Friday, September 28, 2018

Stocks Gain On Positive Economic Data; Elon Musk, Tesla Sued By SEC

The Dow Jones Industrial Average snapped a three-day losing streak and the S&P ended its own four-day skein as positive economic numbers boosted confidence, leading to spirited buying early in the session.

Euphoria faded as the day wore on, however. The Dow was up nearly 170 points close to 1:00 pm EDT, but sold off through the afternoon into the close, losing two-thirds of the day's gains. Similar patters were noted on the S&P and the NYSE Composite. The NASDAQ lost some value, though the afternoon swoon was not nearly as severe as on other indices.

The good news came prior to the opening bell. The third estimate of second quarter GDP held steady at 4.2% and durable goods orders for August soared by 4.5%. Upon further review, the durable goods number appeared much weaker than the headline, as much of the increase was supplied by non-defense aircraft orders, which were up 69% and defense capital goods order were up 44%.

Late in the day, word circulated that Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla Motors (TSLA) was being sued for fraud by the SEC.

The SEC alleged that Musk made "false and misleading statements" when he casually stated and tweeted that he could take the company private at $420 a share and also alleged that Musk's tweets caused market chaos, harming investors.

If the SEC's claims hold water, Musk could be stripped of his position and barred from ever running a publicly-traded company. He would also face stiff fines.

The news came too late in the day to affect trading on Thursday, though the stock was down between 10 and 13 percent in pre-market trading Friday morning.

Musk has been a controversial leader of the company he founded, but seems to be beset by psychological demons and may be bi-polar. In addition to his frequent affronts to sensibility, the company has never turned a profit and is deeply in debt. Additionally, Tesla autos have been known to burst into flames upon impact and its auto-pilot feature has been cited by some as a cause for lack of control, leading to a high rate of accidents.

Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
9/4/18 25,952.48 -12.34 -12.34
9/5/18 25,974.99 +22.51 +10.17
9/6/18 25,995.87 +20.88 +31.05
9/7/18 25,916.54 -79.33 -48.28
9/10/18 25,857.07 -59.47 -107.75
9/11/18 25,971.06 +113.99 +6.24
9/12/18 25,998.92 +27.86 +34.10
9/13/18 26,145.99 +147.07 +181.17
9/14/18 26,154.67 +8.68 +189.85
9/17/18 26,062.12 -92.55 +97.30
9/18/18 26,246.96 +184.84 +282.14
9/19/18 26,405.76 +158.80 +440.94
9/20/18 26,656.98 +251.22 +692.16
9/21/18 26,743.50 +86.52 +778.68
9/24/18 26,562.05 -181.45 +597.23
9/25/18 26,492.21 -69.84 +527.39
9/26/18 26,385.28 -106.93 +420.46
9/27/18 26,439.93 +54.65 +475.11

At the Close, Thursday, September 27, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,439.93, +54.65 (+0.21%)
NASDAQ: 8,041.97, +51.60 (+0.65%)
S&P 500: 2,914.00, +8.03 (+0.28%)
NYSE Composite: 13,105.72, +3.77 (+0.03%)

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Fed Raises Rates, Stocks Tank, Regular People Get Squeezed

Sometimes, there's just too much of a good thing.

Like booze, or sex, or food, or federal funds interest rate increases.

Yes, one of those is different from the others, but, if you're a big brain at the Federal Reserve, maybe not. People who live for an love money might have the same kind of reactions ordinary people have to normal stimuli from money-induced pleasure.

Keeping interest rates at near zero for such a long time, from 2008 to 2015, had to be hard on people at the Fed. There was a lot of stress during that time, and the FOMC governors and presidents of the regional banking hubs had to make up for their lack of money pleasure (ZIRP) by printing oodles of dollars out of thin air (QE). It was an artificial high, a necessary evil to some, and everybody knew it would have to come to an end.

Nothing brings a smile to the face of a banker, central or otherwise, than interest rate increases. It means more money in their silk-lined pockets.

Ordinary humans may not be able to comprehend the exhilaration of a 0.25% increase in the federal funds rate, but central bankers do. They revel in it. Imagine, with one simple policy announcement, making an extra $2.5 billion per year. That's real excitement. And that's just the interest on a trillion dollars. The Fed is handling one heck of a lot more than just a didly trillion. By golly, that's just pocket change.

Rest assured, there are a lot of bemused smiles at the Fed this afternoon. Probably some good old back-slapping, toasting with fine wine, and smoking of expensive cigars, such is the wont of the central banking elite. They've made themselves a mighty handy profit today, and you're paying for it, on your credit cards, mortgages, personal loans, car loans and leases and just about every other negotiable debt instrument you can think of. Business is paying the piper as well. In spades.

So, does the market reaction to the Fed's scheme surprise anybody? Nope. Higher interest rates are always bad for consumers, especially those carrying debt, which is just about everybody these days.

The major indices were cruising along with decent gains until the Fed's announcement at 2:00 pm EDT. After a pause and a slight rise, stocks began to slip. From it's intra-day peak at 2:15 pm, the Dow shed 231 points, the NASDAQ lost 78 points. The move was significant. The Dow has posted losses three days in a row. Correlation, in this case, seems to imply causation.

Wall Street investors aren't immune to the interest rate malaise. They know where their bread is buttered and some surely shifted some dough out of stocks and into bonds, or cash, or art, or expensive cars.

The Fed's insistence on raising rates every quarter has gotten to be a pretty definable pattern by now, but some people are beginning to question when it's all going to end and also, how it's going to end.

Will the stock market and all those juicy profits go down in flames? Hard to say, but a 3.10% yield on a ten-year treasury note ($31,000 a year risk free on a $1,000,000 investment) isn't hard to take, and, in the world of rich people with millions of dollars, yen, or euros to throw around, many will take it.

The rich just got a little bit richer. The poor didn't get any poorer, but the people in the middle (debtors) did.

Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
9/4/18 25,952.48 -12.34 -12.34
9/5/18 25,974.99 +22.51 +10.17
9/6/18 25,995.87 +20.88 +31.05
9/7/18 25,916.54 -79.33 -48.28
9/10/18 25,857.07 -59.47 -107.75
9/11/18 25,971.06 +113.99 +6.24
9/12/18 25,998.92 +27.86 +34.10
9/13/18 26,145.99 +147.07 +181.17
9/14/18 26,154.67 +8.68 +189.85
9/17/18 26,062.12 -92.55 +97.30
9/18/18 26,246.96 +184.84 +282.14
9/19/18 26,405.76 +158.80 +440.94
9/20/18 26,656.98 +251.22 +692.16
9/21/18 26,743.50 +86.52 +778.68
9/24/18 26,562.05 -181.45 +597.23
9/25/18 26,492.21 -69.84 +527.39
9/26/18 26,385.28 -106.93 +420.46

At the Close, Wednesday, September 26, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,385.28, -106.93 (-0.40%)
NASDAQ: 7,990.37, -17.10 (-0.21%)
S&P 500: 2,905.97, -9.59 (-0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 13,102.68, -57.92 (-0.44%)

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Dow Lower Again As Investors Ponder Fed Wisdom

Well, if you're content with having a bunch of highly-paid academics controlling your finances, you're in luck. The Federal Reserve has been hard at work for over 100 years to guarantee that they get a cut of everybody's money, mostly because they create it themselves, out of thin air, with no backing with tangible assets, like gold, or silver, or anything like that.

As it says on their debt instruments, full faith and credit.

Therein lies the problem. Most people, if they understood how the Federal Reserve operates - mostly in secret, and outside the boundaries of government (it is a private banking system, after all. Shhh!) - would pine for foregone days when gold and silver were the coin of the realm, so to speak, when people and businesses weren't amortized and taxed to the bare bones of their existence.

Full faith is something the Fed takes for granted, assuming that 99% of the public has no idea how money works. Credit is their life blood. Every dollar created by the Fed is a debt, which is why the so called "national debt" can never be repaid. If it was, there would be no money. Everybody would be broke.

Is that what is occupying the minds of the great investors and traders of Wall Street and their bankers, brokers, cronies and insiders? Probably not. They're more interested in getting and keeping as much of the Federal Reserve money they can, investing it in more stocks, bonds, debentures, options, futures and maybe along the way, some real assets like real estate, gold, silver, art, vehicles, machinery.

Almost nobody really cares about how the Fed or other central banks operate. It's a fact. Most people are caught up in the matrix of jobs, bills, rents, taxes, and debt. They don't have time to study the intricate workings of central banks, which, of course, is how the central bankers wish. The less scrutiny on them, the more they and their member banks (all the big ones) make, unaudited and without interference.

What the traders on the exchanges today were contemplating was whether or not the Fed will actually raise the federal funds rate (the rate banks charge each other for overnight loans) to 2.00-2.25% tomorrow at 2:00 pm EDT when the FOMC policy rate decision is announced.

The simple answer is that they almost certainly will. The market has priced this in. At the least, the 10-year treasury note has gotten the memo. It's holding pretty steady at 3.10% yield, anticipating the Fed's very well-telegraphed interest rate ploy.

To many of the top traders and investors, the Fed's bold actions, in the face of a somewhat gradual economic improvement, are already too much and too soon. Some analysts are suggesting that with the 10-year note over three percent, big money will forego the risks inherent in the stock market and shift more money into bonds. The 10-year is a benchmark. Better returns can be made in corporate debt offerings, junk bonds, shorter term offerings, or munis, all of which carry more risk, but not significantly so.

Thus, the market will tell everybody, including the wizened old men and women at the Fed, what the federal funds rate should be by voting with their feet. If stocks continue to rise, it gives the Fed a free pass to increase rates another 25 basis points in December. If the market declines, the Fed will be on its own.

The Fed has raised rates at a very steady pace since December 2016, adding 0.25% every quarter, in March, June, September, and December. They may be nearing a point at which they need to take a break.

The questions are whether or not they will see it, understand it, and how they will act upon it.

Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
9/4/18 25,952.48 -12.34 -12.34
9/5/18 25,974.99 +22.51 +10.17
9/6/18 25,995.87 +20.88 +31.05
9/7/18 25,916.54 -79.33 -48.28
9/10/18 25,857.07 -59.47 -107.75
9/11/18 25,971.06 +113.99 +6.24
9/12/18 25,998.92 +27.86 +34.10
9/13/18 26,145.99 +147.07 +181.17
9/14/18 26,154.67 +8.68 +189.85
9/17/18 26,062.12 -92.55 +97.30
9/18/18 26,246.96 +184.84 +282.14
9/19/18 26,405.76 +158.80 +440.94
9/20/18 26,656.98 +251.22 +692.16
9/21/18 26,743.50 +86.52 +778.68
9/24/18 26,562.05 -181.45 +597.23
9/25/18 26,492.21 -69.84 +527.39

At the Close, Tuesday, September 25, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,492.21, -69.84 (-0.26%)
NASDAQ: 8,007.47, +14.22 (+0.18%)
S&P 500: 2,915.56, -3.81 (-0.13%)
NYSE Composite: 13,161.64, -0.42 (0.00%)

Dow Losses Tied To Nothing Other Than Profit-Taking

There's almost no chance - as Yahoo! News blared in a headline late Monday afternoon - that Brett Kavenaugh's Supreme Court nomination had anything to do with the 181-point drop on the Dow.

The continuing false narrative foisted by the financial media is about as fake as fake news can get. Every day, there has to be a reason for stocks rising or falling, there just has to be. Otherwise, how would the 24-hour squawking about stocks, finance, and your money justify its existence.

Sure enough, there are days that movements in stocks is correlated to some economic event, data drop, or newsworthy story, but most of the time trading actions are the result of some analysis, some emotion, and largely, some advance planning. Big firms don't just jump in and out of positions on the news of the day, their positions, and the allocation of their capital, is guided by profit and loss, gauging risk and reward, greed and fear.

There are times in which herd mentality takes over and swings sectors or even entire markets one way or the other, but, by and large, such huge swings are already programmed by the big trading firms, which almost never leave their positions vulnerable to unforeseen events. They are protected by covered calls or puts or any of a variety of risk-reducing strategies. Nobody with any experience trading stocks is rushing to their terminals to buy or sell on whatever nonsense is being cooked up by the crooks running the federal government in Washington, DC, because what happens on Capitol Hill usually has little to nothing to do with real capital being flung far and wide from Wall Street.

Firm in the knowledge that big positions were not being liquidated by major traders, what did cause the dip on the Dow Monday?

Chalk it up to profit-taking on short-term positions. Of the 30 Dow stocks, only seven were winners on the day, leaving 23 in the loss column. Two of the winner - ExxonMobil and Chevron - were tied almost directly to oil prices, which were up not just on the day, but for the past few weeks, as WTI crude hit a four-year high above $72/barrel on Monday. Three were chip or computer-related, as Apple, Microsoft and Intel were up, and the other two, Disney and United Health, were based on some perceived valuation play.

The rest of the stocks were lower, and it's probably a good idea to discount it as nothing more than random noise. The Dow just reached all-time highs this past Thursday and was even higher on Friday, so traders had plenty of time over the weekend to figure their positions, their profits, and how to take them. Since the move was less than one percent there's reason to believe that many traders - who, via groupthink, share many of the same strategies, knowledge, and objectives - saw an opportunity to book profits and move on to the next big thing, whatever that might be.

And, when they discover the next profitable trade, it's a safe bet that you won't be privy to it, but that many of the bigger traders on the street will know. It will have nothing to do with the news, politics, the soybean crop report, or the color of Lady Gaga's hair. You can bet on that.

Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
9/4/18 25,952.48 -12.34 -12.34
9/5/18 25,974.99 +22.51 +10.17
9/6/18 25,995.87 +20.88 +31.05
9/7/18 25,916.54 -79.33 -48.28
9/10/18 25,857.07 -59.47 -107.75
9/11/18 25,971.06 +113.99 +6.24
9/12/18 25,998.92 +27.86 +34.10
9/13/18 26,145.99 +147.07 +181.17
9/14/18 26,154.67 +8.68 +189.85
9/17/18 26,062.12 -92.55 +97.30
9/18/18 26,246.96 +184.84 +282.14
9/19/18 26,405.76 +158.80 +440.94
9/20/18 26,656.98 +251.22 +692.16
9/21/18 26,743.50 +86.52 +778.68
9/24/18 26,562.05 -181.45 +597.23

At the Close, Monday, September 24, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,562.05, -181.45 (-0.68%)
NASDAQ: 7,993.25, +6.29 (+0.08%)
S&P 500: 2,919.37, -10.30 (-0.35%)
NYSE Composite: 13,162.05, -74.39 (-0.56%)

Monday, September 24, 2018

Weekend Wrap: Dow, S&P At Record Levels, Tech Shunned, Fed To Raise Rates

This was a banner week for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, ramping nearly 590 points - the most since late March - and eclipsing the old record high close from January 26 (26,616.71) and leaving it in the dust.

While the Dow and S&P set records, tech stocks didn't fare as well, closing down for the week as investors continued to shed shares of some of the more widely-held US companies, like Facebook (FB), Netflix (NFLX), Alphabet, nee Google (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), and Apple (AAPL).

The biggest losers were Amazon (-55.18, -2.80%) and Apple (-6.18, -2.76%) as traders recorded record volume on the AA's of the so-called FAANGs.

Bond yields spiked, with the 10-year note rising beyond the Maginot line of 3.00%, ending the week with a yield of 3.07%.

Precious metals continued to remain in the doldrums, with gold and silver still hovering just above three-year lows.

The week ahead should provide some volatility as the Fed's FOMC policy meeting convenes Tuesday and Wednesday, with a policy announcement set for Wednesday afternoon which is anticipated to raise the federal funds rate for the seventh consecutive quarter, to 2.00-2.25%.

Playing a dangerous game of chicken with the market, the Fed continues its attempt to pour cold water on the emerging strong economy and the even-stronger US dollar, which has smashed currencies in countries from Turkey to Argentina into financial chaos.

The Fed insists upon rate increases to slow the economy, though it's unclear that the US economy is expanding at anything approaching red-hot status. While second quarter GDP came in higher than expectations, at 4.2 percent annualized, the three prior readings, from the third and fourth quarters of 2017 and the 2018 first quarter were still cool, at 2.8%, 2.3%, and 2.2%, respectively.

GDP in the second quarter was the highest since the third quarter of 2014. More than a few analysts and economists have expressed fears of a second half downturn in GDP growth. Should their forecasts come to fruition it would be seen as a strike against the aggressive Fed rate-hiking and an appeal for them to stop before they crush the nascent American expansion.

After the Fed's policy announcement this week, the third estimate of GDP growth will be revealed on Thursday, September 27.

Dow Jones Industrial Average September Scorecard:

Date Close Gain/Loss Cum. G/L
9/4/18 25,952.48 -12.34 -12.34
9/5/18 25,974.99 +22.51 +10.17
9/6/18 25,995.87 +20.88 +31.05
9/7/18 25,916.54 -79.33 -48.28
9/10/18 25,857.07 -59.47 -107.75
9/11/18 25,971.06 +113.99 +6.24
9/12/18 25,998.92 +27.86 +34.10
9/13/18 26,145.99 +147.07 +181.17
9/14/18 26,154.67 +8.68 +189.85
9/17/18 26,062.12 -92.55 +97.30
9/18/18 26,246.96 +184.84 +282.14
9/19/18 26,405.76 +158.80 +440.94
9/20/18 26,656.98 +251.22 +692.16
9/21/18 26,743.50 +86.52 +778.68

At the Close, Friday, September 21, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 26,743.50, +86.52 (+0.32%)
NASDAQ: 7,986.96, -41.28 (-0.51%)
S&P 500: 2,929.67, -1.08 (-0.04%)
NYSE Composite: 13,236.44, +11.33 (+0.09%)

For the Week:
Dow: +588.83 (+2.25%)
NASDAQ: -23.09 (-0.29%)
S&P 500: +24.69 (+0.85%)
NYSE Composite: +185.92 (+1.42%)