Tuesday, July 10, 2018

No News Sends Stocks Soaring

Animal spirits were alive and well on Wall Street to open the week, putting aside all the phony fears over President Trump's trade war with China and the rest of the known world.

Shrugging and buying has become a trademark of the easy money days since the crash in 2008 and recovered which started in 2009. Monday's buying spree comes at the tail end of the second longest bull market in history, and is likely a sign that the market is nearing exhaustion rather than a sign that everything is going swimmingly.

There was no noteworthy news to bring out the buyers.

Oddly enough it was the Dow Jones Industrial Average that led the way, posting its best gain in month. On June 6, the Dow ramped higher by +346.41.

Even odder, the three other indices posted identical gains of 0.88%.

Oddities will continue as traders pore over a flood of second quarter earnings reports the next few weeks.

Dow Jones Industrial Average July Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
7/2/18 24,307.18 +35.77 +35.77
7/3/18 24,174.82 -132.36 -96.59
7/5/18 24,345.44 +181.92 +85.33
7/6/18 24,456.48 +99.74 +185.07
7/9/18 24,776.59 +320.11 +505.18

At the Close, Monday, July 9, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,776.59, +320.11 (+1.31%)
NASDAQ: 7,756.20, +67.81 (+0.88%)
S&P 500: 2,784.17, +24.35 (+0.88%)
NYSE Composite: 12,776.92, +112.04 (+0.88%)

Monday, July 9, 2018

Weekend Wrap: Stocks Celebrate The 4th With Solid Gains

Stocks bubbled up after the BLS reported June job gains of 213,000 in the non-farm payroll report, though the official unemployment rate rose to four percent as more people entered the workforce.

The increase, being more than the expected 195,000, was a positive spur to trading instincts and helped end one of the better weeks of the year, with all four major indices posting gains for the day and the week.

Fears of an extended trade war with China were put aside for the time being. With the nation basking in the glow of an Independence Day week, only one down day was recorded, that being Tuesday's shortened session, which seemed more an adjustment to price levels rather than a trend-starting event.

Earnings reports for the second quarter will soon be the talk of the town and with that narrative taking precedence, there's a very good chance that stocks may see some solid support for the rest of the month.

The Dow is already ahead for July, despite still being more than 2000 points from the January all-time highs. With trading volumes down, it won't take much tome markets and the mood has shifted to a summery, feeling-good groove.

Bonds being moribund, stocks will bear some near term interest. The longer term still appears shaky or shady on a fundamental basis.

Dow Jones Industrial Average July Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
7/2/18 24,307.18 +35.77 +35.77
7/3/18 24,174.82 -132.36 -96.59
7/5/18 24,345.44 +181.92 +85.33
7/6/18 24,456.48 +99.74 +185.07

At the Close, Friday, July 6, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,456.48, +99.74 (+0.41%)
NASDAQ: 7,688.39, +101.96 (+1.34%)
S&P 500: 2,759.82, +23.21 (+0.85%)
NYSE Composite: 12,664.88, +79.67 (+0.63%)

For the Week:
Dow: +185.07 (+0.76%)
NASDAQ: +178.08 (+2.37%)
S&P 500: +41.45 (+1.52%)
NYSE Composite: +160.63 (+1.28%)

Thursday, July 5, 2018

Stocks, Bonds In Game Of Chicken With Fed, Economy

Who will blink first?

That's the essential question, especially whenever stocks advance in the face of disappointing news or data.

Just today, basking in the afterglow of Independence Day, the data was far from convincing of the official narrative that the economy is clicking, unemployment is low and happy days for all are just over the horizon.

Unemployment claims were higher than expected. For the last week of June, 231,000 were receiving government benefits. The low number of unemployment claims is partially due to a number of factors the government number crunchers don't readily report. First, there are no more extended claims. In most states, it's 26 weeks. That's it. Find a job in six months or be relegated to the "out of workforce" brigade, which are not counted in the official figures.

Additionally, with so many baby boomers retiring (supposedly at a rate of 10,000 a day, though it's likely much lower), there should be jobs aplenty. However, many of those older folks are not being replaced. Corporations are saving through attrition, or, at best, hiring replacements at much lower wages with fewer benefits.

Then there's job growth. The numbers delivered by ADP this morning were uninspiring. Private employers added 177,000 to their payrolls, well below the expected 190,000. Prior to the opening bell on Friday, the BLS releases the non-farm payroll data for June, which is expected to come in at around 195,000 new jobs, but whether the numbers match expectations or not, almost anybody with a functioning brain knows that the data is largely fudged and massaged and generally not reflective of local conditions.

Thus, the wizards on Wall Street are playing chicken in the market, and well they should. The Wall Street elite have the ability to hedge, shed positions before the general public, and make moves faster than anybody else, especially the home-gaming day-traders. They are selling when everyone else is buying and vice versa. They're pros. That's why they're making mega-bucks on Wall Street and you're not.

The Federal Reserve released the minutes from June's FOMC meeting at 2:00 today, which initially sent stocks down, but they recovered to close near their highs. The minutes sent mixed signals, but little to suggest that the Fed would not raise the federal funds rate by another 25 basis points in September, despite a flattening treasury yield curve, which is a harbinger of an economic downturn.

Again, the market pros played chicken and bid up stocks in the face of the Fed minutes which revealed little beyond what was already known.

Bond yields edged slightly higher, except for the 30-year, which shed one basis point to 2.95%. Spreads on the 2s-10s dipped to 29 basis points, and the 2s-30s dropped to 40 bips. Bond traders are staring directly at a flatline instead of a curve, with potential for inversion a real concern. They're selling the short end, buying the long, challenging the Fed to tighten twice more this year, a move that almost certainly would send wild signals through the trading community.

If all of that isn't enough to churn the stomach, Trump's China tariffs go into effect at midnight EDT.

Chicken. It's not what's for dinner. It's what Wall Street plays these days.

Dow Jones Industrial Average July Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
7/2/18 24,307.18 +35.77 +35.77
7/3/18 24,174.82 -132.36 -96.59
7/5/18 24,345.44 +181.92 +85.33

At the Close, Thursday, July 5, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,345.44, +181.92 (+0.71%)
NASDAQ: 7,579.59, +83.75 (+1.03%)
S&P 500: 2,735.07, +21.85 (+0.81%)
NYSE Composite: 12,564.92, +90.53 (+0.56%)

Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Stocks Turn Ugly In Short Session: Time Out On Wall Street

The Dow took a nearly 300-point round trip from top to bottom on the second trading day of the third quarter, rising by more than 137 points before collapsing in the final hour to close 1/2 percent lower. The NASDAQ was beaten down further, off 65 points on the day (-0.86%).

Markets can become discouraged by many factors, but for this current one, it seems to be merely a matter of during out after nine-plus years of unprecedented fantasy. Speculators, those eager early-day traders who took it on the chin today as they have on many other recent sessions, have to be concerned that investors might catch on to the fact that the global economy is not all roses and unicorns, but rather a patchwork of central bank machinations that have distorted what used to be free markets into stealthy, clandestine, controlled entities.

If that becomes the case, the second leg of the bear market will commence in short order and likely not cease until well after the Dow falls 20% from the January 26 high (26,616.71), a process that could last anywhere from three to six months. This is shaping up to be a long drawdown of asset values, considering that the central bankers will not readily abandon their chosen "low unemployment and moderate inflation" narrative, of which practically everyone who matters is in disbelief already. The proof is in stock market and bond returns, both of which suggest contraction instead of a healthy growth environment.

July 4, Independence Day in the United States, will be an anchor on foreign markets because there will be no trading on the day. China has already intervened in their equity markets to stem the outflows. Italy, and thus, all of the EU, is staring directly at a major solvency crisis which could explode and uncouple the southern nation from the rest of Europe. Already, the new Italian government has ECB officials on edge.

Argentina is already a basket case, as is Venezuela, with Brazil close to chaos as well.

Maybe it's time the politicians in Washington stop focusing on the "evil" Russians (who are doing quite well, despite sanctions and expulsions of their diplomats by the US), and begin taking account of the rest of the world, which seems to be not right at all.

Dow Jones Industrial Average July Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
7/2/18 24,307.18 +35.77 +35.77
7/3/18 24,174.82 -132.36 -96.59

At the Close, Tuesday, July 3, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,174.82, -132.36 (-0.54%)
NASDAQ: 7,502.67, -65.01 (-0.86%)
S&P 500: 2,713.22, -13.49 (-0.49%)
NYSE Composite: 12,494.70, +9.12 (+0.07%)

Stocks Start Slow, Finish Well To Open Third Quarter

Starting off the third quarter by stumbling into the red, US stock indices bounced off their early lows to erase the losses and post gains late in the afternoon.

With the notable exception of the NYSE Composite, the major exchanges posted small advances in what really looked like coordinated buying by forces unseen (hint: central banks, led by the Federal Reserve and the PPT).

Most of the rest of the world finished lower on the day, so the US market appears to be an outlier, because, well, America rocks, ya know.

Monday's finish was nothing more than market noise and should be regarded as such. Tuesday's session is shortened so that the brokers and dealers can beat the traffic out to the Hamptons. The exchanges will close at 1:00 pm EDT and remain closed on Wednesday, July 4, in appreciation of Independence Day.

Dow Jones Industrial Average July Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
7/2/18 24,307.18 +35.77 +35.77

At the Close, Monday, July 2, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,307.18, +35.77 (+0.15%)
NASDAQ: 7,567.69, +57.38 (+0.76%)
S&P 500: 2,726.71, +8.34 (+0.31%)
NYSE Composite: 12,485.58, -18.67 (-0.15%)