Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Monday Morning Chartology------The Deal

The Morning Call

 

5/30/23

 

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

After a week of high volatility, the S&P ended above that Fibonacci 23.6% retracement level (~4200). If it remains there through the close on Wednesday it will confirm a breakout of this year-long trading range. While Market breadth remains terrible, investors have gotten jiggy with the likelihood of a rate ceiling deal and the limitless prospects for AI. As you know, I am quite skeptical of any upside momentum. Indeed, even the bulls are projecting only a 4300 year end valuation. Your math wizards will quickly realize that is a mere 2.3% higher than current prices, which frankly won’t match the return you can get on short Treasuries. I can’t help but be nervous about where this will all lead. But if the breakout is confirmed, I will likely put some money to work---there are plenty of stocks out there that have been crushed and represent value.

 

  


                                                                        

 

 

The long bond continued its downward journey, but did manage to bounce off the lower boundary of its intermediate term downtrend. Of course, if the stock jockeys are right in the first instance (i.e., no recession/a debt ceiling deal/the banking crisis is over) that would suggest a tighter for longer Fed policy as inflation remains a persistent problem---which, in turn, would tend to keep interest rates high/bond price low. Historically, a tight Fed has not been especially good for equities. So, you see the conundrum. Of course, stock investors may want it all---no recession, a debt ceiling deal, the banking crisis is over AND an easy Fed. I will let you decide if that is reasonable. And that is part of what keeps me nervous.

 


 


Gold continued to take it on the chin. It successfully challenged the lower boundary of its very short-term uptrend and will likely make a run at its 100 DMA this week. This is really the first sign of weakness in gold for some time. Just to remind you that it remains in long and intermediate uptrends and above both DMA’s. While all this is a plus, we are also looking at higher stock prices, higher interest rates and a stronger dollar, none of which is good for GLD.

 



 

The dollar had another great week. It is now challenging its 200 DMA and appears ready to challenge the upper boundary of its short-term trading range. If successful on both counts, it would clearly re-establish upside momentum. That would all fit with the optimistic economic scenario being discounted by stock investors.

 

 


 

            Friday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/tech-tops-dow-drops-bonds-flop-hawkish-inflation-signals-send-rate-hike-odds-soaring

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

                         

                        Last Week Review

 

The US stats last week were mixed (the overseas data were again quite negative) though the primary indicators were positive (one minus, two neutral, three plus). In short, the numbers are coming in upbeat with no clear near-term signs of a recession and certainly no sense of how deep it may be if it occurs at all.

 

As you know, I am not an optimist on this count; but to date, we are still lacking sufficient evidence to back up a recession forecast, although some historically accurate forward-looking indicators like the yield curve and the latest read on the leading economic indicators are still predicting one. However, time is running out on the doomsayers. I am not conceding a no recession/soft landing outcome yet but clearly my conviction remains greatly diminished.

 

The other issue investors must deal with is, of course, inflation. And perhaps more importantly, how the Fed perceives this problem and even more important, just how firm is its determination to achieve its 2% target. As you know, I believe that inflation is the red-headed stepchild of Fed priorities. Not without cause---the Fed has proven time and again that that any sign of economic/financial/Market turmoil will result in the immediate reversal of any tight money measures. So, if we rely on history, the Fed won’t likely be the instrument of 2% inflation.

 

Bottom line: my best guess is that there is a recession (though my conviction weakens by the week) and that at the slightest hint of economic/Market disruption, the Fed folds, leaving inflation as an ongoing problem.

 

Longer term, irrespective of what happens over the next year, we are still faced with a struggling economy growing at well below its historic secular rate.

 

Regrettably, years of fiscal profligacy have left us with a debt to GDP ratio far in excess of the boundary marked by Rogoff and Reinhart as the level at which the servicing of too much debt negatively impacts the growth rate of the economy. And years of irresponsible monetary expansion have led to the misallocation of resources and the mispricing of risk.

 

 

Correcting those self-inflicted wounds won’t be easy. It will take years of fiscal and monetary restraint to do so. And that would mean less fiscal stimulus and interest rates staying higher for longer than many now expect---which unfortunately is not apt to happen.

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                        International

 

                           April Japanese unemployment  was 2.6% versus consensus of 2.7%.

 

  The May EU economic sentiment index was 96.5 versus predictions of  98.9; the April industrial sentiment index was -5.2 versus -4.0; the May service sentiment index was 7 versus 10.2; consumer confidence was -17.4, in line.          

 

                         Other

                       

                          There is a problem in China.

                          https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/theres-something-rotten-china

 

The Debt Ceiling      

 

  The Deal---and what a Deal it is.

  https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/total-farce-real-spending-under-debt-ceiling-deal-actually-goes-next-year

 

  The day after.

  https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/morgan-stanley-day-after

 

China

 

  Chinese shadow banking defaults surge.

  https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/china-shadow-banking-defaults-surge

 

      Bottom line.

 

                Latest from BofA.

                https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/another-bout-risk-late-june-hartnetts-gloomy-view-world-9-charts

 

    The argument for ‘buy and hold’ strategy.

    https://humbledollar.com/2023/05/losing-value/

 

      News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

What I am reading today

 

                             How hypersonic missiles work and the threat that they pose.

https://theconversation.com/chinas-hypersonic-missiles-threaten-us-power-in-the-pacific-an-aerospace-engineer-explains-how-the-weapons-work-and-the-unique-threats-they-pose-206271

 

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