Futures melted up overnight with boosts from VIX and USDJPY.
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Futures melted up overnight with boosts from VIX and USDJPY.
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With goldbugs calling for gold to double, we got bearish again when it reached our upside target at 1870.60 on November 10 [see: CPI: Out of Control.]
Gold is getting a big boost from the inflation data, and has now reached the purple neckline at 1870.60. I would revert to short with tight stops right here.
We didn’t give silver the hook until Nov 12 [see: Gold – Still a Good Inflation Hedge?] when it tagged our 200-DMA target. Neither metal has fallen much since then. But, the fact that they haven’t broken out in the midst of an inflation scare speaks volumes.
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CL and RB are both off about 12% since our Oct 25 short call.
CL is coming up on the top of its rising white channel – a potential turning point. It’s probably close enough to be shorted here at 85.23.
I’ve been skeptical of oil’s rally for quite some time, observing almost a year ago [see: Don’t Ignore Inflation] that the YoY price rise would drive inflation well above the Fed’s target range.
Frankly, I’m surprised that it took investors this long to get nervous nervous. IMO, the Fed’s “transitory” story was cockeyed from the start.
As we approach an important inflection point — our 73.50 target — the question shifts to where oil/gas prices need to go in order to put the inflation monster back under the bed.
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BTC reached our next downside target, a 17.2% drop from our short call on Nov 8, reiterated on Nov 9 and 10.
Last, BTC is getting a very nice bounce this morning, perhaps on the notion that Elon’s $20 billion in TSLA sales might land in crypto. In any case, this is a very important juncture for BTC. I expect it to fail and revert to the cloud and dotted blue channel line at 55,700ish.
BTC has substantial downside risk if this support doesn’t hold.
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Futures came within 5 points of our upside Fibonacci target before backing off last night. This satisfies our expectation that the last leg up in this phase of the rally would occur overnight due to the pattern discrepancies between SPX and ES.
Today is OPEX. Close enough for the party to get started?
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Futures are up modestly as we approach OPEX, with yesterday’s drop recasting the rising wedge as a rising channel – a more apparently bullish pattern.
Naturally, VIX has “broken down” all over again.
And, naturally, the algos are listening… (more…)
EURUSD tagged our next downside target overnight: the .618 Fib at 1.1285. As we discussed in last month’s currency update [see: At The Brink] this breakdown below support has been instrumental in helping DXY achieve our long-expected breakout.
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Retail sales for October came in hot at 1.7% MoM vs 1.4% expected. Excluding gas and motor vehicles, sales gained 1.4%. These are the highest prints since March’s blowout data and represented strong results across the board. Strong Walmart and Home Depot results underscored the print.
Note that retail sales are adjusted for seasonal factors, but not for price changes. In other words, the increase was aided by inflation – 0.83% in October.
Futures are off slightly as we await capacity utilization and industrial production.
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If you blinked, you might have missed the S&P 500’s 1.1% plunge last Wednesday…
…following the highest CPI print since 1990.
The print was followed two days later by the lowest consumer sentiment reading in 10 years, a result driven primarily by…wait for it…inflation fears. Stocks actually rose on the day.
Until a few months ago, the market’s non-reaction might have been driven by the “bad news is good news” meme. Translation: bad economic news will prompt the Fed to pour a few more trillion into the markets.
But, the Fed recently announced that it is trimming its $120 billion in monthly stimulus by $15 billion per month, with an eye toward raising interest rates sometime in 2022. Shouldn’t that mean “it’s different this time?”
Even with the taper, the Fed still has $105 billion to play with this month — plenty enough to move markets and stoke further inflation. And, with his job on the line, Jay Powell is unlikely to allow markets to experience a long-overdue correction, no matter how justified such a reaction might be.
It’s not entirely Powell’s fault. He’s simply following in the footsteps of his predecessors, both here and abroad. Central banks’ policy mistakes have been years in the making, based on the erroneous assumption that markets can be manipulated indefinitely without consequence.
The all-time champion of market manipulation, of course, is the Bank of Japan. Japan has ¥1.2 quadrillion in debt (about $12 trillion USD), which is roughly 277% of its GDP. Its annual budget deficit is approximately 14% of GDP. It pays about 40% of every tax dollar it collects to service just the interest on its mountain of debt.
The country has managed to stay (nominally) afloat only because the Bank of Japan, the GPIF and large Japanese banks purchase nearly all of Japan’s debt issuance — artificial demand for securities which arguably don’t merit any demand at all.
Last night, the Japanese Cabinet Office announced that Q3 GDP had declined at an annualized rate of 3% vs -0.7% expected. Below the surface, the data was even worse. Private consumption fell at an annualized pace of 4.5%, capital spending dropped 14.4%, and exports fell 8.3%. How did the market react?
The Nikkei 225 futures dipped less than 0.5% intraday and are back in the green as we go to press.
What do we mean by “Japanification?”
The US’ $29 trillion in debt is about 126% of GDP. The budget deficit, almost $3 trillion in 2021, is roughly 13% of GDP. Interest on the debt is roughly 9% of taxes collected — more than the federal spending on food and nutrition services, transportation, housing, or education.
Thanks to the Fed’s intervention, however, interest rates are near all-time lows. Equities, real estate, and nearly all other asset classes are at or near all-time highs. About the only thing falling with any consistency is vol, particularly when any overhead resistance is met.
While arguably better off than Japan, the US is clearly following in Japan’s footsteps when major economic missteps result in minuscule market reactions. It might take time for the economic tax imposed by the Fed’s inflation policies on lower and middle-income Americans to show up in the data, let alone the financial markets. But, the absence of price discovery exposes the same stunning lack of market integrity seen in Japan.
VIX collapsed in the nick of time yet again, busting ES’ latest falling channel.
Has the run to the year-end barn begun already? (more…)