Friday, February 8, 2013

The Morning Call---The GOP and the sequester

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The Morning Call

2/8/13

The Market
           
    Technical

            The indices (DJIA 13944, S&P 1509) inched lower yesterday.  Both of the Averages finished below the upper boundaries of their short term uptrends (13308-13949, 1447-1516) and within their intermediate term uptrends (13308-18308, 1407-2002).

            Volume declined; breadth was poor.  The VIX rose, remaining within its intermediate term downtrend.

            A look at Market internals:

            GLD fell but closed within a developing pennant pattern formed by the lower boundary of a very short term uptrend and the upper boundary of a short term downtrend.  It is well within an intermediate term trading range.

Bottom line: the Averages continued their churning action which means, depending on your perspective, either an overbought condition is being worked off or there is a loss of momentum.  The Market will ultimately tell us which.  In the meantime, for clues on how it will be resolved I am watching two things: (1) the tight trading range of the last eight days [S&P 1495-1514].  A break out either way could point at future direction and (2) the upper boundaries of the Averages short term uptrend.  I have noted that these resistance levels have been something of a magnet of late---a move away in either direction would likely point to the Market’s future course.

            Rhythm in the S&P (short):

    Fundamental
    
     Headlines

            Yesterday’s US economic news was mixed: January retail sales were better than anticipated, weekly jobless claims fell though not as much as expected and fourth quarter nonfarm productivity and unit labor costs were disappointing.  This kind of erratic performance fits our forecast.

Obama kept the heat up in the sequester battle, making another speech yesterday arguing that the GOP will be responsible for any and all problems created by it.  I have this uneasy feeling in my stomach that the republicans are again being outmaneuvered. 

            Meanwhile, across the pond, conditions are getting worse.  The ECB met yesterday and in the accompanying press conference, Draghi was less than enthusiastic: inflation is declining (good luck with that Mario), the ECB will remain accommodative (sound familiar?) and the economy is weak.  That, of course, was the mild, optimistic take on what is now transpiring.  In addition, to the problems in Italy and Spain, it appears that France is joining the ranks of troubled economies. 

            The French economy is going on the ‘troubled’ list (medium):

            And having leaders like the departing head of the UK Financial Services Authority is not going to improve the long term outlook (medium):

Bottom line:  March 1 is the effective date of the sequester.  If the GOP doesn’t hold firm for whatever reason (excuse), i.e. lack of will, out foxed by Obama, etc, we are stuck, at a minimum, with our long term forecast of a sluggish economy---held back by too much spending, too much debt, too much regulation---for another two years.  That is not positive for equity valuations; and given that stocks are already over valued (by our Model), neither is it a plus for stock prices.

 Events is Europe are re-kindling investor awareness that Draghi et al have scarcely mitigated the myriad of sovereign and bank debt problems.  Those difficulties will likely exacerbate economic growth at a minimum and could lead to the ‘fat tail’ risks that I fear.

Hence, our Portfolios remain better Sellers into any further stock price increases

            More valuation studies (medium):

            New head of Bank of Japan (medium):

            SocGen on the economic data and market divergences (short):

            The latest from Jeremy Grantham (medium):

            QE, fiscal policy and inflation (medium):

            The latest from David Rosenberg (medium):

       Investing for Survival

            The death of the ownership society (medium):




Steve Cook received his education in investments from Harvard, where he earned an MBA, New York University, where he did post graduate work in economics and financial analysis and the CFA Institute, where he earned the Chartered Financial Analysts designation in 1973. His 40 years of investment experience includes institutional portfolio management at Scudder, Stevens and Clark and Bear Stearns. Steve's goal at Strategic Stock Investments is to help other investors build wealth and benefit from the investing lessons he learned the hard way.

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