Saturday, March 30, 2013

Keystone's Trading Week in Review and Path Ahead for Markets 3/30/13


On Friday, 3/22/13, the Nikkei plummets -2.5%. The Cyprus finance minister returns from Moscow empty-handed.  Russia is out of the talks until the Troika makes a decision. Merkel is very unhappy with Cyprus delaying talks with the Troika (EU, IMF and ECB).  News occurs that Cyprus Popular Bank will close and reorganize. Hundreds of protestors and bank employees take to the streets in front of the bank and clash with police. Cyprus parliament is in session trying to find a solution to the crisis. S&P rating agency downgrades Cyprus debt.  France business confidence drops. The U.K.’s Mulberry (high-end bags) announces disappointing sales and lowers guidance moving forward (the wealthy consumers are not spending). Contagion across Europe from the Cyprus crisis is tame and contained so far since Italy and Spain bond yields are maintaining a flat posture. The German 10-year yield is down to 1.35%, a level not seen in about one year, so traders are definitely seeking safety. The euro/dollar sits at 1.29. Cyprus needs 5.8 billion dollars within three days time; the clock is ticking.  The tax on Cyprus depositors will likely occur changing the face of global banking forever, and, of course Russia will find a way to retaliate. German business confidence misses estimates. Italy continues to try and form a government. The broad indexes open and jump higher. The remainder of the day the SPX moves through the 1553-1556 range, bumping up and down depending on Cyprus rumors. At 12:30 PM, the 8 MA moves up through the 34 MA on the SPX 30-minute chart signaling bullish markets for the hours and days ahead.  Fitch rating agency places the U.K. on negative review. The SPX closes at 1557 flat on the week. The Dow was also flat this week closing at 14512 but the Dow prints a new intraday all-time high at 14547. The Nasdaq (tech) and RUT (small caps), the market leaders, are negative on the week. The markets do not sell off since traders optimistically expect a solution to the Cyprus situation and, after the closing bell, Cyprus votes to approve capital controls on banks which opens the door to receive a bailout. The smaller Cyprus bank depositors (under 100,000 euro’s) will be protected but the wealthier depositors will have their funds confiscated, perhaps as much as fifty-percent or more. The Russians, making up the bulk of the wealthier depositors, will likely seek retaliation. The capital controls are needed since bank runs will occur come Tuesday morning and restrictions are needed to limit the amount of funds that can be pulled. Moody’s rating agency downgrades three Cyprus banks one notch based on the pending depositor confiscations and serious problems in the banking sector. Traders involved in the JPM London whale trading debacle are under investigation and charges may follow.

On Saturday, 3/23/13, the Senate finally approves a budget after four years without one.  Cyprus leaders are currently meeting with the Troika (EU, IMF, ECB). Cyprus retailers and other businesses are hurting due to the lack of cash with banks closed for one week.  Eurozone finance ministers are meeting tomorrow and the Cyprus parliament wants to wait until this meeting ends before they convene. Cyprus must set the levels and conditions and approve the money confiscation from the wealthy depositors before Monday to avoid a meltdown which would cause Cyprus to exit the euro. Things are on track to approve the confiscation of the wealthy depositor’s money but the worry remains over bank runs.

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On Sunday, 3/24/13, Palm Sunday.  Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky is found dead in the U.K. due to suspicious circumstances. The majority of Cyprus citizens want to exit the euro.  Eurozone finance ministers meet followed by the Cyprus parliament. At 7 PM EST, word of an initial agreement occurs and futures jump higher. At 9 PM, the Cyprus bailout terms are announced. The solution was expected since politicians and central bankers will always kick the can and wall paper over problems. Interestingly, the futures are not as high as would be expected; the S&P’s up only about six handles when 10 to 30 handles are typical when each of these bailout events occur.

On Monday, 3/25/13, Cyprus drama continues with equity markets trading higher.  S&P futures are up eight. The euro is over 1.30. Traders remain happy due to the Cyprus bailout, or rather ‘bail-in’, as some are calling it (since the depositor money was confiscated to help resolve the situation). Protestors take to the streets in Cyprus. Bank employees know that the majority of them will lose their jobs. In Italy, Berlesconi is pushing for new elections.  In the northern U.S. a major spring snow storm creates a slow start to the week.  At the opening bell, the markets jump higher, the SPX stops within pennies of the all-time closing high at 1565.15, reversing on news from the Dutch finance minister that says Cyprus can serve as a ‘template for the rest of Europe.  The broad indexes plummet. Italian and Spanish, as well as U.S. banks, are sold off hard.  Obviously, if you have your money in an Italy, Spain, or Portugal bank, or any bank for that matter, you are on notice that your money can be confiscated just like Cyprus.  The 8 MA stabs down through the 34 MA on the SPX 30-minute chart signaling bearish markets for the hours and days aheadThe euro falls down through 1.30, then 1.29. Copper weakens further. Volatility jumps higher. The 10-year yield drops to 1.92%. The Fed’s Dudley speaks dovishly but the markets do not bounce. Chairman Bernanke speaks at 1:15 PM but his comments are not market moving.  The Dutch finance minister retracts his statement about Cyprus as a template but the genie is out of the bottle.  Markets bounce on his retraction but barely recover half of the drop today.  Everyone knows that the world has changed; your money is never truly safe in a bank ever again.  Markets skid out sideways to end the session.  Cyprus planned to open the banks tomorrow but announces that all banks will be closed until Thursday, placing the bank holiday at near two weeks time.  When banks open Thursday, capital controls will only allow 100 euro withdrawals (about $130 per day). Obviously, a prudent investing plan moving forward should include a small fireproof safe, hidden in your home, where you can tuck away a few dollars each pay day month after month, building a cash reserve. That way, if future bank holiday’s occur, which is likely, you will be protected from having to stand in line all day to receive one hundred  bucks, and then show up the next day to do the same. Fed’s Fisher says he expects a 3% growth rate by the end of the year.

On Tuesday, 3/26/13, Passover.  The euro remains subdued at 1.2875, the lowest numbers since last November. France confidence sentiment drops as well as industrial output data.  Cyprus tries to calm people by saying a further bailout would not be needed but this is overshadowed by news that the capital controls may continue for a few weeks.  S&P rating agency downgrades Eurozone GDP from a -0.1% projection to -0.5%. The broad indexes move higher at the opening bell ignoring the Cyprus drama. The 8 MA pierces up through the 34 MA on the SPX 30-minute chart signaling bullish markets for the hours and days aheadThe whipsaw verifies the ongoing indecisive and erratic market behavior.  Utilities, UTIL, prints above 500 as traders chase yield and perceived safety. The Dividend Stock Bubble is pumped higher as well. Europe continues to downplay the comment that Cyprus serves as a template for all banks but Portugal comes out in support of the depositor confiscations. That says Portugal may be next and you had better pull your money before it is too late. Volatility remains low so the markets remain elevated into the closing bell finishing up strongly taking back yesterday’s losses. The SPX is at 1564 only one point away from the all-time closing high at 1565.15.  The CPC put/call ratio, and low VIX, confirms the complacency in the markets. Traders are fully convinced that the Fed will support equity markets forever. President Obama signs the Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the government into September.  The Debt Ceiling limit will heat up now since the May deadline is only one month away.

On Wednesday, 3/27/13, the European bond yields react wildly to ongoing uncertainty. The 10-year yield shows Greece jumping over the 12% level, Portugal is over 6%, Spain is now back above 5% and Italy is moving towards 5%. The perceived safe havens are all seeing lower 10-year yields such as Germany dropping under 1.30%, and the U.K. now at 1.74%.  The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield is falling like a stone from the mid 1.9’s yesterday to 1.85% this morning.  A big flight to safety is occurring.  The euro falls through 1.28.  The S&P futures are down six.  Negative comments from Europe are causing the weakness. Bersani says that a new Italy election is likely and it is ‘insane’ to run Italy at this time. Monti says he can hardly wait to leave. The broad indexes drop at the opening bell with the S&P giving back all of yesterday’s gains.  Volatility remains low, however, at VIX 13, so the markets recover as the day moves along. Several Fed heads speak today offering dovish comments but the markets do not rally on the happy QE talk.

On Thursday, 3/28/13, Germany retail sales are better than expected setting a happy tone, but, a short time later, Germany unemployment data shows an unexpected increase of 13K claims when a drop was projected. The euro immediately drops printing well under 1.28.  The Cyprus banks reopen with a 300 euro withdrawal limit (about $390) in place. Check-cashing will not occur. Transactions out of the country are limited as well.  Crowds appear at the banks but the scenes are orderly and peaceful since capital controls are very restrictive. Older citizens, especially those without ATM cards, are the most cash-strapped. A new phase of the Euro crisis develops since a euro in Cyprus is now actually worth a little less than the same euro in the main continent due to less liquidity. Think about that. The capital controls on the banks should continue for many weeks and months and likely longer. Schaeble (Germany) says “Cypriots are projecting their anger at others.” Markets recover into the U.S. open. Today is the end of the month, EOM, and end of the first quarter, EOQ1. The GDP is 0.4% one tick below consensus. Chicago PMI disappoints.  The markets are flat to up, however, ignoring the bad news.  At 10:33 AM EST, the SPX all-time closing high at 1565.15 is breached for the first time in five and one-half years. The pre-holiday buoyancy kicks in and the markets run higher into the closing bell. The SPX closes at a new all-time closing high at 1565.19 but remains under the all-time high at 1576.09 from October 2007.  The markets are fueled by the Fed’s easy money. The utilities, UTIL, are now over 508, moving up at a ridiculous rate of one percent per week since the Autumn. The Dividend Stock Bubble shows parabolic moves in DVY and SDY. Healthcare and consumer staples lead the rally as well which is odd, since tech, financials and semiconductors should lead if the recovery was reflective of a normal business cycle. Healthcare is up 50% over the last two years. The Fed’s money printing is bloating the perceived safer haven sectors such as dividend stocks, Dow blue chips, utilities, healthcare, REIT’s and high-yield corporate’s. The central bankers are making a mess of the markets creating new asset bubbles. In addition, money fleeing Europe is seeking perceived safety and pumping the same stock sectors which blows the bubbles bigger and creates the new market highs day after day. The Dow Industrials (INDU) printed another new all-time high and all-time closing high at 14578.54. The leadership by small caps and tech in January and February has started to lag in March. The first quarter ends with the SPX up over 10%, the strongest move since 1998. Traders begin the Easter holiday weekend in high spirits since the Fed is the Easter Bunny delivering candy and guaranteed higher markets every day.

On Friday, 3/29/13, Consumer Sentiment surprises to the upside. This is a surprise since gasoline prices remain elevated and other sentiment indicators are turning sour. Italy struggles to form a government and President Napolitano considers stepping down.  Germany’s Schauble says that Europeans should not worry and their savings are safe. The hit to the major Cyprus depositors may now be a shocking 60% confiscation.

On Saturday, 3/30/13, Italy’s President Napolitano plans to meet with a select group of individuals to find a way to form a government. The Italy mess becomes more confusing by the day. Cyprus depositors wait for confirmation today that as much as 60% of their funds will be confiscated from the accounts holding over 100,000 euro’s. It is absolutely shameful that a bank steals 60% of your money. The world has changed forever. Russia will likely retaliate since they make up the majority of the wealthy depositor’s.  Since Russia controls much of the gas and oil flow to Europe, next winter may be very chilly for the Europeans.

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On Sunday, 3/31/13, Easter.

On Monday, 4/1/13, China PMI.  ISM Mfg Index. Construction Spending.

On Tuesday, 4/2/13, Factory Orders.

On Wednesday, 4/3/13, ADP Employment Report. BOJ meets with new members for a two-day meeting; the money pumping and yen weakening will continue.

On Thursday, 4/4/13, ECB Rate Decision and Press conference. Jobless Claims.

On Friday, 4/5/13, Monthly Jobs Report. International Trade. Consumer Credit.

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On Sunday, 5/19/13, the 16.4 trillion Debt Ceiling hits.

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.

In Q4 2013, European bank stress tests will occur.

On Friday, 1/31/14, Chairman Bernanke’s term ends at the Fed, unless there is news during Q4 2013 that he will stay on.

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