Friday, August 9, 2019

Stocks Jittery On Trade, Economies, Recession


Still on the road...

Watching the various global indices, it's obvious that the markets are quite jittery. A single headline can move stocks up or down, depending on the news. It's very knee-jerk right now and not a good time to be taking positions, unless you're short some China-US trade and well-hedged.

The US and China are to going to work out their differences right away, so it's a good bet that President Trump's promised 10% tariffs on a wider range of imports will come to bear on September 1, which is just three weeks away.

In the meantime, European economies are looking very weak, with some countries on the verge of recession. Britain already announced a second quarter slowdown and more should be forthcoming from various parts of the continent. If Germany falls into recession, there will be a bloodbath in stocks and bonds yields could collapse even further into the negative.

All this suggests a global rout in the not-so-distant future.

It's been a hellish two weeks and Friday, August 9, is shaping up to be deadly for the long side.

At the Close, Thursday, August 8, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,378.19, +371.09 (+1.43%)
NASDAQ: 8,039.16, +176.33 (+2.24%)
S&P 500: 2,938.09, +54.11 (+1.88%)
NYSE Composite: 12,828.82, +195.82 (+1.55%)

Tuesday, August 6, 2019

Panic Sets in as US-China Trade Spat Intensifies


On the road, so this will be a drive-by posting...

On Monday, stocks suffered their worst session of 2019 after China, without warning, devalued their currency, the yuan, in response to US demands for increased tariffs on imports.

President Trump announced that he would tack on a 10% tariff on a variety of Chinese goods - many of them consumer staples - on September first. The response from China was not entirely unexpected, though it took Wall Street and stock traders around the globe, mostly by surprise.

Intraday, the Dow was lower by more than 900 points, but rallied slightly into the close. It was still one of the worst days in recent memory for all US indices.

As Tuesday's trading approaches, US futures have turned positive as China pegged its currency at a higher level overnight, to everyone's relief.

While Monday's panic may appear to be a one-off, the trade war continues to roil markets on a regular basis. Until the two major trading partners agree to play nice and work out some kind of long-term deal, these kinds of shock events will continue to plague investors.

At the close, Monday, August 5, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,717.74, -767.27 (-2.90%)
NASDAQ: 7,726.04, -278.03 (-3.47%)
S&P 500: 2,844.74, -87.31 (-2.98%)
NYSE Composite: 12,497.31, -342.20 (-2.67%)

Monday, August 5, 2019

WEEKEND WRAP: Worst Week Of Year For Stocks

Stocks were pretty well hammered this week, as shown in the figures below.

What did them in was not that the FOMC eased for the first time since 2008, but that it was only 25 basis points. Everybody, including President Trump, was looking for a 50 basis point cut, and they didn't get it, so market participants, already concerned at the ongoing tariff war with China, sold the news (after buying the rumor).

The drop was hardly anything to get excited over as all markets were down less than four percent. The coming week may outdo this last one however, as China has upped the ante Monday by devaluing the yuan (further proof that the Chinese are currency manipulators, along with everything else we don't like about them) and halting US agricultural imports.

These developments are very bad for a jittery market and this one has a case of the DTs. Watch for either a cascading, waterfall type event or some intervention by our friends at the NY Fed, those hale and hearty fellows that saved the Dow with a 200-point boost in the final half hour of trading on Friday. They're likely to be quite busy buying stocks again this week.

Keep a close eye on the divergence between big caps and small-to-mid caps. The smaller stocks are in danger of entering correction or even bear markets for some. They're not supported by the funds nor the fed, so they may be the first dominoes to fall in a crisis, which is entirely possible at this juncture.

Since the federal government has already put in place a moratorium on the debt ceiling, don't expect a September swoon, as we've seen so often when the government can't agree on a budget. With the agreement signed last week, the Trump administration and the congress has committed to spending well beyond whatever is allocated or budgeted. A trillion dollar deficit has now become the norm, though tariff income may begin to whittle away at that (there is some silver lining to the tariffs).

Generally, markets are looking quite unstable and another 3-4% decline could be in the cards. There are few catalysts for upside development. Gold and silver are not going anywhere, despite the howls coming from the Goldbugs and Silver Surfers. The rally has topped out. There may be a little movement to the upside, but it won't be allowed to develop into anything outstanding. When gold goes past $1500 and silver sells for more than $18 an ounce, that may be the time to change one's outlook.

WTI crude is going to end up in the $40s per barrel price by October, if not sooner. There's a massive glut and the economy is by no means overheating. Besides, nobody in the oil business wants to correctly identify the impact of solar, wind, increased efficiency in auto engines, or conservation by US drivers (who are getting older by the day and thus drive less and less).

The world is not going to come to an end this week, but we may be treated to a preview of what it will look like. 2023 is the outlier.

BTW: The 10-year treasury note is likely to sink below 1.50% THIS YEAR. Good for bond sellers and debtors. There is no inflation than cannot be sidestepped with alternatives or smart shopping.

At the Close, Friday, August 2, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,485.01, -98.41 (-0.37%)
NASDAQ: 8,004.07, -107.05 (-1.32%)
S&P 500: 2,932.05, -21.51 (-0.73%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: 12,839.51, -81.31 (-0.63%)

For the Week:
Dow: -707.44 (-2.60%)
Dow Transports: -402.24 (-3.73%)
NASDAQ: -326.14 (-3.92%)
S&P 500: -93.81 (-3.10%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: -396.00 (-2.99%)

Friday, August 2, 2019

Stocks Slammed As Trump Targets Tariffs At China; Gold Bid; Payrolls, Unemployment Steady


Stocks swooned for the second straight session after President Trump announced that he would be adding a 10% tariff on $300 billion of Chinese imports beginning September 1.

The president noted that China had backed down on previous commitments to purchase farm produce from US farmers and to stem the flow of fentanyl into the United States.

Markets reacted with the usual disfavor, erasing earlier gains and slumping deep into negative territory. Apparently, nothing can help the market disengage from negativity. Wednesday's 1/4-point easing of the federal funds rate caused a mini-crash and Thursday's small tariff hike sent dealers to the sell buttons.

On the same news, gold caught a tailwind, rising from a low of $1400 to nearly $1448 in just over seven hours. Silver also gained, but not nearly in the manner of gold. Silver was around $16.30 an ounce as US trading closed and has been trending lower early Friday morning.

WTI crude oil took a nosedive on Thursday, recording its worst one-day performance in four years, with futures dipping below $54 per barrel in late Thursday trading.

As US markets prepare for the final session of the week, Asian and European indices headed lower, with most of the major bourses down more than two percent. After European PMIs all showed contraction - and with the outlook for a "no deal" Brexit a real possibility by the end of October - traders on the continent are voting with their feet, leaving behind a wake of battered stock prices. Europe is most definitely headed for a recession soon, though a US recession is still not an apparent reality.

While the rest of the world struggles to maintain their economies, under the leadership of Donald Trump, the US appears to have a real advantage, the dollar strengthening while the bond market rallies. The US 10-year treasury blasted through the two percent line on Thursday, currently holding with a yield around 1.89%.

In breaking news, July non-farm payrolls came mostly in line with expectations at 164,000 new jobs added during the month. The unemployment rate held steady at 3.7% and year-over-year wages increased at a 3.2% rate.

Us stock futures are trending off their lows as the opening bell approaches.

At the close, Thursday, August 1, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,583.42, -280.85 (-1.05%)
NASDAQ: 8,111.12, -64.30 (-0.79%)
S&P 500: 2,953.56, -26.82 (-0.90%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: 12,920.82, -145.78 (-1.12%)

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Did You Fall For the Fakery? Fed Eases, Stocks Slide, Dollar Gains; Silver Overbought


Today, July 31, 2019, the FOMC of the Federal Reserve System cut the federal funds rate by 25 basis points, as expected.

What was unexpected was the response from the market, which stumbled badly on the news. It was a classic case of "buy the rumor, sell the news," herd mentality. The Fed did not have to cut rates, obviously, just as they were wrong to raise them every quarter by 25 basis points since December, 2015.

The Fed is still out in uncharted territory, unable to raise rates because the economy is just chugging along at less than three percent growth, which is fine, in reality. The trouble is that investors want more. They are chasing yield, but what they're really doing is pushing on a string, exacerbating an already overbought market at or near record highs.

Here's the truth of the matter:

The system broke in 2008 and it was not fixed, just patched up with lots of liquidity thanks to Uncle Sugars at the Fed, BoJ, PBOC, ECB, SNB.

Fiat is an arbitrary order. In other words, this is "money." It's not. Yen, euros, dollars are currency. The intrinsic value of all fiat is zero.

This fakery will continue until there's nothing left except mega-corporations, governments, central banks, and slaves (almost everybody).

Noting that we're phasing through a zombie economy, much like that of Japan, with an aging demographic, systemic debt problems, and myopic, corrupt governments worldwide, there is little the Fed or any central bank can do but to continue the fakery until the public is completely bereft of all assets. Then they will declare the global economy dead, start a new order, promise prosperity for everyone, and deliver a global depression.

There's no way around it. All developed nations are bankrupt. The central banks create money (actually, currency) out of thin air, sell it as debt to governments, at interest, collect their skim and enrich themselves. The central banks work for themselves, not the governments they shadily represent, nor the citizens who make use of the currency.

They have no way out. Government debts (the US is already $22 trillion behind) will never be repaid, so the central banks can only perpetuate the fraud until they can't.

As far as precious metals are concerned, they will continued to be whipped like a rented mule. The recent run-up was only a diversion, a ruse, designed to get more people to buy the stuff. Now, gold and silver will be sold off and the bankers will eventually accumulate at lower prices.

That is why I haven't changed my position or bought into the silver rally from $14.50 to $16.50 per ounce. The bulk of the move came about when the dollar was weakening. Now it is strengthening again, meaning you will buy less gold with the same amount of dollars. The math is simple.

All told, stocks are overbought. the metals are currently overbought, but not for long. Bonds have much more rally in them than may be evident superficially. The bond rally has been ongoing for 35 years and it's not going to stop here. The eventual end-point is negative rates, or NIRP (Negative Interest Rate Policy), as is the current regime in the rest of the world. More than $13 trillion in bonds are priced at negative yields, which tells much about the future prospects for developed nations (and semi-developed China and India).

I continue to be targeting silver for $12.35 by 2021 or sooner. If it goes above $20, that would be a shock and a sign that the global financial system is melting away faster than anyone thought, but it's not likely to happen.

The global economy is a train wreck in super-slow motion. It is unlikely to implode before 2021, so there is still time to prepare for TEOTWAWKI.

That is all for now. Good luck.

At The Close, Wednesday, July 31, 2019:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,864.27, -333.75 (-1.23%)
NASDAQ: 8,175.42, -98.19 (-1.19%)
S&P 500: 2,980.38, -32.80 (-1.09%)
NYSE COMPOSITE: 13,066.60, -120.61 (-0.91%)