Chicago

Market Update 05-19-10

Stock markets around the globe, particularly European markets, remain very jittery over Europe’s sovereign debt problems. Although the bailout package revealed just a few days ago provides a safety net, investors worry that spending cutbacks as part of the rescue package will stall European economies and possibly adversely affect overseas countries as well, potentially damaging the global recovery.
All this is reflected in the wild market action. In fact, in the month of May, the market volatility has been much higher than what we became accustomed to this year, with the VIX (the Chicago Board of Options Exchange Volatility Index), which measures the volatility and is nicknamed the fear index, gaining from its annual low point of only 15.23 set on April 12th. As investors became increasingly concerned about the resolution of the European debt crisis this volatility index has more than doubled off that low, with today’s levels being the highest of the month so far.
The economic backdrop has actually been improving, with today’s released FOMC notes showing that the U.S. economy this year will grow at a rate from 3.2 to 3.7 percent. The Fed has repeated its pledge to keep rates at a near-zero level for an extended period of time; the probability of the rates being increased this year is even lower with all the commotion coming from Europe.
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Market Update 05-18-10

Investor pessimism has been growing of late, with plenty of events to point toward for that bearishness. The primary fear is that Europe is going to drag the global economy back into recession. China is another top concern, with the air coming out of its property “bubble” and the stock market drop on the Shanghai Exchange. Although the Investors Intelligence weekly poll of bulls and bears is still nowhere near where it stood at the market bottom in March, 2009, but it has nevertheless come down substantially in the last few weeks. Likewise, the ratio of call option to put option buying on the Chicago Board Option’s Exchange, after hitting a nearly 10-year high in April, has dropped sharply and is no longer at an extremely bullish reading (a contrary indicator if ever there was one).
 
While we remain concerned with the market’s valuations and its long-term prospects, we wouldn’t be too quick to join the growing bear camp just yet. The market’s action in the past few days has the hallmarks of being at the end of a modest and needed correction, not the onset of an even bigger decline.
 
After all, Europe’s economy wasn’t exactly on a tear to begin with; even if it does slip back into recession territory, we’re not talking about a big change from where it is now. Moreover, the European Union’s unprecedented $1 trillion bailout, coupled with the sharp slide in the euro, is actually bullish.
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Market Update 04-13-10

The US dollar has come under pressure this week as the European Union has moved forward with a rescue package for the ailing Greek government. The EU’s loan package isn’t the be all and end all though and the issue of Greece ultimately defaulting on its debt is still a possibility. The bailout of Athens should only be viewed as a temporary reprieve for the euro. Over time we expect both the dollar and the euro (and all the other currencies that are being debased through the massive issuance of debt for that matter) to continue to lose their battle against hard assets such as gold and silver.

The US stock market has been unfazed by the goings on in Europe, with the Dow Industrials having briefly inched above 11,000 for the first time in a year and half and the S&P 500 flirting with 1200. The rally could carry the major averages higher, but there are some worrying signs that suggest the upside is rather limited.

We’ve mentioned before the steadily declining pace of trading activity. Trading volume on a 50-day moving average basis is off about 35 percent from where it was a year ago. On a longer, 200-day moving average basis, it’s off by about 22 percent. Now there’s nothing to say this won’t continue as stocks claw their way higher, but the lack of volume suggests that when stocks do start to come under pressure, as they invariably will, we’ll see a big jump in volume and that selling could feed on itself, making matters worse.Read more...

Don't Fight the Tape: 03-18-10

U.S. stocks hit their highest level in almost 18 months today, continuing a quiet and modest but sustained advance. With 20 Dow points here and 40 points there, it starts to add up.

All told, the Dow Jones Industrial Average now has risen for eight straight days, and 12 out of 14 so far in March. The blue-chip average is up 4.3 percent for March; 3.3 percent for 2010 so far; and 64 percent from its 12-year closing low of March 9, 2009.

In a sign of reduced investor anxiety and possibly increased optimism, the Chicago Board Options Exchange's volatility index, the so-called fear gauge, has slid to its lowest level since May 2008. So far this month, there have been just two days when the Dow rose more than 100 points from the low of the day to the high. In February, triple-digit intraday moves occurred on 14 of 19 days.
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Market Update 03-16-10

Stocks have traded in a fairly tight range in recent sessions, but it has been fascinating to watch. The market stands at a critical juncture and it looks like the bulls will prevail, but it’s still too early to call.Read more...

Market Update 03-09-10

The major stock market averages have been climbing back toward their 52-week highs. For the S&P 500, for instance, we’re only about 1 percent below the January highs around the 1050 area. Depending on how the S&P (and Dow Industrials) act in the near term it should set the tone of the market for the next several months.

For instance, we’re coming up on the S&P’s 200-week exponential moving average. If the powerful rally we’ve experienced in the last year is nothing more than bull trap in the context of an on-going secular bear market, and there’s still a strong argument to be made that it is, then that level is a logical place for the market to stall again.

Failure to close above the 1050 market for several days running will likely shake investors’ confidence and lead to at least a modest pullback in share prices, probably resulting in another retreat back to around 1050.

If, on the other hand, the S&P does hold above 1050 for several days, the technical breakout will bring in more buyers who are likely to drive share prices even higher. Looking at the index’s long-term chart, the next leg up would probably carry us to around 1220, last seen back in September 2008. That area represents formidable overhead resistance that stretches all the way back to 1999.Read more...

Stock Market's Wall of Worry: 01-28-10

A bull market climbs a wall of worry. But the wall of worry has just gotten taller. 

Since peaking at 1150 on Jan. 19, the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 index has dropped 6 percent in seven trading days. This has occurred despite generally positive corporate earnings. 

With the decline has come a rebound in the Chicago Board Options Exchange's volatility index, or VIX. The Fear Index jumped from a low 17.5 on Jan. 19 to as high as 28 just three days later and has since been in the 23-26 range. Still, this level of volatility is only about average for the last 10 years.

Good news on corporate earnings with a poor stock-market response is a clear sign of trouble, at least in the near term. To be fair, "good" isn't good enough after the stock market has soared some 70 percent in 10 months. And the news hasn't been all good, to say the least. Read more...

A Good Start for Stocks: 01-07-10

World stocks started the year with strong, broad gains to new highs on Monday amid growing investor confidence in the global economic recovery. Since then, the markets have mostly inched ahead.
 
January's stock-market performance is seen as a key indicator for the year. And the first week, to a lesser extent, is considered a barometer for January. Over the last 110 years, an up January for the Dow Jones industrial average has led to a median 10.4 gain for the year, while a negative January has ended with just a 0.3 percent gain. January was weak in both 2008, a terrible year for stocks; and 2009, which saw a sharp plunge until early March before a dramatic rebound.
 
The market averages are still well below their 2007 highs. With the economy and corporate profits in the early stages of recovery, we think there's plenty of room for investment gains over time. But the advance since last March has been mostly uninterrupted, and that much-discussed, long-overdue correction of 10 percent or more has yet to happen.
 
Among the challenges the markets will face in 2010 is rising interest rates. Of course, rising rates aren't all bad this time around because they should at least partly reflect an improving economy. Long-term Treasury bond yields are already climbing, although they're still low. Short-term rates, controlled by the Federal Reserve and now basically at zero, will go higher eventually.
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Sleeping with a Jaguar 10-05-09

Short-Term Key: Negative Long-Term Key: 0 Read more...

Market Update 10-05-09

Short-Term Key: Negative Long-Term Key: 0
 
The end of last week brought two important announcements, both of which are relevant to our investments, though not terribly cheerful.
 
The first of these is the latest report on employment from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It could not have been worse. The horrific details included a larger than expected decline in employment, both in terms of payroll data and household surveys. Unemployment is nearly 10%, if you don't include people who are underemployed or who have stopped looking for work. (If you do include them, the rate could be closer to 17%.)
 
You may recall that, back towards the middle of this year, everyone was talking about positive second derivatives. This is a nifty bit of calculus/desperation that claimed that, while things were getting worse, they weren't getting worse as quickly.
 
Unfortunately, Friday's employment report was clearly a negative second derivative. Not only were the numbers worse than expected, they were worse than the previous month's. Whatever forward momentum the economy has, if any, seems to be much less than previously thought.
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