Tag Archives: market lab report

Market Lab Report – Premarket Pulse 2/4/16

Major averages bounced off their intraday lows yesterday, closing mixed on higher volume on continued, elevated levels of volatility. The S&P 500 reversed to close up on the day, while the NASDAQ Composite, weighed down by relative weakness in the NASDAQ 100 big-cap stocks, logged another distribution day despite closing in the upper half of its daily trading range. Oil rose sharply on speculation on a cut in production from various oil producers including Russia, though state-controlled Rosneft, Russia’s largest oil producer, denied the rumors and said the rise in the price of oil on this basis was “idiotic.” Russia ranks as the second largest oil exporter, just behind Saudi Arabia. Futures are off over half a percent, closing in one percent, after ECB President Mario Draghi warned of continued low inflation. “The longer inflation stays too low, the greater the risk that inflation does not return automatically to target,” Mr. Draghi said. Cheaper oil and other “forces in the global economy” that are holding down consumer prices “should not lead to a permanently lower inflation rate,” he said. “They do not justify inaction.” Her remarks were aimed at Germany’s Bundesbank as the ECB pushes for further easing. Unsurprisingly, Bill Gross who used to run the world’s largest bond fund wrote the following in his recent monthly missive: “[Central banks] all seem to believe that there is an interest rate SO LOW that resultant financial market wealth will ultimately spill over into the real economy. I have long argued against that logic and won’t reiterate the negative aspects of low yields and financial repression in this Outlook. What I will commonsensically ask is “How successful have they been so far?” Why after several decades of 0% rates has the Japanese economy failed to respond? Why has the U.S. only averaged 2% real growth since the end of the Great Recession? “How’s it workin’ for ya?” – would be a curt, logical summary of the impotency of low interest rates to generate acceptable economic growth worldwide.”   Indeed, governments have grown too big and too blind to understand that government debt is poison as it does little to stimulate growth while giving governments free reign to print as much as they wish. Prior to World War I, only the creation of corporate debt was allowed which directly stimulated the economy as it allowed corporations to grow. Government debt was prohibited. Taxes were also very low back then. Today, governments around the world are doing all they can to extract as much tax as possible out of their respective citizenries. 8,000 years of history showcases how governments always eventually end up devouring their middle classes as legendary futures trader Ed Seykota brilliantly writes about in his book “Govopoly”.  We are smack in the middle of a colossal sovereign debt crisis where the world governments continue to issue debt then try to service that debt by raising taxes. Martin Armstrong at www.armstrongeconomics.com  wrote: “This shrinks the private sector as governments act like black holes sucking in all the energy and light within the economy, destroying civilization and risking a Dark Age.”

Market Lab Report – Premarket Pulse 2/3/16

Major averages fell yesterday on higher, above average volume, closing near their lows. The odds of the follow-through day of lats Friday, January 26th, working are at 3% given the distribution day on the day right after the follow through. Yesterday’s distribution day underscores these low odds. That said, markets and oil are trading mildly higher today though the downtrend remains intact. Expect elevated levels of volatility to continue. In the face of such volatility, positions taken either long or short can only be viewed as short-term affairs, and when one has a 5-10% profit in any such position it is generally prudent to take those profits. In addition, holding positions overnight carries added risk given the tendency of the indexes to gap up or down from one day to the next. This remains an environment for nimble, short-term traders only.

Market Lab Report – Premarket Pulse 2/1/16

Major averages rose on above average volume on news the Bank of Japan was moving into negative interest rate territory. This may push the ECB to further lower rates which are already negative. Indeed, European money market rates are pricing in a more than 100% likelihood of a 10-basis-point March cut by the ECB and an almost 100% likelihood of a cumulative 20-basis-point cut by year-end. Friday’s action qualified as a textbook “follow-through” day as all the major indexes were up well over 2% on higher volume. The number of stocks in buyable positions remains scant, although we will be monitoring the market for developments if this current rally attempt is able to sustain to the upside. Bernanke said the Federal Reserve may also adopt negative rates as another tool to stimulate growth. This would imply a reversal of its prior rate hike akin to 1936 when the Fed hikes rates only once when the US was deleveraging a long term debt cycle. They hiked the discount rate by 0.5% in 1936 then eased until 1940. They could repeat this action again should conditions worsen, hiking once, then easing by way of negative interest rates and/or QE4. Nevertheless, the bounce remains suspect as oil and Chinese stock markets continue their slide. In addition, the Fed is still leaning toward rate hikes at some point this year, and leading stocks such as AAPL, AMZN, NFLX, EBAY, and PCLN are still underperforming. Further, consumer spending was flat in December as Americans continue to hoard their cash, and the Fed’s favorite inflationary indicator, the PCE Index, climbed 0.6%, the fastest pace in a year. The Fed wants to see the PCE climb to 2%. Of course, this measure of inflation has been manipulated lower to give the Fed an excuse to enact further monetary easing if necessary.