to deliver results like those during the housing and credit bubble.
That's largely the case for major industrial companies, which have weathered the storm via stock buybacks, close attention to labor levels, and an outright strike on capital improvements. While this short-term strategy may be worthwhile from quarter to quarter, in the long run, these companies have to get back to growing and maintaining their core business interests. Uncertainty - despite the easy credit conditions which are prevalent - concerning global monetary policy is keeping the lid on capital investment.
Worse yet, and this is not seen in any of the macro-metrics, is the paucity of new business development, either in the way of spin-offs or entrepreneurial endeavors. Small business, saddled by an onerous regulatory regime, high taxation and pressure on state legislatures to increase minimum wages, is stifling business formation.
These conditions cannot maintain for too long, lest the markets revolt, consumers retrench, and recession becomes reality.
Today's impish gains:
S&P 500: 2,051.60, +2.02 (0.10%)
Dow: 17,623.87, +21.57 (0.12%)
NASDAQ: 4,808.87, +13.23 (0.28%)
Crude Oil 41.68 +1.31% Gold 1,244.30 -0.80% EUR/USD 1.1245 -0.20% 10-Yr Bond 1.92 +2.78% Corn 369.00 +0.54% Copper 2.29 +0.31% Silver 15.86 +0.31% Natural Gas 1.82 -4.72% Russell 2000 1,098.58 -0.28% VIX 13.79 -1.64% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4373 -0.62% USD/JPY 111.8770 +0.34%
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Coordinated Central Bank Easing Leads to Higher Stock Prices
First came the BOJ.
Then the ECB.
And, just this past Wednesday, the Fed chimed into the global monetary easing chorus with no increase in the federal funds rate, and a solid statement that the FOMC would likely only increase rates twice in 2016, for a paltry 1/2 percent increase.
Such a move would put the rate at 0.75 to one percent by December of this year, or, put another way, just a touch lower than the Greenspan put of the early 2000s.
Those unfamiliar with recent history would not understand how Greenspan's easy rate policy led to various mal-investments, not the least of which were in the housing market, which led to a boom and then a bust and the 2008 financial crisis.
So, what the central bankers are telling us in a unified voice, is that they'll gladly take the risk of another massive financial implosion in order to keep the global fiat currency regime intact.
So far, they're doing quite well. There've been no mass protests, riots, or other noticeable social uprisings in the dominant economies of the developed nations, and, while detractors will proclaim that this regime of low (and even negative) interest rates cannot continue without devastating consequences, the world keeps spinning, the rich get richer and the rest of us carry on in quiet, medieval fashion, mumbling vaguely about unfairness and impropriety.
Elsewhere, stock owners are popping the champagne corks and drinking lustily from the font of the Fed, the ECB and the Bank of Japan, especially in the USA, which just completed one of the quickest and most violent market reversals in recorded history, bringing the Dow Jones Industrials and S&P 500 back to breakeven for the year.
In just over a month's time, the Dow has rallied more than 2,000 points off the mid-February lows. The S&P took off from 1810.10 to close at 2049.58 on Friday, an impressive, 13.23% move. Who said timing wasn't everything?
Buy and hold will be the order of the day, it seems, as long as the central bankers retain complete control over every market, everywhere. When that changes, nobody knows, though many still try. The piper, it appears, will be paid at a later date, likely of the central banks' choosing.
For an overview of the central bank monetary madness, and possible preview of what's ahead, the Telegraph offers keen insight with:
Central banks are already doing the unthinkable -- you just don't know it.
For the week:
DOW: +388.99 (2.26%)
S&P 500: +27.39 (1.35%)
NASDAQ: +47.18 (0.99%)
Friday's Fun Fed Figures:
S&P 500: 2,049.58, +8.99 (0.44%)
Dow: 17,602.30, +120.81 (0.69%)
NASDAQ: 4,795.65, +20.66 (0.43%)
Crude Oil 41.13 -1.27% Gold 1,256.00 -0.71% EUR/USD 1.1268 -0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.8710 -1.68% Corn 366.50 -0.54% Copper 2.29 -0.28% Silver 15.82 -1.30% Natural Gas 1.89 -2.22% Russell 2000 1,101.67 +0.95% VIX 14.02 -2.91% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4471 -0.05% USD/JPY 111.5525 0.00%
Then the ECB.
And, just this past Wednesday, the Fed chimed into the global monetary easing chorus with no increase in the federal funds rate, and a solid statement that the FOMC would likely only increase rates twice in 2016, for a paltry 1/2 percent increase.
Such a move would put the rate at 0.75 to one percent by December of this year, or, put another way, just a touch lower than the Greenspan put of the early 2000s.
Those unfamiliar with recent history would not understand how Greenspan's easy rate policy led to various mal-investments, not the least of which were in the housing market, which led to a boom and then a bust and the 2008 financial crisis.
So, what the central bankers are telling us in a unified voice, is that they'll gladly take the risk of another massive financial implosion in order to keep the global fiat currency regime intact.
So far, they're doing quite well. There've been no mass protests, riots, or other noticeable social uprisings in the dominant economies of the developed nations, and, while detractors will proclaim that this regime of low (and even negative) interest rates cannot continue without devastating consequences, the world keeps spinning, the rich get richer and the rest of us carry on in quiet, medieval fashion, mumbling vaguely about unfairness and impropriety.
Elsewhere, stock owners are popping the champagne corks and drinking lustily from the font of the Fed, the ECB and the Bank of Japan, especially in the USA, which just completed one of the quickest and most violent market reversals in recorded history, bringing the Dow Jones Industrials and S&P 500 back to breakeven for the year.
In just over a month's time, the Dow has rallied more than 2,000 points off the mid-February lows. The S&P took off from 1810.10 to close at 2049.58 on Friday, an impressive, 13.23% move. Who said timing wasn't everything?
Buy and hold will be the order of the day, it seems, as long as the central bankers retain complete control over every market, everywhere. When that changes, nobody knows, though many still try. The piper, it appears, will be paid at a later date, likely of the central banks' choosing.
For an overview of the central bank monetary madness, and possible preview of what's ahead, the Telegraph offers keen insight with:
Central banks are already doing the unthinkable -- you just don't know it.
For the week:
DOW: +388.99 (2.26%)
S&P 500: +27.39 (1.35%)
NASDAQ: +47.18 (0.99%)
Friday's Fun Fed Figures:
S&P 500: 2,049.58, +8.99 (0.44%)
Dow: 17,602.30, +120.81 (0.69%)
NASDAQ: 4,795.65, +20.66 (0.43%)
Crude Oil 41.13 -1.27% Gold 1,256.00 -0.71% EUR/USD 1.1268 -0.02% 10-Yr Bond 1.8710 -1.68% Corn 366.50 -0.54% Copper 2.29 -0.28% Silver 15.82 -1.30% Natural Gas 1.89 -2.22% Russell 2000 1,101.67 +0.95% VIX 14.02 -2.91% BATS 1000 20,677.17 0.00% GBP/USD 1.4471 -0.05% USD/JPY 111.5525 0.00%
Labels:
BOJ,
central banks,
DJIA,
Dow,
ECB,
Fed,
federal funds rate,
FOMC
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