Month: November 2021

  • Gold: Still A Good Inflation Hedge?

    GC reached our next upside target on Wednesday, 2 weeks ahead of schedule. Remember, this is the neckline of a large Inverted Head & Shoulder Pattern with significant upside potential if it plays out.

    If the past is any indication, it won’t — at least not yet.

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  • DXY: Finally Breaking Out?

    Stocks tumbled yesterday on inflation numbers that call into question the pace of the Fed’s taper and rate increases. Then they rallied overnight on an 11.4% collapse in VIX. The most significant chart on my screens at the moment, though, is the US dollar. DXY has had great difficulty breaking out of a tightly controlled consolidation pattern that dates back to July 2020. It tried this past September, but was smacked down to support stocks’ recovery from that terrifying (sarc) 5.8% slump.Now, it’s making another bid for a breakout — one we’ve been expecting for months (a very lonely stance BTW) — which wouldn’t bode well for stocks. Is this one for real?

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  • CPI: Out of Control

    CPI soared to 6.24% YoY in October, well above the 5.9% expected and the highest since Nov 1990. The MoM print of 0.9% and the Core CPI print of 4.2% also came in hotter than expected and set multiyear records. Put simply, the Fed has lost control.As we’ve discussed, inflation continues to become more broad-based than the oil/gas-driven effect initially seen earlier this year.

    The chart below shows the divergence from May-September and illustrates the importance of oil/gas prices to future inflation prints. If gas prices were to level off at today’s levels, the direct effect on CPI would cease in November. However, even if the base effect were to roll off, the other categories are now equally problematic. Futures are off 20 points on the news, with several key factors indicating more to come.

    Today marks the point at which the Fed officially stops cheering on the reflation trade.

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  • PPI Soars, CPI on Deck

    Producer Prices for Final Demand in October jumped 0.6% MoM and 8.6% YoY (6.2% less food, energy and trade.)Futures were little changed… …though the 10Y slipped to a cycle low of 1.43%.

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  • Out of Sync

    SPX tagged a significant Fibonacci extension Friday, but ES came up short of its equivalent target at 4728. Meanwhile, CL is faltering and USDJPY is rolling over as VIX faces a bullish 10/20 cross. What does it all mean?

    Surprisingly, the answer might lie with the bond market.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Nov 5, 2021

    The 531K payrolls beat and Pfizer COVID-19 pill could influence the taper schedule. The 4.9% increase in wages should.

    Energy and food prices might well fall over the coming months. But, wages are sticky. Whether due to contracts, minimum wage rules, or just market forces, they are very difficult to reduce. While it’s true that workers need higher wages in order to keep up with spiraling cost inflation, this is undoubtedly more fuel for the non-transitory inflationary fires.

    Futures are up sharply on the news, which has the factors wondering what to do at ES 4700. Having delivered stocks (with a few trillion in help from the Fed) to all-time highs despite lackluster and occasionally bad news, what should they do with really good news that might speed up the taper?

    Stay tuned.

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  • Update on COMP: Nov 4, 2021

    We’ve been keeping an eye on COMP lately, as it has often been a solid indicator of froth in the markets. It recently reached our next upside target of 15,667, continuing up to today’s high of 15,966.

    The gains are especially noteworthy, as just 5 weeks ago COMP completed a very bearish H&S Pattern that targeted a drop through its 200-DMA for a 11.4% selloff from its Sep 7 highs. Instead, it joined the everything rally which began on Oct 4 and began a 10.5% climb.Does this rally have legs, or is it ready to roll over?

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  • Breaking Down

    No, not the market. We’re talking about VIX – the traffic cop that tells the algos which way to go.  Yesterday, it went as close as it could to breaking down below a key channel bottom – this after a very visible breakdown of the rising white channel on Monday.

    What does it matter?It easily pushed SPX up above its rising wedge to new all-time highs. More importantly, it threatens to break SPX out of its rising yellow channel……which dates back to the depths of the GFC.  Because 12.2% per year isn’t enough, I guess.continued for members(more…)

  • Risky Business

    It was a big gamble, but it paid off – at least so far. The Fed took a page from Ben Bernanke’s famous 2002 speech in which he said, “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at no cost” and went to town. It bet the house that the “at no cost” qualification would hold.

    A staggering $4.2 trillion (since March 2020) later, the whole world now knows that there was a cost: inflation. Initially, we were assured that it wouldn’t happen at all. The message then shifted slightly, suggesting that a 2% target represented a range that would accommodate deviations above and below 2%.

    Finally, when it became obvious that inflation had moved well beyond normal deviations, the Fed insisted such a departure was transitory  – whatever that meant.  When you think about it, isn’t everything either transitory or permanent? Technically, a condition which persists less than a million years could be considered transitory, right?

    All this was obfuscation. The Fed’s real game was to reinflate failing markets just long enough so that COVID could be contained and the economy could recover. An important codicil was to pour so much money into bond markets that rising inflation would have no effect on interest rates. If rates remained at all-time historical lows, who would care about inflation?

    As it turned out, lots of people — especially the ones without any capital, political or otherwise. The cheers of asset owners who gleefully watched their real estate, stock portfolios and collectibles appreciate could be heard around the world. The poor and middle class, borrowers, pensioners, renters, unemployed, families living paycheck to paycheck – not so much.

    Jay Powell’s insistence that the recovery would be “broad and inclusive” conveniently neglected the fact that the Fed’s policies were the primary obstacle to such an outcome. Wealth inequality has never been so extreme. The top 1% now own more wealth than the bottom 92%, and the 50 wealthiest Americans own more wealth than the bottom half of American society – 165 million people. The top 0.1% owns over 20% of the nation’s wealth, up from 7% in 1978. Political pitchforks everywhere are being sharpened.

    Inflation matters greatly to most Americans. The most recent CPI data at 5.4% greatly understates just how much of a burden it is.  The three largest categories of expenses for Americans are rent, food and transportation. September saw annualized price increases of 11% for food, 15% for gas and 20% for a 1-bedroom apartment.

    Even as inflation spiked higher over the past year, Powell continued to insist it could be controlled. A typical response, this one from testimony in July, went something like “One way or another, we’re not going to be going into a period of high inflation for a long period of time, because of course we have tools to address that.” He talked about tools quite a lot.

    As our members know (because we’ve been writing about this very problem for well over a year) there are only 3 tools which can effectively bring down inflation. Tapering and raising rates, the ones most often discussed, take time and cause market disruptions. Lowering prices on key commodities is another option and, given the power and resources of central bank trading desks, has been an increasingly popular choice.

    We saw this in the 2014 and 2018 oil price crashes when CPI had topped 2% and the 10Y had topped 3%.  It’s possible they might employ the same tactic today, though a modest price decline followed by stable prices could accomplish the same goal until the base effect adjustments (the inspiration for the “transitory” meme) kick in.

    The problem, of course, is that the Fed let the game go on too long. High oil and gas prices fueled high food, manufacturing and transportation prices. These in turn have resulted in upward wage pressure and, well, you get the idea. Unraveling the whole thing without disrupting markets is a rather risky business.

     *  *  *

    Meanwhile, ES melted up to within 1.24 of our upside target yesterday – fairly normal behavior as we approach an important Fed announcement.

    Stay tuned.

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  • Pause for Thought

    The market is pausing while the FOMC hashes out how much of a taper/rate increase they need to announce. Futures are generally flat, with factors increasingly pointing towards downside targets. How big a nosedive is VIX prepared to make?continued for members(more…)