Monday, April 9, 2018

It's OVER! Dow Transports Confirm Dow Theory Primary Trend Change Bull to Bear

Right off the bat, here's the theme for today's trading: Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons 1964 hit, "Dawn."



For the uninformed, today's epic pump-and-dump collapse on all the major indices was more than just "the usual." It was, simply put, a day to be marked in financial history, the day the most phony, contrived and manipulated bull market that ever existed, died an overdue death and gave birth to a bona fide bear market, something most of today's millennial day-trading demons have never experienced.

Why would the death of a bull market and the beginning of a bear market be something suitable for celebration?

Good question.

Here's an even better answer: because the bull market, which started March 9, 2009 - nine years and one month, to the day - was one built on fumes and Fed happy talk, endless fiat money printing, rounds and rounds of Quantitative Easing (QE), artificially low interest rates approaching zero (ZIRP) and corporate stock buybacks of unprecedented quantity. Almost nowhere was there a single sign of real growth; much of the gains in stocks were due to buyback manipulation as gross revenue stagnated for nearly a decade.

It was a decade of fakery, of spoofing and high frequency trading as GDP never reached three percent until nearing the end, and never actually did for a full year, including 2017, the last. Almost all of the supposed growth in the "recovery" was due to inflation, nothing else. A false sense of security was promoted by the governors and presidents of the Federal Reserve System and their regional banks and the public gobbled it up.

Meanwhile, in the real world, mark to market had been replaced by mark to fantasy, and price discovery was banished from the equity world.

According to Dow Theory - a nearly infallible projecting tool - as the Dow Transportation Index closed today below the February 9 low of 10,136.61, at 10,119.36, confirming the primary trend change, the bull market can be properly buried and a bear market born.

For anyone unfamiliar with Dow Theory, the primary trend change goes like this:
New Closing Low
Interim High, Below Previous High
New Low Below Previous Low.

This simple pattern must occur on both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Index (confirmation), and here's how it happened.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average made a new all-time high on January 26, 2018 (26,616.71).
On February 8, it closed at 23,860.46 (new low).
On February 26, it closed at 25,709.27 (interim high, lower than previous high).
On March 23, the Industrials closed at 23,533.20 (new low, lower than previous low).

For confirmation, the Dow Jones Transportation Index had made it's new high on January 12, 2018 (11,373.38).
On February 8, it closed at 10,136.61 (new low)
On February 26, it closed at 10,769.84 (interim high, lower than previous high)
On April 9, the Transportation Index closed at 10,119.36 (new low, lower than previous low = primary trend change, bull becomes bear).

Why is this good?

This is good because markets in a stable, trustworthy financial system must have a mechanism to clear mal-investment. Otherwise, stupid money must be purged from the system in order to create real value.

For instance, Facebook, Google, and many other stocks should not be trading as high as they currently are. They are overvalued, promoted by shysters and traded up by fools, one fool greater than the previous one. In other words, this is money chasing an unrealistic return. In order to get back to a realistic, fair, honest market, these stocks must lose value. Some companies will achieve their true value, which is zero. Others will lose 20, 30, maybe even more than 50%. The market will sort out the winners (there will be a few) from the losers (there will be many).

In the end, stocks will be properly valued, but when that time is to come, nobody knows. The perma-bulls out there can take heart that bear markets generally last 14-18 months, some like the one during the Great Depression which began with the stock market collapse in 1929, last much longer. How deep this one will be depends on how quickly stocks revert to an undervalued position, because the market always overshoots on the upside and the downside. There will be a bottom, when it will be wise to buy stocks. The only winning position presently is to sell stocks at a profit, park the money in bonds or money markets and wait for the bottom, which, just like the primary change from bull to bear, will be repeated - in reverse - according to Dow Theory.

For those wishing for the good old days of January 26, a return to those levels may take four to seven years, possibly longer, and, judging by the general insanity plaguing the human race presently, one should prepare for the much longer period. There are mountains of bad investments and onerous debts to be flushed from the system, since they were not flushed out in 2008-09, only papered over by TARP, QE, and ZIRP.

If you must, cry in your beer over the death of the bull. The rest of us will be having a cold one with the new-born bear.

Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/3/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75
4/4/18 24,264.30 +230.94 +161.19
4/5/18 24,505.22 +240.92 +402.11
4/6/18 23,932.76 -572.46 -170.35
4/9/18 23,979.10 +46.34 -134.01

At the Close, Monday, April 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,979.10, +46.34 (+0.19%)
NASDAQ: 6,950.34, +35.23 (+0.51%)
S&P 500: 2,613.16, +8.69 (+0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 12,380.55, +31.44 (+0.25%)

Sunday, April 8, 2018

Weekend Wrap: First Week of 2nd Quarter Losing, Just Like February and March

This edition of the weekend wrap begins with a comment to an article on ZeroHedge

One need not read the article in question, only question the conclusion.
  • markets have started pricing in a Fed policy mistake, or 
  • markets have started pricing in end-of-cycle dynamics.
BOTH, FTW, or, I'll take policy mistake and end-of-cycle dynamics for $1000, Alex.

​​​​​​​This article ignores the obvious.

The policy mistake was the March rate hike. It was either too soon, or completely mis-timed. One can assert, dependent upon where one is positioned, that any and all of the Fed's policies are mistakes, but that may be significantly overstating the case.

End-of-cycle dynamics? Give us all a break. The bull market began on March 9, 2009. It's now been nine years and one month, or 119 months, whichever you prefer. Nothing lasts forever, especially bull and/or bear markets.

The Dow Transportation Index (^DJT) is all one has to watch, since the Industrials have already broken below the Feb. 8 closing low.

According to Dow Theory - which, in matters of primary trends, has a track record approaching 100% - the transports need to confirm, and that number is 10,136.61 (yes, you should have that number memorized).

Where did the transportation Index close on Friday? 10,146.37. 10 points is all there is separating this market from turning bull to bear.

After Friday's mini-crash, stocks ended the week with a significant loss from where it started the week, the month, and the quarter, predictably, the NASDAQ being the worst performer.

Forget articles, commentary, and mainstream analysis. It's all noise. The Fed has made one policy error after another (keeping rates too low, too long, and, trying to raise rates in a weakened economy) and the bull market is ending. The close on the transports below 10,136.61 will tell you exactly when the market has turned, but it's not quite there yet. It could make the move on Monday, the 9th of April, but keen minds are looking at late may or June for the turn. Either way, the bull will be dead.

While there may be a bounce in the aftermath, it will not last and there is a good likelihood of a corollary recession 6-12 months beyond the turn.

That's all one needs to know.

Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/3/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75
4/4/18 24,264.30 +230.94 +161.19
4/5/18 24,505.22 +240.92 +402.11
4/6/18 23,932.76 -572.46 -170.35

At the Close, Friday, April 6, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 23,932.76, -572.46 (-2.34%)
NASDAQ: 6,915.11, -161.44 (-2.28%)
S&P 500: 2,604.47, -58.37 (-2.19%)
NYSE Composite: 12,349.11, -222.83 (-1.77%)

For the Week:
Dow: -170.35 (-0.71%)
NASDAQ: -148.33 (-2.10%)
S&P 500: -36.40 (-1.38%)
NYSE Composite: -102.95 (-0.83%)

Friday, April 6, 2018

Trade War Madness Continues As Non-Farm Payrolls Slip

Stocks gained again on Thursday as fears of a widespread trade war between the United States and China eased a bit, though the rhetoric has become thicker and more belligerent as the saga unfolds.

The escalation of tariff-building between the world's two largest economies appears to be evolving into a major spat, keeping traders on Wall Street jumping, though not out of windows, yet.

Whatever is going down, it's going to continue and no amount of speculation is going to ease the volatility in stocks.

Traders' fears will not be assuaged on Friday morning by the non-farm payroll report for March, which showed job gains of only 103,000, far below estimates of 185,000.

Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/3/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75
4/4/18 24,264.30 +230.94 +161.19
4/5/18 24,505.22 +240.92 +402.11

At the Close, Thursday, April 5, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,505.22, +240.92 (+0.99%)
NASDAQ: 7,076.55, +34.44 (+0.49%)
S&P 500: 2,662.84, +18.15 (+0.69%)
NYSE Composite: 12,571.94, +105.49 (+0.85%)

Thursday, April 5, 2018

Dow Industrials Travel 1,295 Points As Larry Kudlow Saves The World

Spooked at the open that China would impose a 25% tariff on soybeans (you can't make this stuff up), the Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 510 points at the open, but immediately began to gain ground.

By noon, the index had nearly clawed itself all the way back to breakeven, and finally, after 2:00 pm EDT, began an ascent that would leave the blue chips up 230 points on the day.

What spurred the gigantic gain of nearly 800 points off the opening low was word from White House financial advisor, Larry Kudlow, that the tariffs were only outlines and that they may never even be put into effect.

It may be cynical to say, but when the greatest stock market in the world can be auto-tuned to move in massive fashion on the words of one man - and that man happens to be Larry Kudlow - anybody with a functioning brain would want to be far removed from it.

In a word, it's Bullshoot. Rubbish. Trash.

Another cynical outlook would suggest that anybody being short heading into first quarter earrings season is in dire need of a frontal lobotomy. Being anything but long at this juncture - particularly after the whacko Wednesday just witnessed - is tantamount to financial suicide, and suicide is still outlawed in most states.

April now looks to be a perfectly glorious month for pensioners trapped in an alternate reality of hopefulness and trust, and for stock manipulators who make money on both ends of the trade, the brokers, schemers, bankers...

Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/3/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75
4/4/18 24,264.30 +230.94 +161.19

At the Close, Wednesday, April 4, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,264.30, +230.94 (+0.96%)
NASDAQ: 7,042.11, +100.83 (+1.45%)
S&P 500: 2,644.69, +30.24 (+1.16%)
NYSE Composite: 12,466.45, +99.38 (+0.80%)

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Stocks Stage Rebound; Cat-and-Mouse Game Continues Between Bulls and Bears

Is it a bull market? Is it a bear market?

At this juncture, it's a good probability that neither the bull nor bear label is appropriate. At best, one could call the market transitional, or, at worst, confused.

The continuing tug-of-war escalated the past two days as the Dow took a 400-point ride in each direction, ending with a small, 70-point loss to kick off the second quarter.

If none of this makes sense, recall the oft-used quote:
The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.
Attributed to either legendary John Maynard Keynes or contemporary Gary Shilling, it's worth keeping in mind as markets gyrate. Here is an interesting discussion concerning the quote.

Perhaps John Pierpont Morgan said it best, when asked what the market would do:
It will fluctuate.
Dow Jones Industrial Average April Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
4/2/18 23,644.19 -458.92 -458.92
4/2/18 24,033.36 +389.17 -69.75

At the Close, Tuesday, April 3, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,033.36, +389.17 (+1.65%)
NASDAQ: 6,941.28, +71.16 (+1.04%)
S&P 500: 2,614.45, +32.57 (+1.26%)
NYSE Composite: 12,367.07, +150.36 (+1.23%)