The Morning Call
The Market
Technical
The
indices (DJIA 14127, S&P 1525) moved higher yesterday, staying within both
their (1) short term uptrends [13562-14217, 1418-1597] and (2) their
intermediate term uptrends [13455-18455, 1423-2017].
The S&P
close again right on 1525, a level which has acted as barrier over the last two
weeks. If this move continues to the
upside, it would point to a run at 1576; a continuing inability to do so is suggestive
that a major top is forming. So follow through
is the thing to watch today.
Volume
fell; breadth was mixed---and is giving no sense of which way this Market could
break. The VIX declined and remains
within its short and intermediate term downtrends---this is a positive for
stocks.
GLD
was off fractionally, once again closing right on the lower boundary of its
short term downtrend.
Bottom line:
stocks are still trying to resolve the question, is the Market in a topping
process or positioning itself for an attack on the 14190/1576 levels (note: I
am embarrassed to point out that my
inability to read my own writing led me at some point to transcribe 14190 as
14140. The correct number is 14190 and I
apologize for a silly error)? Whatever
occurs, our strategy will remain the same: lighten up if prices move higher; if
they move lower, do nothing until stocks are at least back to Fair Value.
Some
interesting stats on the size and frequency of corrections (short):
The
S&P and the CRB indices (short and a
must read):
Stocks
March trading pattern (short):
The
Shanghai composite breaks 50 day
moving average (short):
Fundamental
Headlines
It
was a pretty dull day overall. No
economic data. Not much fall out and
little discussion on the sequester---which I am interpreting as investor
agreement that the sequester is much ado about nothing. Little news out of Europe ,
leaving investors in a state of ignorant bliss.
The sequester
and the trend in government spending (short):
10
reasons why the euro crisis may be incurable (medium):
There
was some concern about future Chinese growth based primarily on a 60 Minutes editorial
Sunday night regarding overbuilding in housing and a (coincidental) change in
that policy announced overnight (Sunday)---which Stephen Roach poo poos in this
link (skip ahead to the 3 minute 30 second point):
***over
night Chinese leaders set more moderate growth objectives for the economy; and
in Europe , the service PMI ’s
came in better than expected.
Bottom
line: with little upon which to comment,
I simply summarize my point of view: the economy is growing sluggishly, as
expected; the government remains a burden to that growth rate, though the
sequester could (operative word) be a
harbinger of less spending and less debt as a percent of GDP . Based on those two factors, stocks are over
priced (circa 7% on the S&P).
Regrettably,
there is more: the Fed is digging a deeper hole daily---and as Warren Buffett
noted yesterday morning, when the Fed starts tightening, stocks are going down;
Europe is a mess and will require a lot of luck to
escape a crisis because its political class is fiddling. So our Portfolios are carrying more cash than
would other wise be appropriate at current price levels.
I like our cash
position.
The
latest from Jeff Gundlach (medium):
The
latest from John Hussman (medium):
Another
great must read bit of analysis from Lance Roberts (medium):
Update
on Doug Short’s valuation analysis:
Steve Cook received his education in investments from Harvard, where he earned an MBA, New York University, where he did post graduate work in economics and financial analysis and the CFA Institute, where he earned the Chartered Financial Analysts designation in 1973. His 40 years of investment experience includes institutional portfolio management at Scudder, Stevens and Clark and Bear Stearns. Steve's goal at Strategic Stock Investments is to help other investors build wealth and benefit from the investing lessons he learned the hard way.
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