Friday, August 25, 2017

The Morning Call--Waiting for Jackson Hole

The Morning Call

8/25/17
The Market
         
    Technical

The indices (DJIA 21783, S&P 2438) drifted lower yesterday.  Volume was flat; breadth was weaker.  The S&P closed right on the lower boundary of its short term uptrend for a second time in the last five trading days, remained above its 100 and 200 day moving averages and continued to develop a very short term downtrend. 

The VIX (12.2) declined fractionally, finishing below the upper boundary of its short term downtrend but above its 100 and 200 day moving averages.  I continue to believe that the questions remain as to whether the VIX made or is making some kind of bottom extending back to late July and if I was premature resetting the intermediate term from trading range to downtrend. 

The long Treasury fell, but ended above its 100 and 200 day moving averages (both support), the lower boundaries of its short term trading range and its long term uptrend and has now made a third short term higher high.  That is a lot of support. 
           
The dollar advanced, but closed in a short term downtrend and below its 100 and 200 day moving averages. 
           
 GLD was down, but finished above the lower boundary of its very short term uptrend and its 100 and 200 day moving averages (both support).  Plus it is very close to the upper boundary of its short trading range.

Bottom line: the Averages failed for a second day to build on Tuesday’s explosive move to the upside.  In the process, the S&P once again closed right on the lower boundary of its short term uptrend.   To be fair, stock prices had to fight a discouraging news flow (possible government shutdown/default); though that reaction itself is something new---which is to say that bad news was actually bad news.  Plus many investors were likely on the sidelines waiting today’s Yellen and Draghi Jackson Hole speeches.  From a technical standpoint, the key issue is whether or not the S&P holds or challenges its short term uptrend.

The TLT, UUP and GLD also reflected concerns about a government default. 

    Fundamental

       Headlines

            Yesterday’s economic data was mixed: weekly jobless claims were slightly disappointing, the August Kansas City Fed’s manufacturing index was improved and July existing home sales were well below projections.

            Overseas, the stats were also mixed: UK second quarter GDP rose, though household spending was the weakest in three years.

            ***overnight, August German business sentiment remained high but eased slightly.

            Trump kept DC is a stir, attacking McConnell and Ryan for lack of progress on fiscal policy after threatening to shut down the government if congress didn’t fund the southern wall.  I have already opined that the Donald is following his own script right out of ‘The Art of the Deal’; so I don’t think this situation is as dire as the rhetoric.  That said, while the odds of a shutdown may be low, were to it to occur, the Market consequences would be unsettling.

A history of US government shutdowns since 1976 (medium):

            ***overnight, Gary Cohn vowed that between now and the end of the year, Trump’s focus will be on tax reform.  Hopeful news as long as he stays on message.  How likely does that seem?

            In addition, many investors were sitting on their hands awaiting today’s speeches by Yellen and Draghi.  As you know, my expectations are for a lot of mealy mouth platitudes, the bottom line of which is dovish.  As you also know, I think this strategy just delays the inevitable and the longer it delays the more intense the ultimate pain.

            Has the Fed completely lost control? (medium):

Bottom line: ‘the economic news is not nearly as positive as the ruling class would have you believe.  The central bankers are threatening to tighten monetary policy, which I doubt.  But we will know more by the close Friday (today).  So far, the only thing that the GOP dominated congress can pass is gas.  Trump continues to persist in making the achievement of his own agenda more difficult by insulting and threatening the very people he needs to accomplish it.  Of course, this could all end, despite the drama.  It better because that is the way stocks are priced.’
           
            S&P second quarter earnings (short):

            My thought for the day from Charlie Munger: ‘I don’t think you can get to be a really good investor over a broad range without doing a massive amount of reading.’

       Investing for Survival
   
            Seven strategies for investing at market peaks.

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios
 
Economics

   This Week’s Data

            July existing home sales fell 1.3% versus consensus of up 0.7%.

            The August Kansas City Fed manufacturing index came in at 16 versus July’s reading of 10.

                July durable goods orders fell 6.8% versus estimates of down 5.8%; that was largely a function of declining transportation orders---ex transportation orders were up 0.5% versus forecasts of up 0.4%.  However, core capital goods were up 0.4% versus expectations of up 0.5%.

   Other

            Business loan growth continues to slide (medium):

            A different look at economic growth (medium):

            What financial indicators say about the economy (medium):

Politics

  Domestic

How the money gets spent in Afghanistan (medium):

New study on climate change (medium):

  International

            Russia deploys nuclear capable bombers near South Korea (medium):

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