Tag: FOMC

  • Core Tops Headline CPI

    For the first time in over two years, core CPI topped headline.  Core, which ignores food and gas prices, climbed 0.4% MoM and 5.6% YoY, while headline came in at 0.1% MoM and 5.0% YoY.

    Not surprisingly, futures jumped at the news that headline CPI had dropped. But, our charts still show an important risk just ahead.

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  • The Chartists at OPEC+

    It was touch and go on Friday as XLE pushed above its 200-day moving average and WTI smacked into its 50-day. Fortunately for oil bulls and inflation enthusiasts, OPEC+ was watching the same charts and took action.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Mar 23, 2023

    Futures have rebounded about 0.5% following yesterday’s roller coaster session that saw SPX backtest its SMA200.

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  • FOMC Day: Mar 22, 2023

    The situation is pretty clear. By raising rates, the FOMC could continue to fight inflation but would also exacerbate the banking crisis. By pausing, the FOMC could give banks a little relief but would loosen financial conditions – thereby making it tougher to reduce inflation to target.

    The seldom discussed situation is what impact the Fed’s decision would have on equity markets. This unspoken third mandate often weighs more heavily on decisions than do full employment and price stability.

    From that standpoint, we look for the Fed to either: (a) pause but stress that the pause is due to rapidly tightening financial conditions which are inherently disinflationary; or, (b) raise 25 bps but stress that this could be the last hike for a while because they believe inflation is headed significantly lower due to tightening financial conditions.

    Our own research indicates that this is true. Gas prices, which are very highly correlated with CPI, are slated to fall 18.6% YoY in March.  The last time the YoY delta hit this level was in Nov 2021 when CPI registered 1.17%.

    Obviously, other stickier factors have usurped the inflation narrative: wages, real estate, cars, etc. But, as we’ve discussed often in these pages, many of these other categories have been fairly flat or have declined over the past year – meaning that their YoY deltas are also falling rapidly.

    Consider food prices, still elevated at 9.5% YoY in Feb.

    Underlying prices, as reflected in the DBA agricultural ETF, have fallen 11.3% over the past year. As long as it remains in the very tight trading range it’s been in since Jun 2022, the YoY decline will reduce inflationary pressures just as oil/gas have.

    Futures have been vacillating around unch all night. The real action should start at 2PM with the announcement, followed by Powell’s press conference at 2:30.

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  • On the Brink

    While the investing world argues whether the FOMC will or should raise rates a whopping 25 bps, the bond market is sending a strong message that markets are on the brink of a significant move.Futures, drawn higher by the usual pre-meeting meltup, are oblivious.

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  • Contagion

    How bad will it get? That’s the question slamming markets this morning as Credit Suisse is again in the headlines for all the wrong reasons: The Saudi National Bank has cut them off from further financial assistance. The CDS have soared and the stock is getting ever closer to zero.

    Futures were essentially flat after a very nice rebound yesterday – until the news hit.  Now, they’ve given up essentially all of yesterday’s gains and some important technical support.

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  • Powell’s Testimony

    Bottom line, a 50 bps rate hike is back on the table. We got the backtest we expected, and even a little bit more. This morning’s ADP employment report further underscores the need to put the brakes on the economy. It will be interesting to see whether Powell’s tone becomes any less hawkish in light of yesterday’s sell off.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Feb 24, 2023

    Futures have dropped back through the 50-day moving average, putting the 200-day back in focus after yesterday’s near miss.

    We’re essentially in the same situation as yesterday except that we’re jumping off from a much lower level.

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  • What Went Wrong?

    It was a pattern you could see from space.  SPY was making significant new lows every 80 sessions or so. Each one followed a tag of the top of the falling white channel and, in several cases, the 200-day moving average. And, each one came after SPY retraced about 71% of its recent losses.

    But, on Dec 22, the pattern stopped. SPY bottomed out at 374.79 and started an improbable climb back above the 200-day moving average and broke out of the channel, putting in a golden cross for good measure.

    What went wrong?

    The short version: low-volume holiday trading in a heavily shorted market was easily overwhelmed by algorithmic trading tied to a series of sharp collapses in volatility.

    Consider the chart of VIX – the fear index, as it is sometimes called. Over the past few years, it has repeatedly bounced off a trend line dating back to Jan 2018. Those bounces in volatility typically reflected or resulted in pullbacks in equities.

    Conversely, when VIX fell sharply, equities advanced – particularly if VIX dropped through a trendline of support.  Several can be seen in the chart below. ES, illustrated in purple in the background, consistently responded not only to breakdowns in VIX, but VIX’s failures to break out such as occurred in late September.

    VIX spiked above the dotted red trend line, only to fall back and enter a steeply dropping channel that kept stocks on the rise through the end of the year. The reversal (the purple arrow below) stopped SPY’s October decline well short of a backtest of the Feb 2020 highs that other indices experienced.

    Incidentally, VIX’s final thrust lower (white arrow) on Dec 2 ultimately broke down below a trendline connecting the two previous lows, allowing SPY to reach its 71% retracement (407.23) for that cycle.  It was a little earlier than the cycle suggested, so it was no surprise when SPY pushed back up to that level on Dec 13th before plunging lower.VIX’s reversal from its Dec 2 lows ultimately led to the creation of a new falling white channel to prop up stocks.  It only required a few breakdowns along the way, including the Jan 27 lower low (yellow arrow) which helped SPY break out of its falling white channel, and the Feb 2 plunge below the dashed red trendline (from 2018) which enabled SPY to make new cycle highs.

    Since it broke out of the year-long white channel, SPY has made consistently higher highs – in accordance with VIX’s very clear signals.

    The latest test of the rising channel bottom came yesterday, after Powell suggested investors are perhaps a little too optimistic about a Fed pivot. The 2% intraday reversal… …was halted by – you guessed it – VIX’s simultaneous reversal at the top of its falling white channel. After all the dust settled, SPY had made new highs anyway. Today, it’s back to the channel bottom yet again.

    There are several morals to the story, along with a few implications to consider. Breakouts can be easily engineered by those with enough capital – particularly over low-volume holiday periods. It doesn’t much matter who instigates one: central bank, large hedge fund, market maker, etc. They can and they will under the right circumstances. The key is being able to anticipate them and position accordingly.

    It’s also important to understand that while markets can be manipulated, it’s usually a delaying the inevitable. The corrections between 2014-2016 are a prime example. By breaking the pattern, an instigator can wriggle out from under a painful options position, ramp prices higher in advance of an anticipated selloff, etc.

    Don’t count on the financial media to point out the manipulation. If they were interested, they’d hammer Jay Powell every press conference with questions re the Fed’s and other CB’s trading activities – which remain shrouded from public scrutiny.

    Do count on the financial media to interview dozens of analysts and PMs whose prognostications and explanations completely ignore the obvious – most of whom wouldn’t know a bear market if it bit them. The majority of these closet indexers find it safer/easier to talk their book, concurring with the official narrative and ensuring they’ll look no worse than their competitors when the selloff eventually materializes.

    Are Powell et al. really satisfied with the loose financial conditions underpinning the current inflationary environment?  They’re either comfortable enough waiting for the reversion to the inflationary mean or are too nervous to fess up (remember transitory inflation?) and allow true price discovery.

    Keeping a lid on inflation and interest rates has never been more important. I don’t fault central bankers for trying, even when it means obfuscation or outright manipulation. They have a nearly impossible job given the disconnect between the economy and the markets.  I believe, however, that this locks us into a never ending pattern of booms and busts – each of which will be greater than the last.

    And, it sure gets tiresome.

     

     

     

     

  • Fed Whispering

    The FOMC’s meeting gets underway today. Like most, this one seems very consequential. The Street is divided on whether or not the Fed has done enough to combat inflation as well as the necessity of a recession.

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