On Friday, 6/14/13, Japan
and Asia markets recover on the back of a happy U.S. tape yesterday. The BOJ says more
stimulus programs are coming in autumn which helps lift global
equities. The dollar/yen
is at 95.00. Economic bellwether rebar trades near a 9-month low due to China weakness. European markets
move higher. The Airbus A350 plane performs a successful test
flight. PPI (Producer Price Index) reports higher food and energy prices. Industrial
Production remains lackluster. Economics professor Jeremy Siegel appears on television once
again affirming his Dow 17,000 call for this year. The broad indexes jump higher with the SPX printing a high
near 1641 but the weaker than expected Consumer Sentiment
data drops the markets. In addition, the IMF is pessimistic warning of downside risks to the U.S. economy. The dollar/yen drops like a stone down through 95 towards 94.
The stronger
yen slaps the equity markets lower. Keystone’s 60-minute chart shows the SPX
dropping through the 200 EMA at 1629 signaling bearish markets for the hours
ahead. The broad indexes are
flip-flopping this week with a big down day on Wednesday, followed by a big
up on Thursday and now another down day. The SPX then moves sideways through 1625-1632 and closes at the important
1626-1627 S/R. The SPX loses -0.6% today,
the Dow is down
-0.7%, Nasdaq -0.6% and RUT -0.8%; small caps leading the way lower. Volume was light. For the week, the SPX closes at 1627 losing
-1.0%, the Dow is 15070 losing -1.2%, Nasdaq at 3424 losing -1.3% and RUT at
981 losing -0.6%. Tech led the broad market lower while traders maintain
faith in small caps. Stocks are down
three of the last four weeks. The FBI
head testifies before Congress revealing that he does not know who is running
the internal investigation that is supposed to get to the bottom of the
situation. Shameful. At the same time, National
Intelligence Director James Clapper is exposed for lying to Congress when he
said there is no spying of Americans occurring. Detroit misses a 2 billion debt payment
trying to service 17 billion in liabilities. The Iranians elect pro-nuke and
moderate Rohani to replace Ahmadinejad but the cleric’s rule the country and are pro-nuke so the politics will remain
the same.
On Saturday, 6/15/13,
the Snowden
spying case receives international attention with Hong Kong protestors marching
in favor of the whistleblower not wanting to return Snowden to the U.S. In the States, citizens
weigh-in on each side of Snowden’s disclosures of the government spying, some
call him a traitor, others call him a hero for exposing the breach of the American
Constitution. This
ongoing drama may distract Congress away
from solving the ongoing monetary problems in the U.S. The Syria mess
intensifies with a more active role by
America beginning but a majority of Americans are not in favor of the action
since the weaponry will simply end up in
terrorist hands. Iran is sending 4K
troops to fight in Syria. The Syria war is a regional conflict with both
sides disliking the U.S. There are now 4
million Syria refugees with the conflict causing oil prices to move higher. The Turkey
mess continues with Erdogan cracking down on protestors. Police
and government forces attack citizens in alley ways leading to the square
and are releasing tear gas canisters
inside of buildings creating mayhem and chaos.
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On Sunday, 6/16/13,
North Korea expresses interest in negotiations over
its nuclear program but these advances always result in gamesmanship.
U.S. bank regulator Hoening says that Deutsche
Bank is ‘horribly undercapitalized’. Turkish unions call for a one-day strike to protest the government crackdown on citizens.
On Monday, 6/17/13, China drops on lower property and material stocks. Stress is appearing in the China banking
system. G8 leaders meet in
Belfast. The
U.K. is hesitant to arm the Syrian
rebels and become embroiled in a Middle East conflict. Putin warns the West about becoming involved in Syria and says the rebels should not be supported since they
‘kill their enemies and eat their organs’. Erdogan (Turkey) threatens to use government troops to
further beat down citizens. The dollar/yen moves higher overnight from 94.20 up to 94.90
sending
S&P futures to +15 and the Dow +136. WTIC oil prints 98.54 at one-year highs. The SPX leaps higher at the opening bell. Equities move
up into the early afternoon when at 2 PM EST, the FT (Financial Times)
releases an article by Robin Harding that says the Fed tapering will begin
sooner than later. The market’s collapse. The Dow plummets 150 points erasing the day’s
gains. At 3 PM, Harding tweets (Twitter) a message “chill out” and says his
article was misinterpreted. The broad indexes turn around and catapult higher with the
Dow moving up 100 points. The
markets are now a circus moving off
the words of a journalist waxing about the tapering of QE. The central bankers have created this mess.
The broad indexes finish up on the day. Presidents Obama and Putin provide a joint
statement from the G8 Summit where both look like they would rather be a
hundred other places. Russia backs
Syria’s Asaad making for an awkward meeting. G8 leaders say the worst is over for the global economy. What are
they smoking at that summit?
On Tuesday, 6/18/13, India is hit with
severe floods. China banks become shakier
as the property bubble grows. The dollar/yen
is calm at 95-ish. Indonesia protestors are rioting over gasoline prices. European auto
registrations hit 20-year lows for the month of May. Folks cannot buy cars if they do not have jobs. Greece
is falling apart mired deep in depression with rioting on the increase.
People have made sacrifices over the last two years but there is no economic improvement
and no economic plan forward. Trust
is lost between the Greek citizens and the State. Draghi has an ‘open mind to non-standard measures’ moving forward that may
have ‘unintended consequences but that does not mean they should not be used’.
The euro
continues rising to near 1.34 as the dollar weakens in anticipation of happy QE
money-printing talk. Brazil citizens
protest the rising living costs as a result of the Olympics. Stadiums are
built while folks suffer with inadequate hospitals, schools and infrastructure.
All around the world, the wealthy benefit from the bailouts and are richer than
ever while everyone else suffers. These protests
are occurring in many nations currently and are a developing worldwide
phenomena as the common folks are fed up with receiving the short-end of the
stick. President Obama suggests that Chairman Bernanke will
likely be replaced saying “he’s already stayed a lot longer than he wanted or
he was supposed to.” CPI (Consumer Price Index) shows no signs of
inflation. Housing Starts are 914K, lower than expected,
and surprising since it is the spring building season, well off the one million
pace two months ago. The housing recovery is in question. Markets drift higher all day long and the Dow Industrials are up over 150 points in
the afternoon printing the sixth consecutive triple digit move for this index
in as many days. The markets finish strong with the SPX up 13 points, +0.8%, to 1652 moving
above the 20-day MA. The Dow is up 140
points, +0.9%, to 15318. This action turns out to be the market top
for the week.
On Wednesday, 6/19/13,
HSBC lowers the growth forecast for China due to
weak economic data. Brazil protests intensify with rioters storming the Sao
Paulo City Hall. Economic bellwether FDX beats on EPS but is
light on top line revenue, like most companies these days. FDX lowers guidance
moving forward and says 3600 employees are ‘leaving voluntarily’. Perhaps walking the plank constitutes leaving
voluntarily? Tesla issues a partial recall on its electric automobiles. Commerzialbank plans on cutting 5600 jobs through 2016.
Fashion icon’s Dolce & Gabbana are convicted of tax evasion in Italy.
The broad indexes move flat awaiting the
Fed. Oil Inventories are higher than expected so oil price drops from the 99
level it hit today to 98.21. At 2 PM, the Fed says there will be no change to the
purchase program. The markets drift
lower but tentatively await the press conference. Chairman Bernanke’s opening statement says
that ‘downside risks have diminished and if the incoming data is broadly
consistent with this outlook, the committee should moderate purchases this year
and end in the middle of next year’. BOMBSHELL NEWS. This is a much more
hawkish statement than traders expected. The party will be coming to an end
since Bernanke is taking away the punch bowl. Stocks immediately sell off on the statement.
Interestingly, the word ‘taper’ is not mentioned in the press conference. Treasury
yields sky rocket as notes and bonds are sold off. The 10-year yield leaps above 2.30% at highs not seen for fifteen months.
The 30-year bond yield is 3.41%. The dollar
catapults higher sending the euro into a tailspin
down from 1.34+ this morning to under 1.32, and the dollar/yen jumps from 95-ish this morning to over 96,
huge moves for currencies. Utilities and REIT’s collapse due to the up in yields causing
further pressure on equities. Oddly, volatility remains flat and does not leap higher as would be
expected. Keystone’s
30-minute chart shows the 8 MA stabbing down through the 34 MA signaling
bearish markets ahead. Keystone’s 60-minute chart shows the SPX dropping under
the 200 EMA at 1630-ish signaling bearish markets ahead. At the closing bell, the SPX is down 23 points, -1.4%, to 1629.
The Dow drops
206 points, -1.4%, to 15112. The Nasdaq loses 39 points, -1.1%, to 3443.
The RUT loses 13
points, -1.4%, to 987, after printing over 1000 two hours ago. Gold ETF’s such as IAU and GLD are beaten
-1.2%. Long traders that are up nicely on the year are taking the chips off the
table. Traders await the reaction in Asia.
On Thursday, 6/20/13,
Aussie dollar falls to lowest since February
2011 with an Aussie dollar buying 92.74 cents. Japan’s Nikkei closes down -1.7% to 13.0K.
China manufacturing PMI hits a 9-month low with
output and new orders both in decline. Commodities,
copper, gold and silver plummet. Asia stocks are pummeled with the double
whammy of the Fed hawkishness and weak China PMI. Eurozone PMI’s
remain in contraction but improve slightly. At 4:30 AM EST, the DAX is down
-1.8% to 8050. France is -1.7%. U.K. -1.5%. The sell off is global cascading through the time
zones. Gold and oil extend
their losses after the Fed news yesterday.
Gold drops over -3%, about 40
bucks, to 1310. Silver collapses -6%.
WTIC crude oil drops almost -2% to 96.47.
At 5 AM EST, S&P futures are -12. Dow -89. Nasdaq -23. Dr.
Copper is at a 7-month low. Gold drops to 1302. Dollar/yen
98.00. Euro 1.3211. The 10-year yield is 2.39%. At 6 AM EST,
the S&P’s
are -13. Dow -100. Nasdaq -24. Gold, silver and copper are collapsing.
The 10-year yield is 2.42%. Several U.S. banks, including BAC, JPM C and WFC, are not following
mortgage standards. At 7 AM, S&P’s are -14.
Dow -102. Nasdaq -28. The broad indexes drop
like a stone at the opening bell. The SPX falls through the 50-day MA at 1618, then
1600 and then leaks lower all day long. Financials and retail sectors lead the way lower. A historic
economic and market day is occurring. Keystone’s trading algorithm, Keybot the
Quant, flips to the short side. The 10-year yield catapults higher to 2.47%, the highest yields in over one year, causing a large sell
off in home builders, REIT’s, utilities and telecom. Into the close, panic and fear begins to show as the broad indexes collapse. CPC
put/call spikes to 1.39 and VIX spikes to 21 signaling a return of fear. Gold plummets under 1300. Commodities,
copper, gold and silver are all beaten lower across the board. The SPX finishes down a huge 41 points, -2.5%, to 1588. The Dow loses 354
points, -2.3%. The Nasdaq loses 79 points, -2.3%. The RUT drops 26
points, -2.6%, small caps leading the
way down which is a bearish indication. After the close, ORCL drops over -9% on weak earnings.
On Friday, 6/21/13, today
is the first day of summer in the
northern hemisphere. The Indian rupee falls. Global markets are crushed over the
last couple days especially emerging
markets. Asia markets are all lower except the
Nikkei printing a gain closing at 13.2K. China intervenes to support its
failing banking system which sends U.S. futures higher and points to a relief
bounce (easy money always pumps markets).
China banks are starting to miss
overnight interbank lending obligations. Singapore smog reaches hazardous
levels with the pollution creating a thick fog and airplanes are having trouble
landing in the haze. Brazil’s one
million man march starts peacefully but ends tragically with riots, violence and the first death.
European
bond yields are creeping higher. Greece becomes a bigger worry each day as
its 10-year yield moves above 11%. Greece needs further funding by the end of
July. The 10-year yield for Italy is 4.54%, Spain
4.83%, Germany 1.68% and U.S. 2.40%.
The Fed pulling back on QE is rekindling the European turmoil. Fed’s
Bullard goes rogue disagreeing with
Chairman Bernanke’s path forward, calling it “inappropriately timed,” something
you never hear among the FOMC members. Perhaps there is trouble in
paradise. CME raises gold margin
requirements which may lead to lower gold prices as traders scramble to
raise cash with commodities collapsing. Today is OpEx Quadruple Witching day so
there is heavy volume at the open. The
markets bounce at the opening bell and
then leak lower to print the lows for the day at lunch time. The SPX sells
off but bounces off its 100-day MA at
1577. The broad indexes float higher into the close ending near flat
on the day with the Nasdaq ending negative.
For the
week, the SPX drops 34 points, -2.1%, to 1592. The Dow is down 271 points, -1.8%, to 14799. The Nasdaq loses 66
points, -1.9%, to 3357. The RUT is down 17 points, -1.8%, to 964. From the
late Tuesday intraday high to the Friday intraday low, the Dow drops from 15340 to 14688, a huge 652 points, in only about 15 total hours of trading. The Trannies (Transportation
Index; a bellwether of economic activity) lose -3.2% this week! The 10-year Treasury note yield hits 2.53%,
the highest close since August 2011. The 30-year bond yield hit 3.59% and the 5-year yield prints 1.41%. Gold drops -7% this week and silver dorps
-9%. Home builders, REIT’s, telecom
and utilities are bludgeoned this week due to the up in yields. After the
close, FB said a bug in its system causes
user personal information to become available on the internet. In the evening,
the U.S. government charges Snowden, the
NSA whistleblower who informed America that everyone’s cell phones, email and
Internet usage is being spied upon, with espionage. Hundreds of Southwest Airlines flights are
delayed due to a computer glitch. Shamed ex-Enron CEO Skilling, continuing to
serve prison time, has his sentence reduced.
On Saturday, 6/22/13,
Hong Kong says the Snowden situation will be
handled as the law dictates but does not comment on any potential Snowden
extradition. Snowden’s location is unknown since 6/10/13 when he checked out of
a Hong Kong hotel. The Whitehouse scandals are distracting politicians that must resolve
budget and government funding issues within the next 12 weeks.
Markets are becoming nervous over the political inaction reminiscent of the
summer of 2011.
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On Sunday, 6/23/13, concern
continues that a banking crisis may occur in China.
Full moon.
On Monday, 6/24/13, Chicago
Fed National Activity Index. Dallas Fed Mfg Index. Fed’s
Fisher (hawk) speaks.
On Tuesday, 6/25/13,
Durable Goods Orders. New Home Sales. Consumer Confidence. Richmond Fed Mfg Index.
2-Year Note Auction. LEN earnings.
On Wednesday, 6/26/13,
Fed’s Kocherlakota speaks. GDP. Oil
Inventories. 5-Year Note Auction. Fed’s Fisher
speaks.
On Thursday, 6/27/13,
Jobless Claims. Personal Income and Outlays. Natty Gas Inventories. Fed’s Powell speaks. Kansas City Mfg Index. Fed’s Lockhart speaks. 7-Year Note Auction. Farm
Prices 3 PM. NKE earnings.
On Friday, 6/28/13, EOM. Fed’s Stein
speaks. Fed’s Lacker speaks. Chicago
PMI. Consumer Sentiment. Fed’s Pianalto speaks. Fed’s Williams speaks.
--------------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 7/1/13, Asia
PMI’s. Europe PMI’s. Construction
Spending. ISM Mfg Index.
On Tuesday, 7/2/13,
Factory Orders.
On Wednesday, 7/3/13,
ECB Rate Decision and Press Conference. ADP
Job Report. International Trade. ISM Non-Mfg Index. Natty Gas Inventories. Oil Inventories.
Markets Close Early for Holiday.
On Thursday, 7/4/13, U.S. Markets are Closed in Observance of July 4th
Independence Day.
On Friday, 7/5/13, Jobless
Claims. Monthly Jobs Report.
---------------------------------------------------------------
In September, the Debt Ceiling limit is reached along with the CR
resolution to fund the U.S. government. Can the politicians reach an agreement this
summer to set the U.S. on the correct fiscal path forward to avoid these
deadlines? The summer showdown is similar to the set-up in the summer of
2011 which did not end happily for markets. The Whitehouse scandals are distracting politicians from properly
addressing the countries financial problems.
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 and likely wanting to see QE 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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