After the release of the non-farm payroll data for December, futures rose on the news that the nation created 156,000 net new jobs in the month, just shy of consensus estimates for 170,000. What may have been the cause for optimism was the 0.4% increase in wages carried in the report. The unemployment rate rose a notch to 4.7%, but that was at 8:30 am ET, an hour before the market open.
The bigger event began hours later as the Dow Jones Industrial Average - with the other major indices in tow - powered higher, eventually getting to within 0.37 points of the mystical, magic mark of Dow 20,000. The stall occurred at 19,999,63, the high for the day, right around noon.
For roughly the next four hours, the Dow tantalized and amused traders and spectators alike, hovering just below 20,000, reaching to within single points on various occasions.
But it never made it, as though somebody had placed a lid on the market right at the 20,000 mark. The index struggled and failed, over and over again throughout the afternoon, to no avail. Finally, with less than ten minutes remianing in the trading day, all the stops apparently run, the ghost was given up and the Dow closed not only short of 20,000 but also shy of a new record, at 19,963.80, a few ticks short of the all-time high close made on December 20 of last year, 19,974.62.
Explanations abound as to why the Dow cannot break through this hysterical, purely-psychological number, the best of them probably involving program trading, as computer algos have been set to sell as the number is approached. If that is the case, there's more than a few sharpies on Wall Street thinking that stocks are severely overvalued, or that even if Dow 20,000 is pierced, it will not hold.
Stocks are severely overvalued, boosted over the past eight years by cheap funding courtesy of the Federal Reserve, whose pockets are being emptied, replaced by promises to pay in the form of treasury and mortgage bonds, many of them losing value.
This was a close call for sure, but the 20,000 mark still stands triumphant over a market that continues to show weakness and an unwillingness to carry through to even higher figures.
With this in mind, the question to be answered over the weekend is, will it do it on Monday? Tuesday? Ever?
From all appearances, with markets stretched to the breaking point, it's not a very good bet, no matter how close it gets.
Thus, the first trading week of the new year ends in tears, though it was a profitable one for stocks with the notable exception of the NYSE Composite, which closed down for the day. Gains were made on all major indices, but perhaps people should be paying more attention to interest rates, which, after an initial surge in yield following last month's 25 basis point hike in the federal funds rate, have fallen hard. The 10-year note yielded 2.418%, but closed Thursday at 2.368%, the lowest yield in a month. While the apparent reversal from the Fed's induced yield above 2.50% is not set in concrete, it is surely something which bears close inspection. Spreads have narrowed since the rate hike, an ominous sign of rough times ahead. If stocks falter, the stampede into bonds will be overwhelming, but possibly the move has already begun in anticipation of a stock market correction or reversal into a bear market.
However, elite traders can pat themselves on the back as they head home for the weekend. So far, January 2017 is looking good for equities, despite the obvious failure at Dow 20,000.
At the Close 1.6.16:
Dow: 19,963.80, +64.51 (0.32%)
NASDAQ: 5,521.06, +33.12 (0.60%)
S&P 500: 2,276.98, +7.98 (0.35%)
NYSE Composite: 11,237.63, -10.06 (-0.09%)
For the Week:
Dow: +201.20 (1.02%)
NASDAQ: +137.94 (2.56%)
S&P 500: +38.15 (1.70%)
NYSE Composite: +180.73 (1.63%)
Friday, January 6, 2017
Thursday, January 5, 2017
With Non-Farm Payrolls Up Next, Dow Closes 100 Points Away From 20,000
Negative forces were at work on Thursday, keeping the Dow Jones Industrial Average below the magic 20,000 mark once again.
Prior to the market open was the ADP jobs report for December, which, in anticipation of Friday's non-farm payroll report, reported that the US added 153,000 jobs in the month, below consensus analyst estimates of roughly 170,000 jobs.
That, in addition to the ongoing turmoil in Chinese yuan was enough to start US markets off on a very tepid tone.
By late morning, the Dow had sunk to what would be the lows of the day, off by 113 points to 19,811, but the plunge was not significant and very short-lived.
Also weighing on stocks was the retail sector as Macy's and Kohl's both reported sluggish holiday sales after the bell on Wednesday. Macy's plans to close 68 stores nationwide and displace over 10,000 workers. Sears chimed in as well, announcing store closures and selling its iconic Craftsman brand to Stanley Black & Decker for $900 million.
Still flirting with the 20,000 level, the Dow stabilized close to the 19,900 level as continued optimism at the prospects of a Trump-inspired stimulus kept spirits somewhat still ebullient, though subdued.
Since mid-December, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has been hanging onto gains and closing just below historic highs, though signs are evident that the rally may not have much stream remaining. Those clinging to gains from the post-election surge may be gradually trimming their positions, as stocks seem to have stalled after Christmas.
What everyone believes but is loath to admit is that stocks are not fairly valued. They are expensive and a significant decline of five to ten percent might be just what's needed to resume the climb to new records. In other words, a short-lived sell-off might present a buying opportunity. On the other hand, market participants are fearful that any decline in equity values could unleash an uneasy and still-hibernating bear.
Tomorrow's non-farm payroll report for December should be enough of a catalyst in one way or another. The wait continues...
At the close 1.5.16:
Dow: 19,899.29, -42.87 (-0.21%)
NASDAQ: 5,487.94, +10.93 (0.20%)
S&P 500: 2,269.00, -1.75 (-0.08%)
NYSE Composite: 11,244.07, -2.47 (-0.02%)
Prior to the market open was the ADP jobs report for December, which, in anticipation of Friday's non-farm payroll report, reported that the US added 153,000 jobs in the month, below consensus analyst estimates of roughly 170,000 jobs.
That, in addition to the ongoing turmoil in Chinese yuan was enough to start US markets off on a very tepid tone.
By late morning, the Dow had sunk to what would be the lows of the day, off by 113 points to 19,811, but the plunge was not significant and very short-lived.
Also weighing on stocks was the retail sector as Macy's and Kohl's both reported sluggish holiday sales after the bell on Wednesday. Macy's plans to close 68 stores nationwide and displace over 10,000 workers. Sears chimed in as well, announcing store closures and selling its iconic Craftsman brand to Stanley Black & Decker for $900 million.
Still flirting with the 20,000 level, the Dow stabilized close to the 19,900 level as continued optimism at the prospects of a Trump-inspired stimulus kept spirits somewhat still ebullient, though subdued.
Since mid-December, the Dow Jones Industrial Average has been hanging onto gains and closing just below historic highs, though signs are evident that the rally may not have much stream remaining. Those clinging to gains from the post-election surge may be gradually trimming their positions, as stocks seem to have stalled after Christmas.
What everyone believes but is loath to admit is that stocks are not fairly valued. They are expensive and a significant decline of five to ten percent might be just what's needed to resume the climb to new records. In other words, a short-lived sell-off might present a buying opportunity. On the other hand, market participants are fearful that any decline in equity values could unleash an uneasy and still-hibernating bear.
Tomorrow's non-farm payroll report for December should be enough of a catalyst in one way or another. The wait continues...
At the close 1.5.16:
Dow: 19,899.29, -42.87 (-0.21%)
NASDAQ: 5,487.94, +10.93 (0.20%)
S&P 500: 2,269.00, -1.75 (-0.08%)
NYSE Composite: 11,244.07, -2.47 (-0.02%)
Labels:
China,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
holiday shopping,
Kohl's,
Macy's,
retail,
Sears,
Yuan
Wednesday, January 4, 2017
Stocks Edge Closer To Dow 20,000
Just the numbers at the close:
Dow: 19,942.16, +60.40 (0.30%)
NASDAQ: 5,477.00, +47.92 (0.88%)
S&P 500: 2,270.75, +12.92 (0.57%)
NYSE Composite: 11,246.55, +92.20 (0.83%)
Looks like tomorrow could finally be the day.
Dow: 19,942.16, +60.40 (0.30%)
NASDAQ: 5,477.00, +47.92 (0.88%)
S&P 500: 2,270.75, +12.92 (0.57%)
NYSE Composite: 11,246.55, +92.20 (0.83%)
Looks like tomorrow could finally be the day.
Tuesday, January 3, 2017
Stocks Up On First Trading Day Of Year, Signifying Nothing
Having - i some small ways - dispelled the concept that reaching for fantastic numbers such as Dow 20,000 is somehow productive, traders today took no heed of... well, anything, and pushed the DJIA close to the historic, albeit meaningless, mark.
That was early in the day. Shortly after the noon hour, the Dow had given up nearly all of the gains (all 160+ points) and was close to UNCH for the day. At the same time, the big run-up in WTI crude - to its highest level in 18 months (July 2015) - quickly was eviscerated, sending crude back below the break-even point for the day and into the red, where it closed on the NYMEX (53.49, -1.17).
However, the trading was not over on the stock exchanges and market participants seemed determined to open 2017 on a positive note, which they did, the major averages closing about 25% off their high points of the day.
Gains were well distributed, with nine of ten sectors positive, led by basic materials and energy. The only loser was utilities, though the loss was mild (-0.07%).
None of this one-day-one-off momentum-fest should be cause for alarm nor excitement. It's a new year, loaded with new ideas and fresh money and that money needs to go to work. While there are still impediments and potholes on the road to a brighter economic future and higher stock prices, none of that appeared to be of any consequence today.
Tomorrow may be another story with the very good possibility that the Dow will pierce the golden 20,000 mark and go well beyond. On the other hand, the evidence from the final two weeks of 2016 was robust in telling that the Trump rally from election day forward had run out of steam, so sideways could be the order of the day.
Money Daily was correct in predicting that Dow 20,000 would not be achieved in 2016. The second hypothesis was that it wouldn't reach that number until June of this year. Our third and most bombastic call was to say that Dow 20,000 may not be hit until 2023. Note the word MAY. We did not say the Dow would NOT reach 20,000 by that time, only that it MAY NOT. Big difference, but the call is based on a nascent understanding that everything in finance-land is not as rosy as the fake news media might have all of us believe.
The concept is very deep and rooted in a theory that the bulk of stock gains since the GFC of 2008 were achieved only though the means of depreciating and nearly decapitating currencies around the world. If money is cheaper today than it was yesterday, assets will accordingly be priced appropriately higher. Of course, should this free-money regime persist (we think it won't) then Dow 20,000 is not only achievable in the short run, Dow 30,000 would be in the kluge lights in short order, as would Apple at 250, and sirloin steaks at $24 a pound. In other words, inflation, then hyperinflation - such as is the case in Venezuela today - would make pricing irrelevant. Survival on $100,000 a year would be challenging and nobody is looking forward to that kind of nightmare scenario.
So, we see the gains of the last eight years as chimeras, and fading. And, if they fade, they will continue to fade until they are almost all gone. Not that a major, dramatic, collapse in prices would be a panacea for a better world, but only one which could be called closer to rational.
That's the view.
At the Close: 1.3.17:
Dow: 19,881.76, +119.16 (0.60%)
NASDAQ: 5,429.08, +45.97 (0.85%)
S&P 500: 2,257.83, +19.00 (0.85%)
NYSE Composite: 11,154.35, +97.46 (0.88%)
That was early in the day. Shortly after the noon hour, the Dow had given up nearly all of the gains (all 160+ points) and was close to UNCH for the day. At the same time, the big run-up in WTI crude - to its highest level in 18 months (July 2015) - quickly was eviscerated, sending crude back below the break-even point for the day and into the red, where it closed on the NYMEX (53.49, -1.17).
However, the trading was not over on the stock exchanges and market participants seemed determined to open 2017 on a positive note, which they did, the major averages closing about 25% off their high points of the day.
Gains were well distributed, with nine of ten sectors positive, led by basic materials and energy. The only loser was utilities, though the loss was mild (-0.07%).
None of this one-day-one-off momentum-fest should be cause for alarm nor excitement. It's a new year, loaded with new ideas and fresh money and that money needs to go to work. While there are still impediments and potholes on the road to a brighter economic future and higher stock prices, none of that appeared to be of any consequence today.
Tomorrow may be another story with the very good possibility that the Dow will pierce the golden 20,000 mark and go well beyond. On the other hand, the evidence from the final two weeks of 2016 was robust in telling that the Trump rally from election day forward had run out of steam, so sideways could be the order of the day.
Money Daily was correct in predicting that Dow 20,000 would not be achieved in 2016. The second hypothesis was that it wouldn't reach that number until June of this year. Our third and most bombastic call was to say that Dow 20,000 may not be hit until 2023. Note the word MAY. We did not say the Dow would NOT reach 20,000 by that time, only that it MAY NOT. Big difference, but the call is based on a nascent understanding that everything in finance-land is not as rosy as the fake news media might have all of us believe.
The concept is very deep and rooted in a theory that the bulk of stock gains since the GFC of 2008 were achieved only though the means of depreciating and nearly decapitating currencies around the world. If money is cheaper today than it was yesterday, assets will accordingly be priced appropriately higher. Of course, should this free-money regime persist (we think it won't) then Dow 20,000 is not only achievable in the short run, Dow 30,000 would be in the kluge lights in short order, as would Apple at 250, and sirloin steaks at $24 a pound. In other words, inflation, then hyperinflation - such as is the case in Venezuela today - would make pricing irrelevant. Survival on $100,000 a year would be challenging and nobody is looking forward to that kind of nightmare scenario.
So, we see the gains of the last eight years as chimeras, and fading. And, if they fade, they will continue to fade until they are almost all gone. Not that a major, dramatic, collapse in prices would be a panacea for a better world, but only one which could be called closer to rational.
That's the view.
At the Close: 1.3.17:
Dow: 19,881.76, +119.16 (0.60%)
NASDAQ: 5,429.08, +45.97 (0.85%)
S&P 500: 2,257.83, +19.00 (0.85%)
NYSE Composite: 11,154.35, +97.46 (0.88%)
Labels:
basic materials,
currencies,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
energy,
sectors,
stocks
Saturday, December 31, 2016
2016 Ends On Sour Tone As Stocks Sell Into Year-End Close
At the Close: 12/30/2016:
Dow: 19,762.60, -57.18 (-0.29%)
NASDAQ: 5,383.12, -48.97 (-0.90%)
S&P 500: 2,238.83, -10.43 (-0.46%)
NYSE Composite: 11,056.90, -17.43 (-0.16%)
Over the final three weeks of 2016, the financial community focused on not buying Christmas presents or planning a New Year's gala event, but boosting stocks to a point at which they could be sold for a tidy, late-year profit, and they did so by ramping up the Dow Jones Industrial Average to stratospheric levels before dumping the blue chip shares into the laps of terminally brain-dead bag holders, i.e., pension funds.
This maneuver was rather artfully crafted, with the financial media cheerleading the ascent to the magical "Dow 20,000" level, which, as most readers will note, is anything but magic. The figure is plainly something upon which ordinary people (pension fund managers) could focus their extremely short spans of attention. 20,000 points on the Dow can be compared to other nostalgic remnants of history, like 300 million Americans, 60 home runs, or five percent unemployment.
These are just numbers, and, while numbers themselves don't lie, when placed in a variety of contexts, the narratives blur the lines between fact and fantasy. To say that a certain level of unemployment is "maximum", or that another number is an historic record (and thus something to which others can aspire) reinforces the perceived value of such a figure. It does not change the fact that the number itself is innocuous, lonesome, and static.
Having control over vast swaths of money and capital, as do central bankers and their agents, allows considerable control over the flow. Stocks and commodities are easily controlled by such enormous hordes of cash and certificates; bonds and real estate less so. Thus it's no surprise that US stocks went into overdrive upon the election of Donald J. Trump as the 45th US president. This was after various implied warnings about a massive correction should the media star and real estate mogul win the election and was also on the heels of an enormous dumping in the futures market. Unwashed have limited insight, knowledge or memory of how large was the shift from futures to the US open on the day after the election and how well orchestrated was the late-stage rally from early November until just before Christmas.
From November 9 through December 13, the Dow added in excess of 1900 points (from 18,332.74 to 19,974.62), a gain of 1641 points, or, more than 8% in a period of less than seven weeks.
In other words, anybody who was right about Trump winning (not as out-of-the-question as the media had everybody believing) and wrong about the market outcome made a simple, inexcusable error of judgement. Those people trusted the same media narrative that was lying to them on both ends. As it turns out, Mr. Trump was a viable candidate capable of winning the election and the market was going to rally upon his victory, not drop into a sinkhole.
It was a great setup keyed by none other than everybody's favorite globalist central bankers and their agents at Goldman Sachs, the latter group eventually the recipient of more than just a few, token places inside the incoming Trump administration, but also the benefactor in a mammoth stock run which added significantly to the wealth of insiders at, or close to the center of the firm.
But Dow 20,000 was not to be. It was the cherry on top of the sundae meant for the little guy, but it was devoured by ravenous market forces otherwise known as naked short sellers, ostensibly, the large money crowd.
So, 2016 ends with a whimper rather than a shout. Delusional traders and hopeful investors will likely bear witness to more of the same chicanery in 2017. Nobody wants to admit that they're mere pawns on a global chessboard, therefore damming themselves behind a wall of self-doubt, misinformation, lies, and half-truths.
Happy New Year!
Week Ending 12/30/2016:
Dow: -171.21 (-0.86%)
NASDAQ: -79.57 (-1.46%)
S&P 500: -24.96 (-1.10%)
NYSE Composite: (-71.90, (-0.65%)
Dow: 19,762.60, -57.18 (-0.29%)
NASDAQ: 5,383.12, -48.97 (-0.90%)
S&P 500: 2,238.83, -10.43 (-0.46%)
NYSE Composite: 11,056.90, -17.43 (-0.16%)
Over the final three weeks of 2016, the financial community focused on not buying Christmas presents or planning a New Year's gala event, but boosting stocks to a point at which they could be sold for a tidy, late-year profit, and they did so by ramping up the Dow Jones Industrial Average to stratospheric levels before dumping the blue chip shares into the laps of terminally brain-dead bag holders, i.e., pension funds.
This maneuver was rather artfully crafted, with the financial media cheerleading the ascent to the magical "Dow 20,000" level, which, as most readers will note, is anything but magic. The figure is plainly something upon which ordinary people (pension fund managers) could focus their extremely short spans of attention. 20,000 points on the Dow can be compared to other nostalgic remnants of history, like 300 million Americans, 60 home runs, or five percent unemployment.
These are just numbers, and, while numbers themselves don't lie, when placed in a variety of contexts, the narratives blur the lines between fact and fantasy. To say that a certain level of unemployment is "maximum", or that another number is an historic record (and thus something to which others can aspire) reinforces the perceived value of such a figure. It does not change the fact that the number itself is innocuous, lonesome, and static.
Having control over vast swaths of money and capital, as do central bankers and their agents, allows considerable control over the flow. Stocks and commodities are easily controlled by such enormous hordes of cash and certificates; bonds and real estate less so. Thus it's no surprise that US stocks went into overdrive upon the election of Donald J. Trump as the 45th US president. This was after various implied warnings about a massive correction should the media star and real estate mogul win the election and was also on the heels of an enormous dumping in the futures market. Unwashed have limited insight, knowledge or memory of how large was the shift from futures to the US open on the day after the election and how well orchestrated was the late-stage rally from early November until just before Christmas.
From November 9 through December 13, the Dow added in excess of 1900 points (from 18,332.74 to 19,974.62), a gain of 1641 points, or, more than 8% in a period of less than seven weeks.
In other words, anybody who was right about Trump winning (not as out-of-the-question as the media had everybody believing) and wrong about the market outcome made a simple, inexcusable error of judgement. Those people trusted the same media narrative that was lying to them on both ends. As it turns out, Mr. Trump was a viable candidate capable of winning the election and the market was going to rally upon his victory, not drop into a sinkhole.
It was a great setup keyed by none other than everybody's favorite globalist central bankers and their agents at Goldman Sachs, the latter group eventually the recipient of more than just a few, token places inside the incoming Trump administration, but also the benefactor in a mammoth stock run which added significantly to the wealth of insiders at, or close to the center of the firm.
But Dow 20,000 was not to be. It was the cherry on top of the sundae meant for the little guy, but it was devoured by ravenous market forces otherwise known as naked short sellers, ostensibly, the large money crowd.
So, 2016 ends with a whimper rather than a shout. Delusional traders and hopeful investors will likely bear witness to more of the same chicanery in 2017. Nobody wants to admit that they're mere pawns on a global chessboard, therefore damming themselves behind a wall of self-doubt, misinformation, lies, and half-truths.
Happy New Year!
Week Ending 12/30/2016:
Dow: -171.21 (-0.86%)
NASDAQ: -79.57 (-1.46%)
S&P 500: -24.96 (-1.10%)
NYSE Composite: (-71.90, (-0.65%)
Labels:
capital,
central banks,
Donald J. Trump,
Goldman Sachs,
New Year,
president
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