Friday, February 2, 2018

Stocks Struggle Against Higher Bond Yields

Stocks may have had a wondrous January, but February is shaping up to be a story of a different kind.

Not only have yields on all manner of bonds risen with alacrity over the past three weeks, they show no signs of slowing, especially since the Federal Reserve has sent a signal to markets that the federal funds rate is going to be upped at last three times this year, the first hike scheduled at the next FOMC meeting in March.

Higher bond yields make stocks look less attractive by comparison, being that they are virtually without risk, as opposed to stocks, which can rise or fall on whims, trends, poor performance of the underlying companies, or without cause, simply because a company or a sector is "out of favor."

As the 10-year note created above 2.70% earlier in the week, stocks suddenly became not so much of a bargain, especially since valuations have been egregiously stretched as the nine-year-long rally in equities has exceeded all reasonable valuation metrics.

Countering the argument are the voices from the Trump train touting the meteoric rise in stock prices over the past year, and, certainly, the economy is in better condition than it was 12 months ago.

But, a strengthening economy has headwinds, such as higher wages and costs due to inflation, and that's being caused by the endless printing of fiat and buying of securities outright by central banks, which has distorted the landscape of global economics.

The rush to safety has begun, and, once started, such a trend is not easily pushed back. Investors should prepare for a sea change which will wipe out gains that have been largely the result of central bank intervention and stock buybacks by inefficient corporate managers.

At the Close, Thursday, February 1, 2018:
Dow: 26,186.71, +37.32 (+0.14%)
NASDAQ: 7,385.86, -25.62 (-0.35%)
S&P 500: 2,821.98, -1.83 (-0.06%)
NYSE Composite: 13,381.97, +14.01 (+0.10%)

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Stocks Rocked, Presdient Trump Stick-Saves with SOTU

There shouldn't be too much in the way of analysis seeking a rationale for Tuesday's smash-crash in global equity markets.

With treasury's 10-year-note rocking beyond 2.70%, bonds are coming back into favor as investments with little risk, as opposed to over-inflated stocks buoyed by buybacks.

Profit-taking being mostly a participant sport, sellers piled into the pits, sending previously-favored issues down for a second straight session. After the markets closed for the day, life returned to some semblance of normalcy, awaiting disruption, caused primarily by President Trump's stirring State of the Union speech (and the pouting Democrats lack of response).

Trump delivered for his base, as usual, leaving a feeble Joe Kennedy III drooling out the Democrat response, a vain, ineffective attempt to continue undermining the administration's attempts to bring America back to a place of dominance, reverence, and prosperity.

The shock-selling on Monday and Tuesday should likely fade as business continues gearing up, though the path will be made more difficult for the Fortune 500 types as interest rates ascend.

Perhaps investing will return from an overcrowded type of algo-chasing, bid-stuffing, front-running mosh pit to a semi-science based on math skills, management, and fundamental analysis.

Perhaps it will not, but, by all outward appearances, President Trump, at least has the right kind of ideas to move the country - and industry - forward.

At the Close, Tuesday, January 30, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,076.89, -362.59 (-1.37%)
NASDAQ: 7,402.48, -64.02 (-0.86%)
S&P 500: 2,822.43, -31.10 (-1.09%)
NYSE Composite: 13,375.51, -149.14 (-1.10%)

Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Wall Street's Monday Blood-Letting Leads to Global Calamity in Equities

US equity markets were roiled Monday as the dollar jumped and bonds sold off, pushing yields higher, especially on the short end of the curve.

The two-year treasury finished the day at 2.09%, the five at 2.47%, and the benchmark ten-year note briefly touched 2.70% before dipping back to 2.68%. For perspective, consider that the five-year treasury was yielding 2.19% and the ten-year, 2.39, just a month ago. Those are significant moves and, apparently, the stock market has now taken notice as fixed investments begin offering yields competitive with stock dividends, at least.

For more perspective, the S&P and Dow averages suffered their worst one-day drops since early September. The percentage was just two-thirds of a percent on both indices. That shows just how decisive the rally since the election of Donald J. Trump as president has been. There has not been on single-day one percent decline on either in well over a year.

If a sea change in sentiment is occurring, Tuesday's trade could be a determinant day. Futures are pointing well lower and the VIX is cresting over 14 in the US, while global markets are a sea of red.

Japan's NIKKEI was down nearly 1.5%. The Hang Song was off over one percent. European bourses are uniformly lower at their midday.

As the nation prepares for President Trump's first State of the Union speech Tuesday night, more focus could be on internal DC politics, especially the readying for release of the troubling, explosive memo penned by the House Intelligence committee.

On Monday, the Intel committee voted along party lines to declassify the four-page missive. The president has five days to release the memo or keep it classified. Opinion and timing see Thursday as the likely eventual release.

With the FOMC set to keep rates unchanged on Wednesday (the meeting opens Tuesday), that may be the only thing that doesn't change this week.

At the Close, Monday, January 29, 2018:
Dow: 26,439.48, -177.23 (-0.67%)
NASDAQ: 7,466.51, -39.27 (-0.52%)
S&P 500: 2,853.53, -19.34 (-0.67%)
NYSE Composite: 13,524.65, -112.37 (-0.82%)

Monday, January 29, 2018

Stocks Soar Through January; Big Week Upcoming

Stocks staged their best cumulative effort of the new year, as January equity returns continued to explode through the final full week of trading in the United States.

Making the gains all the more impressive is the fact that the month has seen only 18 out of a possible 20 trading days, due to the New Year and MLK holidays falling on Mondays. Three more sessions to start the new week will conclude January trading.

Stocks have been the major story of the year thus far, along with the continued decline of the US dollar against other major currencies, especially the Yen, Euro and British Pound.

President Donald J. Trump returned from Davos over the weekend, preparing for his first State of the Unions address to congress on Tuesday night.

Also of note this week is the FOMC policy rate meeting of the Federal Reserve. While the Fed is not expected to raise key interest rates at this meeting, there's general impetus for a planned rate hike at the March meeting. The FOMC meets on Tuesday and Wednesday, January 30 and 31. The March meeting is March 20-21.

The week concludes with the January Non-farm Payroll release by the BLS on Friday, Feb. 2. The data release includes publication changes related to the annual sample review and the conversion to NAICS 2017.. Expectations will be high, given the explosive nature of the stock market and recent touting of strong economic growth by President Trump.

At the Close, Friday, January 26, 2018:
Dow: 26,616.71, +223.92 (+0.85%)
NASDAQ: 7,505.77, +94.61 (+1.28%)
S&P 500: 2,872.87, +33.62 (+1.18%)
NYSE Composite: 13,637.02, +124.36 (+0.92%)

For the Week:
Dow: +544.99 (+2.09%)
NASDAQ: +169.39 (+2.31%)
S&P 500: +62.57 (+2.23%)
NYSE Composite: +252.56 (+1.89%)

Friday, January 26, 2018

Dow Soars

Really?

At the Close, Thursday, January 25, 2018:
Dow: 26,392.79, +140.67 (+0.54%)
NASDAQ: 7,411.16, -3.89 (-0.05%)
S&P 500: 2,839.25, +1.71 (+0.06%)
NYSE Composite: 13,512.66, +5.00 (+0.04%)

Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Stocks a Little Shaky As Dollar Plummets, Silver, Gold Soar

Chalk this up to various theories of unintended consequences.

Even the brilliant thinkers at the Federal Reserve are unable to explain the strange divergence of bonds and the dollar over the past number of weeks because that's not the way it's supposed to go.

With the Fed becoming more hawkish as they attempt to unwind literally trillions of dollars worth of bonds on their vast balance sheet, interest rates have risen, but the value of the dollar in relation to other major currencies has taken a noticeable hit, not just in the past few weeks, but for the better part of the past year.

The mighty US dollar was beaten like a trailer park hooker, down nearly one percent on the day per the dollar index, which, in the forex universe, is a pretty severe move.

Other currencies were the beneficiaries of the dollar demise, with the British pound up 2.4%, Japan's yen up nearly one percent, and the Aussie dollar gaining 0.90%.

Fueled by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's comments at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that a weaker dollar was good for US trade, currency pairs were traded with one thing in mind: dollar dumping.

Bonds, however, failed to play along, with the 10-year benchmark unchanged at 2.65% and both long and short-dated maturities moving less than a basis point.

Besides the currencies of nations not the United States, commodities were bid large, with WTI oil futures making another in a series of three-year highs and precious metals continuing a rally that began in December but had recently stalled.

Not so today, as silver led the way with a gain of over three percent, topping out at 17.70, the highest since breaking briefly over $18 per ounce in early September of 2017. From a technical perspective, silver has ripped through a long, declining resistance line dating back to its peak in 2011. A clear breakout holding above $17.50 would be a significant development for the world's most unappreciated asset.

Gold was also well-taken, finishing in New York up $16.80 (1.50%), at $1358.70 the ounce.

Stocks meandered along the unchanged line, ending split, with the Dow higher while the NASDAQ and S&P fell.

With many pension funds chartered to rebalance by month's end, the rapid rise of equities in the early days of the new year may be coming to a quick conclusion. Estimates range from $12 to $120 billion of stocks which must be sold and converted to bonds in the next week. If that's the case, it will take a concerted effort from the central bank cartel (who also may be selling into the weakness) to keep the stock bubble adequately inflated.

If there's a downside other than stocks taking a much-needed shave, it's that any decline in the stock market will be blamed on President Trump and his administration's tough currency and trade policies.

The President is set to address the assemblage at Davos on Friday, concluding this year's fete of economic manipulators and would-be statist social constructionists.

The President is expected to deliver remarks touting America's re-emergence as the world's greatest economic force.

At the Close, Wednesday, January 24, 2018:
Dow: 26,252.12, +41.31 (0.16%)
S&P 500: 2,837.54, -1.59 (-0.06%)
NASDAQ: 7,415.06, -45.23 (-0.61%)

Revenge of the Gold (and Silver) Bugs As Dollar Crashes

Stocks may be hurtling towards infinity and beyond, but the long-suffering holders of gold and silver are about to be rewarded for their patience and prescience.

Overnight, the dollar index breached the 90 level to the downside extending the trend which saw the dollar lose the most value in 14 years in 2017.

As the dollar falls, gold and silver can do nothing but appreciate in dollar terms, and with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin speaking out in favor of a weaker dollar, the trend seems set to accelerate.

Meanwhile, the US Postal Service continues to cater to the Amazons of the world by hiking postage rates (particularly to retail and the lowest tier of commercial rates, Commercial Base) and punish small business.

Likewise, cell carrier Verizon continues to throttle the speeds of users of its "unlimited" bandwidth service in spite of regulations and court rulings which forbid the practice.

The corrupt news media continues to taunt the public with stories that President Trump is about to be grilled by special prosecutor Robert Mueller in the "Russiagate" probe, while all along the true traitors are still employed by the FBI and Department of Justice.

It seems that the tree of liberty is ready to be to be quenched again.

At the Close, Tuesday, January 23, 2018:
Dow: 26,210.81, -3.79 (-0.01%)
NASDAQ: 7,460.29, +52.2568 (+0.7054%)
S&P 500: 2,839.13, +6.16 (+0.22%)
NYSE Composite: 13,474.11, +3.74 (+0.03%)

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Trump and Republicans Carry the Day (and Water) for Wall Street

Just to be certain that the big government shutdown over the weekend was a big puff of smoke that left nothing other than a fog and stench, here is a comment made by a presumably knowledgeable person on how big business perceives the machinations and meanderings of the politicians in Washington, DC.

So far Wall Street is the dog that didn't bark in the night time. Indeed, all of Big Business is.

I work coordinating business meetings, mostly for Fortune 500 companies; the companies that spend enough on meetings to bother hiring professionals to handle them. I'm usually pretty busy during these meetings, but I keep an ear open for interesting tidbits when I can, and sometimes I have nothing to do but listen to every word.

Usually these companies do discuss politics, and how they plan to position themselves vis-a-vis the political climate. Not lately, they haven't been. Almost nary a peep. And that includes pharmaceutical companies, which usually are about as attuned politically as anyone.

The companies I work for, and you've heard of them, are ignoring:

- Attempts to change ACA (they know the entire healthcare finance system is already broken anyway, and they have to buy their employees health insurance no matter what happens so they don't care);

- Efforts to raise the US minimum wage to $15/hr. (they're already planning to raise pay because they can't hire people at the prevailing suppressed wages);

- The tax bill (they already pay corporate taxes at an effective rate so much lower than the headline rates it doesn't matter, and their top executives already mask most of their income from the tax system so effectively no legislation conceivable in the current political climate matters at all to them);

- Immigration (they simply don't care because they have no liability or consequences no matter what);

- Carbon-based fuels (they're all getting out of them anyway because they're too expensive and inefficient; if Trump wants to subsidize them while they're doing it they're fine with that);

- Government regulations (they pay their way out of them anyway, one way or the other, and write off the costs);

- Global trade agreements (all the methods they use to evade existing duties, tariffs and sanctions supersede such things anyway); etc.

- War and rumors of war (None of the wars involve or will involve anything they have an interest in. They have deep enough contacts to know there isn't going to be a nuclear war, and no other wars on the table pose more risk than profit opportunities to corporate interests);

- Ethics investigations, "RussiaGate," Uranium 1, PizzaGate, FISA-gate, or any of the popcorn nonsense dominating the partisan media (who invented ad campaigns in the first place?).

Indeed, most of the issues we concern ourselves with don't even interest the executives of the biggest corporations in America.

This is reflected in Wall Street. Where it matters, they know they've got the system dicked. It simply doesn't matter to them one way or the other, which faction of the Oligarchy has the upper hand today or tomorrow.

Here's the link to the comment (from a site on which the Money Daily staff has been banned twice for speaking truth to power).

Thus, stocks gained on the eve of the shutdown and also on the end of the shutdown. The shutdown was bad theater engineered by obstructionist Democrats who have nothing left in their quiver of attack arrows outside of assiduously assaulting the sitting president.

...and, apparently, it wasn't even close to being enough, as their gambit blew up in their collectivist faces, and especially so on the visage of one NY Senator Chuck Schumer, a sell-out to his constituents and to his party.

At the Close, Monday, January 22, 2018:
Dow: 26,214.60, +142.88 (+0.55%)
NASDAQ: 7,408.03, +71.65 (+0.98%)
S&P 500: 2,832.97, +22.67 (+0.81%)
NYSE Composite: 13,470.37, +85.91 (+0.64%)

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Conceptually, Wall Street is Irrational and Stocks Are Poor (at best) Long-Term Investments

Follow the logic:

US federal government shuts down, stocks go up.

US Dollar collapse: stocks go higher (but inflation kills your purchasing power).

Nuclear war: stocks go ballistic (parabolic path, but the world is mostly ash).

TEOTWAWKI: Stocks take off towards infinity (no way to cash out, i.e, can't take it with you, though).

Ergo, bad news is good news, again.

And you thought investing was easy...

At the Close, Friday, January 19, 2018:
Dow: 26,071.72, +53.91 (+0.21%)
NASDAQ: 7,336.38, +40.33 (+0.55%)
S&P 500: 2,810.30, +12.27 (+0.44%)
NYSE Composite: 13,384.13, +68.55 (+0.51%)

For the Week:
Dow: +268.53 (+1.04%)
NASDAQ: +40.33 (+0.55%)
S&P 500: +24.06 (+0.86%)
NYSE Composite: +90.12 (+0.68%)

Friday, January 19, 2018

Does Wall Street Take a Government Shutdown Seriously?

Late Thursday afternoon, US stock indices took a decided turn to the downside as legislators in Washington DC failed to agree upon a plan to meep the US government operating past Friday night.

A favorite parlor game for the noise-makers in the nation's capitol, threatening to shut down the government because there's no budget or continuing resolution may have become passe´ to the general population, but Wall Street may take the issue a bit more seriously.

A partial shutdown of the federal government - because it doesn't really shut down critical operations or necessary functions - isn't taken seriously, though it could become a real issue, if it were, in fact, an absolute reality.

Considering the amounts of money the federal government handles on a regular basis, a complete shut-down would be devastating to the nation's economy. Imagine welfare, social security, and disability recipients not receiving their regular checks or direct deposits.

Imagine the nation's largest workforce going without paychecks for an extended period. Imagine the US Postal Service shut down, the entire military on leave, contractors idled, and an assortment of other regular activities closed, ceased, ended. The US treasury would cease operations, causing all US treasury bonds to become worthless.

Least of all, the bickering by members of congress would least be missed, since they are the supposedly responsible people.

An actual shutdown is a scary thought. Trying to scare the populace with a fake shutdown, caused solely by inter-party disagreements and politics, may be nothing now, but it could be seen as a conditioning effort for a true federal failure.

In such a case, the president would likely declare martial law, a necessary action to ensure civility, especially in cities. That's unlikely to happen at this juncture, but, the more the politicians play politics instead of enacting laws that do good for the American people, the closer the nations comes to a severe and lasting crisis.

Passing a two, three, or four-week resolution merely kicks the can down the road a little, making the government appear no better than that of a third-world banana republic.

If that's what's happening, all investors should take appropriate actions to safeguard not only their liquid assets invested in stocks and bonds, but also move to protect their friends and families.

The United States is headed for disaster if the congress and the news media continues on the destructive path of irresolution, political posturing, fear-mongering, and division.

Let's hope it doesn't begin to unravel further over the weekend.

At the Close, Thursday, January 18, 2018:
Dow: 26,017.81, -97.84 (-0.37%)
NASDAQ: 7,296.05, -2.23 (-0.03%)
S&P 500: 2,798.03, -4.53 (-0.16%)
NYSE Composite: 13,315.91, -36.48 (-0.27%)