On Friday, 11/30/12, EOM. German retail sales disappoint showing
continued weakness. France consumer spending is worse than
expected. Europe’s third
largest economy, Italy, announces a 13-year high in unemployment at 11.1%. The
Eurozone unemployment rate approaches
12% with youth unemployment in Spain at 50%, depression levels. LaGarde
(IMF) and Draghi (ECB) are at a conference where Draghi says “Spain and Portugal are showing
strong export growth.” This
statement hints that Draghi does not
want to lower rates at the ECB meeting next week. Draghi says “Euro area is
making progress on internal balances.” He says that Europe has been living in a “Fairy World.” Draghi talks in broad terms but does not
provide details. European stock markets are at 16-month highs. The euro
is at 1.3000. The U.S. broad indexes drift sideways all day with a downward
bias due to volatility rising. Just
before 1 PM, Speaker
Boehner walks to a microphone and says “Who are we kidding, we are at a
stalemate,” and, “the talks are going nowhere.” The markets drop on the negativity but
recover quickly and continue along sideways. This behavior hints that the
markets are now willing to wait and see how the coming days play out concerning
the fiscal cliff negotiations. Late
session a rebalancing occurs bringing in strong volume which floats the broad
indexes higher into the closing bell.
The day ends flat overall. For the week, the broad indexes were flat
while the Nasdaq and RUT, tech and small caps were up 1.5% and 1.8%,
respectively, which is encouraging for the bulls. For the month of November, the SPX, COMPQ and
RUT were flat while the Dow Industrials
printed a negative month. After the bell, Moody’s rating agency downgrades the ESM
(European Stabilty Mechanism), which was anticipated, however, the euro takes a hit from over 1.3000 dropping
to 1.2985 on the news. This will create negativity to start the new week.
On Sunday, 12/2/12, Secretary Geithner appears on the Sunday political television shows and restates the president’s
plan. Speaker Boehner restates his plan. Both sides are worlds apart talking past each other. Protestors in
Egypt block the judges from entering the court buildings. The judges refuse
to rule on the new constitution that Morsi is trying to ramrod through the
system. This action results in a standoff and increased tension.
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On Monday, 12/3/12,
the China
PMI shows expansion so copper receives a lift as well as global
markets. Italy and France PMI’s are weaker than
expected. Germany PMI is as expected. Overall, the Eurozone remains in
contraction. Merkel opens the door to a potential write-off of Greece
debt, aligning herself with LaGarde at the IMF. Any debt
forgiveness would not occur until 2014 or 2015 and the statement is perhaps
more lip service than anything since Merkel’s election is only nine months away
and she is likely promising a chicken in every pot. Greece receives aid so this creates market
positivity. The euro is at 1.3034. The U.S.
10-year yield is 1.61% showing a strong willingness to stay in the safety
of bonds as the fiscal cliff drama plays out. The market bounces at the open, as December
trading begins, with the SPX testing the
50-day MA at 1421, but then collapses quickly. The ISM Manufacturing Index is far lower than
anyone expects at 49.5 indicating contraction. The markets sell off further. Volatility spikes solidly higher encouraging
the bears. At 2
PM, Keystone’s
SPX 30-minute chart shows the 8 MA stabbing down thru the 34 MA indicating
bearish markets for the hours and days ahead. President Obama conducts a Twitter
Q&A at 2 PM concerning the fiscal cliff. Speaker Boehner tweets the president asking how growth can be
achieved when the people that create the jobs are taxed more. The president
ignores the tweet. The juvenile antics by both sides continue. At 3
PM, Speaker
Boehner provides a counteroffer to the president to solve the fiscal cliff
crisis and as would be expected, the Whitehouse says the plan is not well
balanced. Late session, the semiconductors
break down dragging the broad indexes lower into the closing bell. The
markets finish down on the day. Brent oil drops under 111. After the bell, ORCL
joins the many other companies that are
accelerating dividend payments to avoid the higher taxes coming in 2013. Usually
the stocks are popping on this divvy tax-avoidance maneuver but ORCL actually
sells off AH’s. What a mess the politicians and central banksters have created.
On Tuesday, 12/4/12,
Australia
cuts rates but surprisingly the Aussie dollar gains in value. Also,
commodities are weak, the Aussie stimulus is not providing the bump that would
be expected. European officials meet to
discuss the banking union. Merkel says “Nobody can say when this banking crisis will
be over.” The euro remains elevated at 1.3070. A Los Angeles port strike is causing
economic damage at one billion dollars per day as ships are unable to load and
unload in this busy holiday season. Brent oil falls thru 110. The markets
continue the bull-bear struggle and trail lower as the day progresses. The euro moves above 1.31 helping the bulls
to support the markets. The 10-year
remains flat at 1.62% with traders unwilling to take on risk. Semiconductors and financials lead lower
although semi’s recover strongly into the close. Protestors in Egypt storm Morsi’s palace
causing him to flee. Speaker Boehner removes four tea party members
from committees, a sign that the Keynesian republicans and democrats continue
to drive the country down the wrong road, fiscal responsibility be damned.
On Tuesday, at 11:05
AM EST, Keybot the Quant algorithm flips bearish at SPX
1407 signaling bearish markets for the hours and days ahead. The markets
are in an unstable and erratic sideways bull-bear fight.
On Wednesday,
12/5/12, China
markets move higher anticipating growth-friendly policies. Commodities
move higher. The euro is over 1.31. Morsi returns to the Cairo palace although the
riots and protests continue. The Spain bond auctions are disappointing. The Euro retail sales numbers are weak. ADP
Employment report surprises with weaker numbers. The markets take on a negative tone with the
banks faltering then only minutes before
the opening bell, C drops a bomb shell announcing
an 11K reduction in its workforce. C stock catapults higher, BAC is also goosed,
and the financial sector leaps higher
creating market happiness. Stocks take a slight dip as television screens show
Congress leaving town for a long weekend but many republicans break ranks with Speaker
Boehner and sign up to the democrat approach of raising taxes on the wealthy. The markets perceive this as a positive
development for the fiscal cliff negotiations so the markets leap higher
in a dramatic
intraday reversal, the SPX
moving from 1398 to 1416 in quick order.
Geithner says that the president
is ‘absolutely ready to go over the cliff if the republicans do not raise taxes
on the wealthy’, but the markets do not react negatively. The mixed and erratic market action continues
with the Nasdaq negative
today but the Dow Industrials are up over
100 points. The Nasdaq has
technical problems with bringing an IPO to market. The data feeds shown on
television are lagging real-time by a couple minutes in the afternoon. These
odd data and technical glitches, as well as mixed market signals (Dow up Nasdaq
down) provide reasons to consider flash crash scenarios for markets moving
forward. AAPL plummets 5% during the session,
the biggest drop in four years. Droid is gaining market share, China sales are
losing share and margin requirements on owning Apple stock are increased. Financials and semiconductors push the
broad indexes higher, sans Nasdaq. The RUT
was also negative, and, since small caps and tech lead, the move higher in
the Dow is not impressive. Keystone’s SPX 30-minute
chart shows the 8 MA piercing up thru the 34 MA indicating bullish markets for
the hours and days ahead. Keybot the Quant positions for a move to the bull
side but the algorithm does not turn bullish and then late session the
markets do leak lower into the close. The Dow is up over 13K again.
On Thursday, 12/6/12,
France unemployment rate is over 10% at
a 13-year high. European stocks, led by Germany, are now making
18-month highs. Brent oil
drops under 109, it was over 111 a couple days ago. This behavior shows that Middle East tensions
are abating but oddly enough, the Egypt turmoil grows with deaths now occurring
as the Muslim Brotherhood’s building is set on fire and Morsi’s palace remains
a target of protestors. Egypt may erupt in civil war. Syria may be
arming chemical weapons of mass destruction (WMD) which would elevate the
already horrific tragedy where Asaad has now killed over 40K of his own people.
The BOE keeps rates on hold. The ECB Rate Decision and Press Conference results in no cut, however, Draghi says growth remains weak and the growth forecast
was cut to 0.3%. Trader’s
realize this reduction in forecast is code
for a rate cut coming in early 2013 so the euro
drops like a stone and takes the U.S. futures lower. The markets drop at the opening bell but
recover as semiconductors are goosed
strongly. The SPX travels sideways all day long ending at the HOD at 1414. Senator DeMint resigns, a tea-party fave,
to head the Heritage Foundation think-tank.
There is no fiscal responsibility in Washington, D.C., both democrats
and republicans are Keynesians that cannot stop their obscene spending.
On Friday, 12/7/12,
an earthquake hits Japan extending their economic woes. In bombshell news, Germany lowers
growth forecasts, now calling for a paltry 0.4% growth in 2013. The euro drops on the news, the ECB will
definitely have to ease and lower the euro’s value moving forward into the New
Year. Egypt turmoil continues. Violence in Athens grows uglier. The Monthly Jobs
Report blows out all consensus estimates to the upside with 146K jobs and the
unemployment rate drops to 7.7%. Average
hours worked are flat but hourly wages
are up which is a very encouraging sign. Markets are blind-sided as everyone expected Hurricane Sandy to negatively affect the data. The S&P futures
reverse from down 4 to up 7, an 11-handle flip for the bulls. The
markets bounce at the open. Consumer Sentiment
is another bombshell surprise dropping more than expected.
Interestingly, the positive sentiment displayed
by wage earners that make over 75K per year that was in place before the
election vanished causing the large drop in sentiment. Obviously these folks were happy one month
ago thinking Romney would win the presidency, but instead are now deflated dealing
with higher taxes, increased regulation and more business bashing ahead. At 11 AM,
Speaker Boehner lays an egg saying ‘no progress is occurring on the fiscal
cliff negotiations, the Whitehouse has wasted another week, the president is
slowly walking us to the cliff, Geithner’s ‘absolute’ comment was reckless, and
the president’s plan will result in trillion dollar deficits forever’.
The markets drop three S&P’s but
continue sideways the remainder of the day receiving a late day push higher as
volatility moved lower. The SPX closes
at 1418, flat on the week, but price closed a touch
above the 50-day MA, a bullish indication. The Dow Industrials are up 1% on the week to 13155. AAPL is down nearly 3% intraday. The Nasdaq is down 1%
this week and the RUT is flat
on the week showing that small caps and tech continue to create a negative weight
on the markets. IBM changes employee benefits to make a lump-sum annual
payment to 401k accounts rather than distributed payments, thereby allowing the
company to save money. The employee is hurt financially but that does not
matter in this slow-growth, high regulation, high-tax environment; companies
are looking for ways to save money and many will follow IBM’s lead. 60 billion
in relief is requested from a government that is broke to handle the Hurricane
Sandy tragedy.
On Saturday, 12/8/12,
Egypt military warns of dire consequences
coming if they protests continue. Morsi
rescinds the majority of his dictator-style decree but refuses to cancel the Draft
Constitution vote on 12/15/12.
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On Monday, 12/10/12, more
Fiscal Cliff drama is ahead. European drama
continues with Spain the major focus.
On Tuesday, 12/11/12,
International Trade. Wholesale Trade. FOMC two-day meeting begins.
On Wednesday,
12/12/12, Import and Export Prices. 10-Year Note Auction. FOMC Rate
Decision 12:30 PM, FOMC Forecasts 2 PM and Chairman Bernanke’s Press Conference
2:15 PM. Operation Twist ends in two
weeks so a decision on a new QE course of action is expected. New money-pumping ideas should create lift in the markets
and PM’s. A surprise announcement of limited QE, will shock the markets. Keep
in mind that QE3 Infinity already failed; the SPX is below the 1435 level where
QE3 was announced in early September.
On Thursday,
12/13/12, Jobless Claims, PPI and Retail Sales.
Business Inventories. 30-Year Bond Auction. New moon.
On Friday, 12/14/12, CPI
and Industrial Production.
On Saturday,
12/15/12, the vote on the Draft Constitution for
Egypt is scheduled.
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On Sunday, 12/16/12, Japan elections, watch the dollar/yen.
On Wednesday, 12/19/12,
Housing Starts.
On Thursday,
12/20/12, Jobless Claims. GDP.
Philly Fed.
On Friday, 12/21/12,
Opex. Personal Income and Outlays. Consumer Sentiment.
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On Monday, 12/24/12, Christmas Eve, U.S. markets close early.
Durable Goods.
On Tuesday, 12/25/12,
Christmas, U.S. markets are closed for the holiday.
On Wednesday,
12/26/12, U.S. markets reopen for trading.
Happy Kwanzaa.
On Thursday,
12/27/12, Consumer Confidence.
----------------------------------------- 2013 ------------------------------------
On Monday, 12/31/12, EOM. EOQ4. EOH2.
EOY2012. Last Day of
Trading for 2012.
On Tuesday, 1/1/13, ESM is officially open but will not be fully operational.
On Wednesday, 1/2/13, if Congress does not act, the U.S.
hits the ‘massive fiscal cliff’ (a phrase coined by Chairman Bernanke in
early 2012) that will cut the GDP,
increase unemployment and
immediately launch the country into recession, but, on the positive side, the
nation’s debt will decrease. On 9/13/12,
Bernanke says the Fed does not have tools to handle the fiscal
cliff. First Day of Trading for 2013. ISM
Manufacturing Index. FOMC Minutes.
On Friday, 1/4/13, Monthly Jobs Report.
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In March, the National People’s Congress convenes. China President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang take
over complete control and the ten-year
transition of power is finished. China now sets inflation and budget targets moving
forward. China will push to a
domestic-led economy, private consumption, rather than an export-led economy, but a domestic economy will grow
at a slower pace.
In September, Merkel (Germany) seeks re-election and will not want to see Greece exit the euro before
the election but will not care afterwards. Perhaps Greece and Germany will both
exit the euro in the future.
Hi I want to go long on equities soon thinking there will be a December and January rally but I'm not sure whether to go now or wait a few days or week for prices to fall . Any advice please ? Thanks
ReplyDeleteKeystone never has and never will provide advice Anon, you have to make your own decisions. Simply develop a trading program that suits your personality, pick and choose different tools that create a good vibe for your personality and follow those tools to trade. Most importantly, the killer of any trader is placing too much on a one-sided bet. Focus on capital preservation above all other things. This means hold many positions that are diversified across sectors, bulls and bears, and across different time frames. If you lean bullish, do not view that as 100% bullish, view that as being about 70% bullish and 30% bearish, likewise, conversely, if you lean firmly bearish, do not view that as 100% bearish, view it as assembling positions that are perhaps 70% bearish but maintaining about 30% bullish positions. If anyone has made lots of gains this year, and considering the higher taxes on tap, cashing out appears attractive, enjoy th ehoidays, and simply wait until January to reallocate.
DeleteWhile Nov QE3 settlements were swallowed by special Treasury fundings, not the case with Dec when $70 billion+ QE3 cash settles Dec 12-20, surely just "coincidental timing" with the likely 12/12 QE4 bond buying announcement. Very bullish but can't escape the feeling the market wants to bitchslap the politicians into submission with a Fiscal Cliff Flash Crash. While markets cannot disrespect Ben's bond buying, key for me is Ben's 12/12 Presser and whether he moans and wails Fiscal Cliff Doom thus giving markets permission to crash and crush Congress into quickly desired action.
ReplyDeleteIf Ben moans and wails I sell longs and prep for a possible big dump Fri-Mon-Tue. Moon phase should resync after eclipses adding to potential negativity. Long gold but looking to sell or hedge with ZSL. Is Keystone done with ZSL for now or is there a possible reenty next week?
@ marlowe:
DeleteI think you're too rushed with selling the longs - remember that Ben has done until now ALL that could be done and beyond ... I don't belive in the "Ben moans and wails" version - it's Obama's cashier man ... he will limit to note that the job creation although sluggish in it's growth is rising (pop! goes the weasel for markets!), and FED will double the limit of QE3 from 40 to a total of 80/85 bln $ per month and he expects the job market to recover in a faster way (pop! goes the market again!) BUUUUUUT .... (and now the markets tremble a little :D ) the politicians should do their part and should settle an accord and...bla...and blaa... (and now market go to east, sideways)... The press conference ends and the markets go UP!
That's the end. :)
Damn! I should be hired at FED and write those borring lines for Ben's conferences .. :)
Marlowe, I think a final rally is expected between 12.dec.12 and 21/24 dec.12 .... Monday and Tuesday (10/11 dec.12) markets will falsely faint down to 1380's ... 1390 and some bulls will cut their longs ...and after that ...surprise rally! SPX up to 1440's probably and AAPL 585-620/625 ... and than. .... when nobody is expecting, on a very low volume markets with VIX on the floor (10.5-11.5 points) ... BANG!!! the markets will be thrown down and buried on "fears" on fiscal cliff not resolved before Christmas ...(as Obama promised).
It's just a scenario...but might happend ...
V.
Great comments all which illustrate how the markets are a coin toss this week. And it is a very important week, progress must be made on the fiscal cliff since time will be too tight if another week goes by. Also of interest is that QE3 Infinity has failed. Chairman Bernanke tries to create the wealth effect to encourage spending and a recovery, but if the SPX under where QE3 Infinity was announced at 1435-ish, it is a head-scratcher. The emperor is not wearing any clothes (Hans Christian Anderson). The markets appear to have priced in the positive ending to the fiscal cliff, and a new QE4 to replace Operation Twist, so this week will provide fireworks, especially mid-week and on. The VIX 15.82 will set the tone for Monday and Tuesday trading. All that can be done is to take things day to day.
ReplyDeleteV, thanks for the feedback. If Ben doesn't moan and wail Fiscal Cliff Doom then I stay long. He will certainly be peppered with Cliff questions and his lamenting or lack thereof will be a conscious deliberate decision made in advance. I still think markets prefer to seize the opportunity to show politicians who is the boss, but markets will nonetheless defer to Ben, and thus his Presser will tell us whether his loyalties lie with markets (go short) or politicians (stay long).
ReplyDeleteKS, while I detest QE3 and expect it to eventually fail, I don't consider it yet to be a short term fail as all we've had is the annoucement without primary dealers getting new bags of cash. That changes next week although the Cliff gives PDs an excuse not to use the new cash. If Cliff is resolved/kicked and PDs do not put new cash to work then its Big Time Fail and look out below.