The Morning Call
The Market
Technical
After
a raucous day on Wednesday, the indices (DJIA 16179, S&P 1809) took yet
another break yesterday. I think that
this lack of follow through is a sign of growing uncertainty/lack of firm
conviction/increased schizophrenia among investors; and it is somewhat
indicative of the pin action over the last month or so: it looks like stocks
are signaling a move up/down, then nothing or just the opposite happens.
In this latest
instance, while I was surprised at the Market’s aggressive response to the
Fed’s new tapering for pussies policy, I just assumed that I was wrong (not the
first time) and stocks would be off for a run at 17400/1900. Instead, they snoozed. True our internal
indicator was rotten; but it hasn’t been upbeat for most of the year and the
Averages just kept climbing.
I
am not angling for a firm conclusion here; I am saying that the Market action is
confused and uncertain, that it could break either direction, I just don’t know
which. Meanwhile, the indices remain
tucked nicely within uptrends along all major timeframes: short term
(15566-20566, 1757-1911), intermediate term (15566-20566, 1660-2241) and long
term (5050-17400, 728-1900).
Volume
fell, breadth deteriorated much more than the pin action would suggest. The VIX rallied, remaining within its short
term trading range and intermediate term downtrend but continuing to be of
little value in discerning Market direction.
The
long Treasury fell again---not all that surprising given that some token
tapering is about to start. It finished
within its short term trading range and intermediate term downtrend and is
still building a head and shoulders formation.
GLD
was whacked big time, closing right on the lower boundary of its long term
trading range. As I have noted several
time, how it handles this support level should say a lot about future
direction.
Bottom
line: yesterday’s sleep fest
notwithstanding, I still think that seasonal factors provide a better than even
chance of the indices challenging the 17400/1900 level. However, I will continue to use any advance
as an opportunity for our Portfolios to take advantage of our Sell Price
Discipline.
The
latest from the Stock Traders Almanac (short):
Fundamental
Headlines
Yesterday’s
US economic data didn’t make for all that good a reading: weekly jobless claims
rose versus an expected decline, the December Philly Fed manufacturing index
was lite of estimates and November existing home sales were not good. Keeping the day from being a total bummer was
November leading economic indicators which were above consensus.
International
news didn’t help: Chinese rates are spiking prompting the Bank of China to ease
monetary conditions. ***that continued
over night
As
bad as the above sounds, it comes after a string of upbeat datapoints. So I see nothing to worry about at this point. Strangely, if investors were really as jazzed
about the almost imperceptible change of direction in Fed policy as Wednesday’s
pin action implied, then a couple of lousy stats should have made them all that
more jiggy. Nothing.
Bottom line:
Market reaction to tapering appears to have come and gone. That leaves the questions; (1) will the Fed
prove effective in unwinding QE without causing economic disruptions? (2) will it even matter to the Markets if
current overvaluations persist or get more extreme? The answers to those questions will likely
play a major role in shaping the Market over the next 18-24 months.
I can’t emphasize strongly enough that I
believe that the key investment strategy today is to take advantage of the
current high prices to sell any stock that has been a disappointment or no
longer fits your investment criteria and to trim the holding of any stock that
has doubled or more in price.
The
Fed’s economic projections: myth versus reality (medium):
Fed
balance sheet hits $4 trillion (short):
More
from Doug Kass (medium):
Corporate
earnings projections declining (short):
Subscriber Alert
The
stock price of South Jersey Industries (SJI )
has traded below the lower boundary of its Buy
Value Range
but remains well above its Stop Loss Price.
Therefore, SJI is being Removed from
the Dividend Growth Buy List, but the Dividend Growth Portfolio will continue
to Hold it.
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 Investing For Survival is to help other investors build wealth and benefit from the investing lessons he learned the hard way.
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