Monday, July 31, 2023

Monday Morning Chartology---Are current valuations at an extreme?

The Morning Call

 

7/31/23

 

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

The S&P maintained its upward bias with the ‘inflation in the rear-view mirror accompanied by a soft landing’ scenario received some mild support from Powell and the FOMC.  Last week’s economic data continued its see saw pattern as good news followed the prior week’s bad news.  So, at the moment, I don’t see any clear compelling evidence for investors’ acceptance of the aforementioned Goldilocks narrative.  However, they seem determined to be upbeat.  Therefore,, I think we have to assume that the S&P will at least test the upper boundary of its short-term uptrend (~4650) and perhaps its all time high (~4818). 





 

 

With the “inflation in the rear-view mirror accompanied by a soft landing’ scenario gaining credence, last week’s decline in bond prices doesn’t fit. But how many times have the bond guys disagreed with the stock boys?  I think that means that equity investors’ Goldilocks scenario is not universally accepted.  I like that interpretation because it agrees with mine---although it doesn’t mean that it is right.  It does mean that ‘inflation in the rear-view mirror accompanied by a soft landing’ is not yet a given.

 

 


 





GLD had another roller coaster ride last week though it did manage to eke out a small gain---keeping it above its 100 DMA and in harmony with its intermediate and long-term uptrends. It seems to be reflecting the same uncertainty as TLT.

 





 

The dollar continued its rally off the lower boundary of its short-term trading range and is now challenging its 100 DMA. A strong dollar is usually not a plus for stocks or gold.  So, again, I chalk this up to uncertainty among the players in the different markets.

 

 



            Friday in the charts.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/stocks-close-highest-april-2022-yen-tumbles-boj-tweak-fizzles

 

The longs are longer.

https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/long-longer

 

    Fundamental


       Headlines

 

              The Economy

                         

                        Last Week Review

 

Last week’s US stats were slightly downbeat with the primary indicators overwhelmingly positive (four plus, one neutral, one negative). Overseas, the data was copious and negative.

 

So, the results affirmed both the Markets’ takeaway and the growing consensus among leading economists that (1) inflation is in the rear-view mirror and (2) we will get a ‘soft’ landing. But just as a reminder, the prior week’s numbers were the exact opposite---meaning that, at least to me, it is not clear at all whether inflation is in a secular decline or a recession will be avoided.  Nonetheless, the Markets’/economists do.

 

Here is a perfect example:

https://www.morningstar.com/markets/feds-powell-talks-tough-after-rate-hike-pause-seen-likely-here

 

Though we are hearing caution from some.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/27/business/economy/fed-economy-soft-landing.html

 

Its/their underlying assumption seems to be that either (1) the Fed is not really serious about hitting its 2% target and will settle for a 3% or so goal, or (2) inflation will miraculously return to 2% on its own while the economy remains healthy.  Not surprisingly, in its meeting last week the FOMC was weaseling its way toward a low inflation/no recession forecast.  I think that gives the most weight to choice number (1) which clearly is not putting inflation in the rear-view mirror.  It is, in fact, aiding and abetting another round of inflation as a too easy monetary policy and irresponsible fiscal policies continue to plague our economy.

 

Unfortunately, I believe that the Fed hasn’t ‘chickened out’ soon enough to avoid a recession.  Though I have no idea how deep it will be.  That means it will not likely be the kind of recession that cleanses the economic system of years (decades) of monetary/fiscal mismanagement and returns secular inflation to ~2%.

 

But mine and other’s forecasts are all guesses.

https://www.themoneyillusion.com/long-and-variable-nonsense/

 

As an aside, I will note that the one scenario that would screw almost all investors/forecasters/current elected officials would be for either the Fed to stick to its guns, pushing the economy into a rough recession or the economy falls into a severe recession of its own accord weighted down by years of monetary/fiscal mismanagement.  To be clear, I don’t think that will happen, but I would pose it as the major Market/economic risk.

 

Longer term, irrespective of how low inflation goes in the short term, irrespective of whether or not we have a recession and if so, how deep it will be, we are still faced with an economy growing at well below its historic secular rate and a base rate of inflation above 2%.

 

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.

 

                                  Why irresponsible monetary and fiscal policies matter.

                          https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/deficits-debt-and-why-32-trillion-matters

                                                                 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

                        International

                    

 Q2 EU flash GDP grew 0.3% versus estimates of +0.2%; Q2 CPI was -0.1% versus -0.2%.

 

  June Japanese preliminary industrial production was up 2.0% versus predictions of +2.4%; June retail sales fell 0.4% versus +0.8%; June YoY housing starts were down 4.8% versus -0.2%; June YoY construction orders were up 8.8% versus +2.0%; July consumer confidence was 37.1 versus 36.8.

 

  June German retail sales declined 0.8% versus consensus of +0.2%.

 

  The July Chinese manufacturing PMI came in at 49.3 versus expectations of 49.2; the July nonmanufacturing PMI was 51.5 versus 52.9; the July composite PMI was 51.1 versus 52.0.

 

                        Other

               

Fiscal Policy

 

  More support for the thesis that rising debt to GDP slows economic growth.

  https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2023/07/28/quarterly-review-second-quarter-outlook-hoisington

 

            Geopolitics

 

             No adult supervision in Ukraine.

             https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-was-behind-both-crimean-bridge-attacks-seymour-hersh

 

              Mysterious Chinese bio lab discovered in remote California city.

             https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/ive-never-seen-anything-mysterious-chinese-bio-lab-discovered-remote-california-city

 

       Bottom line

 

          Wall Street pessimists are still wrong.

          https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/28/business/stock-market-bears.html

 

          Are current valuations at an extreme? (must read)

          https://www.capitalspectator.com/looking-for-market-signals-with-extreme-price-changes/

 

          The latest from BofA.

          https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hartnett-everything-overshooting

 

          Reviewing this earnings season to date.

          https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/bar-was-set-extremely-low-why-stocks-are-melting-earnings-season

 

      News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

What I am reading today

 

            Nonhuman biologics discovered in crashed UFO’s.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/political/non-human-biologics-recovered-ufos-whistleblower-testifies

          

            Monday Morning humor.

                       

 

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