Month: June 2018

  • “Trade Wars are Good, and Easy to Win”

    It’s been 15 weeks since Trump declared war on its major trading partners.

    “When a country (USA) is losing many billions of dollars on trade with virtually every country it does business with, trade wars are good, and easy to win,” Trump tweeted Friday morning. “When we are down $100 billion with a certain country and they get cute, don’t trade anymore – we win big. It’s easy!”

    We’re about to find out just how “good” trade wars are.  As a net importer, with CPI at 2.80% and PPI at 3.10%, the US will likely see inflation continue to leak beyond its comfort zone.

    Futures are currently off 14 points.continued for members(more…)

  • Update on EURUSD: June 14, 2018

    Back in January, with DXY having dropped from 95.15 to 92.51, we went full-on bear and reiterated a target [originally from May 1, 2017] of 88.423 on the index [see: Update on USDJPY]  This meant a huge jump for EURUSD, which at the time was trading at 1.19.  We targeted 1.2597 and crossed our fingers.The biggest question at the time was the top of the falling red channel. Would the pair zip on up to the channel top or wait until it aligned with the .618 Fib?

    By Feb 16, DXY had plunged to 88.253 and EURUSD had popped to 1.2555 — .0042 from our target.  The question remained, what about the channel top?  [see: Where to Next?]  We were kept in suspense until late April, when a consolidating triangle finally broke down instead of out.

    The midline of the rising white channel didn’t hold, and the pair continued to drop until May 29, when it finally reached the channel bottom.  Now, two weeks later, it’s testing the channel bottom again on Draghi’s latest verbal gymnastics.  Will it hold, or are we looking at another leg down for the pair?

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  • Ciao Euro Growth

    Draghi’s press conference is wrapping up, and the upshot is a weaker economy going forward — but, one strong enough to get along without QE.  2018 GDP was lowered from 2.4 to 2.1%, with 2019 and 2020 remaining unchanged at 1.9% and 1.7%.  2018 inflation estimates were increased from 1.4% to 1.7%, where Draghi expects it to remain for the next several years.

    Not surprisingly, the euro is taking it on the chin.DXY, whose latest channel had broken down yesterday, was suddenly back in the black.Equity futures are loving the dollar resurgence which, combined with the threat of (what else is new?) another VIX breakdown, has ES pushing 18 points off its overnight lows.  For now, at least, the focus is off China’s economy, which is clearly weakening just in time for the imposition of US tariffs.

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  • Inflation: Out of the Bag

    What a wonderful time to be a FOMC member.  You could raise rates to stave off spiking inflation, and in the process: (1) choke off the stock market and real estate meltups, (2) put more pressure on overleveraged consumers and businesses (3) increase the budget deficit, and (4) throw emerging markets under the bus.

    Alternatively, keep rates where they are and hope that inflation just goes away.

    Sure, the BLS lies about inflation.  Instead of the stated 2.8% CPI and 3.1% PPI, the actual numbers are closer to 6-10%.  Consumers experience the actual inflation rate when they buy groceries, rent an apartment or gas up the family truckster.  So, in a sense, the Fed faces the unenviable choice of penalizing consumers in order to “save” the market.

    And, make no mistake about it, saving the market has been their primary goal for the past decade.  They’ve had plenty of help, of course: the ECB, BoJ, BoE and SNB have all played an important role. Currencies, VIX, oil and gas — all are manipulated on a daily basis.

    Remember when the death cross was a “thing?”  The DMA-50 crossing below the DMA-200 was supposed to signal an impending nosedive.  After central bankers got into the stock propping business in the wake of the GFC, the death cross suddenly began signaling bottoms.Lately, stocks get an assist when the DMA-50 even approaches the DMA-200… …let alone an important Fib level or channel line.Although I rail sometimes about the lack of integrity in the markets, our focus is on making money.  Fortunately, the fact that the Fed has painted itself into this corner has been quite helpful in that regard.

    Oil and gas have sold off heavily since the inflation problem finally became apparent to central bankers and politicians [see: Once More With Feeling.]  USDJPY has bounced where/when we expected.  And, VIX has behaved scandalously, but predictably.Stocks typically ramp higher in the days leading up to FOMC announcements.  Depending on the decision, they either continue ramping or come unglued and backtest the former resistance through which they melted up.

    The biggest question, now, is what would it take to rattle investors the algos?

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  • CPI: Highest Since Dec 2011

    As expected, the oil and gas breakout has pushed CPI to levels not seen since Dec 2011. So far, equities are taking the news in stride – with VIX and USDJPY well-positioned to help prop up futures – to a point.But, inflation at these levels has huge implications for oil and gas prices, the bond market, and equities.

    It’s now been 57 days since the 10s2s tagged the trend line connecting its previous lows (and stocks’ previous highs.)  At 2.96%, the 10Y is higher than during any FOMC meeting since June 21-22, 2011 — a few weeks before the US debt downgrade.

    At the time, CPI was 3.63% and WTI was $94. By Oct 4, 2011 SPX had plunged 17%, WTI had plunged 19%, and 10-year yields had collapsed 80% to to 1.72%. 

    CPI dropped below 3% in December and has remained below it ever since — despite a doubling of central bank balance sheets, $7 trillion in additional US gov’t debt, and the so-called “robust recovery.”

    We’ll revisit some of the charts which first illustrated the problem in the post Oil & Gas, Inflation and Interest Rates: A Delicate Balance or Goal Seeking?  The most important comparison to 2011, IMO, illustrates that interest expense is once again exploding as inflation drives rates higher — but, this time with $21 trillion instead of $14 trillion in debt.

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  • The Week Ahead: Jun 11, 2018

    Futures are flat this morning as investors contemplate the flurry of headlines in the week ahead.It’s the same old, same old.  VIX continues to rally overnight, in order to have support it can break below in the morning.It’s one of the few positives in the charts — which otherwise feature a continuing slide in oil and gas and an indecisive USDJPY.

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  • AAPL: Still Tasty?

    Nearing a $1 trillion in market cap, AAPL hit some major turbulence overnight.  Amid reports that the company has trimmed its orders, the stock gapped lower and is clinging to support.The larger chart shows that the stock has also reached the top of a long-term channel and a major Fib extension level at 190.43.   It pushed through the Fib on Jun 4 (the day Warren Buffett very publicly pounded the table on the stock), and is doing its best to hold on.Needless to say, this hasn’t helped the broader markets.  ES was off as much as 20 points overnight, but has since climbed back to an 8-pt loss.  Is it time for another pause, or will AAPL bounce back and save the day?

    The market’s bigger headwind remains oil and gas prices — which should be ready for another big leg down.  But, if the last few sessions are any indication, VIX stands ready to reassure the algos.  It has a nice, new shiny paper-tiger trend line to break below.

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  • Algos: Still Running the Show

    JPMorgan estimates that “fundamental discretionary traders” account for only about 10 percent of trading volume in stocks.  The rest?  Passive, semi-passive and quantitative techniques — whose market share has doubled in the past 10 years.

    Techniques vary quite a lot.  But, the basic premise is to find factors which are predictive of market direction and invest accordingly.  Factors generally fall into two camps: fundamental (e.g. dividends, ROE, book-to-price) or technical (e.g. volatility, moving averages, momentum.)

    Once a factor is widely accepted as strongly predictive of future prices, the vast majority of daily volume is tied to its every tick.  Such is the case with VIX.   Fundamental investors know that rising VIX is a sign of increasing volatility and that they should rein in their exposure lest they suffer losses in a falling market.

    Falling VIX, on the other hand, signals the opposite.  If risk is falling, then investors should increase their exposure to profit from a rising market.

    A quantitative shop might employ hundreds or thousands of factors in the algorithms with which they trade and invest.  But, over the past several years, one of the most important factors is VIX — which studies have shown is easily and frequently manipulated.

    Yet, if you’re watching VIX like a hawk, as do virtually all algorithms, you don’t really care why VIX might be plunging.  You only note that it is; and, you buy rather than sell.

    We’ve looked at the longer-term patterns of VIX, which after years of bouncing off the bottom of a huge channel once a year, suddenly spent most of 2017 repeatedly dipping below the bottom of that channel.  To carbon-based factor diviners such as myself, it was apparent that the dips weren’t always in sync with headlines.It quickly became apparent that the dips were often completely out of touch with reality — a plunge in VIX after particularly negative economic data, for instance.  Why would traders short VIX, for instance, in the middle of a plunge in equity futures?

    Fundamental stock-pickers — remember, 10% of daily volume — could go all year without worrying about such things.  But, the algos notice immediately and go on a buying spree whenever VIX plunges below important support such as the yellow channel bottom.

    And, it doesn’t take much insight to see that, more often than not, such VIX plunges occur when stocks need rescuing or need support in breaking above important resistance.

    Consider the DJIA’s chart below.  After reaching its 2.618 Fibonacci extension at 26702, it quite naturally reversed to the next lowest Fib level — tagging the 2.24 at 23824 on Feb 9.

    It bounced as expected, but the bounce failed and the index fell to its 200-DMA (the thick red line) which, by then, had risen above the 2.24 Fib.  DJIA formed a rising wedge (a bearish pattern) and fell, tagging the 200-DMA once again on May 3.

    This was a particularly weak performance.  So far, May was living up to it s reputation (sell in May and go away.) A breakout was needed.The following day was critical.  Futures had dropped below their 200-DMA overnight — the second day in a row — and the index seemed likely to break down [see: We’ve Seen This Movie Before.]

    VIX came to the rescue, plunging sharply in the pre-market.  The drop lasted all of two minutes; but, the algos didn’t care. All they knew is that VIX had plunged 42% from the previous day’s high, had dropped below its 200-DMA, and has even dropped below the yellow channel bottom.  S&P futures bounced 57 points off their overnight low.

    DJI tacked on 554 points from its low.  But, it wasn’t out of danger.  Two sessions later, on May 8, it was still struggling to retake the trend line (red, dashed) from its January high.  Again, it needed help.

    On May 9 [see: PPI Spells Trouble] we noted that VIX was testing horizontal support, with the 200-DMA just below.  VIX dropped through the support and the moving average, shedding 35% before it finally bounced.

    Algos got the message.  DJIA broke out (the yellow arrow), as did every other major index.DJIA ran into trouble again earlier this week, when it seemed stuck beneath its 100-DMA (the yellow line.) Again, all it took was VIX dropping through its 200-DMA. As we pointed out yesterday, it made several 1-minute plunges in the pre-market in order to ensure stocks got off to a strong start.  DJIA gapped higher, tacking on 347 points.  SPX added 23.

    Just to make sure it stuck (futures had started to break down from a rising wedge) VIX plunged below the yellow channel line again and broke down — the opposite of the usual outcome — from its falling wedge.

    Now, it could be a coincidence that these very significant plunges in VIX occur precisely when equity indices need a boost. Or, it could be that central bankers, their proxies, or players with a stake in the game are routinely manipulating VIX.

    Seven years ago, when I began this website, I was often chastised for suggesting QE was artificially suppressing interest rates and supporting stocks.  Along the way, it became apparent that currency (especially USDJPY) and commodity (especially oil/gas) prices were also being used to drive equity prices higher and to produce economic data that wouldn’t upset markets.

    The market cap of the S&P 500 is $24 trillion.  The trading volume in VIX futures yesterday was about $240 million.  Which would be easier to manipulate?  Again, a sizeable share of daily trading volume cares only what VIX does, not why.

     

     

     

     

  • VIX: A Broken Record

    It was pretty obvious, a couple of weeks ago, that oil and gas were finally going to break down [see: Once More With Feeling.]  The trick was how to accomplish it without tanking stocks in the process.

    This morning, VIX tagged our downside target – the bottom of the long-term yellow channel.  The 38% plunge since May 29 has (so far) easily offset the damage that the oil and gas breakdown would have done.Now that the channel has been tagged again, will we revisit the 2017 strategy of daily algo nudging?  All those dips below the yellow channel bottom (signified with yellow arrows) were instrumental in getting and keeping SPX back above 2138 (the 1.618 extension of the 2007-2009 crash.)We should find out soon enough whether the 2.24 extension at 2703 is equally important.

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  • Whatever It Takes

    How do you engineer a major drop in oil and gas prices without upsetting the algos?  As we discussed yesterday, you feed them something they like just as much — like a 35% plunge in VIX.

    From yesterday’s Update on Oil & Gas:

    Is it any surprise that VIX is dipping below its 200 DMA as the market is about to open this morning?

    Sometimes oil and gas prices drop because of fundamentals.  Sometimes they drop because central bankers need them to.  With the 10Y still pushing 3%, and the June YoY delta in gas prices pushing 27.5%, something had to give.

    For those who haven’t read it recently, this would be a good time to review April’s Oil & Gas, Inflation and Interest Rates: A Delicate Balance or Goal Seeking?

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