On Friday, 4/5/13, the Japan bond markets are reacting erratically with a
drop in the 10-year yield into the 0.3%’s, then catapulting into the 0.6%’s,
then back down to the 0.4%-0.5% area; phenomenal action that creates concern
around the globe. Soros warns that Japan is engaging in dangerous and risky
business. The S&P futures trail lower ahead of
the Monthly
Jobs Report that produces a paltry 88K jobs when 200K or more was
expected. The unemployment rate dropped
one tick to 7.6% but this is due to folks simply giving up hope of finding a job,
so they are no longer counted. The labor
participation rate is the lowest since 1979 with one-half million folks leaving
the work force. Retailers drastically reduce employees as the tax hikes
are cutting into consumer spending. Less traffic is noted at restaurants. The futures plummet on the news with the S&P’s down -20.
The Dow futures
are down -165 and Nasdaq -35. The 10-year yield collapses under 1.70% down to 1.67% fostering the
deflationary theme. Markets tumble at the opening bell but
the dip-buyers, hooked on the Fed’s crack cocaine, trip over themselves to buy
long, and the markets recover as the
day moves along. Consumer Credit grows as the demand for automobile loans and student
loans increase far more than expected. The auto loan numbers verify the new subprime auto bubble. If you can
fog a mirror, you can drive off the car lot in a brand new Caddy. The SPX recovers off the low at 1539 to close
at 1553, down 7 points on the day, -0.4%, and closes down one percent on the
week. The Dow is flat on the week
at 14565. The Nasdaq
is down -2.0% on the week to 3203. The RUT is down -3% this week to 923. Tech and small cap weakness indicate
trouble for markets moving forward.
The break down in semiconductors
this week is very bearish for markets.
In addition, new asset bubbles in
dividend stocks, healthcare, staples, utes, and other perceived safety plays, are
verified by the flat Dow this week. Utilities
have gone parabolic with UTIL at 515. The market sentiment remains complacent with markets not climbing a
wall of worry but instead climbing the wall of Fed easy money. The Italy mess
continues with a new election becoming more likely. Sadly, an
Italian couple, representative of the financial and social problems currently
plaguing Italy, commits suicide to escape their daily struggles, and a third
person, the brother of the woman, also commits suicide. The tragic news gains attention across Europe
and the world.
On Saturday, 4/6/13, the
EU’s Rehn says that a new directive under
development may require large bank depositors to assume losses for future bank
failures. The InTrade on-line betting site is 700K in debt and
appears insolvent.
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On Monday, 4/8/13, the
dollar/yen
leaps to 99 as the yen weakens to a 4-year low. The Nikkei prints over 13200, up over 3% today, on
the money pumping. TM is up over 4%. Other Asian markets drop on the bird flu
concerns; airlines are down but drug companies are up. China property bubble fears are increasing. Xi tamps down China’s growth projections and
says the “global recovery remains elusive” and “protectionism is on the rise.” Greece’s two main banks fall 30% since this
troubled nation cannot meet the Troika
requirements. Portugal
10-year yield leaps to 6.5% signaling trouble with their bailout
agreement. The France 10-year yield drops to a record low 1.72%, Germany drops to
1.22%, as money moves out of Portugal and Greece into the perceived safer
haven countries. Prada, the luxury shoe retailer, indicates a large drop in
spending. Pirelli says tire demand in Europe is very weak; rubber is a key
indicator of economic health. Eurozone sentiment is down for the
second month in a row below estimates. The euro
is at 1.30. The ‘Iron Lady’, Margaret Thatcher, passes. The
bears have the upper hand to start the day but the bulls push the VIX under 14
and send the broad indexes higher into the close. Keystone’s SPX 30-minute chart shows the 8
MA moving above the 34 MA signaling bullish markets ahead. The SPX
closes at 1563 recovering all the downside, then some, from the weak Jobs
report last week. The central banker
QE money pumps continue to elevate markets. AA earnings kick off the Q1 earnings season with numbers in line
but top line revenues miss
continuing this ongoing trend in the markets. Chairman Bernanke speaks in the evening and says the banks need to reduce
liquidity risk.
On Tuesday, 4/9/13,
China inflation data is in line. New toxic
water leaks are found at Japan’s troubled Fukishima site. Germany export data is weaker than expected
since other countries are debasing but
Draghi has not. Slovenia faces a debt crisis. The Dow Industrials print new all-time highs
and the SPX
prints a new intraday high for 2013 at 1573.89 (two points away from the
all-time high at 1576.09) but retreats during the last hour of
trading. The RUT (small caps) finish
down on the day. The CPC put/call ratio is an uber low 0.67 which equals the
levels where the August 2011 waterfall crash occurred as well as the major
market pullbacks in May 2012 and October 2012.
On Wednesday, 4/10/13,
China exports are weaker than expected. Soros says the Euro crisis is far from resolved and
Eurobonds (which Germany is against) is the solution. Troika recommends
extending the duration of the Irish and Portugal loans. Portugal bond
yields increase causing concern. GS lowers its gold forecast. At 9
AM, the Fed says the FOMC Minutes were mistakenly released ahead of time to
certain individuals yesterday (no wonder the markets rallied) so the
Minutes are released before the opening bell ot everyone else. At 9:36 AM, after the opening bell, the SPX punches
through the previous all-time high at 1576.09 officially printing a new all
time high at 1589.07 and new all-time closing high at 1587.73 finally joining
the Dow Industrials that continues to print new all-time highs day after day. The Fed
and BOJ easy money is pumping U.S. equities higher especially the Dow and
SPX while global indexes remain
lackluster. Utilities print new multi-year highs day after day as investors
seek yield and safety but with UTIL printing nearly 523 intraday, rising one
percent per week since November 2012, things are out of hand with prices bloated
to lofty levels. This behavior is taking
place across all dividend stocks fueling bubble behavior. Folks are simply
buying dividend stocks for the divvy and the perceived safety regardless of
price. The tech sector and small caps recovered strongly today outpacing
the broader market. Global PC shipments fall by a record low for Q1. The FOMC Minutes early release was given to
all the major banks on Tuesday afternoon enabling them to trade off news and
benefit from the market upside. Gold
declines on news of Cyprus selling gold
to pay off debt as well as the GS downgrade. YUM, a bellwether for China, says sales are
weakening significantly.
On Thursday, 4/11/13,
Monti says Italy’s debt will rise to a record low.
Slovenia is a growing problem but Euro
leaders are already calling it a unique situation like Cyprus. China trade data is coming under increasing scrutiny
since the export numbers simply do not line up with global data. The China
exports are far weaker than the numbers the government is reporting. GS
downgrades MSFT based on the weak global PC sales. COST sales miss
estimates. Jobless Claims drop 42K reversing last week’s steep rise. The 30-Year Bond Auction results in the
yield remaining under 3%. The markets jump higher at the opening bell and the SPX prints a new
all-time high at 15397.35 at 11 AM. A new all-time closing high is printed at
1593.37. Bearish
economists and traders turn bullish as short traders throw in the towel and
everyone believes the Fed and BOJ will continue sending markets higher forever
(view this from a contrarian perspective). The dollar/yen
comes up towards 100 but stops just short of this psychological level
(higher dollar/yen pair is due to the BOJ weakening the yen which is the main
driver of the recent new highs in the SPX).
On Friday, 4/12/13, VW reports weak automobile sales in Europe. European Finance Ministers meet for a two-day
meeting to discuss the Eurozone problems. New problems surface in Cyprus where
more money, above the 10 billion bailout, is already needed. Cyprus sends a
letter to the EU, EC and ECB requesting more help. The bailout
numbers for Cyprus now exceed their GDP. Germany’s Meister says they will not
back more aid for Cyprus. European
Finance Minister Rehn says Cyprus may have to find the money from bank reorganizations
and more pain from bank depositors. World leaders simply dig deeper
holes of debt since no one wants to face the deleveraging music. IMF cuts the U.S. growth forecast. JPM earnings beat by twenty cents on
the EPS but come in light on top line
revenue. The ongoing theme of light top line revenues continues across all sectors.
JPM trades lower in the pre-market. WFC follows the same path as JPM,
beating on EPS but with less than
expected top line revenue. WFC
trades lower. Wells Fargo is an important barometer for the housing
sector. Retail Sales decline by the most in nine
months. The bad news sends bonds higher, the
yields lower; the 10-year Treasury yield
drops to 1.72%. The broad indexes drop at
the opening bell with the SPX losing about 7 points in the first few minutes. Consumer Sentiment
takes a sharp drop lower to 72.3 far below estimates showing an unenthusiastic
consumer likely concerned over high gasoline prices and the ongoing lackluster
economy. The stock market collapses on the sentiment numbers with
the SPX dropping from 1591 to 1580 in
one hour’s time. Keystone’s SPX
30-minute chart shows the 8 MA moving below the 34 MA signaling bearish markets
ahead. The Fed
and BOJ money-printing, however, floods
into the market as the morning proceeds, like any other day, and the markets
recover into the closing bell. Traders
ignore bad economic news and disappointing bank earnings. Copper and
commodities collapse today, the building blocks of a global economy, but traders
do not care. Traders are fully hooked on central banker easy money crack cocaine
and bad news is actually great news since
the money printing will continue indefinitely and stocks will be pumped higher
forever. The asset relationships between copper and the markets, commodities and the
markets, Treasury yields and the markets, and many others, have broken down due
to the central banker’s intervention. Traders continue to pump the housing, retail and healthcare
stocks today shrugging off the bad news. The utilities are actually up on this down day, with the utility and dividend bubbles growing ever
larger. UTIL closed above 523. The dollar/yen dropped under 99 today after almost touching
100 yesterday. A stronger yen
(lower dollar/yen) creates downward pressure on equities while the weaker yen,
due to BOJ easing, creates the recent thrust higher in the U.S. equity markets.
The Dow finishes flat today showing how
money continues to chase into the perceived safe havens and dividend stocks.
The SPX and Nasdaq are down -0.2% and the RUT down
-0.4%. Small caps and tech are not leading which is what would be expected
for a strong market. Nonetheless, the bulls ran relentlessly higher this week with the broad indexes all
gaining over 2% this week and the SPX printing new all-time highs.
On Saturday, 4/13/13,
Secretary Kerry warns North Korea to stop the
aggression. The U.S. Treasury warns Japan to not actively weaken the yen.
Obviously, the Fed realizes that the
drastic drop in yen is causing the latest upside thrust in U.S. equity markets
and is becoming concerned over market asset relationships breaking down. Traders are simply pushing markets higher on
the central banker QE.
--------------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 4/15/13,
the IRS deadline for tax returns. North Korea’s key anniversary date. Empire State
Mfg Index. TIC data. C earnings.
On Tuesday, 4/16/13,
CPI and Housing Starts. Industrial
Production. Fed’s Duke, Kocherlakota and Yellen
speak.
On Wednesday,
4/17/13, Beige Book. Fed’s Stein, Bullard and Rosengren speak.
On Thursday, 4/18/13,
Jobless Claims. Philly Fed. Leading Indicators. Fed’s
Kocherlakota and Raskin speak.
On Friday, 4/19/13,
OpEx.
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On Monday, 4/22/13,
Existing Home Sales.
On Tuesday, 4/23/13,
PMI Manufacturing Index. New Home Sales.
On Wednesday,
4/24/13, Durable Goods Orders. 5-Year Note Auction.
On Thursday, 4/25/13,
Jobless Claims. 7-Year Note Auction. Full moon.
On Friday, 4/26/13, GDP. Consumer Sentiment.
---------------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 4/29/13,
Personal Income and Outlays.
On Tuesday, 4/30/13,
EOM. Chicago PMI. Consumer Sentiment. FOMC two-day
meeting begins.
On Wednesday, 5/1/13,
ADP Jobs Report. PMI Mfg Index. ISM Mfg Index.
Construction Spending. FOMC Meeting Announcement.
On Thursday, 5/2/13, ECB Rate Decision and Press Conference. Jobless
Claims. International Trade. Productivity and Costs.
On Friday, 5/3/13, Monthly Jobs Report. Factory Orders. ISM
Non-Mfg Index.
--------------------------------------------------------------
On Tuesday, 5/7/13,
3-Year Note Auction.
On Wednesday, 5/8/13,
10-Year Note Auction.
On Thursday, 5/9/13,
Jobless Claims. Wholesale Trade. 30-Year Bond Auction.
On Friday, 5/10/13,
Treasury Budget.
--------------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 5/13/13, Retail Sales. Business Inventories.
On Wednesday,
5/15/13, PPI. Industrial Production.
On Thursday, 5/16/13,
Jobless Claims, CPI and Housing Starts.
Philly Fed.
On Friday, 5/17/13, Consumer Sentiment. Leading Indicators.
---------------------------------------------------------------
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.
I haven't seen any Treasury auctions scheduled for May. What's the source for the May 7,8, and 9 listings?
ReplyDeleteUse the google machine (google) for searching Marlowe. Type in 'Treasury auction schedule'. The auctions are regularly scheduled each month like all the economic data. You can find it anywhere. It appears the dates check from multiple sources. The 10-yr and 30-yr are worth keeping an eye on, the 10 important to watch day to day to see if money is flowing from bonds to stocks, or the other way, or neither. Lately, money is buying bonds and stocks both. The 30 is key lately due to the drama at the psychological 3% level.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/quarterly-refunding/documents/auctions.pdf
Thanks for link. Get my auction info from Treasury Direct and they only go out 2 weeks. Settlement dates are what I pay attention to so this schedule should be helpful in intermediate time frames. Will also watch for deviations.
ReplyDeleteMonday the Treasury announces a 4 week Cmb auction. This should be an early indicator of tax receipts. A cancelled auction wouldn't surprise me and would be quite bullish for stocks. Rally till the eclipse inversion.