Thursday, July 12, 2018

The Morning Call---Who's on first


The Morning Call

7/12/18

The Market
         
    Technical

The Averages (DJIA 24700, S&P 2774) were down yesterday, though volume remained flat.  Breadth weakened.   The Dow continued to trade above its 100 day moving average (reverting to support), above its 200 day moving average (reverting to support) and within a short term trading range.  The S&P ended above both moving averages, in uptrends across all timeframes but retreated from the minor resistance from its June high.
               
 VIX rose 7 ¾ %, but still closed below its 100 day moving average (now resistance), below its 200 day moving average (reverting to support) and within a short term trading range.  So it bounced even before mounting a challenge of the May/June double bottom; suggesting that stocks may have to labor for any further short term advances.

The long Treasury advanced ½ %, remaining well above its 100 and 200 day moving averages and in a long term uptrend. 

            The dollar was also up ½ %, staying above both moving averages and in a short term uptrend.

            Gold returned to its old ways, falling 1% and continued to trade below both moving averages and in a short term downtrend.

            Bottom line: despite being a lousy day, the DJIA remained above both its recently successfully challenged moving average (a positive), bringing those momentum indicators in harmony with those of the S&P (also a plus).   TLT, UUP and GLD continue to perform like investors are betting on a relatively positive US economy versus the rest of the world’s economy.   The only problem, in my opinion, is that doing less poorly than the rest of the world is not a reason for stocks to advance when they are already near historic high valuations.
           
    Fundamental

       Headlines

            Yesterday’s economic releases were mostly upbeat: weekly mortgage/purchase applications and May wholesale inventories/sales were better than anticipated.  June PPI was a tad hotter than expected which isn’t good news if you are worried about Fed staying hawkish.

Speaking of which and wish I wasn’t, the Fed is once again intent on ignoring the data and constructing its own reality in order to forward policies that it thinks best for the economy.  The latest example is the construction of a hypothetical yield curve (to replace the real yield curve) to justify a continuing tightening of monetary policy.  To be sure, I love it since I believe that the gross misallocation and mispricing of assets created by QEInfinity has to be corrected as a precondition for the capital markets return to efficiency.  For that to occur, the Fed has to be equally oblivious to economic reality in unwinding QE as it was when was implementing it.  But that involves Market pain---which means this is not a widely held view.   (medium and a must read):

            ***overnight, the minutes from the latest ECB meeting show that plans for unwinding QE are on track---as long as nothing untoward occurs (medium):

            But the Fed was not the lead headline of the day.  Trade returned to center stage as Trump upped the tariff ante with China.  Prior to this announcement, the magnitude of the threatened tariffs were relatively small.  Now we are talking serious money.  But it will take some time before the tariffs are implemented; so there is still time for negotiations.  That said, no one seems to talking about the Chinese theft of US intellectual property which, for me, is their primary transgression.  This has been going on for far too long and, as a point of fairness, the US needs to stop it.  So I have no issue with Trump playing hard ball.  What would be a major disappointment to me (and would, in my opinion, have a much less important impact of future US secular growth) is if somehow an agreement is reached solely on tariff levels and not include a solution to this problem.

Trump and China trade (medium):

            ***overnight, China toned down trade rhetoric; traders get jiggy.

            Trade was also a part of present negotiations taking place with our NATO allies.  There is more issues involved than trade; most importantly, NATO nations not contributing their fair share of its defense expenses.  To be sure, they are related.  The good news is that, as of last night, the rhetoric at the current conference is a lot less confrontation than with China.

            ***overnight, Trump says NATO allies agreed to up defense spending (medium):

            But Macron/Merkel say no (medium):

            What Trump should say is that the US is spending less (medium0:

            Stockman slams Trump trade strategy (medium):

            This is a great discussion on tariffs and how they do and don’t affect an economy.  It is a bit long; and even though the prose are not pedantic, I had to re-read some portions several times to understand.
           
Bottom line:  investors appear to continue to believe that (1) the Fed will tighten only so long it isn’t disruptive to the Market, and (2) any trade repercussions will be minimal.  The difference in the two is that the trade more directly impacts the economy while under the Fed policy regime established by Greenspan, the Fed more directly impacts security prices.  And security prices are more directly related to my investment goals than the economy.  In short, watching the Fed monetary policy has been, is and will be the big kahuna when it comes investment strategy; and its Alice in Wonderland strategy, in my opinion, will not end well.  At current valuations, be sure you own some cash.
           
            Corporate stock buybacks are a losing proposition for companies (medium and a must read):


    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios
 
           

Economics

   This Week’s Data

      US

            May wholesale inventories rose 0.6% versus expectations of up 0.5%; sales were up a whopping 2.5%.

            June CPI rose 0.1% versus estimates of up 0.2%; ex food and energy, it was up 0.2%, in line.

            Weekly jobless claims fell 18,000 versus forecasts of down 6,000.

     International

    Other

            Facts on unemployment (medium and a must read):

            The Market and the Fed (short):

            Iran sanctions are different this time (medium):


What I am reading today

            More on the future of social security (medium):

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