Wednesday, February 5, 2014

The Morning Call---A dead cat bounce?

The Morning Call

2/5/14
The Market
           
    Technical

            The indices (DJIA 15445, S&P 1755) bounced off an oversold condition yesterday.  The Dow remained within a short term downtrend (15345-15780), an intermediate term trading range (14696-16601) and below its 200 day moving average.  The S&P confirmed the break of its short term uptrend and has re-set to a short term trading range (1746-1850).  It continues to trade in an intermediate term uptrend (1701-2381) and above its 200 day moving average.

            Volume fell (not a good sign on an up day); breadth improved.  The VIX fell finishing within its short term trading range and intermediate term downtrend.  On a positive note, yesterday’s decline marked the fourth time it has backed off the upper boundary of its short term short term trading range and the fifth time it has failed to penetrate its 200 day moving average to the upside.

            The long Treasury fell but closed over the upper boundary of its short term trading range for the third day, thereby re-setting the trend to a short term uptrend.  It also remains above its 200 day moving average.  However, it is still in an intermediate term downtrend.

            GLD declined, finishing within short and intermediate term downtrends.

Bottom line:  the Market remains disoriented.  The indices are not in harmony though they edged a wee bit closer with the S&P re-setting to a short term trading range. Volume fell which is not good on an up day in a lousy Market.  Nonetheless, further technical deterioration is needed before we can safely say that the Market has topped.

In the meantime, we can only watch.  It is too soon to be Buying and too late to be Selling anything other than stocks that violate their Stop Loss Prices or whose company has declined in quality and no longer qualifies for inclusion in our Universe.

            Will the S&P hit new highs again soon (short):

            This is a good technical review (medium):

    Fundamental
    
     Headlines

            Yesterday’s economic data was again subpar: weekly retail sales were mixed to poor; December factory orders were down less the anticipated though November orders were revised down.  The only news from overseas other than falling markets was the Russian government pulling a bond offering due to ‘Market conditions’.

            Of some interest, the CBO released its budget forecast.  The good news is that it expects the budget deficit to decline in FY2014.  The bad news is that it expects economic growth to slow (not likely to be well received by investors in the current atmosphere).  Worse it confirms what we all knew, Obama’s protests to the contrary, to wit, Obamacare will lead to higher unemployment and higher budget deficits.

            And:


            And the White House’s pathetic response (medium):

            Bottom line: I think the best description of the pin action yesterday was: a relief rally off of an oversold condition.  Little news of any kind plus low volume (absence of sellers) allowed prices to drift higher.  Certainly, there was nothing happening that would mitigate concerns over turmoil in the emerging markets or hint that the recent poor economic numbers were outliers.  On the contrary, more and more pundits are stepping up and expressing concern.

The Market rout proves the failure of Fed policy (medium and a must read):

            The latest from Marc Faber (3 minute video):

            The latest from Bill Gross (11 minute video):

            Why emerging markets matter to the EU banks (medium):

            However, as I said in yesterday’s Morning Call, is far too soon to be altering our economic forecast and seems more reasonable to simply assume that that investors are starting to realize that stocks are very generously valued and acting accordingly.
           
            Challenging the consensus (medium and a must read):




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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