Tuesday, September 10, 2013

The Morning Call---Obama gets a second way out

The Morning Call

9/10/13

The Market
           
    Technical

            The indices (DJIA 15069, S&P 1671) had a great day.  The S&P had a directionally demonstrative day, so I am leaving its short term trend as up (1648-1802).  It also surged through its 50 day moving average.  The Dow closed below both its 50 and 100 day moving averages and remained within its short term trading range (14140-15550).

            Both of the Averages are well within their intermediate term (14786-19786, 1573-2159) and long term uptrends (4918-17000, 715-1800).

            Volume fell; breadth improved.  The VIX declined but continues to drift within its short term trading range (offering no hint of direction).  It is also in an intermediate term downtrend.

            The long Treasury inched higher, but finished within its short and intermediate term downtrends

            GLD was down slightly; but closed above both the lower boundary of a very short term uptrend and the upper boundary of a very short term downtrend.

Bottom line: while the technical strength of the S&P definitely improved yesterday, it remains out of sync with the DJIA---both directionally and with respect to the 50 and 100 day moving averages.  Furthermore, much of the force behind yesterday’s price rise appears to have been short covering---not the healthiest of reasons for a Market up tick.  That leaves the Market with no clear short term trend. The long Treasury remains in both a short and intermediate term downtrend---which I don’t see as a positive.  I remain anchored to the sidelines.  Any additional upside that pushes our holdings into their Sell Half Range will be used to lighten up.

            NASDAQ 100 breaks out (short):

            Russell 2000 breaks short term downtrend (short):

    Fundamental
    
     Headlines

            No US economic stats yesterday; but there was a number of positive foreign datapoints: second quarter Japanese GDP was revised upward, plus Tokyo received the 2020 Olympics which investors seemed to believe would be a major economic positive (they need to check the math on the last four recipients before getting too jiggy); China recorded improved export numbers and the EU  reported a rise in investor confidence.

            That got stocks off to a nice start.  Then Putin handed Obama yet another way to extricate Himself from His Syrian ‘red line’ threat.  The Russian suggested that Syria place its chemical warfare weaponry under the control of international authorities.  Syria (along with other international players like the UK) enthusiastically supported this suggestion.  Kerry embraced it.  Obama said that He and Putin had been talking about such a solution all along (yeah, right).  Reid called off the Senate vote on a Syrian resolution.  And several House members said that there was no way that the House would vote positively for such a resolution.  Forgetting whether or not, the international community will ever be able to locate the Syrian poison gas arsenal, all this action suggests that one way or the other, Obama will be allowed to back out of His original threat; and investors, rightly so, responded positively.  As I noted in Saturday’s Closing Bell, hopefully this is now a crisis passed its peak.

            Obama/Putin come up with yet another way of wiggling out of His ‘red line’ threat (medium):

            And Syria agrees (medium):

Bottom line: the lessening risk of US involvement in Syria is positive, at least in the short term.  It keeps the US out of a situation in which it has no strategic interest and in which any action by our Orator in Chief could lead to escalation from powers much more deadly than Syria.  In the long run, hopefully the electorate will realize the error of its way in putting this man and His ideological sycophants in office in the first place and replace Him with  someone with more common sense, perspective, leadership and balls that won’t get himself and this country in the precarious position that His Highness of Hope and Change has done. 

With that behind us (hopefully), our ruling class can turn its attention to some things really important---like a budget resolution, addressing the debt ceiling, finding a workable resolution to the fiscal problems caused by the FY 2014 sequestration and implementation of Obamacare, clarifying the transition process from cheap to tight money and replacing Bernanke.  If that sounds like a full agenda, it is.  And if it raises doubts as to the willingness and capacity of America’s finest to do the right thing, well, it should.

The fact is Syria was/is an unfortunate and unnecessary distraction to the business of America.  The job before our political class to right the economic ship still lies ahead.  And if they can’t do any better than they have in the past decade, our economy will remain mired in excessive government debt/spending, a growth stifling tax system, a burdensome regulatory environment and a central bank that has taken license to go to extremes that no other central bank in recorded history has gone. 

That doesn’t mean that this country is going to hell in a hand basket.  It does mean, in my opinion, that stocks are way over valuing the likely earnings that can be produced from an economy on the current trajectory of the US.

            The flaw in Fed policy (medium):

            The latest from John Hussman (medium):

     ***over night, China reported much better than expected industrial production and retail sales; while France’s industrial production number missed badly.

            Goldman questions the strength of recent EU PMI’s (medium):

     Investing for Survival

            Which is better, investing for dividends or for total return (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 Investing For Survival is to help other investors build wealth and benefit from the investing lessons he learned the hard way.

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