Tag: DXY

  • Retail Sales Miss

    April retail sales came in at 0.4% versus expectations of 0.8%, underscoring the notion that the economy isn’t nearly as strong as the market would have you believe. Futures, already off slightly, have added to their losses.

    It remains to be seen, however, whether the propping up of equities in advance of OPEX and the debt ceiling debacle can be derailed.

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  • End of the Line?

    The market has frustrated both bulls and bears lately, vacillating between sharp downturns and even sharper recoveries. But, a close examination of the charts shows two very obvious patterns that suggest the tide is about to turn – not in a good way.

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  • Bank Concerns Are Back

    After a brief respite, bank stocks are again under pressure with deposit flight and CDS both pointing to escalating concerns.

    Neither the April CPI nor PPI prints support the notion that the Fed will lower rates any time soon – keeping the pressure on banks and an economy that depends on easy access to cheap credit.

    Futures backed off the key 4166 threshold again yesterday, only to bounce back and test it again overnight.

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  • Aftermath

    Futures are off modestly after a more hawkish Q&A with Powell than many expected. ES came within a few points of the 50-day yesterday. Based on the overnight action, it should reach our next downside target with ease.

    It didn’t help that unit labor costs shot up 6.3% for April versus the 3.3% prior and 3.6% consensus. Perhaps the three rate cuts the market has been pricing in by year end don’t constitute such a great forecast.

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  • FOMC Day: May 3, 2023

    Futures are essentially flat ahead of today’s pivotal FOMC decision and press conference.  This follows a day that saw stock prices plunge below our initial backtest target……as VIX actually broke out – at least for a few hours. The banking crisis obviously hasn’t gone away. How many more First Republics or Silicon Valley banks are out there – clicks away from a bank run? Even those banks which aren’t already in trouble will most certainly cut back on lending, which will certainly raise the odds of a (worse) recession.

    Will the FOMC take that into account as they contemplate future actions?

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  • FOMC on Deck

    Futures are off modestly in the run-up to tomorrow’s FOMC decision.

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  • Price Setting

    After establishing a well-formed falling channel and positioning for a bearish 10/20 cross, SPX soared last week on  – what else? – another collapse in VIX.

    In the process, the 10/20 cross was (at least) delayed and the channel busted.  It’s normal activity for the lead up to a Fed meeting. Perhaps “price discovery” should be renamed “price setting.”

    Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised to see similar goings on in other “markets” such as silver.

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  • Q1 GDP Disappoints

    GDP increased at an annual rate of 1.1% versus expectations of over 2% and Q4’s 2.6%, fueling both recession fears and expectations that the Fed will soon halt rate hikes after next week’s 25 bps increase.

    Futures dipped on the news but have since rebounded as the usual VIX smackdown convinced algos to look on the bright side.

    For now, algos are ignoring the hotter Q1 PCE data embedded in the GDP print.

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  • Durable Orders’ Mixed Bag

    There’s something in March’s durable orders report for both bulls and bears. The 3.2% topline number was wildly better than the 0.7% expected and -1.2% previous.  But, it was driven primarily by large Boeing orders.

    Non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a proxy for business spending plans, dropped 0.4%. And core shipping logged another 0.4% drop.

    Stocks were little phased, as they’re still marching to VIX’s drumbeat. But, the 2Y is back below 4% as First Republic reminds us that the banking crisis has not gone away.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Apr 24, 2023

    Futures are flat this morning after climbing back from a 20-pt overnight deficit.  With scores of companies due to report earnings this week, we should be in for a wild ride.continued for members(more…)