Thursday, October 13, 2016

The Morning Call--Fed a tad more dovish. What's new?

The Morning Call

10/13/16

The Market
         
    Technical

Yesterday, the indices (DJIA 18144, S&P 2139) edged higher but not nearly enough to undo the damage done on Tuesday.  Volume was down slightly; breadth negative.  The VIX up another 2%, nearing its 100 day moving average (resistance) and closing in a short term downtrend.  That means that it is still a net positive for stocks, but getting less so.  In addition, it is still in a very short term uptrend---a negative. 

The Dow ended [a]  below its 100 day moving average for the second day, now support; if it remains there through the close today, it will revert to resistance, [b] above its 200 day moving average, now support, [c] below the lower boundary of its short term uptrend {18248-19971}; if it remains there through the close today, it will reset to a trading range, [c] in an intermediate term uptrend {11472-24317} and [d] in a long term uptrend {5541-19431}.

The S&P finished [a] below its 100 day moving average for the second day, now support; if it remains there through the close today, it will revert to resistance, [b] above its 200 day moving average, now support, [c] below the lower boundary of its short term uptrend {2150-2306}; if it remains there through the close today, it will reset to a trading range, , [d] in an intermediate uptrend {1960-2562} and [e] in a long term uptrend {862-2400}. 

The long Treasury was up.  It closed below its 100 day moving average (resistance) and below a third Fibonacci level. It remained within short term, intermediate term and long term uptrends.  TLT’s chart is still healthy but getting less so.

GLD also rose, ending below a key Fibonacci level, below its 100 day moving average (resistance), in a short term downtrend and below its 200 day moving average (if it remains there through the close on Friday, it will revert to resistance).  This chart gets uglier.

The dollar was up, finishing above its 100 day moving average (now support) and in a short term trading range.

Bottom line: following the release of the slightly more dovish FOMC minutes, the Markets reacted as one would have expected if one assumes that they were concerned about rising interest rates---though admittedly from a technical standpoint, it was a pretty pathetic response.

Both of the Averages are in the midst of challenges of multiple support levels.  GLD has already been battered and TLT’s chart grows weaker every day.   So the present setup seems like a possible inflection point.  I don’t know that yet; but I am on alert.  On the other hand, as I suggested yesterday, we could be in nothing more than another giant Fed led circle jerk.

    Fundamental

       Headlines

            Yesterday was a carbon copy of Tuesday---only one minor US indicator (weekly mortgage and purchase applications) which was negative; and several upbeat global numbers---second quarter EU business investment was up fractionally while August EU industrial production was above expectations.

            ***overnight, the September Chinese trade numbers were terrible.

            The lead headline of the day was the Fed’s release of the minutes from its last FOMC meeting.  Aside from the monotonous back and forth of the ‘on the one hand, on the other hand’, the bottom line was that they sounded a tad less hawkish than the narrative that was contained in the statement following that meeting.  As noted above, all Markets acted as expected to the lower probability of a December rate hike: stocks up, bonds up, gold up.  

With this little tidbit of information, the uncertainty on Fed policy that I mentioned on Tuesday and Wednesday becomes less so: the score: have the central bankers realized their policies have been a failure (score: three no); do they have the cojones to follow through when Markets throw a tantrum (score: three no); how will the Markets react if they take QE, NIRP, ZIRP to a new level? (score: three question marks).

            In short, all that supposed re-thinking of monetary policy was apparently just the intellectual masturbation of a bunch of bureaucrats with nothing else to do.

            Comments from the BOJ (medium):

Bottom line: there was some clarity regarding the Fed’s intent regarding a December rate hike, i.e. it seems less now.  That said, if the bond, gold and dollar markets continue to push prices in the direction of higher rates, the Fed may be forced to follow or risk sacrificing its credibility.  In addition, the Markets must still deal with the possibility that this earnings season could be a bust and chaos on the political front---the major problem being a democrat sweep of the presidency and both houses of congress, eliminating all the blessings that come with gridlock. 

So there remain ‘a lot of balls in the air right now, which means heighten uncertainty.  And heighten uncertainty usually means weak Markets.  Until we get some clarity, that weakness could continue short term.  For that to continue long term, then a lot of those uncertainties have be resolved to the negative; and we have no idea whether or not they will.’ 

It is not too late to take some money off the table.

     
       Investing for Survival
   
            Thoughts on buying a home

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios
 
Paychex (NASDAQ:PAYX) declares $0.46/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous.

Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) declares $0.77/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous.

C. R. Bard (NYSE:BCR) declares $0.26/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous.

United Technologies (NYSE:UTX) declares $0.66/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous.

Economics

   This Week’s Data

            Weekly jobless claims were flat with the prior week versus estimates of a 5,000 increase.

            September import prices rose 0.1%, in line; export prices were up 0.3% versus forecasts of up 0.1%

   Other

Politics

  Domestic

More on the disaster that is Obamacare (medium):

  International War Against Radical Islam

            The ‘occupying force in Greece (medium):


Visit Investing for Survival’s website (http://investingforsurvival.com/home) to learn more about our Investment Strategy, Prices Disciplines and Subscriber Service.




No comments:

Post a Comment