Friday, March 8, 2019

The Morning Call--Watch the S&P 200 DMA


The Morning Call

3/8/19

The Market
         
    Technical

The Averages (DJIA 25473, S&P 2748) had their first rough day in a while.  The S&P has clearly backed off 2800, trading through a minor support level and ending right on its 200 DMA.  Meanwhile, the Dow’s 100 DMA has crossed below its 200 DMA---a technical negative.  So, it appears that follow through has been to the downside.  However, the 200 DMA usually presents decent support/resistance; hence, I will be watching how the S&P treats this level today as an indicator of near term price movement.

Volume was up; breadth was again weak.

The VIX was up 5 ½ %, ending above its prior low, having created a double bottom (bad for stocks).  Further, it closed right on its 200 DMA, being almost in inverse unison with the S&P.

The long bond was up ½ %, remaining above the support level at which it has now become a double bottom.   That leaves it in a trading range bounded by the aforementioned support level and its recent (triple) top.   Its 100 DMA has crossed above its 200 DMA, a positive.  Are the bond guys having second thoughts about higher rates/stronger economy?

The dollar soared, finishing above the upper boundary of the November to present trading range.  However, it gapped opened and as I remind you occasionally, those gaps are usually closed.  Other than that, this chart looks strong and suggests that investors believe that the US economy will be stronger than the rest of the world.

GLD was down slightly, closing above a second minor support level and above both MA’s.

Bottom line: the S&P has now clearly faded 2800.  That is negative short term; for things to get worse, it has to successfully challenge its MA’s.  It is way too soon to assume that yesterday’s pin action is anything other than a normal retreat off a very overbought condition.

            The price action in TLT, UUP and GLD remains inconsistent.

            Thursday in the charts.

            ***overnight, Chinese stocks plummet.

    Fundamental

       Headlines

            Yesterday’s data was mixed: weekly jobless claims were down less than anticipated, Q4 productivity was better than expected but unit labor costs were worse, January consumer credit rose more than consensus.

                Overseas, the Q4 EU GDP grew 0.2%, in line.

                The major headline was Draghi/ECB’s monetary policy easing---leaving interest rates unchanged, its current version of QE intact and promising to initiate additional QE steps later this year.  Given Draghi’s historic dovishness plus the fact that the Fed, the BOJ and the Bank of China have all become more expansive, this outcome is not surprising.  I continue to believe that the liquidity injections from the central banks will have little economic effect but will provide fuel for asset price advances.

                China trade remains a center stage:

(1)   China uneasy about trade deal.
                             https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-03-07/china-growing-uneasy-about-trade-talks-nyt
           
(2)   Trump wants both a trade deal and stock rally.  Can he get both?

(3)   Another not so positive take on Trump’s trade policies.
           
            ***overnight, trade summit delayed.

            Bottom line: all the trade happy talk notwithstanding, its outcome is not clear at all.  Whatever Trump may think about the value of any trade deal to investors, I believe that one that doesn’t properly address China’s industrial policy and IP will do nothing for the secular growth rate of the economy and could very well disappoint those investors that he is so eager to please.

            Central banks are now in QE sync.  The mispricing and misallocation of assets will only get worse.

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios
           

Economics

   This Week’s Data

      US

            January consumer credit grew by $17.0 billion versus expectations of up $16.8 billion.

Credit card delinquencies rising.

                February nonfarm payrolls advanced 20,000 versus projections of up 175,000.

            January housing starts were up 18.6% versus consensus of up 8.5%; building permits rose 1.4% versus forecasts of down 2.9%.

     International

            The February Chinese trade surplus came in at $4.12 billion versus estimates of $17.5 billion.

                January Japanese household spending rose 0.7% versus expectations of -0.1%; Q4 GDP was up 0.5%, in line.

            February German manufacturing orders were down 2.6% versus projections of +0.5%; however, the January number was revised up substantially.
           
    Other

Household net worth declined in Q4.

The horror story of government spending (must read):

Are Trump’s deregulation efforts as positive as is being portrayed?

Italy’s battle with the EU back in the headlines.


What I am reading today
                               
                  How the Model T drove hats out of fashion.
                  https://lamaalrajih.com/2018/12/07/model-t-hats/

                  The moral implications of luck.

                  A look at confirmation bias.

                  The continuing resiliency of America.

                        Double your money.
                   
                  Investors should be satisfiers not maximizers.

                        What happens after you win.

                  ‘Artificial’ 2.1 earthquake detected in North Korea.

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