Monday, July 30, 2012

No confirmation ................ yet!

Man-oh-man, just a little BS and the markets ramp up like the European crisis was fixed, the US debt bubble is no longer and all the Bankers on Wall Street are finally serving time in jail. The key to last week is that the markets were looking for anything to move higher. The news is dismal and getting worse but we need a little levity to get people feeling better before the bottom falls out. The charts below from the chartist friend from Pittsburgh's site does a great job of showing you the lack of confirmation for the breakout on the Dow Jones Industrials. So what's next. Well it looks like everyone will move sideways into Bernanke's comments mid week. After that we should see if the market is drinking the cool-aid or moving swiftly to the sidelines.



Here's my chart (SPX) for identifying turning points. We are now approaching a turn window (red box). Can't tell if we are going much lower or this is just a small correction before the move to infinity. It pays to be careful here but the crooks who run the world banks may be able to push this wreck higher before the crash begins.





Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Market rises on possible new batch of crack (QE3)



Damn, right on time. As soon as the markets tried to swoon, the Fed policy leakers start sending little love messages to the market that all is well and the Father Bernanke won't let anything bad happen. Note comments sent out at 3:55 pm on Tuesday just in time to allow the market a melt up to close the day.
"The WSJ's John Hilsenrath leaketh the good stuff (QE3 hints) that the world's been waiting for right at the close -- coincidentally just as several important support lines and moving averages were beginning to be violated like James Holmes in a Colorado prison...
Federal Reserve officials, impatient with the economy's sluggish growth and high unemployment, are moving closer to taking new steps to spur activity and hiring."
Apple missed its numbers big time and the news on he economic front is dismal at best. Here's an interesting ending paragraph to the Hoisington Quarterly report that speaks volumes as to what they see going forward in this broken market:
"Based upon the historical record of effects of excessive and low quality indebtedness, along with the academic research, the 30-year Treasury bond, with a recent yield of less than 3%, still holds value for patient long-term investors. Even when this bond drops to a 2% yield, it may still have value in relation to other assets. If high indebtedness is indeed the main determinant of future economic growth and further government “stimulus” is counterproductive, then a prolonged state of debt induced coma may so limit returns on other riskier assets that a 30-year Treasury bond with a 2% yield would be a highly desirable asset to hold."
Van R. Hoisington
Lacy H. Hunt, Ph.D.
Certainly not an endorsement of the Equity markets going forward. The next bit of advice is characteristic of what I have been preaching in this blog since the start ......... things are really, really rotten around the globe and the guys running the Governments  haven't a clue on how to fix our problems. Their only hope was to avoid being in office when the dam broke ........ too late for that.

"To top it all off (and trust that I could keep listing things but you get the point by now) yesterday we received an infamous confirmed “Hindenburg Omen”. So what does it all mean and what will happen next?
If we think back to the “Flash Crash” of May 2010 and the early August plunge of 2011 there were a few things in common with both events:
Market participants were generally positioned fairly bullish with a general sense of complacency – the $VIX was relatively muted and rose rapidly as panic set in
Both corrections occurred rapidly amid a “buy the dip” mentality which dealt out a great deal of punishment to the vast majority of market participants
There were powerful catalysts which emerged suddenly and took the market by surprise (Greece in 2010, Italy yields skyrocketing, emerging US recession fears, and US downgrade in 2011)"
 Comments by Robert Sinn at the Stock Sage and posted at the The Daily Crux


We are getting really close to a major top here and the move lower could be very swift. The one indicator we need to watch closely is the VIX index (Volatility). So far it has not shown the fear necessary to move the markets lower in a significant way. The chart below shows a 6 period moving average of the index and it moved up smartly yesterday above the 20 threshold but fell back once the QE3 rumor was circulated. Once we see a move above 20 and the market holds that level into the close it will be time to get very conservative with your investments. (Remember the VIX moves in the opposite direction of the market price)




Monday, July 23, 2012

JP Morgan loses $5.8B and the Market loves it...

You don't have to be a conspiracy theorist to invest in this market but it sure would  help. Let's list some of the recent market events that have been reported :
  • News from China confirms a major slowdown and possible hard landing.
  • Brazil is running into the same headwinds as the rest of the world.
  • The problems in Europe continue and there is no answer in sight.
  • The Central Bankers of  the world have been fixing the Libor rates for years and everyone knew but the small investors.
  • JP Morgan lies about everything and the markets think its a good thing.
  • Brokerages (PFG-MF Global) steal your money to bankroll their riskiest deals and no one goes to jail. This is a much bigger issue than the markets reaction to it. (see www.PeterLBrandt.com)
  • The economic numbers in the U.S. keep coming up red as we edge closer to a "fiscal cliff" 
  • California has 3 cities that declared bankruptcy...likely only the tip of the iceberg.
  • Bernanke admits he is out of bullets and wants Congress to start doing their job. God help us.
  • The US is on the edge of the cliff with 4 major problems that need to be resolved, end of Bush tax cuts, automatic Pentagon budget cuts, Obamacare and social program revisions. Good luck Chuck.
And the good economic news from last week:
  • Jobless claims surge...
  • Foreclosure crisis hits older blacks, Hispanics hardest...
  • Factory activity contracts...
  • Home sales drop 5.4%, fewest since October...
  • Grocery bills on rise as corn prices near record highs...
What's the reaction from the market...... ambivalence or maybe just pure ignorance. Given how the market reacts to stress, as we have seen for the last few years, you have to come to the conclusion that this market is broken. The funny thing is that the small (retail) investors have figured this out and the big boys are just trying anyway they can to make money off of it before it all comes crashing down.

What needs to change to bring back confidence in the markets. The market action on any day is a reflection (or it should be) of fear and greed. A free market allows for the buying and selling of issues without interference from political influences.  The VIX index reflects this ratio and tells us how the market is reacting to the news (internal and exogenous) of  the day. As soon as the market begins to falter out comes the "Greenspan/Bernanke Put" comments or the QE3 whispers and the market miraculously corrects and streaks higher for no good reason. (Witness Friday the 13th)


A few fixes to start the process of cleaning house:
  1. In the future let's stop the Fed from interfering with the market in terms of flooding it with liquidity every time there is a hiccup. We're too late for this time so we'll have to suffer the consequences.
  2. Start reporting actual economic data rather than politically polished BS. It's impossible to make good decisions based on bad data.
  3. Get rid of the algorithm's (bots) that are running the trading currently. Even when the markets are heading lower when they should you can see the computers go off as soon as a mythical resistance level is hit and no amount of logic can explain it other than the computers thought that was a good idea. We are losing control people!
  4. Start putting the Bankers, who abuse the system, in jail instead of allowing them to get away with murder. A few good hangings on Wall Street would also help set the right tone.
  5. Put everyone who was on a Banking or Finance committee in Congress for the last 10 years in prison just for spite.
This credit cycle bubble we have been riding is coming to a end and there is no way to avoid the destruction it will have on our economies. We can kick it down the road a little longer but its now months instead of years until the payment comes due. Here's a few well chosen comments

 Andrew Jackson: (Quotation)
“Gentlemen, I have had men watching you for a long time and I am convinced that you have used the funds of the bank to speculate in the breadstuffs of the country. When you won, you divided the profits amongst you, and when you lost, you charged it to the bank. You tell me that if I take the deposits from the bank and annul its charter, I shall ruin ten thousand families. That may be true, gentlemen, but that is your sin! Should I let you go on, you will ruin fifty thousand families, and that would be my sin! You are a den of vipers and thieves. I intend to rout you out, and by the grace of the Eternal God, will rout you out.”
 Game Theory and Crowded Trades - Doug Noland - Safehaven.com
"But the downside of the Credit cycle radically alters rules of the game. Over time, reality sinks in that the previous prosperity was in fact an unsustainable boom-time phenomenon. The downside of the Credit cycle ensures faltering asset prices, deflating household net worth and financial sector deficiencies, along with the revelation of problematic economic imbalances and maladjustment. It's not long into the bust before many see themselves as losers - and to have lost unjustly at the hands of an unfair system. The growing ranks of losers become an increasingly powerful political force".
 James Howard Kunstler: It's Too Late for Solutions
"We are discovering more and more is that the world is comprehensively broke in every sphere, and in every dimension and in every way. The governments in every level are all broke, the households are going broke, the banks are insolvent, the money really is not there. And the pretense that the money is there has been kept going simply with accounting fraud. And accounting fraud really accounts for most of the so-called "innovation" that we chatter incessantly about – this is at the heart of (Jame's new book) Too Much Magic and the wishful thinking about technology. We are so intoxicated with this idea that we can create new and wonderful things. And we have absolutely no sense that the new and wonderful things that we created in the money system are destroying the money system".
Here's the updated monthly chart of the SP500 (SPX) and we are still trending - sideways to down. The markets are running out of momentum and will soon have to correct in a major way before a new bullish leg up can begin. We can still get a move higher for a few more weeks or as long as the markets remain oblivious to reality. Note: the leading indicator in red (first window below the price) has already flashed a sell signal. We still need confirmation from the other indicators. In the mean time stay safe