Tag: trump

  • Middle East Tensions Escalate

    Not too surprisingly, the Iran problem didn’t go away over the weekend.  If anything, both sides are making threats that would significantly expand the conflict. What’s more, Trump’s unilateral actions have resulted in Iraq’s parliament calling for all US troops to withdraw from Iraq – without question an important win for Iran.

    Trump’s 2011 predictions of a politically-motivated attack on Iran by Obama (which obviously never came to pass) are causing many to question the timing and motivation of his own actions, not to mention the existence of a coherent Middle East strategy.

    So far, equities’ reaction has been contained.  Though, gold and bonds are providing a less filtered reaction to the escalating risks. Gold popped up to tag our next upside target… …and, 10Y notes broke out.Past Trump-related emergencies (trade war, impeachment, etc.) have been easily downplayed or explained away. I can’t imagine that Trump or his sycophants will be able to spin this latest series of missteps as unimportant.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Oil Spikes on Iran War Worries

    WTI futures spiked nearly 5% overnight in the wake of a US drone strike on Baghdad Airport which killed Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani.  It is a dangerous escalation in the US conflict with Iran which broadened when Trump alarmed US allies by pulling out of the Iran nuclear deal last May.

    We argued at the time, as did many, that Trump’s actions put the US on the path to a potential shooting war. The assassination of Soleimani clearly amplifies the risks. So far, oil prices have pushed only slightly above the levels reached after the nuclear deal pullout and the Saudi Aramco plant was attacked in September.  But, this is obviously a more serious geopolitical development. From an economic standpoint, a sharp rise in the price of oil further complicates the already thorny inflation problem facing markets – setting up a showdown between Fed hawks and doves in January.

    continued for members(more…)

  • CPI: Nov 13, 2019

    Today is off to an interesting start.  Following Trump’s call for negative interest rates and more grandstanding on China in New York yesterday, headline CPI came in hotter than expected but right in line with our forecast. As we’ve discussed, this is the result of oil and gas trending sideways in support of the upcoming Aramco IPO.

    On top of all that, the impeachment hearings get underway at 10AM and Powell testifies before Congress beginning at 11AM. EIA inventories are delayed until tomorrow due to the holiday.

    It was enough to knock ES down by about 17 points where it finally reconnected with its SMA10 on the 8th session in a row during which it tagged its 2.618 Fibonacci extension.

    It should be a pretty exciting day for a change.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Unspinnable

    An extremely disappointing payrolls report put February new hires at 20K.  I had to look twice, certain that a digit had been left out.To make matters worse, hourly earnings spiked 3.4% YoY, far in excess of what all the Goldilocks models suggested. It should be entertaining to see how Kudlow et al. spin this one.

    Meanwhile, our targets are being hit left and right.  ES came within 1.21 (so far) of our next downside target.On the currency front, EURUSD nailed our next downside target……USDJPY plunged right through its nearest support and is closing in on our secondary target……and DXY is again approaching our upside target.CL and RBOB’s selloffs are accelerating after tagging our upside targets.

    S&P futures are currently off about 20 points.  But, our models suggest SPX should tumble a minimum of 35 points before all is said and done.  If that support doesn’t hold, there are potentially very large declines ahead.

    continued for members(more…)

  • The True Price of Oil

    As enjoyable as it is filling up the Family Truckster for only $2.36/gallon, what if it meant the the death of thousands of Kurds?  Here’s what we know.

    For months, OPEC ignored Trump’s demands to bring down the price of oil.  Trump was correctly concerned that spiking oil prices would push inflation to new highs (they did) and thus cause interest rates to reach unsustainable levels (they did.)

    Trump’s tweets began in April…

     

    …but, oil prices continued to climb until October 3 — which just happened to be the very day headlines proclaimed that Jamal Khashoggi was murdered in the Saudi embassy in Turkey, presumably at the direction of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman.

    Since October 3, oil prices have dropped over 40%.  Coincidence?

    We commented back in October about the connection [see: Coincidences and Consequences] and speculated that it would finally give Trump the leverage he needed to force oil and gas prices lower.

    Condemnation of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman was nearly universal.  The lone holdout/apologist?  Donald Trump.  Highlights from his statement:

    …the Kingdom agreed to spend and invest $450 billion in the United States…it could very well be that the Crown Prince had knowledge of this tragic event – maybe he did and maybe he didn’t!  King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman vigorously deny any knowledge of the planning or execution of the murder..we may never know all of the facts surrounding the murder of Mr. Jamal Khashoggi. The United States intends to remain a steadfast partner of Saudi Arabia…

    It’s not much of a leap to conclude that the price for Trump’s equivocation was a big decline in the price of oil.  CPI, which reached 2.95% in July, came in at only 2.18% in November.  In December, it will likely return to below 2% as the YoY delta in gasoline prices turns negative.

    The 10-year treasury, which topped out at 3.25% on Oct 5, is back down to 2.75%.  The Fed is under renewed pressure to scrap plans for additional rate hikes.  Mission accomplished.  But, there was one thread which threatened to unravel the whole deal.

    According to Turkish President Recep Erdoğan, recordings of the entire incident were shared with the US, the UK, France, Germany and Saudi Arabia.  He specifically mentioned providing a copy to Secretary Pompeo and to the CIA, which shortly afterwards concluded that MBS was behind the killing.

    Caught between a rock and a hard place, how could Trump convince Erdoğan to refrain from publicly releasing the recordings?  Apparently after deciding that handing over Gulen would be a little too repugnant, even for Trump, he handed them an even bigger prize.

    Without US troops at their side, most observers believe the Kurds in Northern Syria will be easy prey for Erdoğan. He has graciously agreed to postpone the massacre.

     

     

  • Coincidences and Consequences

    It’s interesting how Khashoggi’s murder top-ticked oil and gas prices…

    …and, so soon after Trump’s latest demand that OPEC lower oil prices.

    I’m certainly not insinuating that Trump had anything to do with Khashoggi’s murder.

    But, OPEC ignored Trump’s Sep 20 demand.  Two weeks later, oil prices had spiked 10% higher.  Since Oct 3, the day of the murder, WTI has fallen 14.5% and RBOB has fallen 16.7%.

    As Churchill famously said, “never let a good crisis go to waste.”

     *  *  *

    Sometimes it’s quite difficult to anticipate a major market move.  You’ve got hundreds of companies, all with their own earnings, outlooks, and market-moving headlines.  Then, there’s the economic news of the day, both domestic and foreign.  And, of course, there are geopolitical developments such as who’s dismembering or cozying up to whom?

    And, sometimes it’s not so difficult at all. It can be as simple as the VIX chart we’ve discussed all week.  From Time to Panic on Tuesday:

    Note that VIX need only break the purple TL [for SPX to bounce.] If VIX doesn’t break down, this should be the end of the line for this bounce.

    It didn’t bounce.  SPX plunged.  Next?

    Or it can be slightly more complex, but still fairly straightforward — such as is the case with oil and gas.

    As we all know, central bank support (low interest rates, among other accommodations) has been critical to stock prices since 2009.  Low interest rates, of course, rely on low inflation.  And, low inflation relies to a great extent on low oil and gas prices (more accurately, low MoM and YoY increases in those prices.

    From last April in Oil & Gas, Inflation and Interest Rates: A Delicate Balance or Goal Seeking?

    The complicating factor, of course, is that oil and gas prices took over the job of stimulating algos (chief among the 90% of all trading activity which is conducted by machines) to drive stocks higher.

    Most recently, oil, gas and SPX all bottomed on Feb 11, 2016 and oil and gas prices played an integral role in stimulating the subsequent rally.  The most important nudge was in December 2017, when oil and gas prices broke out of an already rising channel.

    To chartists, and to algos, this is a very bullish maneuver.  It also has the effect of driving inflation and interest rates higher. CPI rose from 2.11% in December 2017 to 2.95 in July 2018.  The 10Y rose from 2.31% in December to 3.24% just a few weeks ago.

    The Fed told us they were okay with this, that they were going to let the economy and inflation “run hot.”  I was among the many doubters, citing the damage that higher rates would inflict on our already alarming budget deficit, but darned if they didn’t do it anyway. I suppose that, at the end of the day, a temporary increase in the rate at which the debt and interest expense are expanding was less important than having a higher perch from which to crash rates during the next GFC.

    Stocks ignored the implications for a while, happy to play follow the leader with oil and gas prices.  The day that RBOB popped out of the rising purple channel was the day that SPX popped above its 2.24 Fibonacci extension at 2703 – a level which might otherwise have provided serious overhead resistance.  It can be seen as the horizontal, purple trend line on the chart below. In early February, though, RBOB’s breakout faltered.  No surprise, but SPX followed along, suffering its biggest and sharpest decline in years.  Like magic, RB quickly popped back above the purple channel top – rescuing SPX and helping it back above 2703.

    Note that SPX went on to new all-time highs in September, only after RB backtested the purple channel and bounced higher.

    And this lovely little correction we’re enjoying?  SPX topped the day that RB failed to break out of the falling yellow channel (also the day of Khashoggi’s murder.)  SPX fell through its 200-day moving average on the day that RB plunged back below the purple channel top.  And, SPX plunged below 2703 on the day that RB fell out of the falling yellow channel.

    With the elections less than two weeks away, I’m not expecting a sharp rebound in oil and gas prices any time soon.  So, the algos will have to rely on other tools — such as VIX, which has now shed 12.5% since tagged our 26 target yesterday.

    So far, VIX’s decline has produced a pretty nifty bounce.  Is it enough to offset weakness in oil and gas and a hawkish Fed which has been browbeaten by a “low-interest rate president?

    continued for members... (more…)

  • Appearances

    Credit: REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

    It is often said that there are two sides to every story and, somewhere in middle, lies the price of oil.  Okay, I paraphrased that just a bit.

    But, isn’t it odd that the day after the Saudis threaten $400/barrel oil, Donald Trump suddenly embraces the ludicrous “rogue killers” theory for the death of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi?

    It appears that after days of vehement denials of any involvement, the Saudis suddenly remembered that Khashoggi was, in fact, assassinated and dismembered in their Turkish embassy (Saudi operative: “Oh, yeah…that guy that we chopped up with a bone saw?  I had forgotten all about that!)

    After a 20-minute conversation, the president who fell in love with Kim Jong-un also came to terms with Saudi King Salman.  Was it love?  To quote the master of the deal, himself, who knows?

    But since Trump is desperate to reverse the rise in gas prices, inflation, and interest rates between now and November 6 (and, to salvage billions in arms sales) don’t be surprised if we get that next leg down in oil prices very soon.  Nobody knew the economy could be so complicated!

    And, while we’re on the topic of government prevarication, the much-delayed September Treasury Statement was finally released yesterday.  Anyone notice something odd about September outlays?  Did we really see a plunge in every expense category?  Or, maybe, someone decided to massage the numbers just a bit to prevent the report of a $1 trillion deficit.  Appearances, again.

     

    Nah…then we’d surely see other efforts to obfuscate the country’s fiscal plight.  For instance, they’d never allow charts like this one from the August report.

    The same chart in September…  (appearances, indeed!)continued for members(more…)

  • The Devil’s Playground

    Catch this news flash yesterday?  Trump, ironically at a White House meeting with the National Council for the American Worker:

    You’re gonna see on China, today, right after close of business…we’ll be announcing something, uh, and it will be a lot of money coming into the coffers of the United States of America, a lot of money coming in, but you’ll be seeing what we’re doing uh right after close of business today, the markets closing.  Thank you.

    Note the repeated emphasis on the market’s closing. Was there something about the announcement that required a delay?  To paraphrase…the after-hours markets are the devil’s playground.

    The S&P 500 plunged 22 points from Friday’s highs, then recovered just in time for a well-engineered close: down only 16 points on the day.  More importantly, it closed at 2888.80 – just above yesterday’s 10-DMA at 2888.70 (2888.80 today.)

    After the close, of course, the futures tanked – shedding 14 points before being saved by the usual suspects: VIX, WTI and USDJPY.  Trump’s announcement didn’t come right after the close.  In fact, it didn’t come until after 3 1/2 hours had passed.  Why?That’s how long it took to get the safety net properly positioned.  USDJPY, which had just backtested its IH&S neckline, spiked sharply moments after the announcement.

    VIX, which had just backtested the broken white channel, suddenly reversed and headed lower.

    The overnight action was impressive, with the usual timely plunges when ES faced important tests. How much more of a smackdown will resurrect stocks’ rally?Whether the rebound will hold or not is anyone’s guess.  China has already announced retaliation – which Trump insisted will lead to a $267 billion expansion of US tariffs.

    Futures are under pressure again, and interest rates are threatening to break out on the obvious (to everyone except Trump, apparently) inflation threat that tariffs pose.  Might investors care that the trade wars could, as Jack Ma theorized, last for 20 years?

     

    continued for members(more…)

  • Striking Distance

    This is day 8 of our membership promotion, running now through the end of the month for members and non-members alike. We’re offering a 25% rebate off the first month of Monthly and Quarterly auto-renew subscriptions. Annual memberships are available at a very substantial discount (rewarding those who act quickly!)

    Remember, the annual pricing is available to current members. If your current membership hasn’t expired yet, we’ll tack your new subscription on to your current expiration date. This can be especially valuable for those who took advantage of a special last year which offered a discount on the first year of a auto-renewing annual subscription.

    To sign up for a new monthly or quarterly subscription, CLICK HERE. For details on an annual subscription, drop us a line with the subject line “sign me up!”

    * * *

    After SPX’s break out on the back of a 37% plunge in VIX, it’s no surprise that the VIX has kept it within striking distance of new all-time highs.

    In dropping that 37%, VIX completed a deep retracement of its rise from 9.97 — the lowest it’s been since 2007 — to 16.28.  The .886 retracement is considered the last stop before prices drop through the previous lows.  Imagine: risk being considered lower than at any time since 2007!

    Yesterday, VIX spent the entire day dancing around that .886, with a dip below it every single time SPX started slipping.  The message to algos was that VIX was about to drop to new lows and, therefore, stocks should be bought.It was enough to keep SPX from completing a simple retracement from its .886 to its .786, or any meaningful dip until the final minutes of an otherwise nonsensical session.Today’s a new day, as CL is closing in on our 48.35-48.45 target and investors are no doubt anxious to express their disappointment with the lack of details provided for the fantastic, big-league tax cuts “revealed” yesterday.

    Despite the slight bump in futures overnight, our downside targets remain intact – starting with 2384.

    continued for members(more…)

  • A Good Crisis Pays Off

    With the S&P futures off around 100 points Tuesday night, I noted that if the selloff lasted, SPX had a very good chance of tagging the .786 retracement at 2034.97 the next day.  Instead, we got the biggest overnight turnaround since Mar 2009 and a breakout of the channel SPX has been in for the past three months.  What happened, and why?2016-11-10-usdjpy-daily-0605

    While most analysts were scratching their heads over the repercussions of a Trump presidency, central planners were busy ramping USDJPY for all it was worth.  Just this morning, it reached our next upside target — a rally of over 5% in about 24 hours.

    Was this merely a case of not letting a good crisis go to waste, or is there something more fundamentally bullish at work here?

    continued for members(more…)