On Friday, 8/16/13, shenanigans occur in the China stock market with the
Shanghai Index popping, then dropping,
in what appears to be market
manipulation although others are saying it was a fat finger trade. The
erratic behavior is the largest swing in 4 years. Authorities are
investigating. The Indian Rupee hits
all-time low against the dollar. The BSE
Sensex (India) crashes -4%. Tanks seal off Tahir Square, the epicenter of political change in recent years, the
center of the city of Cairo, to prevent protestors from entering. The Muslim Brotherhood calls for a Million-Man
March today, after Friday prayers, calling for a ‘Friday of Anger’. There are now over 600 dead and thousands wounded in the violence. Companies such as Shell
are now pulling out of Egypt as conditions deteriorate. Oil prices
remain elevated. European markets trade flat. Merkel says “the EU debt crisis is not
over.” Today is Opex. YHOO’s
Marissa Mayer appears on a sexy Vogue magazine cover lying seductively across a
lounge chair. Housing Starts are in line now setting up a sideways range through 850K-950K for the last year. Thus, the housing recovery will be real if Starts
print above 950K moving forward but troubling economic times are ahead if sub
850K Starts begin printing next month and beyond. Markets
drop at the open with dip-buyers jumping in to create a bounce into noon time. Consumer Sentiment is weaker than expected. Financials and
utilities roll over to the downside and volatility spikes higher,
sending markets down to the LOD at 1653. The SPX closes at 1656 under the 50-day MA at 1657.
For the week, the SPX loses -2.1%, the Dow drops -2.2%, the Nasdaq -1.6% and
RUT -2.3%. The Dow records the worst week of
the year. Financials, XLF, that
have led the markets higher, drop -2.0% this week. The retail sector, RTH, was bludgeoned -3.1% since the
low-end (WMT), middle (M) and high-end
(JWM) consumers are all decreasing their spending. The 10-year yield is 2.83%. Fed’s Fisher
says yields are rising as the economy improves and traders realize that QE
Infinity will not last forever. Utilities lost
their 50-week MA (UTIL 483) which signals extended and serious broad market
selling ahead. Gold is 1375. AAPL has the best week in two years. Traders remain complacent and not
particularly concerned about the market selloff (this typically indicates
further downside ahead).
On Saturday, 8/17/13,
Egypt prepares for more violence and bloodshed as
conditions deteriorate. Oil
prices remain elevated which will keep gasoline prices elevated. GM recalls
300K Chevy Cruze models. The new Steve Jobs movie is released, starring Ashton
Kucher, and is slammed by critics with lousy reviews.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Sunday, 8/18/13, Glenn Greenwald, the journalist who broke the stories on
Snowden and the NSA leaks, vows to write more aggressively about government
snooping into everyone’s lives. Greenwald’s
civil union partner, David Miranda, is detained
at the Heathrow Airport (London) under anti-terror legislation. Big Brother (1984) is not happy that the
common population has discovered the governments spying, therefore, the
governments of the world seek retaliation against the whistleblowers.
On Monday, 8/19/13, the Shanghai
Index erratic behavior on Friday is traced to a computer glitch at Everbright
Securities, China’s State-owned brokerage. The frequency of trading disruptions continues and negatively impacts
investor confidence. China property prices continue to rise. The Indian rupee crashes to a record low of
62.45 against the dollar; the RBI tries to avoid a currency crisis. Japan exports rise the most in 3 years
on the BOJ easy money policies. Asia and emerging markets are flat to down. The
dollar/yen is 97.63 remaining under
98. A
probe opens into bribery charges against
JPM for employing sons and daughters of Chinese big-shots which resulted in
favorable business treatment for JPM. The Egypt violence continues with death count
now surpassing 1,000. 25 police are
murdered in an ambush attack of two mini-buses by radical Muslims. Congress
is divided over supplying further aid to Egypt. The euro is 1.3333.
European markets are down. Mining and resource stocks are weak after Glencore says it will take a $7.6 billion
hit on its Xstrata assets. European yields are up with the Germany 10-year yield at 1.89%, a 13-month
high. The 10-year Treasury yield
jumps to near 2.86% and prints a new 2-year high at 2.90%. Equities move flat all day with a downward
bias and then a wave of selling hits into the closing bell. The SPX loses 10 points
to close at 1646. Both the SPX and Dow are down about -0.6% with
the small caps RUT losing -1.1%. The
SPX and Dow are down about -4% off the
8/2/13 tops two weeks ago. INTC
and AAPL finish up on the day, opposite the broader market, with Apple stock now above 500. After the
bell, URBN earnings beat and the
stock bounces strongly higher AH’s which will help the retail sector. Wall Street regulators
meet with President Obama to discuss ways to speed up financial reforms.
On Tuesday, 8/20/13,
India
continues to try and stabilize the rupee as
the dollar/rupee currency pair moves
above 64. Indonesia and Thailand currencies are selling off. The Indonesia Jakarta Index is crashing -10%
in the last two days. Fear
grows over a currency crisis in India or Brazil. The Sensex loses another one percent. The India contagion is spreading across
emerging markets with Asian indexes down from 1 to 2% or more overnight.
Traders are exiting commodities and
basic materials. BHP loses -3.2%.
Glencore drops -4.0%. In Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood leader,
Mohamed Badie, is arrested for insighting violence. The Army continues to crackdown on the
Mursi-supporters. Hedge funder Kyle Bass goes long JCP. The 10-year
yield drops to 2.81% losing 10 bips in the last few hours. HD earnings beat but S&P futures are
flat to down. BBY earnings beat on
top and bottom lines and it jumps +10%. DKS
and BKS earnings miss. So the retail
earnings provide good and bad news. S&P
futures are jumpy, now at +2 in front of the opening bell. A GS trading glitch occurs in the opening
minutes of trading that will likely cost Goldman about 100 million dollars. The
computer glitches and flash crash
behavior for the exchanges continues. The SPX moves higher as trading
begins and plateaus during lunch time but then collapses into the close. The SPX back kisses the
50-day MA at 1658, fighting for a couple
hours, and fails. Equities finish mixed with the SPX and
Nasdaq up but the Dow down for five days in a row. The SPX is 1652. Retail and financial
sectors recover. HD, with a 20 P/E, ends
down -1.2% on the day in contrast to the happy move higher after the earnings
report. BAC Intern Moritz Erhardt, only
21 years old, dies after working 3 consecutive days. JPM is targeted with further legal actions by the DOJ. The DOJ sends a message to all banks that a
five-year lapse of time means nothing as far as the statute of limitations and
that any financial institution that did wrong would be prosecuted. Tough hollow
words considering that no one has been
held accountable for the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the bankers are wealthier than ever, the banks are bigger than 2008, and all
were bailed out and paid for by Joe
Sixpack who remains out of work.
On Wednesday,
8/21/13, a new
leak is discovered at the Fukishima nuclear plant; the tragedy does not end.
iPad sales drop in China. The
Russian markets are struggling. Germany is in a
tizzy knowing that Greece will need another bailout this year. Heineken sales
miss expectations and the stock loses -4%. The Vine video app gains
popularity. As people exit Detroit, packs of dogs roam the once-great city. LOW earnings beat which is expected
considering HD yesterday. TGT beats on
EPS but is a bit light on top line revenue. AEO provides weak guidance. SPLS has lousy earnings and guidance
showing that small business is not recovering. The retail sector is weak
except for LOW. Mortgage Applications are down again now falling 13 of the last 15 weeks. Rising rates are taking a bite out of
housing and mortgage refi’s are waning. Markets move flat to begin the
session. Existing Home Sales are robust with the
best numbers since 2009. Markets are
sideways into the 2 PM Fed announcement.
The FOMC Minutes do not add any clarity
to the Fed position. The consensus remains that a 20 billion taper
will likely be announced in September that will begin between October and January,
which will reduce the current QE from $85 billion in purchases per month down
to $65 billion. The Fed would like to begin tapering but it is data
dependant; same-o rhetoric. Equities sell off on
the news with the SPX dropping to 1639
bouncing directly off the 20-week MA. The SPX then catapults wildly higher as volatility is crushed lower. The VIX is smashed from
16.30 to under 15 in 28 minutes sending equity markets higher. The SPX then collapses
into the close to 1643. The
SPX travels 56 points distance up and down today but only moves from the 1651 open to the 1643 close, -0.6%. The
higher volatility creates larger and larger intraday and day to day point
swings. The Dow drops -105 points,
-0.7%, now under the psychological 15K number, down 6 consecutive days. XOM is
down 20 of the last 21 days dropping from 95 to 86, -9.5%. After the bell, HPQ reports disappointing earnings and
the stock is beaten as much as -8%. UPS
will no longer provide health insurance to working spouses of employees. This
action opens the floodgates for other companies to announce similar measures to
avoid the high Obamacare costs. The Federal
Reserve is appealing the debit card swipe fee ruling that allows for further
increases in fees that banks charge retailers. The Fed wants the cap on fees to
remain in place. The Snowden accusations are proven correct that the NSA unlawfully spies on
U.S. citizens, violating the Constitution. Plain and simple, Big Brother (1984) is here and all electronic communications including
cell phones, computers, Internet and email, are monitored and archived by the
government. More proof emerges that chemical weapons are used in Syria. A gas attack occurs near Damascus killing hundreds of people, perhaps as
many as 1400, in the largest use of chemical weapons since Saddam Hussein
gassed the Kurds 25 years ago. Brazil central bankers cancel their
trip to Jackson Hole due to their ongoing currency problems.
On Thursday, 8/22/13,
China Flash HSBC PMI is 50.1, as compared to last month’s 47.7, indicating expansion in manufacturing activity.
Weak futures markets bounce higher on the
news. Oil, copper and commodities move
strongly higher despite a stronger dollar. Copper leaps +1.7%. Materials, coal and steel stocks rise. The dollar/yen is 98.68 up big with the dollar while
the euro drops. Euro-zone and Germany PMI’s are better than
expected hinting at a recovery in
place. France PMI remains weak. European equity markets bounce from 1 to 2%.
YHOO tops GOOG in Internet traffic (non-mobile) for the first time in years.
The World’s
top central bankers convene in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, U.S.A., to discuss global
economics and policy. Ms. Yellen, a candidate for the Fed
Chairman job along with Summers, moderates
a panel. Consensus believes that
Summers, who is not attending Jackson Hole, will be the president’s pick as the new Fed head. Fewer
banks are borrowing in the overnight market from the Fed reminiscent of the
period leading into the 2008 market crash. WFC
cuts 2300 mortgage-related jobs. Mortgage refinances are dropping. The folks buying the houses these days are
speculators and hedge funds paying cash and not newly-married Jim and Jane
seeking a first mortgage. The 10-year yield continues to climb to 2.92%.
S&P futures are +7. SHLD and ANF
earnings are misses. ANF is bludgeoned -19% pre-market. Markets jump higher at the opening bell with the SPX moving into the 1650’s. HPQ is down
-9%. SHLD drops -8%. LTD loses -2%. HAIN beats on earnings and it jumps
+13%. At 12:20 PM EST, the Nasdaq halts all
trading in Tape C securities (Nasdaq). Tape A is the NYSE and
Tape B is the AMEX. The failure occurs as AAPL
stock falls through 500. The Nasdaq is frozen at
3631.17. There are 110 Nasdaq stocks in the S&P 500, about
22%, so the outage affects all markets. At about 1 PM EST, the Nasdaq
releases a statement that “trading
should resume shortly.” Activist investor Icahn tweets that he will attend
dinner with AAPL CEO Cook in September to discuss the magnitude of a stock buyback. At 1:33 PM EST, the Nasdaq says “trading will reopen at a time to be
determined.” Equities move sideways
with the SPX at 1654 and Dow at 14955. At
1:45 PM, traders hear the Nasdaq may
open within one hour or so but no can confirm the statement. Obviously, the Nasdaq is having trouble identifying the problem. At 2:22 PM, Nasdaq says trading will resume at 2:30 PM on a quote-only basis and
then full trading will begin at 2:45 PM.
At 2:34 PM, Nasdaq intends to
reopen ‘limited’ trading at 2:45 PM testing a few stocks first. At 2:49 PM,
Nasdaq intends to reopen the system for
quotes at 3:10 PM and full trading should resume at 3:25 PM. Nasdaq is fighting
to reopen the trading before the closing bell. The Nasdaq resumes trading at 3:25 PM. Oddly, the bid and ask on AAPL is reversed,
with sellers asking for 499 but buyers paying 501; after 5 minutes the bid and
ask line out properly. The Nasdaq says
all systems are operational but the NYSE ARCA reports sporadic outages in
Nasdaq-listed stocks continuing. The
Nasdaq debacle
is dubbed the “Flash Freeze.”
The broad indexes recover into
the closing bell ending near the day’s highs. The SPX closes at 1657 one-point shy of the 50-day MA at 1658.87. The Nasdaq closes at 3639 eight points above where
the shutdown occurred. HPQ closes
down -12.5%. After the bell, ARO, GPS and P earnings are lackluster and all
three stocks are sold off. In the
evening, the financial community is all abuzz about the Nasdaq shutdown. The Nasdaq CEO, Robert Greifield, says “our
systems, and the industry’s, have to get to a higher level of robustness.”
Isn’t that an understatement considering the mini flash crashes, technical
problems and computer glitches that occur frequently? Greifeld will likely lose
his job since he was in charge during the FB IPO debacle as well. Greifeld blames a connectivity issue at
NYSE Arca (without specifically naming Arca). The finger-pointing begins.
SEC Chairman Mary Jo White says she will continue to push for automated-trading
rules. Treasury Secretary Lew tries to play down the Nasdaq trading glitch.
Moody’s rating agency is reviewing the
big banks such as GS, JPM, MS, WFC, BAC and C for downgrades. JPM faces fines within the next few
weeks for the London whale debacle.
On Friday, 8/23/13, Indonesia growth will fall under 6% this year. LLY is
under bribery investigation in China. The dollar/yen
rises to 99 as the dollar strengthens and the euro
drops to 1.3347. Asia markets are up but
finish the week down overall. The pro-Morsi supporters call for a ‘Friday of
Martyrs’ so violence may increase after Friday prayers. U.K. GDP is
better than expected so the pound moves
higher. European stocks are flat to down and experience the worst week in two
months. The forensics on the Nasdaq Flash Freeze begins with a focus on the
trading action at 10:19 AM EST yesterday when problems may have began. Greifeld defends not talking to the press
yesterday and says the ‘professional community’ was updated during the
shutdown. There is outrage over this
comment since it unequivocally says there are two sets of rules in the rigged
market game; the large players are given trading information but the retail
trader and Ma and Pa is not. Greifeld says that ‘those that needed to know the
status, knew’ driving the point home that the stock market is a good ole boy’s
insider game. Brazil
launches a $60 billion currency intervention to defend the real and stop the
outflow of capital. The markets drift lower at the opening
bell. At 10 AM, the New Home Sales lay an egg, dropping -13.4%, the lowest
numbers in 3 years. The sick home sales, however, tell traders that the Fed will
now have to delay tapering and instead supply more easy money crack cocaine. Bad
news is good news. Thus, the dollar drops, gold sky rockets, the 10-year yield
plummets from 2.92% to 2.80%, a 12-bip move, and the stock market bounces
higher, moving higher all day long. The home
builders and ITB index move lower while utilities,
telecom and REIT’s, the interest rate sensitive stocks, move higher. The
Jackson Hole
symposium continues but the big-wigs, Bernanke (Fed), Draghi (ECB) and Carney
(BOE), are not attending. Kuroda (BOJ),
however, is attending. ECB’s Nowotny says
“we have to be cautiously optimistic.” Jackson Hole is a yawner. MSFT CEO Ballmer announces his resignation in the coming months and Microsoft stock jumps wildly higher.
Traders do not mince words saying ‘don’t let the door hit you’ and ‘good
riddance’ but Ballmer does not deserve all the criticism. After all, he took
the position over from Bill Gates at the exact top of the Nasdaq bubble.
Ballmer will not shed any tears due to the +9%
jump in MSFT today since he benefits from owning a huge amount of stock. In the final one-half hour of trading, volatility collapses, the VIX drops under 14, utilities
jump higher, and financials and retail sectors move higher pushing the
SPX from 1660 to 1665, closing at 1664. For the week, the SPX is up +0.5%,
the Dow down -0.5%, the Nasdaq
(tech) +1.5% and RUT (small caps) +1.4%. Tech and small caps leading
is a plus for bulls but the lag in the Dow is very troubling. As noted
technician Acampora quips on a business television interview, “never forget
Papa Dow.” Acampora has turned bearish in recent days, reversing his bullish
call when the SPX moved above 1700, and looks for a continued lower move for
stocks ahead citing the weakness in Dow and emerging markets. Gold ends the
week at 1396. The 10-year yield is
2.82%. The Dow ends the week above
15K at 15011.
On Saturday, 8/24/13,
Jackson Hole
Summit ends without fanfare. California and western U.S. wild fires burn out of control. U.S. warships move towards Syria for a potential cruise missile strike.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 8/26/13, Durable
Goods.
On Tuesday, 8/27/13, Consumer Confidence. 2-Year Note Auction.
On Wednesday,
8/28/13, Oil Inventories. 5-Year
Note Auction.
On Thursday, 8/29/13,
Jobless Claims. GDP. Natty Gas Inventories.
On Friday, 8/30/13, EOM. Chicago PMI. Consumer
Sentiment. Holiday weekend ahead.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 9/2/13, Markets are Closed in Observance of Labor Day. China and Asia PMI’s. European PMI’s.
On Tuesday, 9/3/13, Markets Reopen for trading. Congress returns from recess to address the fiscal
problems within the next 4 weeks. ISM Mfg Index.
On Wednesday, 9/4/13,
Beige Book.
On Thursday, 9/5/13,
Jobless Claims. Factory Orders. Natty Gas Inventories. Oil Inventories.
On Friday, 9/6/13, Monthly Jobs Report.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 9/9/13,
…
On Tuesday, 9/10/13,
…
On Wednesday,
9/11/13, Anniversary of 911. Wholesale Trade. Oil Inventories. 10-Year Note Auction.
On Thursday, 9/12/13,
Jobless Claims. Natty Gas Inventories. 30-Year
Bond Auction.
On Friday, 9/13/13,
PPI. Retail Sales. Consumer
Sentiment. Business Inventories.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 9/16/13,
Industrial Production.
On Tuesday, 9/17/13, FOMC meeting begins as traders listen for ‘QE taper’.
CPI.
On Wednesday,
9/18/13, Housing Starts. Oil Inventories.
FOMC Meeting Announcement, Forecasts and
Chairman Bernanke Press Conference.
On Thursday, 9/19/13,
Jobless Claims. Philly Fed. Leading Indicators. Existing Home Sales.
Natty Gas Inventories.
On Friday, 9/20/13, OpEx Quadruple
Witching.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Sunday, 9/22/13, Germany reelects Merkel and now there is no longer a need
to keep countries like Greece or Cyprus in the euro, or even Germany itself.
On Monday, 9/23/13, Flash
PMI’s.
On Tuesday, 9/24/13, Consumer Confidence. 2-Year Note Auction.
On Wednesday, 9/25/13,
Durable Goods Orders. New Home Sales. Oil Inventories. 5-Year Note Auction.
On Thursday, 9/26/13,
Jobless Claims. GDP. Natty Gas Inventories.
On Friday, 9/27/13, Consumer Sentiment.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Sunday, 9/29/13, the Debt Ceiling Limit and CR Continuing Resolution to
fund the U.S. government deadlines occur. Perhaps last minute antics
occur today which is typical for the politicians. The Whitehouse scandals are distracting politicians from addressing the
fiscal problems.
On Monday, 9/30/13, EOM. EOQ3.
On Tuesday, 10/1/13, Q4 begins.
China and Asia PMI’s. European PMI’s.
Construction Spending. ISM Mfg Index.
On Wednesday, 10/2/13,
ADP Jobs Report. Oil Inventories.
On Thursday, 10/3/13,
Jobless Claims. Factory Orders. Natty Gas Inventories.
On Friday, 10/4/13, Monthly Jobs Report. European
bank stress tests will occur in Q4.
----------------------------- 2014 ----------------------
On Friday, 1/31/14,
Chairman
Bernanke’s term ends at the Fed. Yellen, Summers and Kohn are
candidates. Summers is the front runner, especially since President Obama referred to Ms. Yellen as 'Mr.' Yellen. Long traders prefer Yellen since she has a reputation and history of dovishness which would keep the QE party going.
On Friday, 2/7/14,
Winter Olympics begin in Sochi, Russia, through 2/23/14.
In February/March
2014, the new Fed Head testifies before Congress.
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.
''The 20-day MA at 1680.29 should be back tested and this would be a serious upside test for markets. If you recall prior price action, the 1685 level held as support over and over again, until it didn't. Therefore, 1685 carries strong street cred as resistance. Further, August began at 1686 and there are only five trading days remaining in the month to determine if an up, or down, month prints.''
ReplyDeleteOk, I'll write that only once, who's lucky to read it - ok! Who's not - that's life!
Next week end (also EOM) will mark on the monthly charts a 'hanging man'. The TA guys know what that means.
That's all what I wanted to say.
If that's not the case, the bulls should stand up next week and make their best show in order to delete the occuring technical signal.
Will they succeed?
Stay tuned, we will see :) ....
V.