Gold Moves Higher, Tech Dips

By Robert Perrego, at 10:44 am on November 21st, 2009

Last week saw gold trade another all time high while the overall market inched higher.  The tech sector, as represented by the Nasdaq 100, performed the worst with a weak day on Thursday accounting for most of the loss.  A downgrade of eight stocks in the semiconductor industry, which affected $126 billion in market cap, caused leader Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC) to lose over 4%.  The downgrade came on a day that saw the Mortgage Bankers Association report that 14.4% of all homes with a mortgage were either at least one month delinquent on their mortgage payments or in foreclosure, an all time high.

The Dow Jones industrial Average gained 0.46% this week while the S&P 500 lost 0.19%.  The Nasdaq 100 moved the most, but in the wrong direction, slipping 1.35%.  Gold continued its march higher with a 2.9% gain for the week and an all time high close on Friday.

The week started with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke speaking to the Economic Club of New York.  The dollar peaked this year as the stock market bottomed in March, but has been dropping steadily ever since.  Bernanke controls short term interest rates and this interest rate has a lot to do with the strength of the dollar as denominated in other currencies.  The Fed is in a tight spot here as unemployment is above 10% and if you have noticed an ‘economic recovery’ you are one of the few.  The stock market has rebounded enough to be put in the same sentence as ‘bubble‘, and GDP stopped dropping like a stone, but for most the country times are tough.  The dollar is inherently political too.  If Bernanke defended the dollar by raising rates with the 2010 elections a year out, any negative effect this could have on the ‘economic recovery’ might get him fired.

Bernanke gave the all clear signal to people shorting the dollar, stating that interest rates were to remain low for the foreseeable future.  The dovish interest rate stance Bernanke gave fired up the bulls and they started shorting the dollar and buying stocks.  The Dow Jones rose 136 points and the market broke out to new 2009 highs.

Tuesday and Wednesday saw little movement in the market indexes as San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen commented to her audience in Hong Kong about whether or not The Fed should get involved with the financial markets.  Obama’s visit to China, and his pledge to ask that the yuan be appreciated, centers on the dollar again.  There are more than a few Chinese officials that are blaming the very low interest rates here in the U.S. with creating bubbles in real estate and the market IN CHINA!

On Wednesday the Mortgage Bankers Association came knocking with their first set of bad numbers.  Purchase Applications came in below expectations as no houses being sold means no mortgages applied for.  New York Spot Gold traded an all time high of $1,153.90 an ounce.

Before the open on Thursday, Merrill Lynch downgraded the semiconductor sector and the Mortgage Bankers were back with that huge 14.4% number.  The market plunged off the open and by 11 a.m. the Dow Jones Industrial Average was trading 10,256, down over 150 points.  The market crept back and with a spike up at the end of the trading day losses were cut to less than 100 points.  Microsoft came out with an update on Windows 7, stating that sales were at a record pace.  Then something strange happened… on Thursday the dollar rose AND so did gold.

Thursday after the close Dell Inc. (NSDQ: DELL) reported weak earnings.  This added more selling  pressure to the tech sector after Thursday’s semiconductor rout and Friday opened with a gap down in the market.  The market traded lower until about 11 a.m. but then trended upwards for the rest of the day.  By the close of the day the Dow Jones Industrial Index had pared its loss to 14 points .  The dollar rose again on Friday and the PowerShares DB US Dollar Index (NYSE: UUP) gained 0.54% on the week.

This gave gold a 2.9% gain on the week and the dollar tacked on 0.54%.  For the most part, the dollar and gold are inversely related as gold is traded in dollars.  The dollar carry trade has linked gold to the market as the carry trade cowboys are shorting the dollar to buy the market, and to buy gold.  These days if the market is up so is gold and if the market is up the dollar is down.

This week the dollar was up, gold was up and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up.  The broader S&P 500 was down slightly so the inverse dollar-market relationship held.  Gold moved higher on two days that the dollar moved higher.  Strange things like this can happen when you reach an all time high as it sometimes seems all everyone says is ‘gold, gold, gold’.  While a mania might be building around gold and one of the other things you hear with gold is ‘bubble’ bubble, bubble’, the fact that central bankers from Russia to Mauritania to Chile are buyers tells me all I need to know.  Gold is going higher.

Semiconductor Downgrade and Mortgage Numbers Drop the Market

By Robert Perrego, at 4:29 pm on November 19th, 2009

Merrill Lynch downgraded eight stocks in the semiconductor sector and lousy numbers out of the Mortgage Bankers Association added up to a down day for the stock market.  The downgraded semiconductor companies had a cumulative market cap of $126 billion and that is a lot of money to everyone but the United States Congress.  The downgraded companies included Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC), Texas Instruments Inc. (NYSE: TXN) and Marvel Technology Group Ltd. (NSDQ: MRVL).  The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that 14.4% of all homes with a mortgage are either in foreclosure or delinquent in Q3, which works out to 1 in 7 mortgages being at least one month behind on their payments.  This is an all time high count for home owners not being able to hack the monthly house payment.

Intel dropped 82 cents (-4.07%, $19.30), Texas Instruments lost 87 cents (-3.37%, $24.88) and Marvel slid 82 cents (-5.09%, $15.27)

This took the Dow Jones Industrial Index down 93.87 points (-0.90%, 10.332.4) as a rising dollar also pressured big cap international companies and commodity and materials stocks.  The S&P 500 lost 14.90 points (-1.34%, 1,094.90) and the tech heavy Nasdaq 100 was knocked down 28.55 points (-1.58%, 1,773.19)

Bill Gross, bond fund manager extraordinaire, wrote “Raise interest rates with 15 million jobless and 25 million part-time working Americans?  All because gold is above $1,100?  You must be joking or smoking – something.”  It seems every person that pontificates on the economy is coming up with the same conclusion lately, this being that interest rates are not going up for quite some time, jobs will be slow to come back, and basically we’re screwed.  Keeping rates this low may result in a problem with inflation in the future and everyone sees an asset bubble at every turn.  Ahhhh, good times.

30-year Mortgage rates are below 5%, the first time home buyer tax credit has been extended and still no homes are being sold.  Worse yet, no one seems to have a job and everyone forgot how to get that check into the mail on time.

So what is going up?  Gold, oil, copper, sugar, coal, etc…  Pretty much anything you can hold, that is not backed by the U.S. Government.  The U.S. Treasury stamp is unidirectionally down so badly, that if you stamped it on an ounce of gold it would probably be worth 5% less automatically.  It is even possible that if you hold a hula hoop long enough you can sell it as scrap plastic at a profit.

If you are unemployed here is a hot tip – move to New Jersey’s 5th Congressional District.  Recent tracking of the economic stimulus dollars have shown that they created 4.5 jobs there at a cost of $75.2 million.  I put my resume in this morning – that is a $16.67 million paycheck.  Don’t ask me how they created half a job, but I will take half that salary!

Think positive.  Microsoft is selling Windows 7 at a record pace in their first month of sales.  CEO Steve Ballmer says sales are running twice as fast as past releases of Windows .  This may be because Vista was not well received at all and buyers have been waiting for ‘7′ for years now.

More good news.  House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) announced that if the ‘trader tax’ is enacted it must be international.  Recognizing that a lot of hedge fund and international bank trading business will flee overseas, Pelosi lengthened the odds this tax sees my, or your, wallets.  Pinch me, I must be dreaming.

Again gold hung tough in the face of a rising dollar.  The dollar was up 0.31% and New York Spot Gold still gained 90 cents an ounce to $1,144.30.  Nymex crude cracked and gave back recent gains, dropping $2.12 a barrel (-2.65%, $77.73, 4:01 p.m.) on economic weakness as people not working or paying their mortgages will stop buying a lot of gas any second now.

Well I will leave you on an upbeat note; there are no economic releases tomorrow and we have an NFL game on TV tonight.  If you are in the State of California, watch it on your big screen now while you can.  Believe it or not, the brilliant politicians who have created a $21 billion budget deficit, just outlawed most large screen TV’s in the Golden State to save money.  I have two words for you all – ‘budget cuts’.

Knowing this and how much the government is paying in the 5th District in Jersey, I would actually rather move to New Jersey than California these days.