Saturday, April 27, 2013

Keystone's Trading Week in Review and Path Ahead 4/27/13

On Friday, 4/19/13, OpEx. All eyes in the States are riveted to the news coverage of the Boston Marathon terrorism manhunt. One suspect is shot dead and the other is on the run.  The BOJ increases the money pumping talk ahead of the G20 meetings so the yen weakens, dollar/yen rises to over 99, and the equity futures markets move higher. The dollar/yen was under 98 yesterday afternoon and now over 99. GE earnings are weak and the stock sells off pre-market. After the opening bell, the markets are mixed with the Dow weak but the SPX is up. This is due to weakness in the IBM, GE and MCD components today.  The financial sector recovers and helps elevate markets. Copper is now down 20% off its top and in a bear market. The SPX moves back above the 50-day MA. Crude oil lingers at 88 and gold at 1400. The markets move higher into the closing bell and print a strong up day. Higher financials and lower volatility help create the upside as well as the BOJ easing.  Keystone’s 30-minute chart shows the 8 MA crossing above the 34 MA signaling bullish markets for the hours and days ahead. The SPX gains 14 points, +0.9%, to 1555, but is down -2.1% for the week. The Dow is flat today and down -2.1% on the week. The Nasdaq is down -2.7% this week and the RUT is off -3.2%, clearly tech and small caps leading lower the opposite of what should occur for a strong economic recovery. IBM drops over -8% today. The utilities sector continues an obscene parabolic move higher with UTIL now above 528 as investors chase dividend stocks and perceived safety stocks creating new asset bubbles. At about 9 PM, the second Boston Marathon terrorist suspect is cornered in a back yard and taken into custody. Fitch downgrades the U.K.

On Saturday, 4/20/13, Baron’s magazine newspaper cover proclaims; “Dow 16,000.”  Many times the headlines help identify tops and bottoms in markets from a contrarian perspective.  The G-20 is unconcerned about the BOJ yen devaluation so the equity markets will rally on a weaker yen as they did on Friday (weaker yen creates a higher dollar/yen pair and higher equity markets). The politicians instead choose to label Japan’s currency debasement as a program that is addressing deflation and targeting 2% inflation. The futures climb higher. Chairman Bernanke will not attend the Jackson Hole conference this year due to a scheduling conflict. Each summer traders look forward to Jackson Hole since the Fed always announces a new QE program in this time period. Is Bernanke signaling the markets to not expect further QE? The Fed is likely worried about the new asset bubbles created in the dividend and perceived safe haven stocks due to the current easing.

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On Monday, 4/22/13, Nikkei and Japan auto manufacturers bounce strongly on the weaker yen. The dollar/yen moves higher to tease the 100 level again.  Fitch downgrades the U.K. following along after Moody’s downgrade last week. The Italy election drama continues with the reelection of the aging president and hopes continue that a government can be formed. Europe remains surprisingly resilient as recession and depression continues. The S&P futures are up nine on the weaker yen.  Crude oil moves up from the sticky 88 level.  Brent briefly moves up over 100.  CAT earnings cough up a hair ball missing on both the top and bottom lines and guidance is reduced moving forward.  CAT is a key proxy for China and trades flat since the bad news was expected. GE is downgraded.  China says that some short term pain may be required to set up a stronger future. The broad indexes trade sideways after the opening bell and then drop on the disappointing Existing Home Sales. Interestingly, a few minutes after the open, GOOG experiences a mini flash crash, dropping -3.5% in one minute’s time then recovering.  These mini flash crash events are becoming more and more common.  Putin says that Russia’s economy will likely remain in a malaise moving forward.  Crude oil continues to fight at the 88 level and Brent at the 100 level. Copper continues to collapse.  As the day moves along, Keystone’s 60-minute chart shows the SPX moving above the 200 EMA signaling bullish markets for the hours and days ahead. At 2:50 PM, a moment of silence is observed in Boston and at the exchanges in honor of the three deaths and the many wounded in the terrorism attack last week at this time. Into the closing bell, the SPX fights to regain the 20-day MA at 1564 but closes below at 1562.  Tech is strong today while small caps are weak. Canada thwarts a terrorist attack, that was planned against a passenger train, but the markets do not react negatively on the news. After the bell, NFLX earnings beat estimates and the stock soars higher. TXN earnings are in line and it receives a lift. The U.S. airplane traffic is snarled with delay’s due to the sequestration cuts.  Customer complaints are increasing.

On Tuesday, 4/23/13, China PMI data is weaker than expected.  Copper, commodities and materials markets are sold off.  France PMI comes in better than expected but Germany, and Europe in general, is worse.  The euro drops under 1.30.  Europe warns the U.S. about banking regulations. The BOJ easy money is chasing European bonds with the Germany 10-year yield briefly dropping under 1.20%, a historic low.  The 10-year Treasury drops to 1.66% not seen since December 2012. DD, UTX, TRV and other earnings reports all beat their lowered EPS estimates but the trend continues with weak top line revenues. Companies are meeting EPS due to laying off or beating existing employees, not by growing the top line sales.  The S&P futures are all over the map, down seven early this morning, then up seven, now up about four.  The opening bell rings and the broad markets launch higher. The dollar/yen is moving higher to 99.40 and the weaker yen takes equity markets higher. The SPX tests the key 1576 resistance level and moves up through to print a HOD at 1579. New Home Sales are lackluster and manufacturing data is weak but traders do not care since the Fed and BOJ are pumping the markets higher with easy money.  YUM is downgraded ahead of its earnings later today. Keybot the Quant algorithm flips to the long side at SPX 1569. At 1:07 PM EST, the AP’s Twitter account is hacked and a message is released on Twitter saying the Whitehouse is under attack and Barack Obama is injured. Within a couple minutes, the Whitehouse rebuffs the story and in quick order it is exposed as a hoax and fake tweet. One tip-off was that the President’s tweet would not say Barack, it should say President Obama if legitimate.  However, the broad indexes experience a mini flash-crash dropping -1.1% in a few minutes time. The whole flash crash event took about ten to fifteen minutes from where prices fell and then recovered back to the levels prior to the flash crash. The SPX dropped 16 handles and the Dow dropped 151 handles. The mini flash crashes are now occurring across indexes and individual stocks, such as GOOG, with a frequency of every few days (type ‘mini flash crash’ into the search box to the right to view the charts). The bulls enjoy a strong start to the week, fake tweet and all, with the SPX up well over 20 handles in two days time. Strong financials and semiconductors and lower volatility provides the bull fuel. After the bell, T earnings beat bottom line but miss on the top line revenue as does most other company these days. Companies are meeting EPS not due to robust sales but rather due to cutting expenses and employees and whipping the current employees to produce more with less. AAPL reports earnings that are in-line and announce an increase in buybacks which launches the stock after hours.  Interestingly, in the conference call, Apple admits that sales estimates will be lowered moving forward and also that a wider Smartphone screen, that would be more in line with Droid Smartphones, is not in the works for the iPhone and Apple is sticking with the skinnier iPhone screen. AAPL was up over 420 AH’s and immediately plummets to the closing price at 406 on this news.

On Wednesday, 4/24/13, German sentiment is weaker than expected.  Earnings continue to show beats for the bottom line EPS but miss on the top line revenues.  The weakening yen has a direct impact on the equities markets these days. As the dollar/yen goes, so goes the equity markets.  The high-yield investment instruments are in bubble territory. All the folks chasing yield will likely experience a rude awakening moving forward. The markets open and travel flat all day long.  Dividend stocks are slapped perhaps as traders realize these stocks are pumped far too high on central banker easy money.  T is down -6% today, PG down -5% and LLY down -3%. Interestingly, the drop in these stocks wipe out the yield in only one day.  The 3 to 7% yield on dividend stocks will not appear attractive if the price of the stock is 20% lower a few months from now. Durable Goods Orders are weaker than expected. The CPC put/call ratio is in the 0.7’s again signaling complacency and a market top occurring.

On Thursday, 4/25/13, China banks are negatively impacted by bad real estate loans. U.K. GDP is a smidge positive so a triple-dip recession is avoided. Spain unemployment rate is 27.2%, the highest in 37 years, at the same levels of the Great Depression in the U.S. in the 1930’s. Spain is now in seven quarters of recession. Bellwether UPS earnings are in line which provides a boost to equities. The markets open but a software glitch occurs shutting down the CBOE options trading for three and one-half hours. The flash crashes and exchange outages are occurring far too often these days. The CBOE is back on line after lunch but the reason for the outage is not clear. The markets leap higher regardless of the CBOE outage with the SPX testing the 1593 all-time closing high but unable to push above.  At about 2 PM, Germany’s Bundesbank voices concern over the ECB’s OMT bond-buying program. This is no surprise since Germany has always held this position, but the stock market sells off and trails lower into the closing bell. The SPX prints the highs for the week at 1593 and closes at 1585.  The 10-year Treasury yield continues to travel through a tight two-week sideways range of 1.68%-1.72%. The sequester cuts at the airports are causing multi-hour delay’s with the flying public now voicing anger over the political games. Folks are mad at Congress’s incompetence rather than the FAA. After the bell, AMZN and SBUX beat on EPS but both miss on top line revenue, again repeating the ongoing weak sales theme. The Nikkei charts are topping out showing that the yen debasement may need to take a rest. The NYMO chart signals a market top in place now.

On Friday, 4/26/13, BOJ maintains the pledge for stimulus but data shows the deflation continues.  The yen actually strengthens on the news, so the dollar/yen drops to 98.64 from well over 99 yesterday and equity futures move lower. Analysts are now questioning if the dollar/yen will reach the psychological 100 level. The Nikkei is up an obscene 35% this year purely due to money-printing. The Japanese banks and auto manufacturers benefit from the weaker yen created by ‘Abenomics’. Spain protests flare-up with rioters clashing with police over the austerity and 27% unemployment rate.  Portugal protests heat up as well. Two million households in Spain have no one in the family working.  Protestors are now targeting individual politicians and others perceived to have created the current fiscal mess; a new and troubling twist in the debt saga.  All politicians, bankers and other power brokers around the globe are watching this new societal development with grave concern. Perhaps pitchfork and torch stores will open up on city street corners. The general public is up in arms since the bankers that created all the economic problems were bailed out and are now wealthier than ever, and the too-big-to-fail banks are larger than ever, while individual citizens are struggling each day mired in unemployment with taxes and other expenses increasing daily. The ECB says the bond-buying program may not be needed going forward since yields have calmed.  The BOJ easy money is finding its way to European bonds causing the drop in yields so the reason for calmer yields is not due to a recovering Europe, but rather more central banker intervention in markets continuing to distort price discovery. About 4% of Cyprus’s money deposited in banks was pulled over the last month, perhaps a bit under what would be expected since money is no longer truly safe in banks.  Of great interest is that the other European nations do not show significant outflows from bank deposits so folks do not appear worried about losing money when a bailout occurs. Go figure. Gucci reports the weakest sales in three years indicating that the wealthy continue to cut back on spending.  Merkel softens the rhetoric from the Bundesbank comments yesterday.   The initial read on Q1 GDP is 2.5%, weaker than the expected 3.2%. The markets open and sell off. The Consumer Sentiment is in line with estimates but markets sell off further with the SPX at 1578 at lunch time. Volatility moves strongly higher signaling trouble for markets but then trails off lower into the closing bell allowing the broad indexes to recover. The flat day ends with the SPX at 1582 failing to print all-time highs this week.  The Dow closes at 14713. For the week, the SPX is up 1.7%, the Dow up +1.1%, the Nasdaq up +2.3% and RUT up +2.5%.  Tech and small caps led higher which is a plus for the bulls.  Semiconductor’s are up 4.4% this week.  The parabolic move in utilities continues as traders use the Fed and BOJ easy money to fuel new asset bubbles in dividend stocks, utes, REIT’s, high-yield instruments, healthcare and other perceived safe havens.  Congress passes stop-gap measures to remedy the airport problems caused by the sequester cuts; of course just in time for themselves to fly home for a short recess.

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On Monday, 4/29/13, Personal Income and Outlays. Pending Home Sales.

On Tuesday, 4/30/13, EOM. Chicago PMI. Consumer Confidence. 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.

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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.

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On Monday, 5/13/13, Retail Sales. Business Inventories.

On Tuesday, 5/14/13, Import and Export Prices.

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.

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On Wednesday, 5/22/13, Existing Home Sales. FOMC Meeting Minutes.

On Thursday, 5/23/13, Jobless Claims, PMI Mfg Index. New Home Sales. 10-Year TIPS Auciton.

On Friday, 5/24/13, Durable Goods Orders.

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On Monday, 5/27/13, U.S. Markets are Closed in Observance of Memorial Day.

On Tuesday, 5/28/13, U.S. Markets Open for TradingConsumer Confidence. 2-Year Note Auction. The 16.4 trillion Debt Ceiling limit is hit, however, the government is taking in more revenue than expected, the sequester cuts are in place, and Congress is developing a plan to extend the Debt Ceiling deadline to August or September, so this can will likely be kicked about three months into the future. The politicians are trying to line up all the problems, debt ceiling, fiscal cliff, and CR resolution to fund the government, for a combined August-September deadline thus providing this summer as the time to conduct a knock-down drag out political fight to set the U.S. on the correct fiscal path forward. This political behavior is similar to the summer of 2011 which did not receive a happy ending.

On Wednesday, 5/29/13, 5-Year Note Auction.

On Thursday, 5/30/13, Jobless Claims, GDP. 7-Year Note Auction.

On Friday, 5/31/13, EOM. Personal Income and Outlays. Chicago PMI. Consumer Sentiment.  Farm Prices.

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On Monday, 6/3/13, PMI Mfg Index. ISM Mfg Index. Construction Spending.

On Tuesday, 6/4/13, International Trade.

On Wednesday, 6/5/13, ADP Employment Report. Productivity and Costs. Factory Orders. ISM Non-Mfg Index. Beige Book.

On Thursday, 6/6/13, Jobless Claims.

On Friday, 6/7/13, Monthly Jobs Report.

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In September, Merkel (Germany) seeks re-election and will not want to see Greece or other nations exit the euro before the election but will not care afterwards. Perhaps Greece and others, or Germany, may 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. Will Yellen, even more dovish, likely wanting to see QE Infinity and Beyond placed on steroids, take the reins?

In March 2014, the ESM is officially “fully operational.” The banking union schedule has been delayed from January 2013 to January 2014 and now to March 2014.

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