Friday, June 21, 2013

The Morning Call---Are we having fun yet?


The Morning Call

6/21/13

The Market
           
    Technical

            Are we having fun yet?  The indices (DJIA 14578, S&P 1588) suffered some severe whackage yesterday.  Both closed below the lower boundary of their short term uptrends (14841-15574, 1634-1713) as well as their 50 day moving averages.  Further, they both made lower lows, resetting their very short term trends to down.

            With respect to our time and distance discipline, the S&P’s close yesterday satisfied both the time and distance elements; meaning that barring a massive rally today, it has broken its short term uptrend.  That leaves the Dow having broken the lower boundary of its short term uptrend but not fulfilling the distance element.  At the moment, the time element will confirm a break at the close today.

Under our technical system, once a break to the downside is confirmed, we then wait for the Average(s) to bounce enough to break the new very short term downtrend.  At that point, the low of the decline marks the bottom of a newly re-set short term trading range.  The upper boundary would be defined by the recent highs.  That is now in process for the S&P; and barring a big rally today will be so for the Dow on Monday. 

In addition to those new short term trading range boundaries, other levels to watch on the downside are 14190, 1578 which are the old 2007 highs and the lower boundaries of the Averages intermediate term uptrends (14177-19177, 1507-2095).

            Volume rose; breadth was abysmal.  The VIX soared 23%, closing above the upper boundary of its short term downtrend.  It was a sufficiently large move that the distance element of our time and distance discipline confirms the break---though the time element would do so by the close today.  Again barring a major plunge, the technical process for resetting to a trading range described above for the indices would work in reverse for the VIX.  Clearly, this break confirms the movement in stocks.

            GLD fell 5%, finishing below its double bottom and the lower boundary of its long term uptrend.  Once again, the decline was of such a magnitude  that the distance element already qualifies yesterday’s GLD down draft as a confirmed break.   

Bottom line: yesterday’s pin action could be significant---which is a bit of a hedge but I am doing it because of the extreme volatility of in recent days.  As described above, it has all the markings of a major turning point; but I am holding off for a day or two just to be sure an equally but opposite reaction doesn’t occur. 

Do nothing.

            Are the chickens of record margin debt coming home to roost? (short):

    Fundamental
    
     Headlines

            Although you would never know it, we actually got some decent economic numbers yesterday: May existing home sales were extremely positive as was the Philly Fed manufacturing index.  Granted weekly jobless claims were up and the leading economic indicators were not as strong as expected.  However, on a normal trading day, this data would have had investors smiling.

            On the other hand, global credit markets continued to seize up, partly as a function of deteriorating conditions in specific markets (China, Greece) but antagonized by what appears to have been an ‘emperor’s new clothes’ moment on Fed monetary policy.  The result was a vicious sell off in global stock, bond and commodity markets.

            As you know, this doesn’t come as a surprise to me.  I have been yakking about irresponsible Fed policy, structural weakness in some of the major world economies and overvalued equities for far too long.  Not to be repetitive, but that doesn’t make me a bear on the US economy; it just means that I thought that stock prices were/are way ahead of themselves based on the fundamentals as I see them.

            The primary catalyst for that overvaluation was the belief that as long as liquidity injections lasted, stocks had to go up and that when those injections stopped, each individual investor believed that he was smart enough to be the first one out.  Notice the total absence of anything to do with value; it was all about free money being used to push up security prices until the last ‘greater fool’ allowed the ‘smart money’ out.

            As the Market was cratering yesterday, the bulls were arguing that (1) if the Fed is correct and the economy is improving, then that will justify current prices, (2) but if the Fed is wrong, it will continue QEInfinity---assuming that investors will be just as willing to mainline the heroin in the future as they have been in the past.  To which I reply (1) the Fed’s forecast is not that much better than our own; so there is no way that stocks are currently priced Fairly even if the Fed’s estimates were a lock and (2) if the Fed is wrong, all faith will be lost.  Who in his right mind is going to believe that the Fed will get in right the next time when it is clear that once again it has botched the transition process---in other words, they learn again that ‘it is never different this time’? 

Bottom line: in my opinion, the Fed has drawn its line in the sand.  The best outcome possible is that the economy continues to plod along, growing at a below average secular rate---in which case, security prices revert to Fair Value once the heroin high has worn off (which itself could be a very painful process).  If the economy stumbles and the Fed re-starts (or never stops) QEInfinity, I don’t believe that investors will return to their prior mindset because then they will know that the Fed doesn’t know what it is doing, so it has no clue about its own end game.

            More on the mounting credit crisis in China (medium and a must read):

            More bad news from China (short):

            Meanwhile in Europe, the IMF is threatening to pull the plug of Greece (short):

      Subscriber Alert

            The stock price of Phillip Morris Int’l (PM-$87) fell below the lower boundary of its Buy Value Range.  Accordingly, it is being removed from the Dividend Growth and High Yield Buy Lists.  Since it did not trade below its current Stop Loss Price, both Portfolios will continue to Hold it.




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

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