Sunday, June 14, 2020

Markets Skid, Ending Three-Week Win Streak As Rally Falters; Gold, Silver Continue Abusing Futures Pricing; Treasuries Rally

Stocks broke off a streak of three straight winning weeks courtesy of a trend-reversing, cascading selloff Thursday that erased all or most of June's gains.

The downdraft followed two straight days of minor losses and may have put a punctuation mark on the market's 11-week rally. The NASDAQ, which made a fresh all-time closing high on Monday (9,924.75) and crested over 10,000 on Wednesday, took a 517-point collapse on Wednesday. Like the Dow, which lost over 1800 points, the loss was the fourth-highest one-day point decline in market history. For both indices, the three higher point losses all occurred this past March.

Friday was snapback day, though the gains were paltry compared to the prior day's losses. Stocks gained back less than a third of what was surrendered on Thursday.

The late-week action prompted market observers to question the solidity of the recent rally, which, in V-shaped manner, took the markets straight off their March lows and out of bear market territory. Stocks had gained even as entire states were in lockdowns and the COVID-19 virus raged across America. Stocks continued to rise in the face of nationwide protests against police violence in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police. Many of the protests turned violent, as disruptive elements rioted and looted stores.

Fueled by emergency lending by the Fed, stocks seemed to be out of touch with mainstream economics, a condition not unusual for Wall Street types. Thursday's turnabout was broadly-based and unsparing of any sector though banking and tech stocks were leaders to the downside.

Coincidentally, protesting fell off as well, probably due to uprising fatigue. After two weeks of marching around in hot weather, the movement became somewhat pointless and many lost interest in reform toward better policing, though success was claimed in some areas, such as Minneapolis, where the city council decided to defund and disband the police, and New York, where measures were take by legislators to ratchet down the heavy-handed tactics of its force.

In Louisville, Kentucky, the city council voted to ban no-knock warrants. The resolution was passed in reaction to the death of Breonna Taylor, who was killed in a March no-knock raid at the wrong address.

One city in which protests have not tailed off is Atlanta, the scene of widespread rioting and looting early on, where chief of police, Erika Shields, has resigned on Sunday after officers fired upon and killed 27-year-old Rayshard Brooks Friday night.

And, in Seattle, the madness reached a climax on Monday as officials decided not to defend a police precinct, resulting in protesters, led by Black Lives Matter (BLM) taking over a six-block urban area and renaming it the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ).

All of this is a backdrop to pent-up emotions and outrage that were magnified during the coronavirus lockdowns. Some people, took issue with Wall Street's rapid rally, citing it as an affront to societal mores and economic inequality. By the looks of where markets were heading on Thursday, the impact of the lockdowns and protests finally have reached lower Manhattan.

Treasuries staged a solid rally at the long end of the curve through Thursday, with the 10-year note yield falling from 0.91% to 0.66% and from 1.69% to 1.41% on the 30-year. On Friday, bond prices fell, with the 10-year closing out at 0.71%; the 30-year bond finished at 1.45%.

Precious metals rose early in the week, but were tamped down as the week drew to a close. Gold reached $1742.15 before ending the week still elevated at $1733.50. Spot silver was as high as $17.87 an ounce, closing at $17.62 on Friday. Spot and futures prices continue to trend toward irrelevance as premium prices for physical metal and shortages continue into a third month. Many dealers show popular items out of stock or with significant delivery delays, a condition that has persisted for retailers since the onset of the coronavirus.

eBay continues to light the way for purveyors and buyers alike, with calculable prices (at premiums over spot) and rapid, reliable deliveries. Here are the most recent prices on select items from ebay sellers (prices include shipping):

Item: Low / High / Average / Median
1 oz silver coin: 25.50 / 36.20 / 31.00 / 29.90
1 oz silver bar: 19.95 / 35.20 / 29.32 / 29.88
1 oz gold coin: 1,837.00 / 1,900.52 / 1,857.86 / 1,855.40
1 oz gold bar: 1,806.00 / 1,880.00 / 1,840.52 / 1,832.63

As far as stocks are concerned, after the FOMC meeting concluded Wednesday and the Fed committed to keep the federal funds rate at or near the zero-bound at least until the end of 2022, investors got a little jittery over their engineered V-shaped rally, the overall stability of the global economy, and valuations heading into the end of the second quarter and some supposedly horrifying earnings figures coming the second week of July.

The coming week may be epochal or apocalyptic as Friday offers a quad witching day as stock index futures, stock index options, stock options, and single stock futures expire simultaneously. There should be some volatility showing up at the convergence of day-trading, options players and real-time economics all roll together.

While Thursday's massive decline in stocks sent shock waves through the markets, Friday's returns were uninspired and had the look of a an exhausted rally on its final legs. Trading was sluggish at best and flatlined around 2:00 pm ET only to be saved by late-day short covering and the usual hijinks by backroom operators (NY Fed).

If stocks fail to close higher next week - as this week marked the end of a three-week uptrend - damage could become more or less permanent. While many placed hope in the Fed's power to purchase as many types and varieties of bonds that confidence was shattered on Thursday and should lead the way back to some fundamental rethinking of market dynamics.

Nothing goes up or down in a straight line, but this week should provide some clues as to the ultimate short-and-long term market direction.

At the Close, Friday, June 12, 2020:
Dow: 25,605.54, +477.37 (+1.90%)
NASDAQ: 9,588.81, +96.08 (+1.01%)
S&P 500: 3,041.31, +39.21 (+1.31%)
NYSE: 11,867.17, +208.00 (+1.78%)


For the Week:
Dow: -1505.44 (-5.55%)
NASDAQ: -225.27 (-2.30%)
S&P 500: -152.62 (-4.78%)
NYSE: -774.27 (-6.12%)

Friday, June 12, 2020

So Much for That V-Shaped Recovery as Dow Sheds 1861 Points, NASDAQ Drops 527

That rally - the one that started on right away on March 24 with a 2100-point gain, the day after the Dow bottomed out at 18,591.93 - is over. Smart traders made money. Anybody who was fretting about their retirement account and didn't exit, well, there's still time. The market giveth and taketh away. In this case, thanks to emergency measures by the Fed, the market gave almost everybody who didn't get out a gold opportunity to make for the hills.

If you're still in, you're either a day-trading maniac or just plain stuck on stupid. There are other asset classes. There's always cash. This second leg down is likely to be much more severe than the first because it will take months instead of days to wipe out trillions in invest dollars. Rest assured, at the end of the second leg, everybody's a loser.

Putting it all into perspective, after the major indices fell into bear market territory - defined as down more than 20% - the duration of the bear market was record for brevity: five weeks. Not that those five weeks in the doldrums will go down in the history books as a traditional bear market; they'll likely be remembered as the start of the Greatest Depression, spawn of the coronavirus, oil shock, and global plebeian protests because the stock market decline began again in earnest on Thursday, June 11.

The loss on the Dow was nearly seven percent, ranking it just outside the Top 20 in percentage terms, but number four in regards to points lost. It ranks behind three other losses, all from this year, which is about all one needs to know about stocks in the year 2020. The NASDAQ loss of 527.62 was also the fourth-highest, point-wise. Similarly, the three greatest point losses in NASDAQ history also occurred just this past March.

No, there will not be any v-shaped recovery as the market charts suggested. That was all a fantasy, spun out of whole cloth from the Federal Reserve. After all, how could stocks rally when unemployment was somewher in the neighborhood of 15%, people around the world were dying from a pandemic, whole nations and most states in the US were shut down for anywhere from a month to ten weeks, corporate earnings were in the toilet and second quarter results were still a month down the road?

The fairy tale rally never made any sense and never will except in regards to some very rich people making even more money without doing a damn thing. Rest assured, most of them were selling today or have either significantly trimmed their positions or added hedges, by which they'll enrich themselves even further on another downdraft.

There is likely to be a snapback on Friday. No telling which way it will eventually eventually turn, but recent market action offers a strong indication that a 1200-point swing to the upside on the Dow might be key to understanding the psychology of crazy. Anything less than that would leave the Dow just below its 200-day moving average.

Be mindful that despite the Dow's 9,000-point gain (yes, that's right, 9,000 points!) over the past 12 weeks, the current chart is one of a primary BULL market according to Dow Theory. The Industrials exceeded the December 2018 lows to the downside, and then erupted to the upside, cancelling out the bear reversal. Dow Transports confirmed the move, doing the same.

Nobody is betting on conformity with current market conditions. The Fed's emergency rescue facilities have only added to the overall distortion from QE, ZIRP, and other experiments in currency counterfeiting. Hanging one's hat on theories dating back to the early 20th century might engender more anguish than reward.

Some will call Thursday's pullback "healthy", but those are probably the perma-bulls in the room. Anybody who can say with a straight face that the US or global economy is healthy ought to be selling used cars rather than stocks.

WTI crude fell more than $3 on the day, from a range around $39 to $36. Gold and silver were unceremoniously smashed lower on futures markets, but, as has been a repeating theme, will likely bounce back quickly as premiums and shortages persist.

The long end of the treasury complex continued to rally, dropping yield in the 10-year note and 30-year bond from 0.91% and 1.68% last Friday to 0.66% and 1.41%, respectively.

Stay liquid.

At the Close, Thursday, June 11, 2020:
Dow: 25,128.17, -1,861.82 (-6.90%)
NASDAQ: 9,492.73, -527.62 (-5.27%)
S&P 500: 3,002.10, -188.04 (-5.89%)
NYSE: 11,659.17, -790.05 (-6.35%)

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Fed To Keep Rates At ZERO Through 2022; Are Gold and Silver Investors Batty?; Implications of Global Madness

If Forex is in your wheelhouse, you've no doubt noticed the recent decline in the US dollar against other major currencies. The Dollar Index has been pretty shaky as of late, but the current trend in the aftermath of the worst of the coronavirus pandemic is lower, with no bottom in sight.

After sinking to 94.89 on the 3rd of March, the dollar leapt back to an interim high of 102.82 on March 20th. Wednesday's quote was 95.96, a decline of nearly seven precent, most of that happening within the last three weeks.

That's not surprising, given that American cities have been beset upon by hordes of protesters, complete with rioters, looters, cop killings, tear gassings, rubber bullet maimings, autonomous zones (Seattle's Capitol Hill is one, recently claimed and occupied by protesters as police vacated the 3rd Precinct) and general lawlessness, making dollar holdings somewhat of a risky bet in the near term and, as dollar dominance recedes, maybe for much longer.

At the conclusion of the Fed's Tuesday and Wednesday's FOMC policy meeting, Chairman Jerome Powell made a definitive statement on interest rates, saying that the overnight federal funds rate would remain at the zero-bound at least until 2022. That kind of central bank sentiment doesn't exactly inspire confidence in the world's reserve currency. It indicates nothing less than a failure of financial system underpinning, a condition that first appeared in 2007, was not adequately addressed and has now become a systemic crisis without hope of positive resolution.

While the Fed still has the monetary muscle to backstop financial assets it does so with counterfeit, a fictional fiat currency without backing that eventually will be worthless. History has shown this to always be the case. Fiat currencies die and a new financial system is erected. Normally, the new system is backed by gold or silver, or a combination of the two. This time is no different than any other. The Federal Reserve and other central banks can continue their charade for only so long. Eventually, income disparity results in runaway inflation and widespread poverty, prompting clamor from the masses, which we are witnessing on a global scale today as an epochal societal revolution.

Such incalculable convulsions encourage escape from the clutches of unfair finances promulgated by central banks. People seek refuge from currencies that are losing value rapidly. Housing, health care, and eventually, food become unaffordable to the vast swath of middle and lower classes. Alternatives are sought. Gold and silver are the most readily available to the public. Silver becomes particularly of interest due to its lower price points. The availability of metallic money becomes a point of contention as people with limited means crowd into the space, which is exactly what's happened since the onset of the coronavirus.

A 10 troy ounce gold bar at Apmex.com is offered for $18,255.90. At Scottsdale Mint, the popular one ounce silver bar dubbed "The One" starts at $25.05 and goes down in price to $23.42 depending on quantity and method of payment. Of course, given that one would be willing to pay a price that carries a premium of seven dollars over spot, one would be out of luck, as "The One" is currently out of stock.

These are just a few examples of what happens when a confluence of events (pandemic, endless fiat currency creation, summer-long protests, high unemployment, rampant inflation) strikes the minds of people with money and assets. They either go with the flow and stay in stocks or look to gold and/or silver for some safety. With bonds yielding little to nothing - sometimes less than that via negative rates - and default risk rising (hello, Argentina!), precious metals offer a reasonable alternative.

Futures and spot prices for the precious metals might as well be cast upon stones for what they fail to deliver in terms of price discovery. Being holdovers from the failing fiat regime, they are being left behind as physical holdings dominate the marketplace. Prices are exploding on eBay and at dealers, as shown in the examples above. Money Daily tracks prices on eBay for one ounce gold and silver coins and bars weekly in it's Weekend Wrap every Sunday.

Other ways to deploy currency are in art, collectibles (comic book prices are through the roof), vintage automobiles, commodity futures, real estate, ad other asset classes, but none of those share the characteristics of precious metals as real money, except possibly cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

Wall Street, the Federal Reserve, and the federal government are hanging onto their prized positions of monetary and political authority by their teeth. It's only a matter of time before all of it fails. The nationwide protests are proof that the federal government is losing control of the country in manifest ways. Unrelenting gains in precious metal prices - and the attendant, repeated attempts to contain those gains in the futures markets - is evidence of the Fed's desperation, just as Wall Street's recent snapback rally is a mirage based on easily available fiat currency and nothing else.

It's all tumbling down and there's nothing that can stop it. The demise of the dollar has been an ongoing orgy of dislocation for decades. Trillions of dollars added to the Fed's balance sheet, euros at the ECB, yen at the Bank of Japan, yuan at at PBOC are mere stop-gap measures which do not address the underlying solvency issues. If the stock market crash in March wasn't enough to scare people out of stocks and fiat, the coming wave will surely devastate those who failed to heed the warning. Via the Fed's emergency measures, Wall Street has given investors a golden opportunity to diversify out of stocks. Those who fail to take the opportunity will suffer a heavy economic blow.

At the Close, Wednesday, June 10, 2020:
Dow: 26,989.99, -282.31 (-1.04%)
NASDAQ: 10,020.35, +66.59 (+0.67%)
S&P 500: 3,190.14, -17.04 (-0.53%)
NYSE: 12,449.22, -170.30 (-1.35%)

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

Not Much of an Ouchie for Stocks in Advance of FOMC Party

300 points on the Dow Industrials really isn't a big deal these days. The Fed can make that up in minutes if they so desire. The level of fakery and ridiculous valuations in US equity markets is off the charts. It's like the world is knocking down the downs of these corporations to own a minute fraction of their business, a model, in most cases, that benefits the executives first and shareholders later, if at all.

Take Boeing for instance. Who in their right mind wants to own any of that. A legacy of planes that fallout of the sky and crash, huge bonuses paid to executives asleep at the wheel, mammoth pension obligations that the company will never be able to satisfy are just a few of the salient features of this so-called Blue Chip.

Maybe that moniker should be revisited and the definition revised. Your money will be chipped away until you've lost half or more, and you'll be blue. That would pretty much describe many of the "glamor" stocks touted by the willfully ignorant brokers and boiler room grifters who peddle corporate trash.

Not to say that all corporations are evil or that all investments are bad. Bears are solidly in the minority when it comes to investing, picking stocks, passive indexing, riding momentum or whatever else passes the litmus test at the local retirement home. There are plenty of good investments and good times to make them. Right now, after seeing the fed-pumped run-up over the past 10 weeks, just doesn't feel like one of those times.

The next chapter will be written Wednesday afternoon when all eyes and ears turn to Jay Powell and the FOMC. Being that he's been able to ward off a full-blown depression - by Wall Street standards at least - one wonders if he sees the protesters in the streets day after day, night after night, and wonders whether he is part of the problem.

Probably not. Why worry his little head over something so trivial as two straight weeks of nationwide protests when there's money (currency) to be made, new worlds to conquer and all that noise?

Treasuries yields on the long end of the curve have been decidedly lower over the first two days of the week, the 30-year falling from 1.68% to 1.59% and the 10-year note dropping to 0.81% from Friday's close at 0.91%. With the short end stable, the curve is beginning to flatten out again, something the Fed can hardly avoid happening.

The chit-chat this week has been over something called "yield curve control (YCC)," by the Fed, a real effort that requires skill and diligence to keep bond yields where the central bank wants them. The policy has been in place in Japan for the past four years, with limited success, though the argument from commercial lenders might offer a different theme because they're largely crowded out of the market and have difficulty making profits.

While something of this nature might work all right in a homogenous zombie economy such as is Japan's, and the Fed seems willing to try just about anything to distort markets and conceal price discovery. An experimental yield curve control mechanism should be right up their alley and no doubt they're considering it. Whether the Fed makes their desire to be even more injurious and paralyzing to capital markets publicly known might be a question not raised in polite company. After all, with a word record stock bubble on their hands and the world's reserve currency to babysit, it's unlikely that the Fed would make all their plans public. Some things are better kept quiet, at least until the next crisis.

Argentina watch: It's been a couple of weeks since Argentina actually defaulted on some bonds, missing a $500 million interest payment last month amid a circus of negotiations and proposals that seem to be largely aimed at preventing the triggering of credit default swaps (CDS) and the messy counter-party finger-pointing that is associated with such events. Nobody likes losing money, but, as seems to be the case with the Argentines, there isn't much one can do when there's no good collateral or currency the bond holders are willing to accept, though both sides are trying.

Judging by reportage of the ongoing negotiations it appears that a deal is not about to be struck. Both creditors and the debtor, Argentina's government, seem reluctant to go too far out into the ether. When phrases like "restructuring talks are sparking hopes and tension", "amended proposal", "for a second time sweeten an original offer", "moving June 12 deadline", and "limited further upside" there should be cause for concern, especially when nearly every article on the subject of Argentina's debt "restructuring" ends on a positive note along the lines of "there will be an agreement sooner or later - the difference between the parties is just too small..." one can sense the tinge on panic.

There's supposed to be a final proposal presented either Thursday or Friday, which means probably Friday night some government clerk will slip a note under the hotel door of one of the three major creditors - BlackRock, Fidelity and Ashmore - with an outline of the proposed deal, giving them time to mull it over the weekend.

By Sunday night the world will either hear "we're close to a deal," or "talks will continue Monday" all along both sides well aware that any kind of deal over $65 billion in bonds at this juncture is more sizzle than steak. They're trying to kick the can further down the road, but they're getting dangerously close to the cliff at the end of it.

Finally, US government debt is about to exceed $26 trillion dollars. Trying to get a handle on that kind of number is difficult, but let's start with this: $26,000,000,000,000. Or, how about the burden to every American citizen of $78,600? Kind of makes that credit card debt seem insignificant, doesn't it?

With a run rate of over a million dollars per minute, US national debt, currently $25.92 trillion, increased by nearly $800 billion between April and May and continues at a pace of somewhere between $15 and $20 billion a week. It's possible that the debt will hit $26 trillion by the end of the month, depending on how it's calculated, and we may be able to celebrate the event with fireworks if it happens on or around July 4. If that's the case, remember to social distance and wear a mask.

At the Close, Tuesday, June 9, 2020:
Dow: 27,272.30, -300.14 (-1.09%)
NASDAQ: 9,953.75, +29.01 (+0.29%)
S&P 500: 3,207.18, -25.21 (-0.78%)
NYSE: 12,619.52, -217.08 (-1.69%)

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

NASDAQ Makes New All-Time High As Protests, Coronavirus Continue, FOMC Meets

It's official.

We live in Bizarro-world.

Protests stemming from the police killing of George Floyd continue to proliferate across the United States and around the world at the same time the COVID-19 coronavirus spreads against government efforts to control it. At the same time, stocks continue to erase the losses from the initial virus shock that occurred in March when stocks dove into bear market territory.

As for the shortest bear market in world history - five weeks - it's exceptionally amusing to see the money magicians at the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world create trillions of dollars (and yen, and euros, and pounds, and yuan) out of thin air and see that money flow almost directly into stocks, as if there were no other asset class in the world. Obviously, there are other assets classes, but the stock market is the one which delivers the most bang for the buck, so much so that the NASDAQ made a new all-time high on Monday.

That's just not normal. Nothing about the Fed-induced stock rampage is normal. To make a point, one could attest to it being mostly fake. It's fake money, counterfeited by the Federal Reserve, funneled to primary dealers to ram into stocks whose earnings have been cratering for months, some for years.

Measured in earnings growth or other metrics, stocks have never been more expensive, making a case for the "greater fool" theory where one buys shares in an overvalued company at an inflated price based on the idea that somebody dumber than you will buy it at an even higher price. It's working. There are fools a'plenty making a mockery of fundamentals and due diligence cashing in at incredible rates of return.

Take for instance the NASDAQ, which closed at 6,904.59 on March 16, the bottom of the COVID-19 shock treatment. Monday's record close of 9,924.75 marks an incredible return of 43.74 percent in less than three months. Annualized, that's a return of more than 174 percent, a figure that would have everybody in the world retiring at 40 in the ultimate "buy the dip" scenario.

Obviously, that kind of return is unthinkable, or, at least it used to be, until we entered Bizarro-world where cats mate with mice, birds sing full operas and Tom Hanks becomes a top home run hitter in the major leagues... if there was such a thing as professional baseball, which there is not, nor is there likely to be this year.

In bizarro world, Hertz, which filed for bankruptcy a few weeks ago and traded for under a dollar last week, soar to over $5.50 on Monday. There's a 500% return right there, in just a few days. Thank you Jerome Powell, unrivaled leader of Bizarro-world.

Speaking of Mr. Powell, the FOMC begins a two-day meeting this week at the end of which they will announce their monetary policy. The ritualism of the Fed harkens back to tribal proceedings of the Aztecs, wherein the almighty witch doctor or shaman would enter the temple of the gods - with or without virgins - and emerge a day or two later with a proclamation for the masses. The wizened leader would announce that the rainy season was ending, or that pomegranates could cure mental illness.

The savages would praise the leader and spend the evening partying and dancing until they wore themselves out. It's an apt analogy for the ritual FOMC meetings which are held 10 times a year, or, for the anachronistically-unchallenged, SSDD.

Tuesday's meeting will extend to 2:00 pm ET on Wednesday, at which time the money masters will make their announcement that all is well, release a summary of economic projections, and hold a press conference at which Chairman Powell will amuse and bedazzle the attendant financial media slaves.

And Bizarro-world will continue.

At the Close, Monday, June 8, 2020:
Dow: 27,572.44, +461.46 (+1.70%)
NASDAQ: 9,924.75, +110.66 (+1.13%)
S&P 500: 3,232.39, +38.46 (+1.20%)
NYSE: 12,836.60, +195.16 (+1.54%)