Wednesday, September 27, 2017

The Morning Call--Janet remains as confused as ever

The Morning Call

9/27/17

The Market
         
    Technical

The indices (DJIA 22284, S&P 2496) were mixed yesterday (Dow down, S&P up), though they were basically flat.  Volume declined; breadth weakened further.  Both remain above their 100 and 200 day moving averages and are in uptrends across all time frames. 

The VIX (10.1) was down by pennies.  It ended below the upper boundary of its short term downtrend, below its 100 and 200 day moving averages but finished right on the lower boundary of its long term trading range.  The question remains, did the VIX bottom in July?

The long Treasury declined slightly, but still finished above its 100 and 200 day moving averages (both support) and the lower boundaries of its short term trading range and its long term uptrend. 

The dollar was up strong, but remained in short term and very short term downtrends and below its 100 and 200 day moving averages.  However, it has broken the series of lower highs; and it closed very near the upper boundary of its very short term downtrend. 
           
GLD was down 1%, but ended above its 100 and 200 day moving averages (both support) and the lower boundary of a short term uptrend.  However, it has now made a second lower high.

 Bottom line: long term, the indices remain strong viz a viz their moving averages and uptrends across all timeframes. Short term, they are above the resistance level marked by their August highs, meaning that there is no resistance between current price levels and the upper boundaries of the Averages long term uptrends.

On the other hand, all those gap openings from two Monday’s ago still need to be closed. 

Finally, the pin action in GLD, TLT and UUP was a bit confusing.  GLD and UUP pointed to a stronger economy/higher interest rates---probably a reaction to the confused but somewhat hawkish statement from Yellen.  The bond guys seem to remain convinced of sluggish economy.

I remain uncomfortable with the overall technical picture.
            The latest NYSE margin data (medium):

    Fundamental

       Headlines

            Yesterday witnessed the release of a number on economic datapoints: month to date retail chain store sales improved from the prior week, the September Richmond Fed manufacturing index was ahead of expectations; however, August new home sales (primary indicator) were abysmal and September consumer confidence was below estimates.  The July Case Shiller home price index was in line.  Nothing overseas.

            Yellen made a major address in which she explained the Fed still had no clue about what is going on but she is worried about starting to tighten too late.   Note to Janet, you should have been worried about that three years ago.

            And:

            Other Fed officials were also on the stump displaying a perfect lack of consensus (medium):

            As usual there are so many ‘on the one hand, on the other hand’ that it is tough to have a clear picture of what this group of eggheads are thinking.  That said, Yellen said one thing that suggests that the hawkish stance set at last week’s FOMC meeting prevails:  “it would be imprudent to keep monetary policy on hold until inflation is back to 2 percent”

            Janet in Wonderland (medium and today’s must read):

            In addition, there were more leaks on the Trump/GOP tax bill (medium):

Bottom line: the economy continues to perform sluggishly (witness new home sales).  The Fed continues to throw head fakes---in an investor panel on CNBC yesterday afternoon, no one could agree on what Yellen said in her speech; and these guys are professional observers.  Reading her above quotes, it is not surprising.  So while she seemed to be pointing to higher rates and the unwinding of QE, she has left the Fed with the ability to do anything, then point at one or more of the ‘on the one hand, on the other hand’ statements and claim that it told us so. 

My position hasn’t changed.  The Fed screwed up once again; only this time it did it in grand style, expanding its balance sheet to $4.5 trillion with marginal effect on the economy but pushing equity valuations to nose bleed levels.  When this story ends, it will not be a plus for stocks. 

            Here is a reasonable argument on why ending QE won’t end the bull market.  My objection to his argument is that much of the day to day action in US stocks is done by algos/quant traders who could care less about earnings but do focus on Fed policy (medium):

            My thought for the day:  Take emotion out of your investment decision making process.  I have constructed a valuation model that makes my buy/sell decisions relatively easy even at times of market extremes.  It may be involve more time and effort than you want to invest.  But the validity of my particular process is far less important than the point of just having a process that allows you to make sound investment decisions whatever is occurring in the market.

       Investing for Survival
   
            Warren Buffett wins $1 million bet that S&P would outperform hedge funds (medium):

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios
 
Nike (NYSE:NKE): Q1 EPS of $0.57 beats by $0.09.
Revenue of $9.07B (+0.1% Y/Y) misses by $20M.

General Mills (NYSE:GIS) declares $0.49/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous.

Economics

   This Week’s Data

            Month to date retail chain store sales grew slightly faster than in the prior week.

            The July Case Shiller home price index rose 0.3%, in line.

            August new home sales fell 1.9% versus expectations of an increase of 2.1%.

            September consumer confidence came in at 119.8 versus estimates of 120.2.

            The September Richmond Fed manufacturing index was reported at 19.0 versus forecast of 13.0.

                        Weekly mortgage applications fell 0.5% while purchase applications were down 4.0%.

            August durable goods orders rose 1.7% versus consensus of +1.5%; ex transportation, they were up 0.2% versus projections of up 0.4%.

   Other

            Stripping NAFTA of what makes it great (medium):

            US slaps tariffs on Bombardier (medium):

            Update on oil (medium):

            Apartment vacancy rates (medium):

            Quote of the day (short):


Politics

  Domestic

  International War Against Radical Islam


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