Showing posts with label Nasdaq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nasdaq. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

D-Day Minus Six: Beware Falling Stocks; Dow, NASDAQ in Second-Worst Decline of 2011

It is now just six days from August 2nd, the day the government of the United States of America either passes a bill increasing the debt ceiling or begins defaulting on said debt, which is fast approaching $15 trillion.

Through accounting gimmicks and "borrowing" from the pension funds of federal employees, the government has thus far avoiding making either the commitment to borrow more or claim deadbeat status and suffer a beating at the hands of the ratings agencies in the form of credit downgrades and subsequent higher interest payments.

Make no bones about it, it is time for the American people to come to grips with the reality that the officials in Washington are not doing the jobs they are paid to do, nor have they represented the best interests of the American people for quite a long time (at least the past 11 years).

If the debt ceiling is not raised, calamity will surely ensue, which is why both sides - Republicans and Democrats, except for a few ardent Tea Partiers - have repeatedly expressed sentiment that the debt ceiling must be raised by August 2nd, no matter the outcome of budget negotiations. In truth, both sides are coming to the realization that their parties are far apart and that no budget issues or long-term spending should have become tied to the debt ceiling issue. They are separate matters which should be dealt with separately.

Nonetheless, the politicians continue their annoying Kabuki theatre while the American public seethes over their inability to compromise, act like reasonable adults and do what they were elected to do.

Wall Street has taken notice as well, logging losses in each of the first three days of this week, with no end to the selling yet in sight. To say that our "leaders" have taken a walk to the end of the plank would be putting it mildly. This issue should never have gotten to this point and those wishing to play fast and loose with the US economy should be given a hearly heave-ho and be dutifully shoved off the plank and into the drink.

What both parties have done - though especially the Republicans, who picked this fight - is shrink from their responsibilities, putting politics ahead of their oaths. It is a shameful chapter in American governance which should never be allowed to be repeated, though the general consensus is that more of the same will be forthcoming as the 2012 election season heats up.

The leaders of both parties should be henceforth removed from office for putting the stability and good faith and credit of America at extreme risk. After that, the herd of politicians being led by money from various lobbyists should be summarily removed from office. The entire congress could run better with many fewer members, preferably none of those presently constituting that formerly-august body.

The American public want change, need change and have been promised change, but all it has gotten is a sordid soap opera of bad politics and even worse outcomes. We have reached the brink and it is very nearly time to throw off the yoke of oppression by the governors and take matters in hand in a more efficient and direct manner. Nothing gets done in Washington any more; maybe it's time to shut it down.

The wealthy barons of Wall Street, those who funded the campaigns and lined the pockets of these moronic, imbecilic politicians, should also be brought to task, something Attorney General Eric Holder seems reluctant to pursue. After all, Wall Street keeps him in nice suits and fancy offices. He should be impeached.

Today's losses on the major indices were the second-largest of 2011 (except for the S&P, for which it was the third-largest), surpassing the 68 points the NASDAQ lost on January 28, but less than the 77 point decline on February 22, though more than the 66 point loss on June 1.

The Dow dropped 166, 179 and 279 points, and the S&P fell 23, 28 and 30 points on the same dates, respectively.

Dow 12,302.55, -198.75 (1.59%)
NASDAQ 2,764.79, -75.17 (2.65%)
S&P 500 1,304.89, -27.05 (2.03%)
NYSE Composite 8,153.21, -178.46 (2.14%)


Declining issues slaughtered advancers, 5875-804. New highs on the NASDAQ numbered only 15, while new lows expanded to 89. On the NYSE, there were 28 new highs and 105 new lows. The combined totals of 43 new highs and 194 new lows puts this indicator clearly in the "sell signal" category. Volume was dynamic and huge. Make no doubt about it: this was a rout.

NASDAQ Volume 2,310,879,750
NYSE Volume 5,074,647,000


Commodities were rather tame throughout the equity carnage. WTI oil fell $2.19, to $97.40, from an artificial and fully inflated high point. Gold dipped $1.70, to $1,615.10, while silver fell a modest 13 cents, to $40.57. The losses in the precious metals are temporary, likely the result of margin calls. Eventually, if stocks continue to take on water, money will gush into gold and silver.

The delay in raising the debt ceiling was not the only issue making for a horrible day on Wall Street. Durable goods orders fell 2.1% in June, further evidence that the economy is slowing.

Tomorrow's initial unemployment claims reading from the BLS could be the proverbial straw that breaks this market's back. Should the number come in above 420,000, stocks could pick right up where they left off today, severely to the downside.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

NASDAQ Sells the News

On Monday, we heard that Apple CEO Steve Jobs was going to take a six-month medical leave of absence. On Tuesday, after the closing bell, Apple announced another smashing quarter with great earnings and revenue. On Wednesday, Apple stock got hit with the classic "sell the news" earnings aftermath sell-off.

The decline actually began with the Jobs press release on Tuesday morning, but after earning were released and the stock was initially rebounding, it opened lower on Wednesday and dragged the rest of the NASDAQ down 40 points. Though Apple has only lost 10 points over the past two days, the damage is being felt in other big tech names such as Cisco (CSCO), Dell (DELL), Amazon (AMZN) and Google (GOOG). Of course, it's far too early to tell, but, considering the way stocks have appreciated over the past 4 1/2 months, this could be the beginning of a significant correction, one probably overdue and timed perfectly for post-earnings profit-taking. As usual, the smart money may be getting out while the getting is good.

With tech sliding, the rest of the market didn't fare well, though major industrials on the Dow maintained a sense of stability. Another point of focus should be stock options, which expire on Friday. After that, markets could be in for a free-for-all.

Dow 11,825.29, -12.64 (0.11%)
NASDAQ 2,725.36, -40.49 (1.46%)
S&P 500 1,281.92, -13.10 (1.01%)
NYSE Composite 8,104.92, -85.99 (1.05%)


Losers beat gainers by an unhealthy margin, 5161-1411, indicating that the decline, though well-masked on Apple's move, was certainly not contained to tech stocks alone. On the NASDAQ, there were 147 new highs, but just 12 new lows. The NYSE reported 186 new highs and a mere 22 new lows, though the high-low indicator is somewhat of a lagging one, especially after a huge rally such as that seen since September. It will take a while for new highs to fall off in the case of a real correction and an even longer time period for fresh new lows to be plumbed. Volume was at its best level of the week, another disturbing data point.

NASDAQ Volume 2,106,258,500.00
NYSE Volume 5,298,377,000


Crude oil was relatively flat, dipping 52 cents on the front-end futures contract, to $90.86. Gold gained late in the day, up $2.70, to $1370.40 at last look. Silver continued to slide, however, down 12 cents, to $28.76.

Thursday will be a big day for earnings, with nearly 100 companies reporting, including big names such as Capital One (COF), Southwest Airlines (LUV), Morgan Stanley (MS), Coach (COH), Freeport-McMoRan (FCX) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

Stay tuned. This may become interesting again.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Ireland and FBI Hedge Fund Raid Don't Dent POMO-Driven Market

According to the World Bank, the population of Ireland (circa. 2008) is 4,425,675. On Sunday, ministers from the ECB, EC, IMF and the Irish government announced a bailout plan for the nation worth roughly $110 billion, or, $24,853.00 for each and every citizen on the island nation.

Naturally, the citizenry won't be getting any of the money. That's going to the banks. The public will be saddled with the debt, an amount so monstrous that one would wisely assume that it will never be repaid. The reason: the banks. Why would it be any other entity running up amazing mountains of debt. Earlier this year, the Irish government bailed out the banks to the tune of about $60 billion, but apparently, that wasn't quite enough, and now the government itself is threatened, by the populace on one side and the IMF and European Union on the other.

Some members of the government are already saying that they won't vote in favor of the package, and are calling for new elections in January. Protests sprung up on Monday, though they were small, organized by Sinn Fein, the political arm of the IRA.

Essentially, Ireland is the second in line - after Greece - for where most of Southern Europe is going: begging to the other members of the EU and the IMF for more money to keep their bankrupt economies going. Portugal is widely believed to be next, then Spain and Italy. These nations, should they accept the same or similar terms as the Irish, will be indentured to global banking interests until they default on the loans or rise up and through out the bankers and overthrow their governments. Either way, the populace will be the worse off for it, as tax hikes are certain on the one hand, and desperation and poverty in an every man for himself environment on the other.

There are those, and their numbers are growing, who believe that it's time for the people to take back their nations, though nobody is particularly keen on the idea of any brutal government crackdown that would surely come in response to a popular uprising.

Thus, the question on the minds of many Europeans tonight is: Would you rather pay taxes and just work your life away, saving nothing, to preserve the present order, or take the chance that things might be better after a bloody coup, a period of anarchy and a reformed Europe that isn't under the thumb of the banking and government oligarchy?

Good question. Only the future holds the answer. Ireland is giving us clues, though, thus far, most prefer the status quo, no violence and payment of tribute without end to governments which have proven to be at least incompetent and at worst, corrupt to the core.

Here in America, the condition is not nearly so dire, but it's close. Our $14 trillion debt is not going away any time soon, our government seems to stumble from one crisis to the next, never fixing anything, while the banks keep hiding their losses off their balance sheets through eased accounting rules and the help of the Federal Reserve.

Today's POMO (money for Wall Street) was a paltry $8.3 billion. More is scheduled for tomorrow, then after a break for Wednesday and Thursday, the injections of cash will continue without respite every business day through December 9. It's how we here in America have now confronted our massive, non-payable debt. We print more money.

The other major story today involved FBI raids on three hedge funds suspected of insider trading. That sent stocks - already down on the rising dollar and Irish blarney - to their lowest levels of the day, the Dow down by nearly 150 points just before 1:00 pm. But - and there's always a "but" these days - with all that POMO money sloshing around, this decline, like all others before it, was viewed as a buying opportunity by the Primary Dealers, flush with cash and stocks rallied for the remainder of the session, closing with marginal losses on the major exchanges, the NASDAQ actually sporting a solid advance.

Dow 11,178.58, -24.97 (0.22%)
NASDAQ 2,532.02, +13.90 (0.55%)
S&P 500 1,197.84, -1.89 (0.16%)
NYSE Composite 7,610.30, -30.78 (0.40%)


Advancers narrowly defeated decliners, 3249-3198. There were 368 new highs and just 68 new lows. Volume, the broken record, was laughably low.

NASDAQ Volume 1,865,878,625
NYSE Volume 4,305,755,500


Oil finished the day down just 24 cents, at $81.74, though it was off more than a dollar earlier in the day. Gold was lower earlier, but rallied to $1366.60, a gain of $12.50. Silver also showed upside, gaining 52 cents, to $27.87.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Bearish Cycle Phase Two Begins As Global Markets Careen Lower

A year from now, there will be many people wishing they had sold TODAY, tomorrow or within the next few weeks. That's because in a year to eighteen months, stocks will probably be flat on their backs and Dow 10,000 will seem like a dream from some long-abandoned, mythical place in which stocks had value and companies made profits.

Beginning with the Fed's understated announcement yesterday that they would replenish their balance sheet by selling mortgage and agency debt and replacing it with shorter-term treasuries, the Phase 2 of the Bear Market Cycle has officially begun. In reality, the market break came in April, but deflation-deniers and recovery junkies saw that as a mere correction, a soft patch, a buying opportunity, when in reality, the break below the 200-day moving averages on the major exchanges was a major tipping point, signaling uncertainty and despair in markets stemming from unsustainable long-term economic conditions.

What began as a fraud, the sub-prime crisis, in which billions were swindled from the system and from individuals and from taxpayers (people not even engaged in the market), has evolved into a serious debate over the future of the United States of America and its Ponzi-like scheme of unfunded liabilities (mainly Social Security, Medicare and Medicade), debt-laced, unbalanced state and federal budgets and a national debt well into the trillions of dollars which will never be repaid.

Phase one was the meltdown of Autumn 2008 into 2009, with the requisite recovery bounce in the markets which gracefully lasted for over a year. Phase two is likely to last longer, move at a slower pace, but end up being even more severe. By the end of phase two, prior to another false bounce, most stock prices will lose half of their value or more as the panic and race for liquidity (cash) ensues. Figure that this phase will take us through the next election cycle, through the end of 2012, before any meaningful bounce, more than likely tied to false hope of a new "conservative" president and congress.

The end will come sometime within the following years - not to put too fine a point upon it - within the first two years of the next administration, when fear and panic have turned to rage and near-anarchy, when stocks will be viewed with contempt and the government (given there even is a government in control) disrespected and almost universally hated and blamed (rightfully) for the entire collapse of the economy.

In phase two, bottoms will form below the previous 2009 lows. The Dow will likely bottom out in the 4500-5000 range, the S&P around 450 and the NASDAQ in the range of 950 to 1100. After a brief sideways to upward move which will suck the last remaining dollars from those foolish enough to jump into the market while it is still collapsing, the major indices will approach levels not seen in 30 years or more. By 2014 the Dow Jones Industrials may well be hovering around 2-3000, the S&P 500 in the 300 range and the NASDAQ shattered beyond belief, possibly around 600-750. Stocks will lose almost all of their value, just as many did during the Great Depression of the 1930s, because, in reality, we are entering the most brutal stage of an even Greater Depression, one which, in all likelihood, will finish the Federal Reserve, fractional banking and fiat money.

Gold will probably reign, selling at unbelievable prices of over $4000 per ounce, as the last and only reliable store of value.

Of course, time being purely a relative factor in the grand economic experiment of the Keynesians, phases two and three could all occur in a much more compressed time frame. There will be days of maximum despair, of the Dow losing 1000 points in a day, aided by computer-generated program trading. There is no escaping the truth, nor the massive, unpayable debt the nation's leaders have promised. Life in America is about to undergo an incredible transformation, from a great nation to a poor one, and we have nobody to blame but the politicians we elected, for they have truly sold out the American people to bankers, frauds, liars and thieves.

Those who believe the next election will usher in some new form of direction or control are absolutely without a clue. The current office-holders will only be replaced by more-corrupt, less talented crooks, liars and clowns, who have neither any skill at governing nor any intention of restoring the country to the middle-class values upon which it was founded.

On the day, stocks were spanked right out of the gate, with the Dow down more than 200 points within minutes and the NASDAQ taking the brunt of the assault, off by more than 60 points in the early going. Stocks did not even attempt a rally at any point during the session, indicating broad distribution and a severe lack of buyers.

Bears took the day fully, and are just getting warmed up for the slaughter that is certain to occur over the next two months, as economic data will continue to demonstrate severe weakness in markets and stresses to the financial core. It is worth noting that US indices were not alone in their decimation. Asian and European bourses also were down by significant levels.

There was significant chart damage to the major averages. All closed well below their 200-day moving averages, a move widely expected only by honest economists with market understanding. The Dow fared better than the rest of the averages, as most of the representative stocks carry dividends, holding their values a little bit better than the majority of publicly-traded equities.

Dow 10,378.83, -265.42 (2.49%)
NASDAQ 2,208.63, -68.54 (3.01%)
S&P 500 1,089.47, -31.59 (2.82%)
NYSE Composite 6,902.72, -237.03 (3.32%)


Internals showed just how severe the damage was. Declining issues absolutely punished advancers, by a 6-to-1 tally, 5600-922. New lows clambered past new highs for the first time in well over a month, 216-210, a trend worth watching, which is likely to continue flashing bearish indications. Volume, though still at reduced levels, was much stronger today than on any of the previous two days of the week. There was enough selling strength to indicate more strain to come for the rest of the week and no end in sight, near-term.

NASDAQ Volume 2,114,243,500
NYSE Volume 4,857,608,500


On the commodity front, crude oil was crushed by the appreciation of the US dollar against most other currencies, especially the Euro, sending the front-end futures contracts down $2.23, to $78.02, the lowest level in two weeks. While most consider gold to be a safe haven, it was not an overwhelming favorite, gaining $1.30, to $1,197.50, though its positive finish was much more acceptable than what occurred in equities. The issue with gold is that it is, as a store of value, also inert. It has no usefulness other than as a place-holder. In times of unusual economic stress and especially in illiquid markets, there is a tendency for redemption. Gold gets liquidated just as quickly as other assets, as was seen during the 2008-09 phase of the crisis. It is, however, more resilient, and will probably, in the long run, prove to be more valued than any paper assets, like stocks or even cash.

The more-commoditized metal, silver, slipped 26 cents, to $17.89. One would expect silver to relinquish gains at a faster pace than gold, though it is likely more volatile as well.

It's not the beginning of the end, nor is it too late to make changes in one's asset allocations, from stocks and bonds into gold, cash, tools of trade and arable land. For those chasing value, like the millions stuck in mutual funds, pension funds and the like, there is nothing but pain ahead for years to come.

Many household names hit new 52-week lows, including our personal favorite, the discredited and illiquid Bank of America (BAC).

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Oy! Tech Keeps Stocks on the Upswing

Tech stocks continued to dominate the gainers once again as stocks continued their month-long ascent. The NASDAQ easily outpaced the other major averages. Investors are coming to realize that tech companies are more financially capable and less in debt than their traditional industrial, material or financial counterparts.

It goes to reason, since most of the strong tech companies - Apple, Cisco, Amazon in particular - are young and have little to no debt service, separating them in material ways from other companies which may be struggling with finances, debt service, bond issuance and legacy costs (pensions, health care, etc.).

The general economy is still somewhat in a confused state of non-denial. While most indicators are benign or improving - other than housing and employment (Is there anything else that matters?) - sentiment remains steadfastly cautious. It actually has set up a nice paradigm for traders, especially those with more guile and shorter time horizons. In other words, the majority of the market is running on momentum, a tricky mistress, which can turn on a dime.

So long as stocks continue to gain in value, I'll reassert that they're not sufficiently discounting the future, which looks horrid. The government's plan seems to be to continually kick the can further down the road, applying patches along the way. There cannot be stability or prosperity until the government sector cleans up its act and tackles the issues of debt and entitlements head on, something few elected officials wish to do.

Eventually, piling debt upon debt is going to cause an implosion and dislocation, as it did in the fall of 2008. Current policies are leading to more spectacular failures, as exposure is now greater and includes not only financial institutions, but government entities such as the Fed, Treasury, and the unmentionable messes contained within Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the soon-to-flame-out FHA.

Fixed income gains are increasingly scarce and many unstable. Witness the note redemptions by Fannie and Freddie on defaulted mortgages within MBS, tight spreads and few alternatives. Flat-lining fixed income is inducing more equity investment, forcing stocks higher, eventually to unsustainable levels. It's a no-win, unless you're completely in cash because of declining asset values almost everywhere else. The stock market is nothing more than a chimera, an abstraction of the global economy and plenty of opinions. Short-term gains are possible. So are permanent losses.

Dow 10,567.33, +2.95 (0.03%)
NASDAQ 2,358.95, +18.27 (0.78%)
S&P 500 1,145.61, +5.17 (0.45%)
NYSE Composite 7,327.67, +33.65 (0.46%)


Winners beat losers, 4325-2192. New Highs: 773; New Lows: 51. Volume was substantially better than recent sluggish sessions. Lots of stock changed hands, but movement was constrained.

NYSE Volume 6,089,594,500
NASDAQ Volume 2,502,965,000


Oil posted another ridiculous gain of 51 cents, to $82.09, despite another in a series of inventory builds. The energy complex is wickedly overpriced and reversion is a certainty. Current prices cannot be maintained with reduced demand levels. Gold fell $14.10, to $1,108.20. Silver dipped 3 cents to $17.31.

Economic data has been slim and incapable of providing direction.

Monday, March 08, 2010

NASDAQ Trading at 18-Month highs; S&P Streak Ends at Six

A year ago tomorrow, the NASDAQ bottomed out at a closing price of 1268.64. With today's finish, it has gained a whopping 84% from the low, so, one must ask just how much more upside is there left?

Investors seem to be pondering that on a daily basis, picking stocks with much more care than in the pre-Lehman days, another level the NASDAQ has surpassed. The last time the index was at this level was September 3, 2008 (2333.73), but it is only 18.5% below the high of October 31, 2007 - the last market top - of 2859.12. It's difficult to imagine that the investments underlying the NASDAQ would be worth 81% of what they were before the market collapsed and the world realized that asset values were over-inflated, but, apparently, the mindset of the typical trader in tech believes in the marvels of technology and the value of equity in these companies.

Being realistic, any group of stocks which gains 84% in a year is probably overvalued, but the inverse is also probably true: that the same group of stocks should probably not have lost 55% in value over an 18-month span. Since neither of these scenarios are normal, the idea that the stock market is in the middle of an extraordinarily perverse period would be an astute observation. When normalcy returns (whenever that may be, possibly never), a reversion to the mean would be the order of the day, putting the entire NASDAQ market at a level approaching the midpoint of the extremes, or, right around 2063.88.

The timing of such an event would again be conditioned on the time-lines of both the fall and subsequent rise: 18 months to the downside and 12 months of gains, making the midpoint to attain equilibrium at half of the derivative times of those, or 7 1/2 months from tomorrow (the midpoint between 6 and 9 months). Checking the calendar, we should expect the NASDAQ to close around 2063 on or about November 10, 2010. (Make sure to mark that date and this post and check back)

The preceding was issued to show just how absurd and arcane any and all quantitative or qualitative analysis of the markets can be. You can go ahead and believe the concoction that spewed out of the top of my little pinhead or just chalk it up to more internet nonsense. The upshot is that I'll probably end up being as correct with my prediction than 50% of the other analysts, name-droppers and outright frauds who populate the stock media today. It gets worse with forex and options trading, so, consider yourself lucky that you are only invested in equities and thus, only mildly confused.

Dow 10,551.91, -14.29 (0.14%)
NASDAQ 2,332.21, +5.86 (0.25%)
S&P 500 1,138.31, -0.38 (0.03%)
NYSE Composite 7,291.58, -0.27 (0.00%)


Advancing issues outdid decliners by a margin of 3676-2857. New highs hit an expected extreme of 806, compared to just 70 new lows. The number of new highs should peak tomorrow or within the next few days at somewhere North of 850, but probably no higher than that. Once we cross the Rubicon that is the one-year anniversary of the market bottom tomorrow, all comparisons become more difficult. Gains will surely be difficult to attain and the chances for a major correction - or a mean revision, as outlined above - increase every day these lofty equity levels are maintained.

One should bear in mind that 2009 was witness to the most powerful stock market rally most of us will ever see in our lifetimes. Comparisons to earnings during that period when companies had cut staffs and expenses to the barest of bones will be particularly challenging. The time to exit the market is, if not now, shortly, unless you are fully recovered from the shocks of 2008 and early 2009 and still liquid. Then, shoot the works. Hang on until the end. Hey, it's only money. Your money.

Volume today was reportedly the lowest of the year on the consolidated markets. That should raise at least one eyebrow toward thinking that this latest rally off the small January-February correction are close to making a double-top. The NASDAQ is already in the process of making a double-top breakout, though the S&P and Dow are lagging, still below the early January highs. Likewise, the Dow Jones Transportation average has yet to confirm, though with Warren Buffet heavily invested in that sector, it's probably only a matter of time before it launches to new highs.

On the other hand, seasoned pros will take one look at the charts and tell you that you missed the move. They'd probably be right.

NYSE Volume 4,092,305,250
NASDAQ Volume 2,096,990,000


Oil continued its dazzling run to higher prices, up another 26 cents, to $81.76. Gold, however, slipped back $10.70, to $1,124.50. Silver also fell by 11 cents, finishing at $17.27.

Economic data is very light this week, and since we're close to the end of the quarter, earnings releases are practically nil. There isn't much to trade on these days except sentiment, which has grown to about as positive a level as we've seen in three years - perfect timing for a sell-off.

Buy tools, plant seeds, grow your own investments.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

NASDAQ Extends Streak, Earnings Up and Down

Editor's Note: I sincerely apologize for the last two days in which I have not posted as I regularly do. Unfortunately, events of the past few days have completely overwhelmed my usual habits, as my father passed away on Thursday of last week and the wake (Monday), funeral (Tuesday) and other family affairs have been very time-consuming. It is my sincere hope to get back onto my regular schedule as of today.

The markets continue to gyrate around second quarter earnings news and reports from a wide variety of companies. While the majority of companies have met or exceeded - mostly-lowered - expectations, a number of major firms have posted shoddy numbers, reflecting the struggles being felt across the US economy.

By the close, the only index posting a gain was the NASDAQ, extending its own winning streak to twelve days. The Dow ended an eight-day run of positive finishes with a modest loss.

That the NASDAQ has been a best-performer over the past few weeks should come as no surprise. Many of the companies comprising the index are younger and leaner, without many of the legacy costs and high debt loads usually associated with the companies on the Dow, for instance.

Apple (AAPL) and Starbucks (SBUX), both listed on the NASDAQ reported solid earnings for the quarter, while Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Wells-Fargo (WFC), two NYSE stocks, posted steep losses for the quarter.

Dow 8,881.26, -34.68 (0.39%)
NASDAQ 1,926.38, +10.18 (0.53%)
S&P 500 954.07, +0.51 (0.05%)
NYSE Composite 6,151.40, -2.99 (0.05%)


Market internals were in-line with the headline numbers. Advancers finished well ahead of losing issues, 3779-2585, while new highs continued their winning streak over new lows, finishing ahead, 142-96. Volume was very strong on the NASDAQ, but continued to slump on the NYSE, barely making it past the benchmark of 1 billion shares traded.

NYSE Volume 1,079,660,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,371,615,000


Commodities traded all over the map. September crude finished 21 cents lower, at $65.40, while the metal shone, with gold gaining $6.40, to $953.30 and silver up 22 cents to $13.70. Grains and livestock were mixed.

Earnings reports will keep investors on their toes Thursday, with nearly 300 companies reporting. Some of the bigger names include United Parcel Service (UPS), Raytheon (RTN), KLA-Tencor (KLAC), 3M (MMM), Burlington Northern (BNI), Capital One (COF), Credit Suisse (CS), McDonald's (MCD) and Microsoft (MSFT).

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Unchecked Greed Reigns Free

If you thought the 2 1/2-week-long rally had run out of gas - like yours truly - you were proven wrong on Thursday. The Masters of the Universe were at their level best once again, goosing stock positions throughout the day, but particularly in the final hour (just like yesterday, and many days before), when stocks added mightily to their already solid gains.

The Dow jumped nearly 100 points in the last hour, while the NASDAQ, which outperformed all other indices by a huge margin, added 28 additional points as the session drew to a close. It is apparent to any outside observer that greed has trumped fear over the short term. The Dow Jones Industrials have now climbed 1377 points since March 9, a span of 13 sessions.

The economic news of the day was pretty much in line with expectations. Unemployment roles hit a new record high, with another 652,000 Americans adding their names to the roles of the jobless. Final GDP figures for the 4th quarter of 2008 came in at -6.3%, better than the -6.6% some had expected. A number of companies reported better-than-expected earnings, Best Buy and Texas Instruments among them, though investors were snatching up shares of just abut anything that had a price attached to it, in a mad scramble to jump on the equity bandwagon.

If ever there was a textbook case for an overbought bear market rally, this surely is it, and while there may be no perceptible end in sight, the 8000 level, at which there is substantial resistance, is already within shouting distance. It should be pointed out, however, that this market knows nothing of support and resistance, commonly disregarding any resistance on the way up. The path back down ought to be particularly brutal, now that 90% of the public is convinced the worst is behind us, since there are there have been numerous gap-ups at various opens, and, as any chartist well knows, gaps always get filled.

But that's a lesson for another day. For now, any hint of the financial crisis, liquidity squeeze, deflationary spiral or housing crunch has given way to chants of "go, baby, go."

Dow 7,924.56, +174.75 (2.25%)
NASDAQ 1,587.00, +58.05 (3.80%)
S&P 500 832.86, +18.98 (2.33%)
NYSE Composite 5,230.53, +103.53 (2.02%)


Market internals were as unsurprising as the headline numbers. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners, 5180-1675, though new lows continued ahead of new highs, 117-36, though the numbers are closing ranks. Volume was very high once more, especially on the NASDAQ, which recorded one of the highest volume days of the year.

NYSE Volume 1,792,579,000
NASDAQ Volume 2,594,485,000


Crude oil continued to rise, up $1.57, to $54.34. Gold gained $4.20, to $942.20, while silver tagged along with a gain of 18 cents, to $13.62.

Noting the gains in stocks, as well as most commodities, it seems that throwing trillions of dollars at the markets in all manner of bailout, breakout, cram-down and stimuli, seems to be working. The economy is reflating at an incredible rate, so much so that the Fed should consider raising interest rates off their absurdly low emergency levels. Of course, they won't, until the American landscape is littered with currency.

The precious metals now appear to be even better investments than ever. With all asset classes rising in price, rather than an orderly deflation which would have occurred naturally, we will now have even more mal-valued investments in equities especially, backed by a currency that is losing value faster than a prostitute sheds her chastity.

People's 401k's ought to look much better by the end of the month. The S&P 500 has gained nearly 25% in the past 2 1/2 weeks, though all that extra loot in one's pension is surely going to be eaten up by the ravishes of taxation and inflation. Welcome to the new normal. You earn, you pay, you remain under the thumb. Enjoy it while you can.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Another Nice NASDAQ Notion

Tech stocks are all the rage again, at least for today. The biggest gains were once again in the tech-heavy NASDAQ index, which was up better than a half percent on a day that the other indices barely budged.

Dow 13,521.34 +14.06; NASDAQ 2,572.06 +14.87; S&P 500 1,518.11 +2.38; NYSE Composite 9,892.49 +16.38

As mentioned here in previous posts, there are good reasons to like tech, especially internet or chip-related issues. Many businesses begun in the red-hot heyday of the 90's are now mature or maturing, solidifying their market positions and bringing down exceptional profits.

Tech fell somewhat out of favor after the dotcom bust of 2000 and it's yet to fully recover. The NASDAQ index is still only half way back from its all-time high, so there are undervalued companies with plenty of upside. Besides that, the blue chips are somewhat overbought and fund managers are looking to mid- and small-caps for more gains in the 2nd half of 2007.

The M&A hawks are also on the lookout for takeover or take private companies in tech. Many of the best have market caps of less than $30 billion. Tech takeovers could be de rigeur in the waning years of the 2000s decade.

Overall, advancing issues surpassed decliners by a nearly 2-1 margin on light volume. New highs checked in at 305, while there was nary a new low to be found - only 73 of them on the day.

The lack of volume was indicative of two matters: Summer and complacency. The nice weather is usually a harbinger of a prevailing slowdown in trading activity. There also was a paucity of economic and/or corporate news to digest, though the consumer confidence numbers released by the Conference Board were surprisingly upbeat and that set the tone for Tuesday.

And, shockingly, with the holiday driving done for now, the price of oil magically fell on the NY-MERC, as light, sweet crude dropped $1.90 to close at $63.30. Drivers should expect some - though not much - relief at the pump over the next three to four weeks. Of course, prices will go higher as the 4th of July holiday approaches due to (wink, wink) supply and demand, of course.

Gold and silver made modest gains but remain rangebound, depressed and somewhat overpriced.

It's a short work week, so expect the most volatility - if there is any at all - to occur on Wednesday and/or Thursday.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Small Change, But a Big One

Please excuse the ambiguousness of the headline. Today's market movements were minimal, but the impact - for those paying attention - could be huge. Yesterday it was noted that while the Dow stumbled, the NASDAQ was having somewhat of a banner day, posting a gain of 20 points, which is close to 1% on that index.

Today was affirmation of our best hunch - that traders were moving away from Dow stocks and large caps to techs, mid-caps and small-caps. Contemplating the huge sums being paid by private equity to take certain companies private, it's obvious that there are a lot of undervalued companies out there. The private equity vultures are primarily interested in major names with established brands - a somewhat disturbing trend in itself - so the small and mid-caps are going to get the lion's share of attention during this summer's trading outside the M&A speculators.

Dow 13,539.95 -2.93; NASDAQ 2,588.02 +9.23; S&P 500 1,524.12 -0.98; NYSE Composite 9,900.96 +3.50

There's a caveat to the trade and it's called timing. Once the S&P tops its previous high, all bets are off. The markets could - and should - go on an unprecedented tear to the upside, similar to what the Dow has done over the past month and change. While the S&P will capture most of the headlines, the NASDAQ will be humming along with even more spectacular gains.

Remember, that since the downturn in 2000, the Dow has come all the way back and then some while the S&P is teasing us with a new all time high.
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Meanwhile, the NASDAQ has recovered only half its heft since the crash. Surely it was overbought back then, but by 2500 points? Doubtful. Figure that the top 20-25% of the Naz was real froth, so we're looking at an achievable number of 3,800 to 4,000 in relatively short order.

While that may sound like a stretch, take into consideration that the Naz crossed back over 2000 in January 2004 and has taken more than three years to gain just another 600 points. All the money that was being made on the Dow and S&P is going to get reinvested, and the most likely place for that to occur is on the NASDAQ and especially in computer and related devices, internet plays and generally anything that involves using a computer chip.

Computers and the internet don't use gas, and that's a major consideration. Media companies that are not newspapers should also do well, as will any disruptive technology company.

Advancing issues were better than decliners by a 4-3 margin. New highs outnumbered new lows, 433-68. The US dollar continued to show strength against most European currencies, though the weakness against the Yen (Japan) and Yuan (China) is still a concern. Oil dropped $1.30 to $64.97, gold and silver were down (again) and that's a wrap.

Monday, March 05, 2007

Wider and Deeper

The US stock markets are in a protracted downturn that isn't likely to end soon, though the measure of the carnage on the NASDAQ has already nearly reached my expectations (7-9%).

People (like headline writers for major news services) usually search to find reasons behind the numbers, but in this current case, there need be no rationale. Stocks are falling because people are selling, plain and simple. A combination of certain perceptions, including, a) a slowing economy (real), b) overvaluation of stocks (again, real), and c) fear that the future may not be so bright (perceived, and only possibly real), have all contributed to the sell-off of the past week.

These perceptions are not about to change soon. Only revaluation (i.e., lower stock prices) is going to solve the problem and that means lower we must go. There's little confidence on Wall Street or Main St. right now and it's being reflected in the indices on an everyday basis.

Today was no exception as we saw the Dow hang in positive territory until capitulation in mid-afternoon. The NASDAQ and S&P 500 spent most of their day in the red.

Dow 12,050.41 -63.69; Nasdaq 2,340.68 -27.32; S&P 500 1,374.12 -13.05

The real carnage was on the NYSE Composite, which lost 120 points today (1.34%). Market metrics established that the correction is broadening and deepening. Overall NYSE and NASDAQ advance-decline lines ran roughly 5-1 in favor of the losers. NYSE volume was 10-1 in the red. But the most compelling data to confirm the ongoing train wreck were the 189 new lows which swamped the 98 new highs. That number had been relatively flat until Friday, at which time the new lows took over leadership.

The new lows will have to reach more than 300 combined before we can begin to take sight on a bottom, so there's much further to go.

Watching the tape today was a painful, gut-wrenching experience for most investors, except for the brilliant few who had already departed. There's still time to get out, however, before a simple loss becomes a life-changing event. As I've repeatedly noted, we are only in the early phase of this downturn and while I may be wrong about the actual bottom for the Dow, I've already been proven vulnerable on the depth of NASDAQ losses. The upcoming earnings season should prove to be a doozy and we're still 5-6 weeks away from that. Prudence would prescribe selling now, not later.

Perhaps the only good news on the day was that oil for April delivery closed down 1.57 to 60.07. Lower oil and gas prices would be welcome relief and surely more representative of the actual supply-demand scenario. Gold and silver were also lower again, signaling that there truly is no safe haven.

The Dow has lost nearly 600 points in just the last 5 sessions. If that isn't enough of a departure signal for you, maybe being hit by the actual train will do. It's very clear that another 1000 points will be sacrificed over the next 3-5 weeks. Caveat emptor.

Friday, March 02, 2007

What a Week: Devaluing Corporate America

Our country is under attack, not by terrorists or a foreign army, but by foreigners, after all, who own most of our debt and a lot of the very same stocks they sold this week.

Corporate America took a nearly 5% devaluation in the course of trading this week. It wasn't a happy sight, nor was the close of trading today, with all three major indices closing at - or very close to - their lows. Such a close does not bode well for Monday.

Assessing the damage, Friday's numbers:
Dow: 12,114.10 -120.24; NASDAQ: 2,368.00 -36.21; S&P 500: 1,387.17 -16.00

And for the week:
Dow: -533.38 (-4.22%); NASDAQ: -147.1 (-5.83%); S&P 500: -64.02 (-4.41%)

What's surprising (at least to me) is the extent of the selling on the NASDAQ. I'd assumed that since the NASDAQ had not recovered from 2000 as well as the other indices, that it would be less prone to massive meltdowns, but the numbers don't lie: techs took a beating this week, nearly half again as much in percentage losses of the other major exchanges.

I can't put my finger on just what it is, but making the NASDAQ the whipping boy in this downtown doesn't exactly add up. Perhaps the market - or some entity acting as a proxy for the market - is trying to make the case that stocks on the junior circuit just aren't as stable and capable of handling bad news, that they are overvalued to an exaggerated degree, or that the NASDAQ is an inherently unsafe haven for investment money.

Call me cynical, but when 28 of the 30 Dow components show losses, as they did on Friday, I'd consider that to be a vulnerable situation. Of course, there's a degree of crossover, as some of the Dow stocks are listed on the NASDAQ, but that still doesn't account for the disparity.

Perusing the Dow components, one after another sports a p/e in the teens, dividend yield of less than 3% and a long history of positive earnings. With that in mind, perhaps there was somewhat of a flight to quality, with investors seeking safe haven in the Blue Chips. If that is indeed the case and we are in the initial stages of a serious correction, I may be out ahead of myself. Over the next 2-4 weeks, we should see the Dow - and the S&P - running a little colder than the NASDAQ. Eventually, bargains will emerge in the beaten down techs as the downtrend lengthens and broadens.

At some point - probably mid-to-late April - we will hear the term shooting the generals at which point I would suggest buying unduly depressed NASDAQ stocks with gusto. The aforementioned term comes from military parlance, and envisions the end-point of a war, when the well-protected leaders are finally rousted and dispatched. So it may be with the Dow stocks which look safe for now, but will eventually capitulate near the end of the correction.

The commodity markets also deserve a glance. Oil was off 36 cents to close at $61.64. I'd like to say that the price of crude has topped or is capped around $62-64, but that would be nothing more than wishful thinking. The charts show that oil isn't about to rise dramatically any time soon unless there is a politically-unstabilizing event or more outright manipulation of the price. With heavy driving months of Spring and Summer approaching, the price is expected to rise, but supply-demand dynamics and a slowing economy may derail such a movement. We can only hope that the charts, which indicate a retracement back into the 50s in the cards, are more prescient than the news media and crude hucksters who preach "driving season" economics.

Gold got slammed again, down 21.00/oz. to 644.10. Silver tagged along again, failing from its breakout at 14.35. Today, the price of silver slumped 0.69 to close at 12.96. Safe haven, my foot! You'd be better off stuffing mattresses.

Monday, February 26, 2007

The Correction Has Begun

On Monday, the Dow drooped for the 4th straight session. The correction has begun.

Since closing at 12,786.64 (an all-time high) on Feb. 20, the Dow has lost 154 points to its resting place today at the close of 12,632.26. Four straight losing days: a trend? Maybe, and at this point in time, likely.

There does not need to be any reason for a decline in the price of stocks as investors will make up any assortment of reasons to buy or sell, but when it comes to substantial increases or declines in the value of the blue chips of the Dow it's worth a second look.

On Monday, there were 16 Dow components in the losing column, one unchanged and 14 posting gains. The disparity was not large and neither was the point loss, a mere -15.22 for the session. Since the Dow is not a weighted average, a closer look at the components reveals that four of the five heaviest-traded issues were actually up.

Intel, the leader with 72 million shares traded, gained .09. Microsoft (63 mil.) was up .17. Citigroup (35 mil.) lost 1.09. Pfizer (32 mil.) gained .22 and General Electric (25 mil.) was up .24.

If the Dow was weighted, it would likely have shown a gain. But, it is not. The points are added and subtracted after being calculated by the Dow divisor, currently 0.14452124. So, that Citigroup loss of -1.09 ÷ 0.14452124 = -7.54. Citigroup's loss outweighed the gains of the other 4 stocks, even though those four stocks traded nearly 5 1/2 times the shares.

Adding a weighted average of the Dow might skew results to which investors have, over the years, grown accustomed, thus, it has not been changed in many years, though the divisor is routinely adjusted for splits.

So, we have the Dow in drop mode, while the other, weighted, indices march to their own beat. The finishes today were, however, similar. The NASDAQ lost 10.58 and the S&P was down 1.82. The reliably honest NYSE Composite showed a gain of just 1.24.

What we're witnessing and will be witness to over the next 5-7 weeks prior to the next round of earnings, is a bit of divergence between the indices. While the Dow and S&P should follow a similar path, I expect the NASDAQ, with its preponderance of tech and mid-cap issues, to outperform both of those.

Remember that in the dotcom implosion of 2000-2002, the NASDAQ took the most severe beating and has only recovered to less than half of its all-time high while the Dow has set new highs and the S&P is close to record territory. 1527.46 was the all-time high for the S&P. It's currently less than 80 points from that mark.

A 10% loss on the Dow would barely be noticeable. From its high of last week, a 10% decline would only put it at 11, 508. I believe a 15-20% loss on the Dow is now in the cards. It would signal to investors that the market is and has been overbought and that the colossal returns of the past 4 years cannot be sustained indefinitely.

I won't bore you with the details of my calculations, but note that Fibonaci numbers will be in play. Expect the Dow to bottom out around the 10,350 to 11,100 range. We're not in a position for a full-blown recession, but indications are that the economy is growing at a slow, sustainable rate. Dollars will be taken off the table in a combination of profit-taking and over-indulgent fears.

The entire episode should shake out by the end May, when the markets will likely go sideways for a while before setting sail for new highs in 2008. It's going to be a rough ride for a while, but nothing earth-shaking unless political machinations derail into some unlikely chaos.

The NASDAQ will fare much better, with an 8-10% decline being the absolute worst of this round.

Friday, December 29, 2006

2007 Predictions (part 2)

Management will be key in 2007. Those companies which can outperform their rivals and adjust to changing economic and market conditions will appreciate dramatically in 2007, while the bulk of publicly-traded companies will skirmish with health care, distribution and marketing issues.

Stocks in general will perform poorly, however, and some will fail outright. A correction is fairly due in the near term, most likely in the first two quarters of 2007, though either sharply rising prices or range-bound fluctuations are equally possible. There has not been a 10-15% correction in the Dow for the entire length of the current bull market, which has now extended to 51 months.

The Dow has just completed its 4th consecutive year of positive returns and 2006 was the best year in the past three. It's not surprising that stocks have accomplished such sparkling gains considering the healthy profit scenarios and rather loose policy guidelines over recent years.

What is surprising is how the markets have behaved with rigid resolution during a time of high deficit spending, a poor balance of trade and the general malaise associated with the conflict in Iraq and the poor US foreign relations policy. Falling currency values must have contributed to higher share prices over this period. Foreigners have, in relation to dollar-denominated assets, more money to boost stock prices, and they certainly have. One could assert that stocks must rise just to stay even with the falling value of the US dollar.

Continued loose policy on many fronts, including the Fed's rate policy could lead to a hyperinflationary environment, but that's all about to change. The shifting politics in Washington should foment positive movements on fiscal policy, foreign relations and spending. A conclusion in Iraq is overdue and calls for an end to US military involvement in the Middle East will only grow louder if the conditions remain the same or worsen.

It's going to be a year of transition in which strong internal management will not only profit but lead into a more balanced and dynamic market. With that in mind, a 15% rise on the Dow would put the average at 16,675, a number that not only seems unrealistic, and probably is. Don't expect the Dow to cross much higher than 16,000 at some point in 2007, but be reminded that a pull-back in the first half will make such a move all the more daunting.

To say that every rally climbs a wall of worry is to speak loudly of this current bull. Sustaining the edge during a transition will not be easy for traders or investors. Expect a cyclical change in sector leadership, and small emerging technology companies in computing, agriculture, medicine and energy will perform very well and many will be takeover targets.

Large value companies, like those comprising the Dow, will continue to diversify to meet changing demands and become even more entrenched in their respective business sectors. That's all positive news for US stocks and 2007 will present quality buying opportunities. The underground, or unseen, economy will continue to thrive and feed into the mainstream at an unprecedented rate. Cash and credit are circulating and growing remarkedly; a condition that must be approached and understood to be cautionary.

2007 will experience political disruptions more often than economic ones. The world's currency exchange system, precarious as it is, has now interpreted globalization effects and accommodated. While areas of fragility will persist, no cataclysmic events can be seen looming and those problem areas such as inflation and disparities in markets will be met with policy action. Areas outside the US will almost certainly afford better returns, though with the associated higher risk. Established foreign firms based in stable nations should be given a hard look.

Expected gains are 7% on the Dow, 12% on the Nasdaq and 5% on the S&P 500 at year end, though the range, especially the lows, could be dramatic.
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