Author: pebblewriter

  • Tests All Around

    Futures are off about 10 points this morning in a rare holiday weekend drop……due primarily to a big drop in oil, which failed to top its plunging SMA10 and, instead, tested its SMA200 for the fifth time in the past six sessions.  More importantly, it broke a trend line dating back to Oct 3.Unless it bounces back intraday, stocks will be facing serious headwinds which include USDJPY’s failure to complete the breakout it threatened last week.

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  • A Meaningful Breakout?

    The Dow isn’t a great index to follow or to chart, except for the fact that it’s a great “tell” when it comes to the narrative being promoted.

    Yesterday, when faced with the option of reversing at the trend line (below, in red) which has touched off four previous downturns, it broke out instead — “telling” us that there is nothing but upside ahead.Note that this breakout follows November’s push above the neckline (dashed white line) — also on the fifth try.

    Neither of these would be possible, of course, without the President’s Working Group (Plunge Protection Team) which met on December 23, 2018 and, unfettered by public scrutiny or minutes, unleashed hell on VIX.

    Since then, VIX has been hammered at every obvious potential breakout point and many which fell short of obvious resistance.And, USDJPY continues to be very cooperative, rallying whenever needed. Will it matter that it has reached 5-year overhead resistance?As we always do when looking at breakouts, we’ll look at whether this one will hold.

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  • Something’s Gotta Give

    The futures are all set to deposit SPX at our next upside target (3306.51) on the opening bell, meaning a potential pop and drop.  Caution is warranted, as a failure to push past resistance could presage a 7% drop.

    The algos are watching VIX’s plunges and CL’s bounce with interest, as something’s gotta give.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Jan 15, 2020

    Lots of interesting goings on in the market this morning.  A few random thoughts… Aramco is no doubt feeling lucky on the heels of its $4 billion additional raise, its final IPO tally totaling $29.4 billion given that OPEC just lowered estimates for crude demand in 2020. Funny how the timing worked out…  Meanwhile, BoA reported a 6% rise in EPS even though net income slumped 4% and net interest margin dropped to new all-time lows. The fact that it repurchased 9% of its outstanding shares probably had nothing to do with it.

    On the economic front Core PPI missed expectations, dropping to just 1.1% YoY – the lowest since August 2016 and the same level as kicked off the 2015-2016 correction.Futures, which had gradually recovered from its overnight lows, it back to a slight loss as we approach the opening bell.

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  • CPI: Jan 14, 2020

    December 2019 headline CPI came in at 2.29% this morning, with a seasonally-adjusted drop from Nov 2019 coming in at -0.1%. This was based on a gas price YoY delta of +7.9%, well below the EIA’s own calculation of +9.10%.  Had 9.10% been used, headline CPI would have printed at over 2.5% and MoM would have printed a positive 0.1%-0.2%.

    The charts below show how much of an outlier December was.

    Seasonally adjusted, there’s nothing to worry about. Without the adjustments, however, we see that rising oil and gas prices are once again papering over the deflation that the current BLS goal-seeking reporting methodology would otherwise report. Had we seen another 10% YoY drop instead of a 9.1% rise in gas prices, headline CPI would have come in at a lethargic 1.6%.

    Without the BLS’s methodology, of course, inflation remains very much a problem. The chart below, courtesy of ShadowStats.com, shows what CPI would be if the methodology hadn’t been changed numerous times over the years.

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  • Bonds: More Turmoil Ahead

    The YoY change in gas prices is highly correlated with CPI which, in turn, is highly correlated with interest rates. If December’s headline CPI (due out at 8:30 AM tomorrow) continues to track the YoY increase in gas prices, it could easily top 2.3-2.4%.

    What would the impact be on bond yields? And, how would stocks respond? The last time CPI topped 2.5% was in October 2018, marking the beginning of the 20% correction.

    continued for members…First, a quick look at futures this morning. ES is up 7.5 points, primarily on the new highs in USDJPY. Note that ES has already backtested its broken purple channel top…

    …but SPX has not yet done so.USDJPY is approaching important overhead resistance.A breakout would be quite significant. Remember, the BoJ had no problem letting the USDJPY break out in 2014 when oil/gas broke down. Inflation is much lower now.And, as we’ve discussed, a breakout in USDJPY might be necessary given the likely continued decline in oil/gas.

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  • Keeping up with the Dow Jones’

    Payrolls missed this morning, coming in at 145K versus expectations of 160K. But, the more concerning data was the average hourly earnings which rose only 0.1% MoM and 2.9% YoY.

    Futures ignored the miss, as algos were much more focused on USDJPY’s threat to break out and VIX’s latest meltdown.

    Those who focus further out than a nanosecond, however, might recognize a potential flaw in the recovery argument. It will be even more obvious next week when December’s inflation data is released.Stagnating wages amidst rising inflation goes a long way toward explaining why more and more Americans are living paycheck to paycheck.

    At least their 401(k) accounts are out of the woods…right?continued for members(more…)

  • When Good Enough…Isn’t

    Yesterday’s 93-point bounce off our backtest target was remarkable — not because it was so extreme or resulted in new all-time highs, but because it surprised so many market experts. The algos are not only very powerful (especially in an indecisive market), but are very difficult to rein in once they’re unleashed because of how they work in the first place – by triggering a cascade of buying by the massive passive universe of buyers. Happens every time.

    In the absence of another escalation in the Middle East, stocks are now in the clear — facing the same issues we’ve been discussing for the past month: a coming spike in inflation and a yield curve which still signals significant risk.

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  • Who’s Propping up the Stock Market?

    It was October 1989 and the stock market was in trouble. Two years after crashing 36% (including 20% in a single session) the S&P 500 had made a comeback and had climbed back to new all-time highs. But high inflation, slipping junk bond prices and failing S&Ls were in the headlines daily. On October 13, stocks slid nearly 7% – back below the 1987 highs. It was time for action.

    Two weeks later, recently-retired Fed Governor Robert Heller penned an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal that advocated a more active approach than simply tinkering with money supply and interest rates.

    The Fed, which “already play[ed] an important indirect role in the stock market”…”could buy the broad market composites in the futures market. The increased demand would normalize trading and stabilize prices. Stabilizing the derivative markets would tend to stabilize the primary market.”

    The Fed apparently didn’t take his advice, as it continued to whipsaw for another 15 months before finally breaking above the 1987 highs to stay, relying on an barrage of rate cuts, crashing oil prices, aggressively bullish Fedspeak, and a cut in capital gains taxes.Thirty years on, there is much circumstantial evidence that the Fed has bought into Heller’s suggestions. JPMorgan estimates that “fundamental discretionary traders” account for only about 10 percent of trading volume in stocks. This means that 90% of trading either keys off of quantitative techniques or is passive (i.e. follows the quants’ lead.)

    The upshot? Triggering a few big quant managers to buy stocks can cause an avalanche of buying by index funds, ETFs, smart beta funds, etc. Picture a $50 billion tail wagging a $30 trillion dog.

    If it seems complicated, I assure you it’s not. It often occurs overnight, when low-volume equity markets readily respond to, say, sharp declines in VIX futures or a spike in the USDJPY — tried and true signals that rarely fail to ignite rallies. We had a prime example today in the wake of Iran’s attack on US air bases in Iraq [see: We’ve Seen This Movie Before.]

    VIX, which closed flat yesterday, rose sharply after the close until 7:41PM ET, at which point S&P 500 futures reached an important level of technical support. From there, VIX began an orderly decline, spurring ES to new all-time highs when it dropped below its recent lows.We’ll never know whether the Fed itself is triggering algorithms to buy until it accedes to being audited. Unlike the Bank of Japan or the Swiss National Bank, the Fed doesn’t share its trading activity. The instigator could very well be another central bank, a proxie, or just a large quantitative player caught too far out over their skis when markets got dicey.

    I’m not sure it matters all that much. The fact is that it’s happening, and happening more and more frequently — which smacks of a very directionally-biased player with access to plenty of cheap capital [of course, central banks sporting negative interest rates actually get paid to prop up stocks.]

    Heller recognized the risks in such an approach, arguing that “the Fed’s stock market role ought not to be very ambitious. It should seek only to maintain the functioning of markets — not to prop up the Dow Jones or New York Stock Exchange averages at a particular level.”

    Perhaps he didn’t appreciate, however, just how addictive support can become to both markets and politicians who rely on them for reelection. Consider how often stocks have rallied to new all-time highs on the breathless announcement of a breakthrough in the China trade wars.

    As Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher said about QE in 2016, “the Fed front-loaded an enormous market rally in order to create a wealth effect… We injected cocaine and heroin into the system…and now we are maintaining it with Ritalin.” Central bankers would do well to remember that although addictions are tough to kick, they can be fatal if left untreated.

    No one knows how much bigger the latest equity balloon can be blown. But, when markets lose their ability to fairly reflect the risk inherent in speculative investments, it’s time to start paying very close attention.

    Here, in all its glory, is Heller’s op-ed from 1989.  The highlights are mine.

     *  *  *

    Have Fed Support Stock Market, Too
    By Robert Heller
    27 October 1989
    The Wall Street Journal
    (Copyright (c) 1989, Dow Jones & Co., Inc.)

    The stock market correction of Oct. 13, 1989, was a grim reminder of the Oct. 19, 1987 market collapse. Since, like earthquakes, stock market disturbances will always be with us, it is prudent to take all possible precautions against another such market collapse.

    In general, markets function well and adjust smoothly to changing economic and financial circumstances. But there are times when they seize up, and panicky sellers cannot find buyers. That’s just what happened in the October 1987 crash. As the market tumbled, disorderly market conditions prevailed: The margins between buying bids and selling bids widened; trading in many stocks was suspended; orders took unduly long to be executed; and many specialists stopped trading altogether.

    These failures in turn contributed to the fall in the market averages: Uncertainty extracted an extra risk premium and margin-calls triggered additional selling pressures.

    The situation was like that of a skier who is thrown slightly off balance by an unexpected bump on the slope. His skis spread farther and farther apart — just as buy-sell spreads widen during a financial panic — and soon he is out of control. Unable to stop his accelerating descent, he crashes.

    After the 1987 crash, and as a result of the recommendations of many studies, “circuit breakers” were devised to allow market participants to regroup and restore orderly market conditions. It’s doubtful, though, whether circuit breakers do any real good. In the additional time they provide even more order imbalances might pile up, as would-be sellers finally get their broker on the phone.

    Instead, an appropriate institution should be charged with the job of preventing chaos in the market: the Federal Reserve. The availability of timely assistance — of a backstop — can help markets retain their resilience. The Fed already buys and sells foreign exchange to prevent disorderly conditions in foreign-exchange markets. The Fed has assumed a similar responsibility in the market for government securities. The stock market is the only major market without a market-maker of unchallenged liquidity or a buyer of last resort.

    This does not mean that the Federal Reserve does not already play an important indirect role in the stock market. In 1987, it pumped billions into the markets through open market operations and the discount window. It lent money to banks and encouraged them to make funds available to brokerage houses. They, in turn, lent money to their customers — who were supposed to recognize the opportunity to make a profit in the turmoil and buy shares.

    The Fed also has the power to set margin requirements. But wouldn’t it be more efficient and effective to supply such support to the stock market directly? Instead of flooding the entire economy with liquidity, and thereby increasing the danger of inflation, the Fed could support the stock market directly by buying market averages in the futures market, thus stabilizing the market as a whole.

    The stock market is certainly not too big for the Fed to handle. The foreign-exchange and government securities markets are vastly larger. Daily trading volume in the New York foreign exchange market is $130 billion. The daily volume for Treasury Securities is about $110 billion.

    The combined value of daily equity trading on the New York Exchange, the American Stock Exchange and the NASDAQ over-the-counter market ranges between $7 billion and $10 billion. The $13 billion the Fed injected into the money markets after the 1987 crash is more than enough to buy all the stocks traded on a typical day. More carefully targeted intervention might actually reduce the need for government action. And taking more direct action has the advantage of avoiding sharp increases in the money supply, such as happened in October 1987.

    The Fed’s stock market role ought not to be very ambitious. It should seek only to maintain the functioning of markets — not to prop up the Dow Jones or New York Stock Exchange averages at a particular level. The Fed should guard against systemic risk, but not against the risks inherent in individual stocks. It would be inappropriate for the government or the central bank to buy or sell IBM or General Motors shares. Instead, the Fed could buy the broad market composites in the futures market. The increased demand would normalize trading and stabilize prices. Stabilizing the derivative markets would tend to stabilize the primary market. The Fed would eliminate the cause of the potential panic rather than attempting to treat the symptom — the liquidity of the banks.

    Disorderly market conditions could be observed quite frequently in foreign exchange markets in the 1960s and 1970s. But since the member countries of the International Monetary Fund agreed to the “Guidelines to Floating” in 1974, such difficulties have been avoided. I cannot recall any disorder in currency markets since the 1974 guidelines were adopted. Thus, the mere existence of a market-stabilizing agency helps to avoid panic in emergencies.

    The old saying advises: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” But this could be a case where we all might go broke if it isn’t fixed.

  • We’ve Seen This Movie Before

    I’ve seen one particular assessment over and over in the financial news this morning: The market’s rebound following Iran’s missile strikes last night was “surprising.”

    No, it is most certainly not surprising! Not even a little bit. Anyone who pays the least bit of attention to charts could have seen this coming a mile away. It’s the same response we’ve seen countless times over the past several years and is a product of the way the market works these days.

    The chart below shows a red channel which S&P 500 futures have followed religiously since stocks broke out of a downturn when Phase One was falsely declared a done deal on Oct 11. Since then, ES has fallen substantially only when significant overhead resistance could be backtested [previously resistance, it would now provide support.]

    Ever since ES first broke out of the rising purple channel on Dec 12, we have been waiting for a backtest of that channel. A backtest is the market’s way of saying it’s done with prices that are any lower.

    Yesterday morning, I posted this chart – placing a downside target at the top of the rising purple channel around 3180. Only if the backtest didn’t hold would any of the lower targets come into play. VIX, which spent the past week being smacked back below its 200-day moving average, began to creep higher as soon as the cash market closed.  At exactly 7:41PM ET, it topped out and began a steady drop back to its former lows.

    Why 7:41? Because that’s exactly when ES completed its backtest of the purple channel top.  There was no other news, no announcements, no tweets – just completion of the backtest.Yes, it could have waited until Monday when the purple channel top and falling white channel bottom intersected. But, that would have meant a more substantial intraday drop below the bottom of the rising red channel.

    Remember, the rising red channel is the one that bulls are hell-bent on preserving – the path out of the rising purple channel which promised gains of only 1.4% annually.By now, readers know that when I say “bulls” I’m not really referring to fundamentally-oriented portfolio managers and analysts who suss through news and data and draw conclusions about the likely impact on markets. They are in the minority, now that quantitative and passive trading are responsible for 90% of all volume.

    I just finished Gregory Zuckerman’s excellent treatise on quantitative investing: The Man Who Solved the Market: How Jim Simons Launched the Quant Revolution. It’s a great reminder that central bankers and their proxies have been enabled, incentivized and prompted to exert great control over stock prices.

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