Sunday, December 9, 2018

WEEKEND WRAP: The Week The Wheels Fell Off

Was this the week that everything fell completely apart?

The answer is a matter of perspective and speculation, but it sure looked pretty bad. Stocks, with no significant deviation between the Dow, NASDAQ, NYSE Composite, and S&P 500 companies took a major hit, or, rather, a series of heavy blows. Stocks were bludgeoned with regularity, flogged within an inch of their lives, only to be flayed again the following day without respect to any particular sector or class.

Monday was the only positive day of the week, with all the major indices closing nicely in the green. Tuesday was a nightmare, with the Dow dropping nearly 800 points and the other indices dragged down the same abyss. By virtue of the death of former president George H.W. Bush, current president, Donald J. Trump issued an executive order, closing all federal offices for a day of mourning, thus shutting down not just mail service and other government functions, but the financial markets as well.

After the surprise day off, traders got right back to selling again, whacking away with the same ferocity as on Tuesday, but, by mid-afternoon, a suspicious rally emerged, sending the S&P and NASDAQ into positive territory by the close, leaving the Dow with a minor loss of 79 points after it had been down more than 700 during the session. As many expected, the lift late Thursday was either short-term short covering or some button-pushing by the PPT (President's Working Group on Financial Markets... remember them?), setting up Friday for a major collapse of another 558 points on the Dow with the other indices following the lead lower.

What actually was behind the carnage was difficult to discern, as a convergence of events helped shape the worrying. Wrapping up the G20 meeting in Buenos Aires on Sunday, President Trump and China's president, Xi Jinping, announced a 90-day calling off period on new tariffs that were supposed to go into effect and increasing the percentages on others already in force on January 1. Those changes were postponed until March 31, with the intent of the two leaders to work out a framework for trade policy going forward. Markets were obviously pleased on Monday, but by Tuesday felt that a mere 90 days would not be enough to develop long-term policy for either nation.

Politics also is playing a role in the background, as Special Counsel Mueller's bogus "Russia collusion" investigation drags onward with the expectation that a final report will is forthcoming in the very near term. The corrosive political climate in Washington is not only a worry for those involved or tangentially aligned, but it's also having a somewhat chilling effect on investments. Nobody likes uncertainty, but especially so, Wall Street, and when it involves the highest levels of the federal government, the fear gauge goes bonkers and skepticism reigns.

On top of that, there's still a general perception that stocks are not just fully valued, but some are significantly overvalued. More than a few analysts have maintained that the effects of the Trump tax cuts are wearing thin, the federal government is running enormous deficits and a profits squeeze will be apparent by the end of the first or second quarter of 2019.

A minor inversion of the treasury yield curve occurred - almost without notice - on Monday, when the yield on the three-year bill rose above that of the 5-year note. On Tuesday, the 2-year joined in, and both the 2-and-3-year yields ended the week above that of the five. The 2-year closed out Friday at 2.72%, the 3-year the same, and the five-year at 2.70%. The 10-year note was last seen with a yield of 2.85%, and the 30-year down to 3.14%. Bond vigilantes were out in force, and the flight from stocks sent both short and longer-dated bonds soaring. While not quite the textbook inversion of the 2s-10s that have preceded every recession since 1955, the indications are not at all rosy.

Finally, on Friday, November's non-farm payroll data came in woefully short, with expectations of 198,000 jobs met with the reality of just 155,000 new jobs for the month.

The short explanation is that the bull market is getting awfully long in the tooth, the economy is set to slow down a bit in 2019, and the big money on Wall Street is heading for the hills, i.e., bonds and cash or cash equivalents. Dow Theory is about to signal a bear market. The Dow has already sent the signal with its close at 24,285.95 on November 23. Confirmation will come if the Dow Transports close below 9,896.11. It closed Friday at 9,951.16.

With the Fed's FOMC meeting scheduled for December 18-19, and the widely-accepted view is that the Fed will raise the federal funds rate another 25 basis points, there's more than one good reason to be getting out of stocks and those in the know - or at least those who think they know - have been scurrying like rats off a sinking ship.

With the S&P now in correction and the NASDAQ, NYSE composite and Dow Transports already having been there, only the Dow remains above the magic mark of -10 percent. All the major indices show losses for the year and the Dow is just a few hundred points from correction.

Elsewhere on the planet, the number of countries in which their stock markets are already down more than 10 percent continued to grow, with Germany's DAX just a shade above bear market status. That's a huge issue, since Germany is Europe's strongest economy. Given the angst over Brexit, the unwinding of the ECBs massive balance sheet, and Japan's upcoming announcement about the end of QE measures, the focus could easily be on Europe, as it will almost certainly be headed for a recession in 2019. Since Japan's been in something of a recessionary decline for the past 25 years, any slowing of growth on the island nation will barely elicit more than a yawn.

If Europe is about to fall over, the US will almost certainly follow. So much for Making America Great Again (MAGA). The disassembly of the globalist power structure, the rise of populism (marches and violent riots in France) and a global economy on its knees after 10 years of fake stimulus may all be leading to a recession that will have long-lasting and severe consequences.

So, yes, this was the week the wheels fell off.

Here's how the Traveling Wilbury's see it, with the cheery "End of the Line."



Happy Holidays!

Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
12/3/18 25,826.43 +287.97 +287.97
12/4/18 25,027.07 -799.36 -511.39
12/6/18 24,947.67 -79.40 -590.79
12/7/18 24,388.95 -558.72 -1149.51

At the Close, Friday, December 7, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,388.95, -558.72 (-2.24%)
NASDAQ: 6,969.25, -219.01 (-3.05%)
S&P 500: 2,633.08, -62.87 (-2.33%)
NYSE Composite: 11,941.93, -202.48 (-1.67%)

For the Week:
Dow: -1149.51 (-4.50%)
NASDAQ: -361.28 (-4.93%)
S&P 500: -127.09 (-4.60%)
NYSE Composite: -515.62 (-4.14%)

Thursday, December 6, 2018

PPT To The Rescue, But For What Purpose?

Prepare for lower lows and lower highs.

It's long been maintained that central banks and/or governments should intervene in capital markets to keep people from panicking. That can also be read as "whenever stocks go down too much, too fast, we're here to protect our friends' investments."

For context, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down more than 700 points today. It rallied to close with a minor loss. One problem. All other major stock indices around the world closed down between two and three-and-a-half percent. America is great, but not so great that it can avoid a global slowdown. Nefarious forces behind the scenes - much like the man behind the curtain in the Wizard of Oz - averted a major selloff. Globalism is ending, and with it, many multi-national stocks are going to be badly damaged.

That's what today's miracle late-day rally was all about, because if stocks lose value, the system falls apart. It's really that simple. For context, figure this: corporate buybacks have been at record levels the past three years. Corporations have been buying their own stock at a frenetic pace, at the highest prices. If stocks fall, these companies will be sitting on mountains of their own stock which they bought at ridiculously-high prices. When they are forced to sell to raise capital, they will be losing money on investments in their own companies.

It's not just stupid, it's corrupt to the core, and that, friends, is why stocks can't go down.

But they will.

For a little more context, consider that according to Dow Theory, the primary trend has changed again from bull to bear. More on this in a later post.

Caveat Emptor.

Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
12/3/18 25,826.43 +287.97 +287.97
12/4/18 25,027.07 -799.36 -511.39
12/6/18 24,947.67 -79.40 -590.79

At the Close, Thursday, December 6, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 24,947.67, -79.40 (-0.32%)
NASDAQ: 7,188.26, +29.83 (+0.42%)
S&P 500: 2,695.95, -4.11 (-0.15%)
NYSE Composite: 12,144.41, -77.57 (-0.63%)

MidDay Digest: Global Rout Underway; Asia, Europe Down Big, US Stocks Plunge

This is a Money Daily update on the churning volatility in stocks, which has taken on prodigious proportions as of Tuesday and extended - after an unusual break due to President Trump ordering all federal offices (and with it the stock market) closed in mourning for the late George H.W. Bush, 41st president - into Thursday's trading.

Asian stocks were wracked as the sun rose from the Pacific. Japan's NIKKEI was down nearly two percent, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 2.47%. European markets opened lower and the selling accelerated throughout the day. Of particular note was Germany's Dax, which stood at 10,810.98 by the close, down 389.26 points (-3.48%). The DAX is now down 19% from its October 30, 2017 high. Another 100-point decline will put it officially into a bear market.

Other European bourses were hit hard, with losses of three to three-and-a-half percent on all major exchanges.

When stocks opened in New York, the rout had reached critical velocity. The ow opened down more than 400 points and continued selling off. At one point, the Dow was down more than 700 points, but has recovered somewhat as of this writing. With the NASDAQ already in correction territory, the Dow and S&P are close, both down roughly nine percent from recent highs.

There will be another post here after the market closes. Look for a full recap about 7:00 pm ET.

Heads Up! Stocks Selling Off Worldwide; US Open Looking Ugly; Germany's DAX Nearing Bear Market

After an unscheduled day off for the Kumbayah TV presentation of George HW Bush's funeral Wednesday, the rest of the world's equity bourses took the day to vacillate, but Thursday looks to be a bloodbath of magnificent proportions.

Asian stocks were down broadly in Japan, Hong Won, China, and elsewhere, and European stocks opened lower and continued to descend. The DAX, Germany's main stock exchange, is approaching bear market status, down 19% from an all-time high of 13,478.86, reached on October 30, 2017. The DAX is currently trading around 10,940.

At this writing, Dow futures are off more than 450 points, S&P futures have fallen nearly 50, and NASDAQ futures are 115 points lower.

Money Daily will be monitoring events throughout the US session, as this current downdraft appears to be one without a bottom.

Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Stocks Rocked As Europe Burns, Political Skepticism Soars; Globalism Grips As Populism Rises

With all the good news that's been spreading of late, the magnitude of this most recent setback was, for some, a little overdone. Others, who see the planet for what it is, see populism on the rise and globalism fading into history.

Prepare for some over-the-top hyperbole in 3...2...1...

Besides wealth inequality reaching heights heretofore unseen, taxation of the general populace in developed nations has reached catastrophic proportions. As seen in the European protests, the civility of the average man and woman, having been grossly abused, has been stretched beyond the limits of many whose toils seem to barely keep pace with the endless panoply of regulations, fees, fines, taxes and penalties. This is how epochs end.

In France, Germany, Sweden, Belgium, Italy and elsewhere, the citizenry has had enough of misrepresentation by so-called officials, elected, selected, or otherwise, and they are seeking economic and social freedom. The forces of globalism have been resolute in obfuscating reality and distorting the obvious all the while raking in the spoils of their pernicious policies and decietful politics.

In the United States, the working class has seen through the flash narrative surrounding the demonization of the popularly-elected President Trump. Americans no longer want illegal migration across their borders, handouts to the poor or the rich, nor policies that do them no good. The entire planet is on the verge of an emotional and psychological breaking point. It has been many years in the making, but, every day that goes by is rife with lies, innuendo, untruths, double-talk. Within the next year or two, everything is going to go sideways. The politics have simply outpaced the usefulness of the ruling class. It's apparent to just about anybody who give a damn and the wisest of the monied class on Wall Street are running for the proverbial hills.

Who knows what causes stocks to zig-zag on a day-to-day basis, for the Dow to pick up 600 points one day and drop nearly 800 the next?

In any case, the point drop on the Dow was the fourth-largest in market history. The other three larger also occurred this year. For the NASDAQ, it was the sixth largest. All of the 11 largest point declines on the NASDAQ occurred in either 2000 or 2018.

The Dow transports (DJT, -4.39%) tumbled 476.37 points, or 4.4%, with all 20 components closing lower. The previous biggest-ever point decline was 445.16 points on Oct. 10. At its intraday worst, the index was down as much as 565.23 points, or 5.2%.

Analysis of the recent volatility is sure to take on obscene forms from a parade of wizened economists, generalists, and hobbyists. None of them will have it exactly right. One day, all the world's full of unicorns and honey. The next, it's going to hell in a hand basket.

Whatever your particular niche or trading style, the current offers a uniquely volatile and confounding proposition for traders, speculators, or even the casual investor.

For the coming months, expect more of the same.

Dow Jones Industrial Average December Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
12/3/18 25,826.43 +287.97 +287.97
12/4/18 25,027.07 -799.36 -511.39

At the Close, Tuesday, December 4, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,027.07, -799.36 (-3.10%)
NASDAQ: 7,158.43, -283.09 (-3.80%)
S&P 500: 2,700.06, -90.31 (-3.24%)
NYSE Composite: 12,221.98, -355.56 (-2.83%)