New York Stock Exchange

Market Update 02-02-10

 Stocks are rallying this week after several weeks of selling. But we wouldn’t be in any hurry to pronounce the correction over. Our work suggests that equities are likely to remain under pressure in the weeks ahead. Read more...

Market Update 11-03-09

Stocks posted their worst showing last week in eight months. The action was dreadful with all sectors and market segments being clipped. Small caps fared the worst, dropping anywhere from 5 to more than 6 percent, depending the on the average you choose to examine. Market breadth was equally terrible with declining issues outpacing advancers by more than a 7-to-1 margin on the New York Stock Exchange. Markets around the globe responded in kind.
 
Yesterday it looked like U.S. shares were headed for at least a temporary respite. But the rally was all too brief. Blue chip shares managed to recover by the end of yesterday’s trading, but there were plenty of divergences: small caps, the transports and utilities all lost ground.
 
Initially, investors cheered the Institute of Supply Management’s (ISM) Manufacturing Index data of October, which came in at 55.7, well ahead of expectations at 53 and the prior reading of 52.6. But the devil was in the details.
 
The stock market rally fizzled as a breakdown of the ISM data revealed the pace of new orders, supplier deliveries and customers’ inventories all slowed in the month, while prices paid rose.
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Market Update 09-22-09

The Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee is meeting this week to decide what to do next with respect to its interest rate policy and to possibly formulate an exit strategy from its current easy money policy. Despite calls that the recession is now over, including from Fed Chair Bernanke, the central bank is expected to keep its target rate for fed funds unchanged at between zero and 25 basis points. And we don’t see that changing anytime soon.
 
The central bank is close to wrapping up buying $300 billion of Treasurys under a program it instituted last March. But it still has room to buy back mortgage-backed securities under the same program. The idea behind buying back the mortgage securities is to keep rates lows and the market liquid and so as to encourage borrowing as well as bank lending. Bank lending has remained tepid, however, although the program has also proven to be a convenient way for foreign central banks to swap out of the riskier agency paper in favor of U.S. Treasurys.
 
Stocks climbed to 11-month highs late last week. At times it has been difficult to resist the temptation to jump in whole hog on the long side to ride share prices higher. But all of our work continues to point to this being a highly irrational market. The buying that is occurring is happening with little or no discrimination taking place between industry groups.
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Market Update 07-07-09

Perception and reality can be two distinctly different things. For example, certain market commentators on CNBC and elsewhere have been cheering the end of the recession. While we wish we could be similarly enthusiastic about the economy right now, we want to point out that even if the economy has bottomed, it’s not an automatic positive for stocks.
 
Consider that the economy emerged from recession in late 2001, yet the stock market surrendered another 30 percent or so before bottoming. It was a similar story during the 1930s: stocks continued to slide, even as the economy improved. This is part of the reason we see no room for complacency right now. Even if the economy is on the mend, which again we doubt, growth isn’t likely to come on strong as consumers and banks alike are concerned with repairing their balance sheets. Without strong growth to deliver vastly improved earnings, stocks will struggle.
 
It’s still too soon to say that the correction that’s now underway is the big one we’ve been expecting for some time now. The 880 area on the S&P 500 will be the real test. But with investor confidence riding as high as it is today, stocks could muddle along in trading range they’ve been mired in since the beginning of May for several more months before stocks stage a major retreat.
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Market Update 06-30-09

We’re at the mid way point of the year and the second half is likely to be every bit a thrilling as the first half. Unfortunately, we’re likely to erase much of the gains we’ve made in recent months in the second half, so we’re not necessarily talking about thrilling in a good way. Of course we intend to make the best of a bad situation with put options.
 
Although they’re correcting today, stocks don’t appear to want to go down just in earnest just yet; they may hang in there for several more weeks. By August the downward trend should be more pronounced. In the meantime, we’re concerned with the lack of trading volume and the prominent role program trading is playing these days.
 
In the week ending June 19, the latest for which data is available, program trading accounted to more than 40 percent of the volume on the New York Stock Exchange. Liquidity is generally a good thing, but when so much of it is coming from automated trading we can’t help but think the greater fool theory is at work. Program traders have become conditioned to expect early morning and late-day buying. What’s more, stocks have typically bounced once they’ve fallen to important support levels.
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Market Update 06-09-09

During the 13 weeks ended last Friday, blue chips stocks had gained 38 percent, marking one of the sharpest rises in history. Small cap stocks, as measured by the unweighted average of all stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, fared even better, gaining a whopping 84 percent in that same period with nary a pause. But for all the bullish stock market talk, the major averages have been unable to muster much in the way of a rally since the results of the banks stress test were released in early May.

The problem is plenty of other things are rising as well, including bond yields and commodity prices. These latter two could scuttle a recovery. For instance, the 10-year Treasury that so many consumer loans key off of shot up more than a full percentage point during the past few weeks. And 30-year mortgage rates have risen to 5.5 percent. Although that’s still low by historical standards, we’ll see less refinancing and few new home purchases as a result.

Our banking sector is walking on egg shells as is. The number of problem banks has risen to more than 300. And even though $75 billion in capital has been raised many of the so-called “healthy” banks are on the edge. Yet the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is essentially out of money, with only $13 billion in remaining reserves (although its line of credit was recently upped to $500 billion).Read more...

Weekly Update 04-09-09

A Day at a Time
What Goes Around, Comes Around­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­_____________________________________Read more...