Happy Halloween. Fortunately, for one day a year, Keystone does not need to wear a mask. Global markets are responding to the Fed's trick rather than treat yesterday. Let's take a look at yesterday afternoon. The FOMC Meeting Announcement is
as expected; the Fed continues the 85 billion per month purchase program without changes. Equities
immediately spike higher on the news but the
headline statement is followed by the Fed
saying ‘labor market conditions show some improvement’ and ‘downside risks to
the outlook have diminished’. The Fed also does not mention the government shutdown so the overall tone on the economy is more positive
than anticipated (thus, less QE, not more, and now traders are thinking a December or January taper may actually be possible).
Markets quickly
reverse and sell off. How ridiculous it is for markets to be purely driven off the Fed's actions; fundamentals be d*mned. The Fed is the market. The Dow drops over
-100 points but recovers. The dollar
pops and euro drops. Commodities and copper
weaken on the stronger dollar. The 10-year
Treasury yield jumps from 2.48% to 2.52% then to 2.54% which chases the utility
sector lower. At the bell, the SPX is down 9 points, -0.5% to 1763. The Dow loses 61
points, -0.4%, to 15619. The Nasdaq drops 22 points, -0.6%, to 3931. The RUT is crushed 16
points, -1.5%, to 1105. Tech and small caps
lead lower. After the bell, V misses on
earnings. SBUX misses on earnings due to weak China sales and drops -3%.
FB earnings are stellar, however, the tween participation on FaceBook is dropping
off dramatically. Anecdotally, young people now refer to the popular social
site as MomBook. Mobile ad revenue continues to grow which is a big plus
despite the loss of teen interest. FB pops +18% on the headline earnings but
drops back to the flat line during the conference call. President Obama speaks on
Obamacare and promises to fix the situation. C and
JPM currency traders are placed on leave when it is discovered they colluded
through instant messaging for 3 years exchanging internal information and
potentially rigging the Forex markets. A NBC
News/Wall Street Journal poll shows a large
drop in President Obama’s approval rating with only 42% of the country in favor
of his actions (the lowest level for his presidency thus far) while over
one-half of the country now disapproves of his actions. 70% of the country now
says the U.S. is on the wrong track forward. The 3 years of lying about
allowing folks to keep their current health insurance and doctors, which is
untrue, is hurting his credibility.
On the technical side, the bulls need to push UTIL above 506.22 and/or GTX above 4874 to reestablish the market upside. The bears need to push JJC under 40.20 and/or VIX above 14.60 to increase the market selling. If all 4 parameters remain in their respective camps, the markets will stumble sideways. For the SPX today starting at 1763, the bulls need to push above 1775 to regain their mojo, a formidable task, but not impossible. The bears need to push under 1757 to accelerate the downside. A move through 1758-1774 is sideways action. S&P futures are -5 as this missive is written. Keybot the Quant remains short through all this market drama and despite the market buoyancy the last few days. If UTIL moves above 506.22 or GTX attains 4874, and the SPX moves above 1775, and stays above, Keybot will likely flip long. The 8 MA stabbed down through the 34 MA on the SPX 30-minute chart signaling bearish markets ahead in this VST time frame so watch to see if the bears maintain control, or not. Bring up an SPX daily chart and note the 5/22/13 market top which occurred on Chairman Bernanke's words. Yesterday's candlestick and Fed announcement is very similar where price leaped higher early in the day and then failed. The fractal from late May may repeat moving forward (price dropped for 2 days after 5/22, then popped to a lower high, then began the May-June selloff into the June low). UTIL 506.22, GTX 4874, JJC 40.20 and VIX 14.60 dictate market direction.
Note Added 10:19 AM: The status is quo. Chicago PMI blows out to the upside so perhaps traders are worried about QE ending in these bazaar markets. UTIL is collapsing with a 497 handle. GTX is 4786. JJC 40.54. VIX 13.89.Thus, all 4 parameters remain in their respective bull and bear camps so the expectation is sideways equities but clearly utes and commodities are weakening further with volatility popping which provides a slight edge to bears so the SPX is down slightly leaking 4 points lower to 1758. Bears need a couple more points to create a downside acceleration. TRIN is 0.79 favoring the bulls today. Perhaps traders need a day of rest after yesterday's drama, plus time to prepare for trick or treating this evening. Bernanke and Yellen masks are the most scary masks of all. Keystone took profits on EUO (double X inverse euro ETF) and will look to reenter; it should have plenty of upside ahead (this is the short euro long dollar theme highlighted over the last few days).
Master Card had a 14% rise in quarterly profit. How wonderful for the stock. But does this simply mean that all the people out of work with no income simply have no other choice. With no cash coming in, they have to rack up credit card debt to support their families??? I do not think that it is the stellar economy that has attributed to lavish spending....
ReplyDeleteV results were disappointing last evening and these two companies should be in agreement. MA is slightly higher so far while V is tanking over -4%. Interestingly, both charts daily and weekly for each are negatively diverged hinting at a top being placed for both of these stocks moving forward, however, the MACD line and histogram on the weekly MA chart wants to see a little more price juice, which is playing out by the looks of their relative behavior.
Deletehttp://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$SPX&p=W&yr=1&mn=6&dy=0&id=p81706716332&a=321667877&listNum=6
ReplyDeletenot my chart but certainly one reason why I'm not bearish yet...
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$NAHL:$NATOT&p=D&yr=0&mn=7&dy=0&id=p67795129391&a=303358015
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$SPX&p=D&yr=0&mn=4&dy=0&id=p84107747990&a=313591232&listNum=4
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$MID&p=D&yr=0&mn=5&dy=0&id=p54336525222&a=279010633
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$SPX&p=D&yr=0&mn=6&dy=0&id=p05281918891&listNum=6&a=317567577
1767 is regression resistance - if we dont breakout as the MidCaps seem to want to then an abc correction to around 1750 is likely...
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$SPX&p=60&yr=0&mn=1&dy=15&id=p82444451104&a=312297654
another good chart that's not mine
ReplyDeletehttps://pbs.twimg.com/media/BX6GrQLCUAAuK1K.png:large
$MID and $tran getting pretty bullish :)
ReplyDeletethe mids slip but still have one foot on firm ground - lol
Deletemy own blog? is that a nice way of getting me to leave? LOL!!!
just kidding!
really I just post the charts as a review of my methods and to offer others another perspective - I'd rather not comment but it is fun sometimes yet it is a distraction
Scott,
ReplyDeleteYou do commendable work. Probably need your own blog.
Mark
Mark do you have a blog? Is it hard to set up?
DeleteSal
Sal,
DeleteBlogs, like these on Blog Spot, are surprisingly easy (in terms of putting it altogether). It's keeping a stream of fresh content that requires a lot of time, as I'm sure KS can vouch for. I DO NOT have a blog, because I honestly don't have that many insights worth sharing. I did work for a brokerage firm for about ten years, where one learns surprisingly little about the market. In my time at the firm, I never once heard an adviser say, "It might be a good time to sell." As the markets were selling off in 09, we were buy-side whores. And as the markets tanked, our firm made record profits. We charge you a commission to sell, the same as to buy. The truth is: your brokerage houses could care less if you make money, because they're set up that they make money off of you either way. Look at who sponsors the news feed on CNBC, CNN, FOX, etc. It's all major street firms. My point is: you can't really listen to all the noise out there. And there's A LOT of noise.
Mark
Hey Mark,
DeleteI do work for a Major Firm and I may be an exception to the rule. As a human being I care about my clients and their money. Additionally, I run managed accounts on a flat fee basis. So my fortunes and directly tied to those of my clients. If they loose money, I loose money. So I am doubly incentivized to protect my clients assets on both the personal and financial levels. There may be very few of us who really do care. But we are out there. :)
C.
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$SPX:$VXO&p=D&yr=3&mn=0&dy=0&id=p19283091184&a=321677645
ReplyDelete