This
Week in Barrons – 9-14-2014:
“These
are CNBC-type numbers…”
In August, CNBC reported
that their average viewership declined by 30% (year over year) to just 28,000
adult viewers, from 25-54 years old, during the 9:30am to 5pm time period. This was its lowest rated month in over two
years. These numbers are really
bad. Can that many people just not care
about today’s financial climate? Here
are some other ‘really bad’ numbers:
-
Japan
just announced that on an annualized basis their GDP FELL 7%.
-
JP
Morgan just said that the amount of excess liquidity around the
globe is at "extreme levels.”
-
Poland
said that Gazprom (the Russian natural gas organization) shipped 40% less natural
gas on Wednesday than Poland had requested. (Note to Europe – you push Russia with
sanctions – they push back.) It also means
that Putin will turn even more towards China for financing.
-
Last
month mortgage applications fell 7%, and refinancing’s fell 10%.
-
51% of
the U.S. population could not go 2 weeks without a paycheck, and has NO
retirement savings.
-
Jim
Reid of Deutche Bank said: “The stock bubble needs to continue in order to
sustain the current global financial system". So, we need to keep
inflating, otherwise the wheels will come off.
-
The
Chinese PPI missed estimates – showing that they are over-stocked with
inventory, and are cutting prices in order to sell it.
-
The Labor Department reported that the initial jobless claims
increased 11,000 to a seasonally adjusted 315,000 for the week ending on
September 6th. This is the highest level
since June, and above economists’ forecasts of 300,000. Combine this number with the actual, full-time
employment measured by ADP, and you quickly realize that job growth remains
paltry and there is still far too much stagnation. The strongest growth in job creation continues
to be in part-time work.
-
Businesses continue to seek revenue overseas, where consumers
prosper, taxes are lower, and regulations are more business friendly. We, as a nation, can decide to compete or we
can punish those that decide to participate. Our administration has chosen the later of
these choices.
-
Last
week a report was circulating that the FED (during their meeting this week)
will remove the language suggesting that rates will stay low ‘for an extended
period’. If the easy money is going
away, then things have dramatically changed.
The dollar
continues strong, and that strength has an inverse relationship to all
commodities priced in dollars. I believe
that the recent dollar rally is playing a bigger role in the decline of commodity
prices than actual supply & demand issues.
Goldman this week set a target price of gold at $1,050 per ounce (down
from $1,250 where it resides currently).
While the price of paper gold is under pressure, physical demand remains
strong. I would be a buyer down at
$1,050 – if we can get there.
The Market....
We are
closing in on another monthly options expiration week. This month’s
roller coaster ride has been more volatile than normal. We had the sharp selloff in the beginning of
the month, the sharp rally in the middle of the month, and now more selling
pressure. If you look at a chart of the S&P 500, you will see
that since July 23rd we are currently in the same spot we were then.
However, the S&P started at 1,985 on
July 23rd, then dropped to 1,904, then ripped back up to 2,011, and
then rolled back over to 1,985 – precisely where we started. The S&P
has made no progress, but the daily swings have added up to over 151 points.
Speaking of the market, it
really looks like crap. The IWM, (which
are the small-cap stocks that led this market for so long) are looking horrible.
The S&P has pulled down and its
trading proxy (the SPY) is sitting on a soft support zone. Friday, which
has a habit of being green for the weekend talk shows, was bright red.
This market has been red 6 out of 10 days. The bounces seem to be one day events, and more
like desperation moves rather than any real serious buying pressure.
To me, the market feels heavy, and almost like it's run out of gas. Now, we've seen this set-up in the past, and they've stepped in to save the day. But right this second; we are parked on the verge of a serious pull down. Yes, they might save it, turn it around, and push us up. But, if you look at the chart and the internals from Friday, you can only deduce that we're one small step away from a healthy fade.
I'm not willing to say the entire run is over. But I have mentioned for two weeks that September has a habit of being an ugly month. It’s being made more interesting by a triple witching options expiration this Friday, and a FED meeting this Wednesday. After all, Ms. Yellen may decide to remove the words "keep rates low for an extended period", and then you would have the making of a real stock selloff.
So for the beginning of this week, my guess is they try and hold us here sideways. We could very well bounce all over the place. The great news is that an increase in volatility could give the market some welcome volume. Then if Yellen doesn't remove the happy talk, they will try and rescue us. If however the FOMC says that they are on track to end QE in October, and removes the "keep rates low for an extended period" line – we are probably going down. That could be our long lost 8 to 10% pullback.
To me, the market feels heavy, and almost like it's run out of gas. Now, we've seen this set-up in the past, and they've stepped in to save the day. But right this second; we are parked on the verge of a serious pull down. Yes, they might save it, turn it around, and push us up. But, if you look at the chart and the internals from Friday, you can only deduce that we're one small step away from a healthy fade.
I'm not willing to say the entire run is over. But I have mentioned for two weeks that September has a habit of being an ugly month. It’s being made more interesting by a triple witching options expiration this Friday, and a FED meeting this Wednesday. After all, Ms. Yellen may decide to remove the words "keep rates low for an extended period", and then you would have the making of a real stock selloff.
So for the beginning of this week, my guess is they try and hold us here sideways. We could very well bounce all over the place. The great news is that an increase in volatility could give the market some welcome volume. Then if Yellen doesn't remove the happy talk, they will try and rescue us. If however the FOMC says that they are on track to end QE in October, and removes the "keep rates low for an extended period" line – we are probably going down. That could be our long lost 8 to 10% pullback.
Tips:
“Something wicked this way comes.”
Friday found large funds bailing out of positions. Instead of selling 1M shares at a time, they were
continuously selling blocks of 1,000 shares – over and over again. This is the first day in a while where I've
seen every asset class (U.S. dollar, stocks, bonds, oil, gold, yen, and the
list continues) down on the day. In
theory, stocks should be rallying with all of the other asset classes down, but
they aren't. The $TICK readings have been constantly to the downside –
telling me that there aren’t any buyers. This doesn't mean we won't get a
nice short covering rally into the FED meeting on Wednesday, but it does mean
that it’s fine to err on the side of caution. For me, my red flag is
always the push below the 21 EMA on a daily chart. When that happens, it just opens the door for
much more downside. On Friday, the S&P, DOW and Bonds all crossed
below that level – with the NASDAQ staying barely above it. Therefore, I liquidated some major portions
of my holdings.
I still hold a couple of the energy stocks, a couple cyber-security
stocks, and I continue to sell 1+ standard deviation PCS’s (Put Credit Spreads)
and CCS’s (Call Credit Spreads) on the NDX and SPX. Obviously if I’m wrong – re-entry is just a
commission away. But if I’m right and
this market even remotely begins to roll over early in the week – then we’re in
for one heck of a FED-induced ride. If
we stabilize mid-week, I would look to get back into small caps such as: ANAC,
IDTI, IG, LEJU, NLS, PANW, RARE, RFMD, SLCA, and TSRA. I would also be looking to put options trades
on the following list of candidates: RUT, SPXPM, CMG, PII, GS, AMGN, AAPL, and MON.
My
current short-term holds are:
-
FEYE (Cyber-Sec) – in @ $28.76 – (currently
$34.95),
-
KO (Beverage) – in @ $41.17 – (currently $41.46),
-
LNG (Energy) – in @ $57.40 – (currently $82.64),
and
-
GLD (ETF for Gold) – in at 158.28, (currently
118.38)
My Small
Caps (earned 19.73% in the month of August):
-
LNGLF (Energy) – in @ $3.54 – (currently $3.90),
-
NEO – in @ $5.82 – (currently $5.99), and
-
VDSI (Cyber-Sec) – in @ $14.17 – (currently
$17.49)
To
follow me on Twitter and get my daily thoughts and trades – my handle is:
taylorpamm.
Please
be safe out there!
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