Wall Street Wrap – The Fed Stands Still, Gold Trades $1,099

By Robert Perrego, at 5:25 pm on November 4th, 2009

As widely expected, The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee maintained its target for the federal funds interest rate at 0 to 0.25% today stating that it “continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.”  This caused the dollar, which had been selling off before the announcement, to drop even farther with the PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish Fund (NYSE: UUP) dropping 0.88% on the day (-$0.20, $22.48) and propelling New York Spot Gold to trade as high as $1,099.  This maintenance of low interest rates caused a rally in the home builders with Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM) +3.46%, Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN) +3.43% and D. R. Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI) +3.12%, all gaining on continued low mortgage rates.

Click here to read the full FOMC Statement

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which had been up all day and traded its highest level a half hour after the announcement at 9928, got sold off into the close dropping 113 points within the last hour of trading.  The Dow 30 closed up 30.23 points at 9,802.14 (+0.30%) with the S&P holding onto gain of 1.09 points (+0.10%, 1,046.50).  The Nasdaq 100 also barely managed to finish positive 1.47 points (+0.08%, 1,680.67).

With the low interest rates and the dollar getting hit left and right, the commodity space has been red hot.  Looking at various commodities and the dollar exchange traded fund, the vehicles the common investor can use to most easily invest in, we find the following returns for 2009 thus far;

  • Market Vectors Coal ETF (NYSE: KOL) +114.5%
  • iPath DJ AIG Copper ETN (NYSE: JJC) + 109.6%
  • United States Gasoline (NYSE: UGA) +88.8%
  • Market Vectors Steel ETF (NYSE: SLX) +79.6%
  • SPDR Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD) + 23.8%
  • United States Oil Fund (NYSE: USO) +22.8%
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average +11.7%
  • PowerShares DB MS Agriculture ETF (NYSE: DBA) +0.2%
  • PowerShares DB USD Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) -8.83%
  • Unites States Natural Gas (NYSE: UNG) -57.8%

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is included here as lately it has traded much like a commodity.  With the current U.S. interest rates so low, the dollar is being used to fund the carry trade and is shorted to provide funds to invest in other ‘risky’ assets (for more on this see my Wraps from 11/1, 10/31, 10/30).  This use of the dollar in the carry trade has established an inverse relationship between the dollar and the stock market, much like commodities.

Looking at these returns we can see that the good news is food is not seeing much inflation and if you heat your home with natural gas this may be a cheap winter.  The bad news is gasoline has almost doubled so you will have to stay home and eat in.

Much speculation has been running around the financial community about whether or not a commodity bubble is forming.  Just looking at absolute returns does not give enough information to define a bubble, as these different commodities are influenced not only by a diving dollar, but by things such as economic activity (coal, copper, steel, oil), inflation expectations and currency diversification needs (gold), consumer income and purchasing patterns (gasoline, food) and the simple supply of the commodity (natural gas).

I do not think we are into a commodity bubble as there have been a series of positive economic numbers out of China (remembering commodities are a global situation) which directly influences the demand for, and price of oil, copper, coal and steel.  The United States economy has also improved as evidenced by the 3.5% GDP report from last week.  Judging from the Fed’s statement today, interest rates will be kept very low for awhile in order to juice job creation and this will keep the dollar weak and the commodity run up will continue.  Also, the overall market; commodities, stocks and bonds, all dropped for a ways before the start of 2009 so rising from a lower starting point makes the run up percentage numbers look larger.  With the specter of a trillion dollar health care reform and cap and trade costs looming in the United States political future, along with the current budget deficit, I do not see the dollar strengthening appreciably anytime soon.  There longer term outlook for commodities remains positive.

Nymex crude rose 80 cents today (+1.01%, $80.18, 4:50 p.m.) regaining the $80 level.  Gold has been the market darling lately trading an all time high of $1,099 an ounce today and was last seen at $1,091.80 (+0.69%, 5:00 p.m.).  Yesterday’s move by the Reserve Bank of India of buying 200 tonnes of gold from the IMF shows the argument why gold may be nowhere near a top.  The inflation/deflation arguments about gold will mean nothing if the offshore assets denominated in dollars start to diversify into gold.  Of all the major currencies of the world gold has the smallest market by far.  Were Russia, China, Japan, India and the Middle East dollars to all diversify to just 5% of foreign reserves into gold, the price could top $2,000 easily.

Market Wrap – Pepsi Bottles up the Bottlers while Homebuilders lose more money

By Robert Perrego, at 4:42 pm on August 4th, 2009

As far as movement for the overall market was concerned today was a day that wasn’t.  All day the indexes stayed in a narrow sideways trading range boring traders to death and unfortunately making CNBC talk about Cash-for-Clunkers all day long… again.  The biggest news of the day was that Pepsico Inc. (NYSE: PEP) bought in their two largest bottlers a decade after spinning them off.  Pepsi Bottling Group Inc. (NYSE: PBG) and PepsiAmericas Inc. (NYSE: PAS) added over 8% each on the news AND Pepsico also added 5%+ showing that the market likes this deal all the way around.  PEP +$2.86, PBG +$2.87, PAS +$2.35.

The home builders picked a good day to report lousy earnings as this mornings Pending Home Sales Index came in very strong up 3.6% at 94.9 with the prior months being up 0.1% at 90.7 (revised to 91.3).  The home-builders lined up after that number to report how much they lost this time and they lost a lot of money but ‘lost less’.  D.R. Horton (NYSE: DHI) dropped $142.3 million and 45 cents a share but that’s better than losing $400 million right?  Centex actually posted a profit of $85 million but needed a tax refund of over $400 million to get there. Ironically Centex is reporting this large tax refund on Obama’s birthday.  You would figure these tax dollars would be headed towards the birthday boy as it seems every other dollar going anywhere near a government employee gets sent directly to jail, does not pass GO and does not collect $200.  DHI +$0.57, CTX +$0.01.

Staying on real estate the REIT’s were on fire today and clearly the strongest sector.  Traders seem to have lost their fear of the supposed looming commercial real estate problems as the Simon Property Group Inc. (NYSE: SPG), Vornado Realty Trust (NYSE: VNO) and Macerich Company (NYSE: MAC) added 6.85%, 4.12% and 7.03% respectively.

Gold trading showed signs of life as at 10:30 a rally started that made a run at breaking towards $1,000 and traded as high as $971.20/ounce before being reeled back in trading at $965.50/ounce (+$9) at 4:15 p.m. est.  Oil pretty much finished flat as did the dollar.

The Dow closed up marginally +33.63 points (+0.36%, 9320.19) as the S&P 500 added 3.02 points (+0.30%, 1005.65) and the Nasdaq 100 added a sliver of a point up 0.37 (+.02%, 1628.49).

Finance was strong today (REIT’s are contained within the larger finance sector) clocking in up 1.7% while energy lost 0.39% and was the lagging sector of the day.

CNBC keeps holding their on-air debates about the Cash-for-Clunkers program and I think they are holding auditions to eventually find the world’s two dumbest people to talk this one out.  I am not sure how many more times I need to hear the pro-clunker tell me that free money is very popular these days while acting surprised that everyone else does not see the wisdom of their position.  The con-clunker argues that this is wasted money and nothing but a continuance of the auto sector bailout and then the pro-clunker says, again, ‘But it’s a hit!’  ‘It works!’  It is like nothing else has worked for the current Administration and they are planting the flag on this one like it is a stroke of genius as those of us that are not buying a car sit here in amazement as we watch our tax money fly out the window in all new and creative ways.  What will those crazy Democrats think of next?  This could be the world’s most entertaining reality TV show if it were not so REAL and so EXPENSIVE.  It is unbelievable that pair after pair of these talking heads completely miss each others point and everyone calls this program ’stimulus’ but isn’t this exactly what we used to criticize Bernanke with when we called him Helicopter Ben?  They are just throwing the money out the window here and surprise!  A lot of it is ending up supporting sales for a very heavily unionized industry.  Obama’s buddies – the Unions over at Government Motors and throughout the auto parts industry.

While the Democrats in Washington crow about their favorite new free money program and run around finding a few billion dollars more for it the overall tax revenues for the federal government have dropped off a cliff faster than you can say ‘I got laid of today’.  Methinks this is all going to end badly and by that I mean what Geithner and Summers would not rule out this past weekend.  Can you say across the board tax hike?