On Friday, 9/27/13, U.K.’s Carney says the recovery is strengthening which may indicate less need for stimulus. Worries
continue over the U.K. housing bubble
where London prices are up 30-40% in only 6 months time. S&P
futures are weak at -4 at 4 AM EST. At 5 AM, S&P’s -6. At 6:30 AM,
S&P’s -8. The threat of the government shutdown looms as the CR deadline on Monday approaches. The debt ceiling deadline is
10/17/13. An IPO comes to market, Violin Memory, VMEM, with loud
boisterous applause at the opening bell. The joy fades quickly and the crowd
goes silent as the stock plummets -16% on its debut. The broad indexes tumble lower at the bell with the SPX falling through
1690. Consumer Sentiment is lower than expected.
LL dumps -11% as corporate offices are searched
by the Fed concerning lumber origin, much like the raid on Gibson concerning
their guitar wood. GS and BAC are downgraded by
Guggenheim. Weaker utilities and higher volatility
sends markets lower. The VIX moves above 15 briefly. The financials continue to tease the XLF 20
level but the bulls hang on and send the SPX sideways at 1692. Keybot the Quant, Keystone’s trading algorithm, flips to the
bear side at SPX 1689. President Obama
speaks at 3:45 PM, fifteen minutes late from the planned time, and berates the
House as usual repeating the mantra that
he will not negotiate. The Washington
dysfunction continues on all sides. Equities drop as the president
speaks but then recover into the closing bell with the SPX ending at 1692. The broad indexes are
down about one-half percent across the board today. The Dow is 15258. For the week, the SPX is -1.1%, Dow -1.3%,
Nasdaq +0.2% and RUT
+0.1%. Tech and small caps lead which is a bullish indication. Small caps are supported by the small
speculative biotech stocks. AAPL’s
2-week rally boosts the Nasdaq. The FHA
asks for a bailout.
On Saturday, 9/28/13,
the House
convenes to discuss the CR bill. Either
the House approves the Senate bill,
which is a clean bill that simply approves funding the government without any
reference to Obamacare, which will be quickly approved by the president,
or, the House will modify the bill by
attaching a different stipulation than defunding Obamacare, such as delaying the individual mandate for the
health bill for one year or making
it law that Congress and all staff should be subject to Obamacare. How
sickening it is for the politicians to ram the higher health care costs down
everyone’s throat while they conveniently exempt themselves? The system is broken. More evidence surfaces that over the last 3 years, the NSA is spying on all American citizens
creating detailed social maps of contacts from cell phones and computers,
obviously, in violation of the American Constitution. Holiday retail hiring drops off dramatically
with 11% less workers needed this year. TGT is hiring 70K workers for the
holidays down from 88K last year. WMT bucks the trend planning to hire 50K
workers up from 55K last year, however, this is more due to the higher number
of stores now open and operating this year. Back-to-school-sales were lackluster indicating weak holiday sales
ahead. Apparel sales are weak. Some new AAPL iPhone users are experiencing
dizziness and vertigo-type symptoms, even vomiting in a few cases, due to
the screen actions and animations.
---------------------------------------------------------
On Sunday, 9/29/13, shortly after midnight, the House approves a new CR bill that approves funding the government with
two new stipulations; first, the
Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) would be
delayed for one year and second, the medical
device tax would be lifted. The Senate
and Whitehouse already say that the new bill is a non-starter and they will not
negotiate. The CR Continuing
Resolution deadline is tomorrow at midnight. Congress and the president are
performing their last minute clown antics as usual. The debt ceiling limit
is only 18 days away. The Sunday evening futures open with the S&P’s -14 and
Dow -109. The China week-long Golden Day holiday begins.
On Monday, 9/30/13, EOM. EOQ3.
Asian markets drop on the U.S. political
uncertainty with a government shutdown now only hours away. NIKKK drops -2%. The
dollar/yen is 97.87. China PMI data is
weaker than expected.. The dollar
is weak and traders are now the least
bullish on the dollar since April. The euro is
up a touch remaining at the 1.35 level. The Italy coalition government faces collapse as the delicate political balance begins to
unravel. Italy 10-year yield moves
higher to 4.51%. Italy banks are down -2 to -4% today. Spain’s retail sales continue to drop. Siemens cuts 15K
jobs. Toshiba cuts 3K jobs. The U.S. 10-year yield is 2.61% after dropping under 2.60% overnight. At 5 AM EST, S&P
-12. Dow -104. Nasdaq -15. The CR Continuing Resolution to fund the
U.S. government deadline occurs at midnight. Equities drop like
a stone at the opening bell with the SPX touching a 1674 handle but
the dip-buyers rush in and the broad
indexes recover as the day moves along. In the afternoon, the Senate votes against the
House CR bill removing the Obamacare stipulations sending it back to the House
with only hours remaining before the deadline. Stocks drop during
the afternoon. The SPX finishes at 1682.
President
Obama calls Boehner (House), Reid (Senate),
and others but with the same message
that he will not negotiate. The
polls must show that all branches of government will be blamed for the shut
down so the president is trying to deflect blame. In the evening, the House stands behind funding the government
but with the stipulations that Obamacare is delayed for one year and that
Congress and staff should have to sign up for Obamacare and not receive
special treatment. The House pleads for
‘fairness’ since the president has already provided businesses a one year delay
and also unions and other friend’s special exceptions. The
Senate tables the bill since there is no progress. The clock runs out and at midnight; the U.S. government begins shutting
down. The last government shutdown was 17 years ago in 1995-1996. As many
as 800K people will be out of work
and non-essential departments such as
parks will shut down. President
Obama takes to Twitter and tweets “They actually did it.” The blame game begins.
On Tuesday, 10/1/13, Q4 begins.
China PMI is lower than expected. Japan increases the sales tax from 5%
to 8% but also provides 50 billion
dollars of stimulus. Global
markets are higher surprisingly shrugging off the U.S. government shutdown. Traders
remain complacent fully believing that the Fed and central bankers will keep
equity markets elevated. The dollar
weakens to 79.1 with the dollar/yen at 97.96
and euro up to 1.3564. The 10-year yield is
2.65%. Unilever, a global bellwether, is
down -4% on lower guidance citing emerging market weakness moving forward. Signs of slowing emerging markets are
appearing across many sectors. At 4 AM, S&P
futures are +9, Dow +66, Nasdaq +19. What shut down? Traders do not
care; the wine is flowing like water. Global
markets are higher. Eurozone PMI weakens
slightly but continues to show expansion. German
jobless rate increases. Italy youth jobless rate rises to 40.1%. The Italy 10-year yield continues to inch
higher to 4.56% and the government
is in disarray. U.K. PMI data is weaker than expected. AMZN boosts holiday hiring. In bombshell
news, MRK cuts 8500 workers, about 10% of its work
force. MRK jumps +1% on the news since laying off workers will
increase earnings. At 7:30 AM, S&P’s +4, Dow +32, Nasdaq +9. The broad indexes leap higher at the opening bell, the SPX moves from 1682 to 1697 at lunch
time. Construction Spending data is delayed due to the government shutdown
and the Friday Monthly Jobs Report may
be delayed. ISM
Mfg Index is better than expected reversing the negative vibe from this
morning’s global PMI’s. The Affordable Care Act health exchanges open for business today. The Obamacare web sites crash and other
glitches occur. The government had 3
years to get ready and they fall flat on the first day. These are the
incompetents that everyone will now rely on for medical care. Gold
collapses today -40 to 1287. A large seller exited gold positions this
morning fostering the negativity. Equities
drift lower during the afternoon but in the final minute of trading spike
wildly higher. The SPX is up 13 points, +0.8%, to 1695. The Dow gains
+0.4%, Nasdaq +1.2% and RUT +1.2%. RUT prints another new all-time high at
1088. The strong tech and
small caps continue to favor the bulls. The House attempts to pass smaller
funding bills to fund items such as the national parks and veterans’ affairs
but the approach is voted down. President Obama and the Senate are against a
piece meal approach and continue to say they will not negotiate. Both sides are busy sniping and blaming each
other all day long into the evening.
On Wednesday, 10/2/13,
Asian markets are higher except for NIKK down -2%. TM is cutting production so all auto makers are trading lower. Motor vehicle sales are weaker than expected.
GM sales are disappointing. European stocks are down -0.5% to -1.0%. Italian PM Letta speaks. Berlusconi’s supporters abandon his party and join Letta. The ECB meets today, on a rare Wednesday
instead of the regular first Thursday each month, due to a German holiday
tomorrow. Traders are listening for a potential LTRO 3. Draghi avoids
commenting on Italian politics. At 3:30 AM EST, futures dip lower with the S&P’s -12, Dow -90, Nasdaq -17.
The 10-year yield is 2.62%. Secretary Lew sends a letter to Congress urging quick
action on increasing the debt ceiling limit since time is running out. Bill Gross of PIMCO says not increasing the
debt ceiling would be unimaginable and catastrophic. The ADP Jobs Report is 166K jobs, weaker than
expected, reflecting an anemic economy, and
takes on increased importance since the BLS number may be cancelled on
Friday. The broad indexes drop at the opening bell. Financials
and utilities create market weakness. At 10 AM, a statement by Leader Reid is perceived to offer an olive branch
(later in the day it was determined to be the same old rhetoric) so the markets recover back towards the flat line as
the day moves along. The SPX ends flat
at 1694 and Dow at 15133. TSLA loses
-10% on a downgrade and more importantly, a video that goes viral, showing a Model S on fire after a collision.
Chairman Bernanke speaks late-day saying that the slow growth economy is hurting small banks. The New York Attorney General sues WFC for insufficiently helping homeowners after the 2008-2009 financial crisis. Defense
contractor UTX says as many as 5K jobs will be lost due to the shutdown.
Twitter is exploring office locations in San Francisco for its coming IPO. After the bell, President
Obama is interviewed by a democrat-friendly commentator and says he will not negotiate. The president says he is exasperated over the
shutdown and that he ‘bent over
backwards to find solutions’ (although for multiple times per day for two weeks
the president forcefully said he would not negotiate). When asked about the stock market complacency,
the president says “this time is
different and the markets should be concerned.” In the evening, the president and Congressional leaders
Boehner, Reid, Pelosi and McConnell meet at the Whitehouse for one hour. Boehner steps to the makeshift podium
in the Whitehouse driveway to say the meeting reiterated all the same
positions. “The president does not want
to negotiate.” Reid and Pelosi provide a statement a short time later saying the Senate will gladly negotiate if the
republicans will reopen the government (same baby talk from both
sides). The language grows uglier with
Reid saying the republicans are holding the U.S. hostage. Markets are desensitized to the drama
remaining elevated without concern. Traders expect a solution to come, as
always happens, so the bulls are content
to stay long the market. This complacency may set up a spectacular drop in
the stock market if the politics worsen.
On Thursday, 10/3/13,
Michelin, a global rubber and tire provider receiving 30% of its sales from
large commercial vehicle tires, reports
weak sales indicating a slowing global economy. Leader McConnell comments on the Senate floor that the meeting last
evening at the Whitehouse resulted in the president
saying he will not negotiate.
The mainline China week-long Golden Day holiday
continues. China services data expands
at a faster rate. Another radioactive leak is discovered at Fukishima.
Tokyo Electric drops -5%. Spanish yields are climbing. U.K. house prices continue to move higher month after month
increasing the bubble. The pound/dollar is 1.6232. The euro breaches
1.36. The dollar is at an
8-month low against the euro. The 10-year yield is 2.64%. At 5:30 AM EST, S&P futures are -5 and Dow -45. Authorities bust the Silk Road website, an anonymous marketplace, which is believed to be
conducting nefarious activities, and using
bitcoin as its form of currency for transactions. Global governments obviously
view bitcoin as a threat and want to create news spin that the virtual currency
is used for illegal activity. Bitcoin prices plunge on the news. LLY
says sales forecasts are weak moving forward so the stock drops, but only
slightly, since they also announce a buy-back to pump the shares higher. Equities
sell off after the opening bell. Factory
Orders data are cancelled due to the government shutdown. ISM Non-Mfg Index is weaker than expected which
weakens the markets. Secretary Lew comments on the
shutdown and pending debt ceiling limit crisis saying it would be
‘catastrophic’ and a ‘recession will occur that will be as bad as the Great
Depression’. Lew spooks the markets
which is likely what the Administration desires during these sick political
games. The SPX falls through the 50-day MA at 1680 and down to 1671 at noon time. The president said the markets should be worried last
evening and apparently the markets are today. The New York Times reports
that Speaker Boehner told his colleagues
that he “will not let the Nation default.”
Boehner’s office does not deny the comment. Stocks recover strongly on the more conciliatory tone with the SPX
moving higher to 1682. At 2:30 PM,
shots are fired at the Capitol Building
at the Botanical Garden, after a wild car chase, which results in a lock-down
of the area. Stocks drop on the news.
The SPX ends the
day down 15 points, -0.9%, to 1679. The Dow gives up 137 points, -0.9%, to 14996, losing the 15K level. The Nasdaq drops -1.1% to 3774. The RUT is down -1.1%
to 1071. Tech and small caps may lead on the way up, but they are
leading on the way down as well. Twitter
announces their IPO stock symbol as TWTR (obviously, they did not want to
select TWIT). The NYSE and Nasdaq continue to court Twitter for the listing but
it looks like the NYSE will get the nod in light of the FB IPO debacle.
On Friday, 10/4/13, BOJ maintains current policy and says the moderate
recovery continues. The Nikkei is down -5% this week. Italy considers expulsion of Berlusconi since he is
convicted of tax fraud. ADBE
data is stolen by computer hackers. The Monthly Job Report is cancelled due to the
government shutdown. The ADP Report has to serve as a proxy for now which disappointed
on Wednesday. President Obama cancels a trip to Asia due to the ongoing
political turmoil. Big banks are
stocking up on cash for ATM machines in case the political situation grows
uglier and folks run to the banks to withdraw cash. UNP reports weaker earnings so it is beaten -1%. The economy is anemic if rail cars are not
hauling coal and other raw materials. The broad indexes run higher after the opening bell but Speaker Boehner
steps to the microphone commenting on a newspaper article that says the democrats
feel they have to do nothing to resolve the shutdown since they are ‘winning’. Boehner
erupts “This isn’t some damn game.” Markets drift a touch lower but
the Fed’s regular morning market pump each day
sends equities higher. The SPX trades flat in the afternoon through
1688-1692 ending at strong S/R at 1691. The SPX gains 12 points, +0.7%. The Dow jumps 76 points, +0.5%, to 15073.
The Nasdaq is up +0.9% and the RUT up +0.7%. Strong copper and financial sectors help the bulls
while weak utilities, commodities and higher volatility
help the bears. For the week, the
markets are mixed, the SPX
is dead flat,
the Dow drops -1.2%, the Nasdaq is up
+0.7% and RUT +0.4%. Gold
ends at 1310. In the evening, the Whitehouse announces that the Obamacare web
sites will be down for repairs this weekend. The roll-out of the Obamacare web sites were a disaster this week due to
the software malfunctions. No one is able to sign up for health insurance. Young folks are growing concerned,
posting messages on FB voicing disgust, now realizing their health insurance costs will rise dramatically, double and triple;
many realize that it will be far cheaper to simply pay a penalty and not carry
insurance, even if they currently have insurance under the existing system.
Hurricane Karen barrels through the Gulf towards New Orleans. Oil and gas rigs are shutting down and
removing personnel ahead of the storm. LMT
begins furloughing workers due to the which will increase each day the
shutdown lingers. Margin interest debt now surpasses the 2007
market top. Traders are borrowing to play the long side at the greatest level
ever in the history of the markets. The major 2000 and 2007 market tops were identified
by the high margin interest. What do you think will happen moving forward?
On Saturday, 10/5/13,
the government shutdown is in day 5.
-----------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 10/7/13,
political drama continues.
On Tuesday, 10/8/13,
NFIB Small Biz Optimism Index. International Trade. JOLTS Job Openings Report. Fed’s Plosser speaks. 3-Year Note Auction. AA kicks off earnings season.
On Wednesday,
10/9/13, Wholesale Trade. 10-Year Note Auction. FOMC
Minutes.
On Thursday,
10/10/13, Import and Export Prices. 30-Year Bond Auction.
On Friday, 10/11/13,
PPI and Retail
Sales. Consumer Sentiment. Business
Inventories. European bank stress tests will occur in
Q4. Germany’s
high court must decide if the ECB’s OMT program is constitutional, or not. The new banking
union rules and organization must be developed for early 2014.
-----------------------------------------------------------
On Monday, 10/14/13,
…
On Tuesday, 10/15/13,
Empire State Mfg Survey.
On Wednesday, 10/16/13,
CPI. TIC data. Beige Book.
On Thursday, 10/17/13,
Fed’s Fisher speaks. Housing Starts. Industrial
Production. Philly Fed. The nation
reaches its Debt Ceiling Limit. Will the debt ceiling be raised to avoid a
downgrade of U.S. debt? A large debt payment is due the first week of
November so there is likely one or two
more weeks of wiggle room for the clown politicians.
On Friday, 10/18/13, Leading
Indicators.
----------------------------- 2014 ----------------------
On Friday, 1/31/14,
Chairman
Bernanke’s term ends at the Fed. Yellen and Kohn are candidates for the
position, and perhaps Bernanke and
Geithner as well. Summers had to bow
out so Yellen appears to be the choice, however, the possibility of
Bernanke extending his term, or Geithner riding in on a white horse to take the
job, have to be placed on the table as well.
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.
In April, MSFT no longer supports Windows XP.
---------------------------
© The Keystone
Speculator. All Rights Reserved. 2012. 2013.
Thank you KS for the week-end update!
ReplyDeleteBest wishes to you!
V.
p.s. on 14.oct.2013 the US markets are closed or opened ? I don't know where I've heard that US markets will be closed on 14 (monday) or on 11.oct.2013 (friday). Thanks!
You can always keep track of what holidays on tap by typing 'NYSE holiday schedule' into google. The only holidays for markets remaining this year are for Thanksgiving, and the day after, Friday, is always an early close, and then Christmas markets are closed, with an early close on Christmas Eve.
DeleteThe Milk Man said to go long Whole Foods with both hands, on margin. He says its a lock.
ReplyDeleteFeS2