Month: September 2020

  • The Dollar’s Demise

    If our charts are to be believed, we are on the cusp of a significant move in currency pairs and the bond yields.

    10Y yields plunged back in March, then began rebounding via a long, drawn-out flag pattern that broke down in late June. Since then, it has been tracing out an equally long, drawn-out triangle pattern that has also broken down.

    It has correlated nicely with DXY, albeit with a 2-3 day lead. If TNX’s latest breakdown holds, we might finally see the next leg down in DXY and the long-awaited, significant moves in USDJPY and EURUSD.

    Needless to say, the dollar’s demise hasn’t helped the trade deficit, which just reached all-time highs despite White House’s claims to have strengthen the trade picture.

    It also doesn’t bode well for stocks. If the past is any indication, October could be a very difficult month.

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  • Tick Tock

    As Congress dithers over a stimulus bill, the part of the economy not reflected by the stock market continues to suffer. How long before the market takes notice?

    Most factors driving stock prices are currently tracing out triangles – a chart pattern marked by lower highs and higher lows. It’s the go to pattern for marking time before a big event such as an important economic data point, a Fed meeting or an election.

    WTI is a perfect example.

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  • Because They Can

    A new week, a new breakout in the after-hours for no particular reason.

    And, just when the ramp job started to waver, a 5.6% smackdown on VIX – no news, just a reminder not to focus on the pandemic, the millions out of work, our dysfunctional Congress, the coming election battle, Trump’s tax troubles, etc.

    Why? Because they can.

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  • Goods Orders Gains: Not Very Durable

    Durable goods orders gained a disappointing 0.4% MoM in August versus expectations of a 1.5% gain. This follows an upwardly revised 11.7% in July and 7.7% in June. Ex-transportation also came in at 0.4% versus 3.2% in July.   YoY, total orders are still down 11.3%.

    Futures responded by slightly trimming their modest losses after bouncing 27 points from overnight lows.continued for members(more…)

  • Fear and Greed

    ES is reaching our next downside target right on schedule.Note that if ES hadn’t spurted past its February highs in late August, falling to our 100-DMA target would have involved a fairly shallow drop of 5.5% and would have preserved the rising white channel.

    Instead, we have a 10.8% loss so far and face much greater technical damage if support isn’t retaken – all for the sake of completely unjustified higher all-time highs.

    Fear and greed. It’s the same old story when it comes to markets, even in the age of algorithms and central bank interference.

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  • Coincidence? I Think Not

    One of the signals which convinced us to call a top a few weeks ago [see: Correction Warning] was the bullish (bearish for stocks) 10/20 cross in VIX. Should bears be concerned that the cross just unwound?

    And, in an attempt to answer the many questions raised by my observation that SPX’s bounce at a 10.0056% decline from its recent highs – 19 cents away from exactly 10% – I offer the following charts. Note that VIX collapsed seconds after SPX reached the 10% correction mark. Coincidence? I think not.

    Note that ES has formed another rising wedge that should see SPX open modestly higher. But, it would take more fancy footwork to keep the bounce going.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Sep 22, 2020

    If a stimulus deal was unlikely before Justice Ginsburg’s death and the current SCOTUS battle, it’s all but impossible now.  Given that the stimulus payments and enhanced unemployment were largely responsible for the economic bounceback, this makes for a very downbeat economic forecast between now and election day.

    Throw in the prospect of renewed/increased shutdowns in key parts of the world, and it’s hard to imagine the market rebounding from here.But Powell will get another chance to convince investors that the future isn’t quite so dire.  Something about tools, yada yada yada. While Mnuchin will likely say very little of anything (it’s his boss who has amped up the stakes in an obvious and understandable attempt to save his political skin) he’s very well versed in happy talk.

    Anyone else notice that SPX reversed yesterday at 10.0056% off its recent highs? That’s 19 cents away from exactly 10%. Probably a coincidence…

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  • The Pandemic is Still With Us

    ES is now off 9.3% from its recent top (-7.8% from our Correction Warning), nailing our 3253 target overnight.  The decline has broadened from the overpriced tech stocks to include banks, energy and cyclicals.

    The factors we’ve been watching for the past three weeks are all bearish now, and bulls are starting to acknowledge the fundamental risks inherent in the economic and political landscape – not to mention an obvious uptick in coronavirus cases in many significant countries around the world. Contrary to politicians’ cheerleading and assurances of a successful vaccine just around the corner, the pandemic is still very much with us.

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  • The Big Picture: Sep 18, 2020

    After a precision tag of its channel bottom yesterday, SPX has an important decision to make. It’s complicated by today’s quad-witching, sometimes the scene of a massive ramp job.

    This one is different, however, as we’ve detailed in studying the price action of multiple important factors. With six weeks to go until the election, we’ll take a look forward at the most likely scenarios for stocks, bonds, currencies and oil/gas.

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  • The Fed’s Big Lie

    Let me get this straight. In answering a question as to how the Fed’s plan for 2%+ inflation will help the average guy on the street, Powell explained that Fed wants higher inflation so it can get higher interest rates so it has someplace higher from which to reduce rates when the next economic downturn begins. In the meantime, however, they’re going to keep rates at or near zero for the next several years by continuing pumping billions of dollars into everything from treasuries to high yield bonds.

    Powell admitted that the concept is a little confusing. What he should have admitted is that it’s hogwash.  Just ask Japan, which in the past decade of hammering rates lower has generated zero lasting inflation. It has, however, reinflated Japan’s asset bubble and kept it from crashing again – which is exactly what the Fed hopes to do.

    Here is Powell’s answer, verbatim, as to why higher inflation would be a good thing for the average guy on the street.

    That’s a very, very important question and I actually spoke about that in my Jackson Hole remarks a couple weeks ago. It’s not intuitive to people. It is intuitive that high inflation is a bad thing. It’s less intuitive that inflation can be too low. And, uh, the way I would explain it is, um, is that inflation that’s too low will mean that interest rates are lower. There’s an expectation of future inflation that’s built into every interest rate, right? And, to the extent that inflation gets lower and lower and lower, interest rates will get lower and lower, and then the Fed will have less room to cut rates to support the economy.

    And, this isn’t some idle, you know, academic theory, this is what’s happening all over the world. If you look at many many large jurisdictions around the world you are seeing that phenomenon. So, we want inflation to be, we want it to be 2%, and we want it to average 2%. So, if inflation averages 2%, the public will expect that, and that’ll be what’s built into interest rates. And, that’s all we want. So, we’re not looking to have high inflation. We just want inflation to average 2%. And, that means that, you know, in a downturn these days what happens is inflation, as has happened now, it moves down well below 2%. And, that means, as we’ve said, that we would, we would like to see and will conduct policy so that inflation moves for some time moderately above 2%.

    So, it won’t be, these won’t be large overshoots and they won’t be permanent, but to help anchor inflation expectations at 2%. So, yes, it’s uh, it’s- it’s a challenging concept for a lot of people. But, nonetheless, the economic importance of it is, is, is large and, uh, you know, those are the people we’re serving, and, uh, you know, we serve them best if we can actually achieve average 2% inflation we believe and that’s why we changed our framework.

    I include all the “ums” and “you knows” for a reason. Like most people, Jerome Powell, uses them as verbal crutches whenever his internal BS detector goes off. The question was how higher inflation will help Main Street America. Powell launches into an explanation of how higher inflation produces higher interest rates [true], suggests that higher interest rates would leave room for future cuts [also true], and that future cuts would support the economy [debatable.] He never comes close to the meat of the question: How does this help the average guy?

    There are numerous studies which have concluded that official inflation figures are pure fiction.  John Williams takes a statistical approach, showing how changes in how inflation is calculated over the years currently understate the actual rate by anywhere from 4-7%.  Ed Bukowski’s Chapwood Index, which surveys actual prices on the 500 most-used goods shows a current rate of 10.8% in the 10 largest cities – 8x the government’s official 1.3%.

    By the time official inflation tops 2%, actual inflation will be solidly in double digits. A family just barely making ends meet or who has plowed through their entire savings (50% of Americans) in the Age of Corona will certainly have noticed the obvious increases in food, rent, gas and medical prices, no matter what the Department of Labor says. Powell’s comments won’t provide much solace.

    Those with substantial equity portfolios or with copious amounts of investment grade debt know that what the Fed is really after is a way to keep all the plates spinning just a little longer in the hopes that the wealth effect from the reinflated bubble will make an appearance.

     * * *

    Futures are off sharply, closing in on our next downside target as we approach the open.

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