Financials Weak and Dow 10,000 No More

By Robert Perrego, at 5:06 pm on February 8th, 2010

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid steadily all afternoon closing down 103.84 points today (-1.03%, 9,908.39) and closed below 10,000 for the first time since November 4th of last year.  All but 2 of the 30 components were losers today with the three weakest stocks all being finance related companies.  Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) dropped 3.46% (-$0.52, $14.48), American Express Co. (NYSE: AXP) lost 2.80% (-$1.06, $36.79) and the Travelers Companies Inc. (NYSE: TRV) finished lower in the red by 2.44% (-$1.23, $49.05).  Home Depot Inc. (NYSE: HD) was the strongest of the Dow components gaining 2.18% and also up were home builders Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN) +4.62%, Beazer Homes USA Inc. (NYSE: BZH) +3.64% and Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM) +2.29%.

The S&P 500 dropped 9.45 points (-0.89%, 1,056.74) and the Nasdaq 100 was down 11.24 points (-0.64%, 1,734.88) and was the leader by being the smallest loser.

I guess the sky stopped falling over in Europe as the euro stabilized against the dollar and Greece was mentioned by the talking heads on CNBC slightly less than the babbling about former Merrill Lynch & Co. chief John Thain getting a new job over at CIT Group Inc.  Various cures for what ails Greece have been proposed from applying for loans from the International Monetary Fund to getting more on their credit card from other EU members.  I vote the EU members bail the EU members out as we pay into the IMF and the chances of Greece paying that money back anytime soon with a strike or protest every other day does not look to good to me.  The Greeks are proud of the fact they invented democracy and the rest of the world is pretty happy they gave it to us, but constantly striking, protesting and having your voice heard pays less taxes than actually going to work.

The dollar slipped marginally, but stayed up at level it has not seen since August of last year.  With the dollar at this relatively high level and basically scared up a tree by the crisis in Greece (and other countries), commodities are looking like a bargain if you think the dollar will come back down when (if) Europe stabilizes.

New York spot gold lost $2.70 an ounce and last traded at $1,062.30 (-0.25%, 4:24 p.m.) as this percentage loss outperforms the 1%+ the DJIA lost.  CNBC has had gold up all day over $10 an ounce and I am guessing the futures contract they are watching is longer dated than the spot market.  If you are invested in or trading the gold ETF’s you will find that they correlate more closely with the spot market than whatever CNBC decides to display.

Oil gained $0.48 to $71.65 a barrel (+0.65%, 4:27 p.m.) as the steep slide down from last Wednesday’s peak is halted.  Oil reversed in this general neighborhood last December with the United States Oil Fund (NYSE: USO) bottoming at $35.48 on December 11th before running up to $41.17 on January 8th (+16%).  For all you channel and range traders out there, today’s close at $35.09 does hit short term bottoms from last December, September and August.

We have a relatively light economic calendar this week with no speeches or testifying for Timothy Geithner.  Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke testifies in front of the house Financial Services Committee on Wednesday about how he is going to let all the air out of the liquidity balloon without crushing job creation (like that is happening now anyway).  As long as I don’t hear ‘then we pray’, it sounds like a plan to me.  Ben is a pretty smart guy and the fact that our economically challenged politicians are going to quiz him on whatever he decides to do and then possibly even understand his answer is comical.

Tomorrow at 7:45 a.m. we have the ICSC-Goldman Store Sales, at 8:55 a.m. we get the Redbook and Wholesale Trade numbers come out at 10.

Selected earnings estimates for Tuesday, February 9th:

AGU 0.24, AFG 0.98 after the close, BIDU 1.68 atc, BJS 0.04, CAM 0.53, CHD 0.80 before market open, CVH 0.56 bmo, EOG 0.98 atc, IT 0.26 bmo, IFF 0.62 bmo, LGF -0.23 atc, MLM 0.33, TAP 1.10, NYX 0.48 bmo, PCH 0.04 bmo, PHM -0.19 bmo, RNR 2.50 atc, TIN 0.03 bmo, KO 0.67 bmo, VSH 0.12 bmo, VMC -0.01, DIS 0.39 atc, XL 0.70 atc

The Market Today – Sell, Sell, Sell! Buy, Buy Buy!

By Robert Perrego, at 5:08 pm on February 5th, 2010

After taking a beating yesterday and closing a mere 4 points off its low, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was looking very weak coming into today’s open.  Worries about the situation in Greece, Portugal and Spain had bubbled over into the U.S. equity markets as money ran to the safety of the dollar causing a sharp sell-off in stocks.  Even with this morning’s unemployment headline number dropping from 10% to 9.7%, the market opened and proceeded to continue selling off.  It looked like the bottom was nowhere in sight as nervous investors started pulling the ripcord on holdings.

Sell, Sell, Sell Mortimer!

And then at 1:59 p.m.

Buy, Buy Buy Randolph!  Buy it all!

The DJIA bottomed at 9835.09 (-167.09, -1.67%) at 1:59 p.m., which just happened to be the exact same minute that the PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) peaked at $23.77.  For anyone that thinks the carry trade is not a factor, think again.  As the market and the dollar are trading inversely these days, looking at the charts shows you have a hammer in stocks, and a shooting star in the dollar.  The market bottomed at 1:59 but that was not the buy signal unless you cleanly picked the bottom as Randolph and Mortimer might have if they got the real orange juice report.  The buy signal came at about 3:00 p.m., when the DJIA broke up through the intra-day downtrend line that had been putting a lid on stocks since the sell-off began yesterday after the open.

At about 3:00 p.m. the market fired higher and the volume on the S&P 500 ETF (NYSE: SPY) spiked as you could almost see traders hitting the buy button to cover their short positions from yesterday.  The S&P 500 jumped from 1,051 to 1,064 in under 15 minutes and the DJIA ripped from 9,890 to 9,999 – 109 points straight up and the rally was on!

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 10.05 points (+0.10%, 10,012.23) after being off as much as 167 during the day.  This is only 10 points on the day but a victory nonetheless as the sell-off was reversed.  The S&P 500 gained 1.91 points (+0.19%, 1,065.15) and the Nasdaq 100 logged the biggest gain today up 13.13 Mockingbird Lane points (+0.75%, 1,746.12)

Nymex crude traded below $70 and was down $3.64 a barrel before bouncing back with the decline in the dollar and was trading $71.74 (-$1.40, -1.91%) at 4:10 p.m.

Gold finished strong after being weak in the morning.  New York spot gold gained 80 cents ($1,064, 4:21 p.m.) an ounce and once again held support at $1,060.  Gold also put in a nice hammer like stocks did, and this hammer pierced support forming what is called a ‘hammer and spring’, which is a powerful reversal indicator.  One of the guys on Fast Money was saying gold was ‘broke’ yesterday and I completely disagree.  After listening to everyone tell me for years now that gold was ‘over’ or in a ‘bubble’, I stayed put and watched the shiny yellow metal climb from the high $600’s in March of 2006 to the $720 bottoming out in November of 2008 to $1,060 now.  I guess I was wrong and up 55%.  Gold has pulled back from the $1200 peak but there is no direction but up if that $1.56 trillion budget deficit gets passed.  It is all about macroeconomics at this point – the one investing wave that might take awhile to play out, but is virtually unstoppable.

Looking at the Tracked.com Industries page we see that the strongest sector today was Metals, up 3.42%.  In this sector are the gold, copper, iron, aluminum, etc… producing companies and they got supercharged as traders are betting that the intra-day top in the dollar today will be the top for awhile.  When you see the market finish up a quarter of a percent (S&P 500) after being down big, and the metals rip for multiple percentage points, what you are seeing is traders trying to get on the commodities train which means they expect weakness in the dollar.  How much worse can the news get on the euro and in Greece anyway?

By buying the companies that mine and produce gold and copper, you get levered to the price of the commodity and ‘buy it cheap.’  If gold is selling for $1,064 on the commodities exchange and you buy a gold miner that digs it out of the ground for $350 dollars an ounce, you are in effect buying gold a lot cheaper than if you bought gold.

This week the DJIA (-55, -0.55%) finished off better than last week (-129, -1.26%).  Last week finished down but finished off better than the week before that (-437, -4.12%).  We are still losing ground, but the pace of the decline is slowing.  Always try to look at the silver lining. (I have friends that might fall over if they ever heard me say that)

Want more good news?  It is Friday afternoon!  Go have a great weekend!

Greece Dropkicks the Euro, Bad Debt is Back!

By Robert Perrego, at 5:38 pm on February 4th, 2010

In 2008 and 2009 we had toxic bundled up mortgage debt and the toxic debt of financial companies and derivatives clobbering the market.  Then we hit a speed bump on the way to the Dow Jones Industrial Average bouncing to 10,729 and that was the toxic debt of a multi-billion dollar real estate company in Dubai.  Now we are getting to the major league of toxic debt – sovereign debt.  Money ran to the safety of the dollar and Treasury bonds today, or it might be more appropriate to say that money was running away from the Euro and the sovereign debt of Greece, Portugal and Spain today.

How does this affect stocks here in the United States?  For almost a year now, as the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates to near zero to prop up our faltering economy, huge dollar carry trades have been made.  The ‘carry trade cowboys’ have been shorting the dollar and buying stocks and commodities.  This is the linkage – as the dollar jumped higher today on money flooding out of Europe, the short positions in the dollar got squeezed and forced to buy in or cover.  When you short a financial instrument, you are selling it to someone and the money they pay for it is given to you.  Now the cowboys to buy their dollar shorts in and in order to do this, they are raising money by selling their stocks and commodities they bought with the short proceeds.

You didn’t think last year’s massive rally was based upon economic fundamentals did you?  Company earnings?  Other than a slightly repaired banking system, the economy is still in deep weeds with 10%+ unemployment.  About the only economic numbers that have been changing for the United States is that unemployment and our debt has been going up.  This has been happening globally and the weaker economic countries like Greece are to the point where no one wants to lend them any more money.  If a lender shows up, they want to oversee how the money is spent and to make sure budgets are adhered to, etc…  You can think of this as an intervention if you like.

Have you ever seen the person an intervention is called for happy?  The people of Greece are not too happy as they see this intervention, or meddling, of the European Union as objectionable.  To be more precise they see the EU/Greek Governments plan of freezing their budgets and no pay raises as objectionable, and as a highly unionized country, they are going on strike.  This certainly does not help tax collection and so on and on it goes, the vicious circle of an economy you certainly don’t want to be lending money to.  So you sell Greek bonds, you sell the Euro as Greece is not the only member country this is happening to, you notice that the other EU countries have loaned Greece a lot of money so you sell them too.

When you sell the euro you buy the dollar, causing the cowboys to sell stocks and commodities driving down stock markets around the world.  Looking around you see that the only market going up is Treasury bonds, the ultimate instrument of investing safety and the port in the storm.  Then you notice Moody’s (the credit rating agency that pretty much missed the entire credit crisis – they went fishing I guess) is warning the United States about their credit rating.  Uh oh.

Crash!  Bang!  Ouch!

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 268.37 points today (-2.61%, 10,002.18) and broke their support level at 10,090 mentioned here in past ‘Wraps’.  Next support level is at 9,820.  The S&P 500 fell 34.17 points (-3.11%, 1,063.11) breaking support at 1,070 with the next support level at 1,046 (200 day EMA).  The Nasdaq 100 closed lower by 51.71 points (-2.88%, 1,732.99) and is right on support at 1,730 with next level down at 1,674 (200 day EMA).

The PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) made a new high for 2010 gaining 0.64% (+$0.15, $23.55) as the CurrencyShares Euro trust ETF (NYSE: FXE) got hit for 1.11% (-$1.55, $137.16).

Commodities got clobbered as well with New York spot gold dropping $46.90 an ounce (-4.23%, 4:17 p.m.) but held support of $1,060 (mentioned in previous posts).  They are selling everything but Treasuries so covering shorts for gold here is not a bad idea but I would wait until the dust clears a little to establish new long gold positions.  Nymex crude got smoked, dropping $3.97 a barrel (-5.16%, 4:08 p.m.) to $73.01.

The 10-year Treasury rose 30 ticks (30/32) to $98 8/32 with the yield dropping to 3.59%.  The 30-year jumped $1 26/32, almost two handles (2 points), to $97 18/32 as yields dropped 11.5 basis points to 4.52%.  These are big moves for the bond market.

London -2.17%, Paris -2.75%, Frankfurt -2.45%, Tokyo -0.46%, Hong Kong -1.84%, Sydney -0.62%, and India was up 2.06%.  I have no idea why India was up – maybe they shorted Greek bonds.  Asia did not get hit as hard as their exchanges closed before the selling really started.  Most likely, they will catch up going down tomorrow.

Everything got sold.  Bad Debt is back!

Want more bad news?  Tomorrow we get the Employment Situation number at 8:30 a.m. and the consensus estimate is we did not lose any jobs in January.  I will believe that when I see it.  The overall percentage is expected to come in at 10.1%, which is an uptick from the current 10% level.

Bad Debt is Back! Greece Dropkicks the Euro

By Robert Perrego, at 5:07 pm on February 4th, 2010

In 2008 and 2009 we had toxic bundled up mortgage debt and the toxic debt of financial companies and derivatives clobbering the market.  Then we hit a speed bump on the way to the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s 2009 bounce back to 10,729, and that was the toxic debt of a multi-billion dollar real estate company in Dubai.  Now we are getting to the major league of toxic debt – sovereign debt.  Money ran to the safety of the dollar and Treasury bonds today, or it might be more appropriate to say that money was running away from the Euro and the sovereign debt of Greece, Portugal and Spain today.

How does this affect stocks here in the United States?  For almost a year now, as the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates to near zero to prop up our faltering economy, huge dollar carry trades have been made.  The ‘carry trade cowboys’ have been shorting the dollar and buying stocks and bonds.  This is the linkage – as the dollar jumped higher today on money flooding out of Europe, the short positions in the dollar got squeezed and forced to buy in or cover.  When you short a financial instrument, you are selling it to someone and the money they pay for it is given to you.  These ‘cowboys’ have been using this money to buy stocks and commodities.  Now they need to buy their dollar shorts in and in order to do this, they are raising money by selling stocks and commodities.

You didn’t think last year’s massive rally was based upon economic fundamentals did you?  Company earnings?  Other than a slightly repaired banking system, the economy is still in deep weeds with 10%+ unemployment.  About the only economic numbers that have been changing for the United States is that unemployment and our debt has been going up.  This has been happening globally and the weaker economic countries like Greece are to the point where no one wants to lend them any more money.  If a lender shows up, they want to oversee how the money is spent and to make sure budgets are adhered to, etc…  You can think of this as an intervention if you like.

Have you ever seen the person an intervention is called for happy?  The people of Greece are not too happy as they see this intervention, or meddling, of the European Union as objectionable.  To be more precise they see the EU/Greek Governments plan of freezing their budgets and no pay raises as objectionable, and as a highly unionized country, they are going on strike.  This certainly does not help tax collection and so on and on it goes, the vicious circle of an economy you certainly don’t want to be lending money to.  So you sell Greek bonds, you sell the Euro as Greece is not the only member country this is happening to, you notice that the other EU countries have loaned Greece a lot of money so you sell them too.

When you sell the euro you buy the dollar, causing the cowboys to sell stocks and commodities driving down stock markets around the world.  Looking around you see that the only market going up is Treasury bonds, the ultimate instrument of investing safety and the port in the storm.  Then you notice Moody’s (the credit rating agency that pretty much missed the entire credit crisis – they went fishing) is warning the United States about their credit rating.  Uh oh.

Crash!  Bang!  Ouch!

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 268.37 points today (-2.61%, 10,002.18) and broke their support level at 10,090 mentioned here in past ‘Wraps’.  Next support level is at 9,820.  The S&P 500 fell 34.17 points (-3.11%, 1,063.11) breaking support at 1,070 with the next support level at 1,046 (200 day EMA).  The Nasdaq 100 closed lower by 51.71 points (-2.88%, 1,732.99) and is right on support at 1,730 with next level down at 1,674 (200 day EMA).

The PowerShares DB US Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) made a new high for 2010 gaining 0.64% (+$0.15, $23.55) as the CurrencyShares Euro trust ETF (NYSE: FXE) got hit for 1.11% (-$1.55, $137.16).

Commodities got clobbered as well with New York spot gold dropping $46.90 an ounce (-4.23%, 4:17 p.m.) but held support of $1,060 (mentioned in previous posts).  They are selling everything but Treasuries so covering shorts for gold here is not a bad idea but I would wait until the dust clears a little to establish new long gold positions.  Nymex crude got smoked, dropping $3.97 a barrel (-5.16%, 4:08 p.m.) to $73.01.

The 10-year Treasury rose 30 ticks (30/32) to $98 8/32 with the yield dropping to 3.59%.  The 30-year jumped $1 26/32, almost two handles (2 points), to $97 18/32 as yields dropped 11.5 basis points to 4.52%.  These are big moves for the bond market.

London -2.17%, Paris -2.75%, Frankfurt -2.45%, Tokyo -0.46%, Hong Kong -1.84%, Sydney -0.62%, and India was up 2.06%.  I have no idea why India was up – maybe they shorted Greek bonds.  Asia did not get hit as hard as their exchanges closed before the selling really started.  Most likely, they will catch up going down tomorrow.

Everything got sold.  Bad Debt is back!

Want more bad news?  Tomorrow we get the Employment Situation number at 8:30 a.m. and the consensus estimate is we did not lose any jobs in January.  I will believe that when I see it.  The overall percentage is expected to come in at 10.1%, which is an uptick from 10%.

Wall Street Wrap – Economic Reports Hammer the Market, Gold Shines $1,000 again

By Robert Perrego, at 5:08 pm on September 30th, 2009

The bullish momentum of the stock market ran into a variety of economic reports today, causing sizable swings in the market on the last day of September trading.  The market sold off hard at 9:45 a.m. sparked by a poor number from the Chicago PMI.  In August the PMI reached 50.0, which is the balance point between expansion and contraction, but the number for September dropped to 46.1, well below the lowest estimate of 48.5.  Gold was the best performing asset of the day, jumping $15.20 an ounce, with Eldorado Gold Corp. (NYSE: EGO) the biggest gainer (+3.35%) of the larger gold mining companies as the dollar got hit mostly on a stronger euro.

The day started with the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) Purchase Applications falling 6.2% and refinancing activity dropping 0.8%, despite a very low current rate of 4.94% for a 30 year loan.  Next the ADP Employment report showed a loss of 254,000 jobs in the private sector when a 200,000 number was expected.  The lone star of hope came in with the GDP revision for the second quarter.  The previously reported number was a loss of 1% and expectations were that the number would be revised down in the range of -1.5% to -1.0%.  The revision was to the upside with the latest number for Q2 GDP reported at -0.7%, and the pre-market futures strengthened into the open.

At 9:45 a.m. as the market traded slightly higher, the other shoe dropped with the PMI coming in low causing the Dow to drop as much as 147 points within the next 20 minutes.  The bargain hunters and bottom pickers came into the market by 10 a.m. and the market started to slowly trade up for the next 3 hours, with the Dow going positive at 1 p.m.  The wild ride was not over as the market sold off suddenly at 2:45 p.m. with a 90 point drop within 30 minutes only to rebound and finally close down just 29.92 points (-0.30%, 9712.28).

The S&P 500 was on the same wild ride and ended up losing 3.53 points (-0.33%, 1057.08) with the star of the day, the Nasdaq 100, actually gaining 1.32 points (+0.07%, 1718.99).

The European Central Bank lent only 75.2 billion euros at their benchmark rate of 1% to participating banks, after making loans as high as a record 442 billion in June.  Banks bid for how much they think they need to borrow and this relatively low number showed strength in the EU which caused the euro to gain against the dollar.  The PowerShares Deutsche Bank Dollar Bull ETF (NYSE: UUP) dropped 13 cents for a 0.56% loss after gaining in 4 of the last 5 trading days.  This dollar drop energized gold and oil, as gold regained the $1,000 level and oil broke above $70 a barrel.

The economic calendar can get more brutal this week, with numbers for August domestic Motor Vehicle Sales (Thursday expected 8.0M expected), Personal Income and Outlays (Thurs. 8:30 a.m. 0.1%, 1.1% exp.), Jobless Claims (Thurs. 8:30 a.m. -537K exp.), ISM Manufacturing Index (Thurs. 10 a.m. 53.5 exp.), Construction Spending (Thurs. 10 a.m. -0.1% exp.), Factory Orders (Friday 10 a.m. 1.0% exp.) and last but certainly not least the Employment Situation report (Fri. 8:30 a.m. -170K) that could show the unemployment rate increased to as high as 9.9%.  Let’s face it – all these areas have been problem areas with a capital ‘P’ for the last year.

The VIX was up 1.66% on today’s wild ride and with these numbers coming in tomorrow and Friday along with a new trading month – hang on, it could get bumpy.