Market Bounces Back as Bernanke Promises Low Rates

By Robert Perrego, at 5:01 pm on February 24th, 2010

Last week the Federal Reserve raised the discount rate to 0.75% sparking fears that the federal funds rate might be next in line for a hike.  JP Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) gained 2.43% and Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) added 2.44% to lead the Dow Jones Industrial Average higher on the day.  The market spiked higher just after 10 a.m. – minutes after Fed Chairman Bernanke began two days of testimony in front of a congressional panel.  As Bernanke stressed that last week’s move did not mean the federal funds rate was going higher anytime soon, stocks responded strongly, pushing the DJIA higher by almost 90 points within 25 minutes.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average regained some of yesterday’s lost ground closing higher by 91.75 points (+0.89%, 10,374.16).  The S&P 500 added 10.64 points (+0.97%, 1,812.51) and the tech heavy Nasdaq 100 led the three indexes, up 18.69 points (+1.04%, 1,812.51)

The finance sector responded strongly as Bernanke spoke and on news that key senators are opposed to limits on commercial banks making bets with their own capital.  More trading news was made today as an SEC panel voted 3-2 to limit short selling on a down-tick on stocks that are down more than 10% on a day.  The new rule would make short positions only able to be entered on an uptick if a stock is down over 10% from its previous daily close in one day, and for all of the next trading day.  Quite frankly, this rule change is more for political cover for the SEC as they try to look like they are doing something.  The markets dropped drastically last year and all of a sudden, people looking for someone to blame pointed fingers at short sellers and the SEC.

The Effects of Short Selling

Fact is, short-selling adds liquidity to the market and just like with any trade, if the short-seller is wrong they can lose money.  An all to common public perception that short sellers cause stocks to go down too much is unfounded as there has to be a reason to bet that stock is going lower in the first place.  Short sellers will put a short position on if they think the stock is too expensive.  Some reasons for this might be that the company’s fundamentals are bad, the economy is headed lower or the stock has risen too far, too fast.

A way to think about short selling is; 1) Stocks are competing with each other for invest-able funds, and those that have better reason to be invested in get those funds and go higher, 2) Current investors in short-seller favored stocks may sell them to buy the more attractive stock, 3) The company that loses this invest-able funds ‘popularity contest’ are judged to be weaker and with no buying interest to counter-act regular selling, the stock goes lower, 4) On their own, short sellers would not be able to push a stock lower, as they have to ‘buy-in’ these shorts sooner or later, creating a ‘built-in’ demand for the stock.  Only the sellers of ‘long stock’ can sell the stock and walk away.  The short sellers have to be there to buy the stock back in and are nothing but future demand potential for that stock.

So if short selling cannot, by itself, make a stock go down, what is the SEC actually accomplishing here?  As long as their is sufficient liquidity in a stock, short selling is not the reason a stock is going down.  The SEC dropped the ball on policing ‘naked short selling.’  Naked short sales increase the supply of an issuer’s (company’s) effective outstanding stock, and is also illegal.  A lot of people should either be in jail right now, or should have paid large fines made money on naked short selling over the past few years.  If the SEC had done their job properly with the naked short sellers they would not be trying to save face right now by tinkering with legitimate short selling.  Period.

New York spot gold dropped $6.80 an ounce to $1,096.70 (-0.62%, 4:30 p.m.) and Nymex crude regained the $80 a barrel plateau, up $1.31 to $80.17 a barrel (+1.66%, 4:23 p.m.).  The PowerShares DB US Dollar Index (NYSE: UUP) dropped 0.20% (-$0.05, $23.76) and this throws a red flag.  Gold dropped and is acting weak while the dollar is dropping, which says to me gold has internal weakness.

Looking at the chart of the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (NYSE: GLD) we see that it failed to take out the resistance level at $111 and has rolled over and traded down to $107.36.  The stochastic oscillator looks to be topping out and rolling lower too.  The GLD did break the downtrend line from it’s all time high and this is a positive.  The next technical test for the GLD will be to see if it closes below $104 (twice in a row).  If this happens we have a lower low and strong trading stocks do not do that.  I suspect the ETF is going to trade sideways for awhile and consolidate.  The GLD will head down to $104 and flirt with breaking it – if it breaks for two consecutive sub $104 closes that is a sell signal.  If it holds and starts to head back up – buy more.

Market Up on Strengthening Consumer Data

By Robert Perrego, at 5:25 pm on December 11th, 2009

Retail Sales for November were released at 8:30 this morning and sent the pre-market futures higher.  The Retail Sales month-over-month change was expected to come in up 0.9% and the range was 0.6% to 1.2%.  The actual number came in even above the range at 1.3% and it looks like the consumer is not dead, or too unemployed, to shop.  Then at 9:55, the Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index was released and this number beat expectations by a large amount (73.4 vs. 67.4).  These two numbers seemed to confirm each other as the Dow Jones Industrial Average opened higher and never looked back.  The big mover in the DJIA was Alcoa Inc. (NYSE: AA), up 8.22% today (+$1.11, $14.61).  JP Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) upped their price target on Alcoa to $25 from $22 and it looks like some players got caught short.

The market finished ’split’ as the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+65.67, +0.63 %, 10,471.50) and S&P 500 (+4.06, +0.63%, 1,106.41) closed higher while the Nasdaq 100 finished lower (-7.31, -0.40%, 1,792.06).  The DJIA closed less than one point from closing at a new 2009 high, gaining 82.6 points (+0.80%) on the week.  The broader S&P 500 was basically flat on the week gaining less than a point and the Nasdaq 100 added 7.46 points this week, which is a 0.42% gain.

It was not all good news out of Washington D.C. as a financial reform package cleared the House.  You wouldn’t be risking much if you bet that whatever is in this new raft of regulations, our brilliant politicians will be regulating for the last problem and not the next one.  The last big set of regulations created mark-to-market after Enron and their ilk cooked their books, and some of the ’solutions’ for the last problem had to be suspended in March as the ‘market’ mortgage bonds were being marked to, was not functioning.  Of course, Barney Frank (D-Mass) was on TV blaming the Republicans for pretty much everything he could and going on about how this new set of regulations would fix everything.  Sorry Barney, I am not buying it.  I have seen this movie too many times before.

The dollar had a strong day and the market was up!  This has not happened too often as of late, as the carry trade has caused a reverse correlation between these two.  The Dollar Index Future was up 50 cents or 0.66% to $76.55.  This rising dollar took its toll on the commodity space as oil and gold both dropped.  New York Spot Gold dropped $15.40 an ounce (-1.36%, $1,114.40, 4:48 p.m.) on the stronger dollar.  The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD) closed down $1.50, its sixth negative day in a row, and is now $9.86 off its all time high close.  The GLD traded as low as $108.72 today, which was 35 cents above its 200-day exponential moving average.  Most analysts and traders are bullish long term on gold and talk about buying the dip.  Moving averages act as support and if this 200-day holds, the GLD is near the bottom of its ‘dip’.

Nymex crude broke down through the $70 level as it is currently trading $69.60 a  barrel (-$0.67, -0.95%, 4:54).  This is the eighth straight losing session for oil with many talking heads naming the rising dollar as the culprit.

Well, it took over a year but it finally happened.  CNBC published a story today discussing a value-added tax and a national sales tax.  Why this took so long is a mystery to me as every politician in the country seems to be running around spending like a drunken sailor during the day and dreaming up new taxes on soda, the number of miles you drive and whatever you currently have in your back pocket at night.  Nothing I like better than more taxes seeing as I live in New York City, one of the highest taxed places in the country.  One day a few of these politicians might wake up and maybe take an economics course or buy a clue.  If this keeps up, all the people working hard at their jobs for less and less money as they are being taxed to death from every direction, may actually decide a welfare check, day time soap operas and government cheese looks like a stress free life and a good time.  Then who would we tax?

Have a great weekend.