Sunday, September 11, 2011

Wall Street Stock Market Crash 2011 Timeline

Stock Market Crash 2011 Timeline and Chronology:

Keystone chronicles the broad markets topping and rolling over during 2011, leading into the July-August-September 2011 crash. The charts and technical’s accurately forecasted the move all year long.

Keystone’s proprietary algorithm, Keybot the Quant, that trades the indexes long-short, using the SPX as a benchmark index, went short on 7/11/11 at SPX 1324 and covered on 8/23/11 at SPX 1146, a 178 handle gain in six weeks time, or 13.4%. The actual trade in SDS gained 25.6%. On 8/23/11, Keybot flipped to the long side simultaneously at SPX 1146. On 9/1/11, Keybot exited the long position at SPX 1207, a 61 handle gain in 8 trading days, or 5.3%. The actual trade in SSO gained 12.1%. On 9/1/11, Keybot flipped to the short side simultaneously at SPX 1207.

On 9/8/11, as the indexes compress into a tighter band, Keybot flipped back to the long side at SPX 1200, a 7 handle gain, but a whipsaw occurred during the session as Chairman Bernanke tanked the markets and Keybot flipped back to the short side at SPX 1186, a 14 handle loss.


Timeline and Chronology of Market Events Leading to the July August September 2011 Stock Market Crash:

In August 2010, the broad markets were going over the falls when Chairman Bernanke stepped in announcing quantitative easing, QE2.  That immediately stopped the market collapse and sent the broad markets on an upward trajectory once again. The easy money flowed into emerging markets, copper, commodities and oil, creating new asset bubbles.

In January and February 2011, Tunisia and Egypt demonstrations result in outing their leaders. The Arab Spring, or Arab Awakening, is born.  This Middle East turmoil causes oil, gold and silver to run higher. Food inflation accelerates since the demonstrations cause food shortages and disruption to food supplies.  At the same time, for many months, Mother Nature has been reeking havoc around the globe causing further inflation in food and other commodities, like coal due to Aussie floods in late 2010.

In February 2011, the charts show that financials, technology, semiconductors and copper have topped and are rolling over. This is ominous considering the importance of these sectors. The weekly charts display negative divergence forecasting multi-week and multi-month weakness ahead for these sectors, and hence, the broad markets.

On 3/11/11, Japan is hit with an earthquake and tsunami. The disaster impacts the technology and auto supply parts areas which ripples thru affecting global markets.

On 4/18/11, S&P ratings agency, one of three major agencies that include S&P, Moody’s and Fitch, lowers the U.S.’s credit rating to ‘negative’ from ‘stable’.

On 4/29/11, the SPX closes at 1363.61, potentially the closing high for the year.

On 5/2/11, the SPX prints a HOD at 1370.58, potentially the highest intraday print for the year.

From late April to early May 2011, silver went parabolic towards $50. CME stepped in and slapped down silver by raising margin requirements several times. Silver dropped 35% from $50 to $33.

On 5/20/11, Keystone’s SPXA150R Indicator dropped under 80% indicating that the long bull rally had lost steam and the broad markets are turning bearish.

On 6/17/11, Keystone’s NYA 40 Week MA Cross Secular Indicator shows price falling under the 40 week MA signaling that the broad markets are falling into a secular bear market pattern. This fight between price and the 40 week MA continued into July until the change to a secular bear was locked in more firmly on 7/28/11. The broad markets have fallen into a secular bear market.

On 7/7/11, a Dow Theory Non-Confirmation signal is flashed with the Dow Transports placing a higher high than the May high, but the Dow Industrials languish over 200 points below its May high with no sign of strength. The non-confirmation signal places traders on high alert since the broad markets appear to be slipping into trouble.

On 7/11/11, Keystone’s proprietary algorithm, Keybot the Quant, a long-short algo, went short at SPX 1324 at 10:34 AM EST.

On 7/12/11, Keystone's 2-10 Spread Indicator loses the critical 255 level indicating that the yield curve is no longer advantageous for the banks, hence, further serious downside for financials is anticipated moving forward.

On 7/21/11, the SPX prints a HOD at 1347.00. This is the start of the waterfall crash.

On 7/22/11, the SPX closes at 1345.02. This is the start of the waterfall crash.

On 7/26/11, Keystone’s SPX:VIX Indicator fell under 68 signaling a large move down in equities is imminent. For 7/26/11 and 7/27/11, the SPX fell 2.5% and the Dow Industrials dropped 2.3%.

On 7/29/11, Friday, the SPX closes the day below 1300. Congress and President Obama continue to bicker like school children over raising the debt ceiling. The 8/2/11 deadline is fast approaching. The weekend, 7/30/11 and 7/31/11 is tense, with plenty of childish, finger-pointing political sound bites crossing the news wires continuously. Apple now has more cash at $76 billion than the U.S. government at $74 billion.

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On 8/1/11, Monday, Congress votes to raise the debt ceiling in a butchered display of childish behavior. The President supplies no leadership or plan of his own, but criticizes what others suggest.  The political bickering does serious damage to not only the confidence of traders and citizens in the U.S., but also to everyone around the World.

On 8/2/11, Tuesday, President Obama signs the bill to raise the nation’s multi-trillion debt ceiling. The markets sell off large. SPX goes negative for the year, losing the 1258 level.

On 8/2/11, Keystone’s SPX 150 Day MA Slope Secular Indicator shows that the slope of the 150 day MA has leveled off and is now turning negative. A stutter step occurs 8/3 but 8/4 shows again that the slope has now reversed and the secular bull run from last December 2010 for the indexes has ended. The secular bear market has returned.

On 8/2/11, Keystone’s SPX 12 Month MA Cross Secular Indicator shows price falling under the 12 month MA signaling that the broad markets are falling into a secular bear market pattern. This was a major dagger in the broad markets and ends the one year long secular bull market. A secular bear market is born.

On 8/2/11, the SPX closes down 33 points, or 2.6%. The Dow Industrials drop below 12000, losing 265 points, or 2.2%.

On 8/3/11, Wednesday, copper collapsed around lunchtime.

On 8/3/11, Switzerland’s central bank takes steps to lower the franc’s exchange rate, saying the currency is ‘massively overvalued’ and threatening the Swiss economy’.

On 8/4/11, Thursday, Japan intervened into the currency markets, defending the 77 dollar/yen level. A spike from 77 to 80 occurs quickly but peters out as all previous interventions had.

On 8/4/11, utilities collapsed in the morning which opened the flood gates for a market collapse. Once the utes, UTIL, lost their 50 week MA, a trap door was projected for the broad markets, which occurred during the afternoon.

On 8/4/11, the broad market selling moves towards exhaustion.  The SPX loses 60 points, or 4.8%, and the Dow Industrials drop 513 points, or 4.3%.

On 8/4/11, Bank of New York Mellon Corporation said they will charge a fee to customers holding cash deposits over $50 million, effectively charging depositors for parking money at the bank.

On 8/4/11, investors moved strongly into the safety of very short-dated T-bills and the bidding was so overwhelming that the real rate was actually a negative yield.  Investors are willing to pay the government to hold their money.

On 8/4/11, Dow Theory confirms a Sell Signal for the broad markets. The Dow Industrials and Transports both have closed under their June lows. Sell first and ask questions later.

On 8/5/11, Friday, markets attempt a recovery rally but it runs out of steam at lunchtime as a rumor circulates the trading floor that S&P has notified the U.S. Treasury that it was planning to downgrade the U.S. credit rating. A draft of the analysis was given to the White House.  The White House identified a mathematical error in the analysis but S&P said the error has no impact on their decision and after the markets closed for the week, S&P downgraded the U.S. This sent the government, traders and the media into a tizzy all weekend long worrying about the effects on the markets for Monday’s open. The SPX loses the 1200 level today.

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On 8/7/11, Sunday evening, Asian markets open lower and U.S. futures plummet. The ECB announces that it would ‘actively implement’ its bond-buying program. Italy and Spanish bonds rally early Monday morning in anticipation of the ECB entering the market.

On 8/8/11, Monday, markets collapse at the open as the negativity from the S&P downgrade all weekend long causes traders to sell first and ask questions later.  The SPX closes at 1119.46, dropping 80 points, or 6.66%, which many media analysts immediately highlight as the satanic 666. The Dow Industrials plummet 635 points, or 5.6%. Huge down day for the indexes.

On 8/9/11, Tuesday, Keystone's Inflation Deflation Indicator flashes Disinflation after many months where the inflationists and deflationists battled in the neutral zone. The move was short-lived, only a couple days, and then the indicator moved Neutral again. But, the move towards disinflation and deflation appears underway.

On 8/9/11, The Federal Reserve makes a promise to hold short-term interest rates near zero through at least the middle of 2013. This signals that Chairman Bernanke and the Fed has written off the chances of an expansion strong enough to drive up wages and prices. The economic recovery is dying.

On 8/9/11, a snap back rally recovers much of Monday’s loss. The SPX places a LOD of 1101.54 but then catapults higher closing at 1172.53, regaining 53 points, or 4.7%. The move from 7/21/11 at SPX 1347 to 1101 is a drop of 246 spoo handles, or 18.3%, in only 13 trading days. The SPX LOD 1101 is now important support moving forward.

On 8/9/11, Keystone's Inflation Deflation Indicator flashes Disinflation after many months where the inflationists and deflationists battled in the neutral zone. The move was short-lived, only a couple days, and then the indicator moved Neutral again. But, the move towards disinflation and deflation appears underway.

On 8/9/11, Keystone highlights the TRAN (Transportation Index), DAX (Germany), RUT (Russell 2000), XLI (Industrials), SOX (Semiconductors) and XLF (Financials) charts showing all have fallen into a bear market correcting in excess of 20% off their tops.

On 8/10/11, Wednesday, the market bears come to play again and drive the markets lower to close at the Monday closing lows again. The SPX closes at 1120.76, down 52 points, or 4.4%. The Dow Industrials lose the 11000 level, dropping 520 points, or 4.6%.

On 8/10/11, gold price has gone parabolic. CME steps in to raise margin requirements effective end of day 8/11/11.

On 8/11/11, Thursday, the market bulls drive the indexes up again recovering all the lost ground from Wednesday’s session. The SPX closes at 1172.64, up 52 points, or 4.4%.  The last three days see a move from 1170-ish down to 1120-ish, back up to 1170-ish, then back down to 1120-ish. Fourth day in a row of unprecedented major market point moves for the broad indexes.

On 8/11/11, a short-selling ban on financial stocks is instituted for France, Belgium, Italy and Spain.  A temporary short-sale ban remains for Greece and Turkey.

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On 8/15/11, Monday, Keystone’s SPX:VIX Ratio Indicator moves above 35 indicating that a big up day will occur in the markets. The SPX gains 26 points, or 2.2% and the Dow Industrials gain 214 points, or 1.9%.

On 8/15/11, the SPX, closing at 1204.49, has now regained the entire point loss that resulted from the S&P downgrade on 8/5/11 at SPX 1199.38.

On 8/16/11, Tuesday, broad index futures turn strongly red overnight to indicate a much lower open. All eyes are focused on the meeting between Sarkozy (France) and Merkel (Germany). The leaders downplay the hype surrounding the meeting to lower expectations. Talk heats up concerning the potential implementation of Euro bonds but Germany says nein. Merkel and Sarkozy, however, emphasize that Euro bonds are not the answer ‘today’, therefore hinting that perhaps in the future Euro bonds would be a possibility.

On 8/16/11, shortly after the markets opened, Fitch, one of the three rating agencies (S&P, Moody’s, Fitch), reaffirms a ‘stable’ outlook for U.S. debt. This decision flies in the face of the S&P downgrade and encourages bullish traders. The bulls and bears fight it out all day but only move within Monday’s SPX trading range of 1178-1205, closing at 1192.76.

On 8/17/11, Wednesday, Merkel and Sarkozy, announce a plan to raise taxes on financial transactions. Banks sell off on the news. Media outlets now referring to the two partners as ‘Merkozy’. The indexes pop at the open and have a chance to confirm a recovery rally if the SPX maintains the 1200 level, but, by late morning, 1200 failed and the indexes slipped away to close out the day unchanged. Keystone’s proprietary algorithm, Keybot the Quant, came within seconds of flipping to the long side, but remains short from 7/11/11 as the session ended.

On 8/18/11, Thursday, European banks are falling large on news that the ECB dollar facility was tapped for the first time since 2/23/11. A mystery bank borrowed $500 million worth of one-week dollars at a fixed interest rate of 1.1%. This rate is well above the rate that would be expected so traders sniffed out distress in the Euro banking system, selling first and asking questions later. Futures fell sharply and only worsened as Claims and CPI data thru gasoline on the fire. The Philly Fed data at 10 AM shows vast manufacturing weakness and locked in the day’s negativity. At the opening bell, the SPX fell 30 points, 2.6%, and the Dow fell 300 points, 2.5%, in only three seconds.

On 8/18/11, at 10 AM EST, the 10-Year Treasury Note yield drops to a record low under 2%, printing a spike low of 1.97% before recovering back above 2%. Traders are rushing into the relative safety of U.S. bonds considering that the global growth story is dead. 30-Year Bond yields touched 3.35%, the lowest since January 2009. The all-time low was 2.51% set in December 2008 during that equities crash. Gold moved above 1820 as traders seek safety.

On 8/18/11, Keystone’s SPX:VIX Ratio Indicator fell under 35 after the opening bell indicating that a large down day is in store for the indexes. The session ended with the SPX down 53 points, or 4.5%. The Dow Industrials closed under the 11000 level, down 420 points, or 3.7%.

On 8/19/11, Friday, the day begins with gold catapulting higher in the overnight session to reach 1880, the parabolic move now straight vertical.  No sign yet of the CME raising gold margin requirements. The futures are deeply red and banks continue to sell off. BAC announces 3500 job cuts, in addition to the 2500 that already received pink slips this year. As the trading session started, BAC announces that as many as 10000 jobs will be eliminated this year. BAC has lost over 40% of its value in the last five weeks. Rumors are rampant with talk of an emergency Fed meeting occurring as well as the SNB, Swiss National Bank, implementing new tax on foreign held deposits over this coming weekend. JPM and C both lower their GDP forecasts.

On 8/19/11, the indexes drop at the opening bell but quickly stabilize as traders seek a temporary bottom for equities markets. The selling begins again at 11 AM and stocks drop into the closing bell. Traders pare back positions heading into the weekend. The SPX closes down 17 points, or 1.5%. The Dow Industrials close down 173 points, or 1.6%.

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On 8/21/11, Sunday, German Chancellor Merkel reiterates once again that Euro bonds are not a possible solution, but, also says that perhaps in the future they must adapt. Thus, wiggle room is opened to Euro bonds at some future date. All in all, this weekend 8/20/11 and 8/21/11 is calm and quiet on the financial front considering the market turmoil over the last three weeks. On the war front, however, Colonel Gadaffi’s regime is on the brink of collapse as the rebels gain control of Tripoli.

On 8/22/11, Monday, Tripoli is taken by the rebels overnight and considering that Gaddaffi’s days are ending, the futures steadily gain thru the morning hours on new found optimism. The markets jumped higher at the open, the Dow crossing above 11000, but then quickly collapsing lower as the day plays out. At the close, GS announces that Lloyd Blankfein previously hired a personal attorney; this news whacks GS in the final minutes of trading and continues to cast a dark cloud over the financials. Markets believe that Chairman Bernanke will announce a QE3-friendly course of action on Friday, 8/26/11, as the trading week begins. GLD, the gold ETF, now has the largest assets of any ETF, surpassing SPY.

On 8/22/11, Keystone’s UPS 20 and 50 Week MA Cross Indicator shows the 20 MA falling under the 50 MA, the first time in over two years. This indicates that the broad markets have now fallen into a secular bear pattern for the long term; this is the last of Keystone’s four secular market indicators to fall into place signaling a secular bear market moving forward. On 8/23/11, however, the UPS 20 MA regained the 50 MA but this shot across the bow is important; weakening shipping sector means no recovery.

On 8/23/11, Tuesday, Gold peaks at 1918 in the overnight session.  Gold daily chart shows an outside reversal day where gold places a higher high than Monday, and then closed below Monday’s low—very bearish; the gold selloff begins. The indexes finish up huge on QE3 anticipation, the SPX jumping 39 points, or 3.5%. The Dow Industrials finish up 322 points, or 3.0%.

On 8/23/11, Keystone’s proprietary algo, Keybot the Quant, exits its short position at SPX 1146 at 11:51 AM EST. The algo initiated the short side on 7/11/11 at SPX 1324 accounting for a 178 handle gain, or 13.4%. The actual play was SDS resulting in a 25.6% gain. Keybot enters a long position at SPX 1146 simultaneously.

On 8/24/11, Wednesday, Moody’s rating service downgrades Japan’s debt, slapping down buoyant Asian markets. The broad markets continue with the recovery rally. Gold sells off $100 ending the day at 1754, losing over 150 dollars, or 8.6%, in less than two days. CME raises gold margin requirements for the second time in two weeks after the markets close.  Steve Jobs resigns as CEO of Apple and S&P futures immediately drop 5 points.

On 8/24/11, insurance on the debt of several major European banks has now hit higher levels than those recorded during the financial debacle in 2008.  Credit default swaps (CDS) on the bonds for banks such as Royal Bank of Scotland, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and Intesa Sanpaolo, to name a few, flashed the dire signals today. This development highlights a coming liquidity crisis a la 2008, more than likely occurring in the September-November time frame.

On 8/25/11, Thursday, weakness in tech occurs due to AAPL’s weighting in the indexes. Warren Buffett provides a $5 billion capital injection into BAC which bounces the indexes large at the open. But, minutes into trading, the indexes collapse on rumors of a sovereign downgrade of Germany’s debt. The DAX tumbles almost 2%. The rating agencies release statements that Germany’s ratings are not under a downgrade but traders sell first and ask questions later; the damage was done. Finland throws gasoline on the fire as they request collateral from Greece gumming up the prior agreements among the Euro countries. The SPX closes down 19 points, or 1.6% and the Dow Industrials close down 171 points, or 1.5%.

On 8/26/11, Friday, the GDP prints 1.0%. Chairman Bernanke stops short of signaling further stimulus. The Swiss, SNB, hints that further action is coming to stem the strength in the franc such as local banks starting to charge customers for franc deposits. The markets take a wild ride opening the day down large, then recovering to post big gains, then fading into the close as traders worry that the stock exchange may be closed on Monday due to Hurricane Irene hitting New York. The SPX moved thru a 45 point range today while the Dow Industrials moved thru a 397 point range. The SPX closed up 18 points today, or 1.5%.  The Dow Industrials closed up 135 points today, or 1.2%. The Nasdaq and Russell 2000 were up over 2.5% today. The indexes produced a recovery rally this week with the SPX gaining 4.7% for the week and the Dow gaining 4.3%.

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On 8/28/11, Sunday morning, Hurricane Irene is downgraded to a tropical storm so there will be no closure to the stock exchange Monday.

On 8/29/11, Monday, Keystone’s UPS 20 and 50 Week MA Cross Indicator shows the 20 MA now convincingly under the 50 MA.  The broad markets are now firmly in a secular bear market.  This is the last of Keystone’s four secular market indicators (SPX 150 Day Slope; NYA 40 Week MA Cross; UPS 20 and 50 Week MA Cross; and SPX 12 Month MA Cross) to fall into a secular bear market indicating that equity weakness will continue for the foreseeable future, weeks and months ahead. Despite this bearish projection, for the short term move, Keystone’s SPX:VIX Indicator moves above 35 projecting a large move up for the indexes today. The SPX finished the day up 33 points, or 2.8%. The Dow Industrials finish up 255 points, or 2.2%. These large index moves either way due to the high volatility.

On 8/30/11, Tuesday, before the open, Charlie Evans, a Fed voting member, says a ‘strong accommodation’ is needed, in other words QE3. Gold jumps higher, dollar lower and equities catch a bid to finish the day up.

On 8/31/11, Wednesday, the blood bath for the month of August ends. The SPX finished the month down 5.7%, the Dow Industrials off 4.4% and the Nasdaq down 6.5%. Keystone’s SPX 12 Month MA Cross Indicator now seals the deal with the month-end print to confirm the secular bear market moving forward.

On 9/1/11, Thursday, in a surprise move Brazil lowers rates. The President moves the jobs speech to Thursday, 9/8/11, after Speaker Boehner refused the request for Wednesday night, a pre-scheduled republican debate night. The pettiness and dysfunction of the President and Congress continues to increase the negativity for the markets. Italy begins to waffle on its proposed austerity program increasing the Euro instability. The Fed announces an enforcement action against GS at 1:30 PM EST and the buoyancy in the equities markets all week long reverses with the financial sector plummeting taking the broad markets down. As the day plays out, traders become increasingly negative concerning the Friday jobs report.

On 9/1/11, Keystone’s proprietary algo, Keybot the Quant, exits its long position at SPX 1207 at 2:02 PM EST. The algo initiated the long side on 8/23/11 at SPX 1146 accounting for a 61 handle gain, or 5.3%. The actual play was SSO resulting in a 12.1% gain. Keybot enters a short position at SPX 1207 simultaneously.

On 9/1/11, during the evening hours, the news wires report that the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, filed law suits against the largest banks, including JPM, GS, BAC, C and DB, 17 in all, for misrepresenting the quality of mortgage securities they sold creating the housing bubble. The futures immediately move lower.

On 9/2/11, Friday, the Labor Department announces that employers added zero new jobs in August.  The current number of U.S. jobs is below 2001 levels.  Futures collapse from already low numbers, the SPX set to open the trading day down about 20 points and the Dow Industrials down about 200 points.

On 9/2/11, the trading session tumbles at the open as expected, hitting lows about one hour into trading, but then recovering as traders look forward to the Labor Day holiday weekend.  The ten-year yield drops below 2%. The yield on the Greek 2-year note hits 50%. After lunch, however, stocks fell steadily only receiving relief in the final half hour.  The SPX finishes the day down 30 points, or 2.5%. The Dow Industrials finished down 253 points, or 2.2%.

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On 9/5/11, Monday, U.S. markets are closed for the Labor Day holiday. The European major indexes tumble over 4% with the DAX losing 5%. The U.S. lawsuits against the corrupt banksters during the mortgage crisis accelerated the European losses. Credit default swaps hit a high for Italy. The 10-year yield prints a historic low at 1.92%. Banks are reluctant to lend. The Libor 3-month rate (Libor is the rate at which London-based banks say they can borrow) climbs to the highest level in one year.

On 9/6/11, Tuesday, the Swiss Central Bank imposes a ceiling on the franc.  They feel the rise in the franc (due to traders seeking a safe haven) is a serious danger to their economy as well as creating a deflation risk. Detsche Bank’s Ackerman worries that ‘we are repeating a Lehman-type event form Fall 2008’. World Bank President Zoellick states that we are now entering a ‘dangerous’ time. Singapore’s Minister of Finance Shanmugaratnam says that the U.S. and European weakness will hurt Asia and a recession is likely. Italy lowers growth forecasts and the managing director of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, says the ‘outlook has darkened suddenly’. The holiday fun is already a distant memory.

On 9/6/11, the indexes fall and Keystone’s UTIL 50 week MA ‘trap door’ indicator is tested. If the utilities, UTIL, fall under the 50 week MA, the markets will go into free fall. Armageddon was avoided, shorts covered, and the markets recovered to the upside. The major global economic bellwethers, however, copper, rubber, chemicals, steel and cardboard boxes all foretell economic weakness ahead. During the evening hours, the CME raises Swiss franc futures requirements.

On 9/7/11, Wednesday, the German High Court rules accepting the actions taken so far for the European debt crisis but warns that they must be consulted for any future deliberations. This is viewed as somewhat positive since they did not rock the shaky European boat.

On 9/7/11, Keystone’s SPX:VIX Ratio Indicator moves above 35 indicating a big up day on tap for the markets.  The excitement flattens as the Beige Book is released at 2 PM EST. The SPX finishes the day up 33 points, or 2.9%. The Dow Industrials close up 276 points, or 2.5%.

On 9/8/11, Thursday, the markets are building upside momentum.  The day begins with the ECB rate decision to leave rates on hold.  Outgoing ECB president Trichet says ‘economic risks exist to the downside and the current environment is uncertain’. The door is left slightly ajar for lowering rates.

On 9/8/11, Keystone’s algo, Keybot the Quant, triggers to the long side at SPX 1200, gaining 7 handles from the short play on 9/1/11 at SPX 1207, only to experience a whipsaw as Chairman Bernanke begins speaking after lunch. Keybot flips back to the short side at 2:28 PM EST at SPX 1186 taking a 14 handle loss.

On 9/8/11, Chairman Bernanke begins speaking at 1:30 PM driving the equities markets straight off a cliff. Bernanke did not provide any details on the upcoming anticipated ‘Operation Twist’, or ‘Torque’, as others call it, where the Fed sells short-term treasuries and buys longer-term 10-year and 30-year bonds in an attempt to narrow the yield curve and lower long term rates. The idea is to get investors to return to the stock market increasing the wealth effect and jump starting the economy again. Bernanke used the wealth effect idea for QE2 and we see how that worked out. Folks are probably much more concerned about their own struggles each day, especially with the dust bowl continuing across Texas and the south with hurricanes now popping up like weeds, while at the same time the Northeast receives one week of rain and the flooding is widespread.

On 9/8/11, the super committee, charged with developing a deficit reduction plan of finding at least 1.2 trillion by 11/23/11, begins deliberations. The children start off on a sour note as Republican Jon Kyl states that he will quit the committee if defense spending cuts are discussed. The market mood sours.

On 9/8/11, into the close, Keystone’s SPX:VIX Ratio Indicator drops back under 35 indicating that the markets are headed substantially lower in the Friday session.

On 9/8/11, in the evening, President Obama addresses Congress, interrupting the pre-game shows for the kickoff of the NFL football season. The President attempts to fly above it all, like a trapeze artist, lecturing everyone that the current ‘circus’ must stop and the politico’s must all join together for the good of the country. The problem is that he has overseen this entire mess as ringmaster of the circus and is in fact part of the clown show. The partisan speech appears more focused on kicking off his reelection campaign than solving the nation’s problems. The American Jobs Act is much bigger than anticipated, $447 billion versus $300 billion. The President had the country wait one month for this masterful solution to the job crisis, as he vacationed in the sun, and says all the ideas are paid for, but he will not have that information for a few more days.  Markets are disappointed and the futures drift lower.

On 9/9/11, Friday, the futures are substantially lower as the President’s speech fails to inspire anyone and the Europe news worsens. The indexes open lower as expected. Keystone’s SPX:VIX Ratio Indicator remains under 35 indicating a large down day is on tap. Stocks drop during the morning session and accelerate lower as news hits that ECB member Juergen Stark, a German anti-inflation hawk, will step down.

On 9/9/11, BAC announces that up to 40,000 jobs will be cut, a huge increase over the prior 3,500 forecast, and accounting for over 14% of their entire workforce. Sallie Krawcheck, respected by many, is fired from BAC. Firecracker Carol Bartz is fired from YHOO. Solar company Solyndra, that President Obama touted as the way to the future, providing $500 million in loan guarantees, went belly-up, wasting more money.

On 9/9/11, as the holiday-shortened week closes and the effects of Stark’s resignation are felt, the SPX is down 32 points today, or 2.7%. The Dow Industrials fell 304 points, or 2.7%, and lose the psychological level of 11,000. Overall, the markets register another down week.

On 9/10/11, Saturday, G-7 finance ministers and central bankers attempt to calm the markets. The meetings are focused on the Eurozone problems. Standard soothing words include ‘we stand ready to provide liquidity to banks as required’, and, ‘we will take all necessary actions to ensure the resilience of banking systems and financial markets’. Sure does sound like Fall 2008.

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On 9/12/11, Monday, ……………the saga continues…………..

Coming Attractions:

Europe is in turmoil looking for solutions concerning the sovereign debt crisis. Greece is crumbling into default and the worry is the contagion that will spread to Italy, Portugal, Ireland and Spain.

Dollar/Yen intervention by the BOJ will continue. Swiss intervention for the franc will continue. The Norwegians are now becoming concerned about their currency as well.

Potential further CME gold margin requirement raises.

A flight to safety to the U.S. dollar and to treasuries continues as the 10-year yield stays under 2%.

Economic data and speeches for the week of 9/12/11 thru 9/16/11 include Fisher at 5 PM Monday; NFIB Small Business Optimism Index at 7:30 AM Tuesday, which has been nothing but bad news for months, 10-year note auction at 1 PM Tuesday; PPI and Retail Sales at 8:30 AM Wednesday, followed by Business Inventories at 10 AM and Oil Inventories at 10:30 AM; CPI, Empire State MFG Survey and Jobless Claims at 8:30 AM Thursday, followed by Industrial production at 9:15 AM and Philly Fed 10 AM, which tanked markets last time; TIC data at 9 AM Friday and the week finishes with Consumer Sentiment at 9:55 AM.

The super committee of 12 House and Senate members continues deliberations to develop a deficit reduction plan of at least 1.2 trillion by 11/23/11.

The peak of hurricane season continues. Dust bowl in the south and rains and floods in the Northeast continue.

Fed rate decision meeting 9/20/11 and 9/21/11. This is now a target for Chairman Bernanke to mention potential QE3 strategies; ‘Operation Twist’.

On 9/29/11, Germany’s parliament votes on the second Greek bailout and the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

From 9/23/11 thru 9/30/11, Q3 window dressing. EOM and EOQ3 9/30/11. October and Q4 begins.

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