Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Tuesday Morning Chartology

 

The Morning Call

 

5/26/26

 

I am on vacation for the rest of the week.  See you next Monday.

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

There is just no quit in this Market. The S&P was up for the week (again).  The technical remains full steam ahead with the S&P (1) above all three DMAs and (2) in uptrends across all timeframes. The technical question for this week is, will the S&P make another new high?

 

As you know, I approached this upside move cautiously---which couldn’t have been more wrong. Nonetheless, I am loath to chase this upswing, especially with three gap up opens sitting below and the bond market performing poorly. The only good news in this trading error is that a number of stocks on my Buy List have remained within buying parameters. So with any retreat, I can make a delayed entry.

 

              A stock price melt up---maybe; an earnings explosion---definitely.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/ai-melt-bubble-maybe-earnings-explosion-definitely

 

Summary: With equities already trading at record highs, the instinctive reaction is that much of the good news must already be priced in. But a closer look at earnings revisions, corporate guidance, dividends, M&A activity and liquidity trends suggests the backdrop is not just bullish — it is unusually bullish. The flip-side of this is of course that expectations are now extremely elevated — meaning even small disappointments could matter more than usual.                

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

I thought that I would give you a long term view of the long bond market.  Despite last week’s bounce, TLT is now below all DMAs and in downtrends across all major timeframes. With stagflation the likely result of the destruction wrought on the oil infrastructure and a spendthrift government, I am hard pressed to think that bond prices are going to improve markedly.  The only question is when, as and if it impacts equity prices.

 

           

 

 


 

 

 

Gold continues to behave poorly in the short term; although it is not surprising given the steady rise in bond yields.  So, it remains in a very short term downtrend marked by the top and now three lower highs. I am watching to see if it makes a new lower low (it did make a lower low for one day and then recovered).

 






The dollar meandered much of the week but still reset both its 50 and 200 DMAs to support. Technically the dollar is in a bit of a no-man’s land. Nonetheless, I continue to believe that the macroeconomic backdrop of the US economy (rising inflation) suggests a low to lower dollar.

 


 




Friday in the charts.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/warsh-waller-war-worries-sends-rates-stocks-highs-long-weekend

 

Summary: Yet more US/Iran/Pakistan headline roulette running the show today ahead of a long-weekend with consumer sentiment at record lows as stocks test record highs. Oil down, stocks up (8th straight week), but short-end yields up on the week (yield curve flattening) thanks to Fed Waller's flip-flop today (trumping Warsh's swearing-in). The dollar and gold ended the week largely unchanged while bitcoin tumbled near one-month lows. Market sentiment remains resilient - almost defiant - as markets want to lean into hopes of a US-Iran de-escalation and chase a broader (AI-based) risk rally... As Bloomberg macro strategist, Brendan Fagan wrote, the dominant theme this week was the market’s willingness to aggressively price a resolution to the war that steadfastly hasn’t emerged yet.

 

Friday in the technical stats.

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/signals/new-recommendations

 

Tuesday morning setup: US futures are higher again, led by tech and small caps. As of 7:30am, S&P 500 futures rose 0.7%, signaling US stocks are set for another record high when the market reopens after Memorial Day weekend. Nasdaq 100 contracts, supercharged by the artificial intelligence trade, gained more than 1% as Magnificent Seven big tech shares rallied in premarket trading. In premarket trading, all Mag 7 are higher led by NVDA (+0.8%), TSLA (+0.8%) and GOOG/L (+0.7%). 10-year Treasury yields fell six basis points and the dollar was steady after dropping against major peers in the previous session. Europe’s benchmark Stoxx 600 index slipped, handing back some of Monday’s 1% advance. Brent trading below $100 on hopes of deescalation between Iran and the US. Yet even though we have seen a barrage of optimistic media reports regarding progress on the US-Iran negotiation; on Monday night the US conducted "defensive" strikes on Iranian military targets, which the Iranian foreign ministry moments ago condemned as ceasefire violations.  Gold and silver are both lower this morning, falling 1.0% and 2.5%, respectively; Ags are mostly lower. Today's economic data slate includes the April Chicago Fed national activity index and May Philadelphia Fed non-manufacturing activity (8:30am), March FHFA house price index, S&P Cotality home prices and FHFA 1Q house price purchase index (9am), May consumer confidence (10am) and May Dallas Fed manufacturing activity (10:30am).

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

The US stats last week were parse but balanced with two positive price indicators.  Overseas, there was an abundance of data which was also balanced as were the inflation measures (three plus, one neutral, three minus).

 

Despite the ever louder narrative of rising inflation, last week’s numbers don’t bear it out.  As you know, I am very much on board with that narrative, but the hard stats are only just hinting at it.  That said, the bond market is shouting higher inflation.  And as you also know, I put a lot of credence in the bond market’s message.  So, I stand pat on the higher inflation forecast.

https://www.capitalspectator.com/headline-inflation-surges-but-core-measures-keep-the-fed-on-hold/

 

On the other hand, the economic growth in the US remains on track with only a smattering of data points suggesting otherwise.  However, if oil remains near current levels and bond yields continue to rise, Trump’s insistence on lower rates notwithstanding, I don’t see how the Fed can avoid tightening monetary policy and that historically opens the possibility of an economic slowdown at the least.  Coupled with the deteriorating numbers in the rest of the world, we need to be alert to a possible economic downturn.  I am not there yet and likely won’t be until the Fed shows me it has some cojones.

 

Bottom line: the economy is performing well and will likely continue to do so at least in the short term, given (1) US energy independence, and (2) the level of AI spend. On the other hand, I remain firmly convinced that above average inflation is part of our near/intermediate term future.

 

                        US

 

  The March Case Shiller home price index rose 1.0% versus   predictions of +0.4%.

 

 The April Chicago Fed national activity index was +0.14 versus consensus of -0.3.

 

                          From Friday afternoon:

 

                          The April leading economic indicators were up 0.1% versus projections of                       -0.2%.

 

                          May consumer sentiment came in at 44.8 versus estimates of 48.2.

https://econbrowser.com/archives/2026/05/u-mich-sentiment-gallup-confidence-plunge

 

                        International

 

The March Japanese leading economic indicators came in at 114.0 versus expectations of 114.5.

                                               

                        Other

 

                          The most and least affordable states for families.

                          https://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2026/05/which-us-states-are-most-and-least.html

 

                          Home prices continue to fall.

                          https://wolfstreet.com/2026/05/22/prices-of-single-family-homes-already-down-10-to-26-in-these-15-bigger-cities-every-market-is-different/

 

                          The calm before the oil price shock.

                          https://talkmarkets.com/article/oil-at-100-calm-before-the-supply-shock-1779454084

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/iran-says-us-peace-talks-hit-consensus-many-issues-no-final-deal-yet

 

Monetary Policy

 

  The problem with monetary policy.

  (3) The Devil Neither Political Party Will Name

           

                        Inflation

 

              El Nino is coming for the crops.

              https://giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/actions/redeem/44e80dde-80fd-4994-a9f0-4188f8d0a900

 

              Regional Fed reports indicate continuing inflation impulse.

              https://bonddad.blogspot.com/2026/05/preliminary-regional-fed-reports.html

           

     Investing

 

                        Here is why rising bond yields haven’t hurt the stock market….yet.

            https://www.marketwatch.com/story/bond-yields-are-in-the-danger-zone-heres-why-thats-not-hurting-the-market-yet-a87a5b5c?st=1jUv7W

 

            On a positive note.

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/pmi-and-the-yield-curve-correlation-1779456675

 

            The latest from BofA.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hartnett-biggest-bubble-railroads-wait-2-things-happen-selling

 

Summary: Hartnett agrees with our cynical view that selling is premature until the SpaceX/OpenAI IPOs price (the banks will simply not allow a crash before they happen as they would lose on billions in fees), and investors should wait for 2 things to happen before selling, to wit: "no one is cutting longs in stocks i) before historic IPOs and ii) big top Policy tightening which will come after CPI hits 4-5% in the coming months" which has historically preceded major market drawdowns

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

What I am reading today

 

           

 

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