The Fed Presidents and The G20 Clear the Way

By Robert Perrego, at 9:00 am on November 14th, 2009

Low interest rates may percolate some future inflation for us, but one other thing they bring is higher asset prices.  This Week on Wall Street saw gold trade a new all time high and all three major indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100, traded new 2009 highs.  On the week, gold gained 1.96% even while the  dollar gained ground slightly and on Friday news out of Vietnam was that they were lifting restrictions on import of the precious metal.  The Nasdaq 100 was the strongest index of the week gaining 3.34% with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 2.46% and the S$&P 500 turning in a 2.26% performance.  The loser of the week was oil as weak economic reports for the U.S. tempered expected demand.

On Saturday the G20 met with the world’s central bankers agreeing to keep the mountains of economic stimulus in place, meaning low interest rates had clear sailing ahead.  This agreement powered stocks higher Monday with the Nasdaq and the Dow steaming ahead and setting 2009 highs, while the S&P 500 closed just 4 points short of its high.

On Tuesday microphones were turned on all over the country for the regional Fed Presidents.  Janet Yellen (San Francisco), Dennis Lockhart (Atlanta), Jeffrey Lacker (Richmond) and Richard Fisher (Dallas) all spoke to different venues opining that they saw, among other things, a jobless recovery and low interest rates ahead.  With the official unemployment rate at 10.2% and rising, there is a lot of pressure from both Washington D.C. and across the United States to keep interest rates low for job creation.  Telling the carry trade cowboys that interest rates are staying low is like sounding the all clear bell for shorting the dollar and buying ‘risky assets’.  When you can short the dollar at 0-0.25% and take that money to buy stocks and commodities the ‘free money’ bell goes off in these players heads and the buying starts.

Wednesday started with a bang in the gold market as Goldman upped their estimates for the precious metal to $1,200 citing their observation that the world’s central banks are becoming net buyers of gold.  China reported that their industrial production jumped 16% and the Chinese Government seems to be signaling a willingness to appreciate their currency.  This seems to be very generous of the Chinese as an appreciation of their currency means that the trillion dollar plus they are holding of the dollar is worth relatively less, but it is just good business.

It seems the Chinese have finally realized it is not all about building foreign reserves and holding dollars, but that if they have all that dollar money tied up there, it is not flowing around over here.  By appreciating the yuan and making U.S. products cheaper in China, we can export more which creates jobs here.  This causes dollars to flow back to the United States strengthening the dollar itself, jobs are created and the greatest consumers of Chinese goods get back to work.  It is called ‘international trade’ as trade means back and forth, and the imbalance that was dollars heading there and goods here is unsustainable.  Sooner or later the correcting mechanism of currency valuation is supposed to kick in and shift the flow of goods so that imbalances are corrected.  The long time pegging of the yuan to the dollar has distorted the trade balance, sucking our jobs and dollars to China.  Good business, long term sustainable business, means it is time to reverse this flow.  No good businessman puts his customers out of business and the Chinese are starting to recognize this.

Thursday saw a settlement between Intel Corp. (NSDQ: INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD) bury the legal hatchet and strike up a cross-licensing deal.  This gives AMD $1.25 billion to lighten their debt load and might get regulators off Intel’s back.  Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (NYSE: WMT) posted strong earnings but warned about the purchasing patterns they see with their customers in front of the holiday buying season.

Friday was a day all about gold and retail, with two IPOs (Dollar General and Rue 21) and earnings beats posted by J.C. Penney (NYSE: JCP) and Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE: ANF).  New York Spot Gold traded a record $1,120.30 an ounce as the dollar traded off its intra-week spike high.  Merrill Lynch upped their estimates for copper for 2010 and 2011, making the mining sector, especially the gold miners with significant copper operations, very attractive.

On Thursday after the close Walt Disney Co. (NYSE: DIS), a Dow Jones Industrial component, posted 46 cents a share which was a surprising jump in quarterly profit of 18%.  This performance pushed Disney to a 2009 high with the week closing out at 2009 highs for the indexes and many other stocks.

The index numbers are looking a lot healthier with the Dow Jones Industrial Average 2.7% above five digit 10,000 and the S&P 500 in shouting distance of 1,100.  A solid week next weak could see the Nasdaq 100 pushing 2,000 as the tech market continues its strong march higher.

For those holding gold and other commodities, the dollar weakness and the carry trade are supercharging returns.  As market players, Fed Presidents, politicians and central bankers argue about economic policy and whether or not Fed Chairman Bernanke should raise rates, the numbers in peoples stock accounts are going up.  The inflation boogeyman is hiding on the horizon somewhere and I leave you with this last link to comments by legendary investor Jim Rogers.

Enjoy your weekend.

Wall Street Wrap – The G20 puts Stocks and Commodities on Steroids

By Robert Perrego, at 5:09 pm on November 9th, 2009

On Saturday in London, finance ministers and central bankers from the world’s 20 largest economies agreed to keep the current coordinated stimulus measures in place until global economic conditions recover.  Here in the U.S., this means The Fed keeps the Fed Funds rate at near zero… as if they planned on raising them anyway.  This ‘all clear’ on the interest rate front sparked a rally in the stock market with the Dow Jones Industrial Average gaining 203.52 points on the day (+2.03%, 10,226.94) and closing at a new 2009 high.  American Express Co. (NYSE: AXP) led the charge in the Dow 30, up $1.84 (+4.94%, $39.05).

Last week after The Fed kept interest rates at 0-0.25%, their comments that the recovery was expected to be too weak to raise rates anytime soon caused a rally.  Now, with basically all the central banks agreeing to this course of action for the ‘forseeable future’, the rally took hold across the board in stocks.  This worldwide interest rate ‘all clear’ also caused the ‘carry trade cowboys’ to jump in with both boots and hit the dollar, dropping the buck to its lowest level in 15 months.  This drop in the dollar juiced commodities and the next thing you know everything is going up.

The Nasdaq 100 put in a 2009 high close, gaining 37.64 points (+2.17%, 1,768.40) while of the three, the S&P 500 is the only index that did not make a new 2009 high close, but still rose 23.78 points (+2.22%, 1,093.08).  Finance led the sector race gaining 3.48% with the consumer cyclical companies up 2.82%.

The commercial real estate market has been scheduled for execution by many a commentator on TV lately.  Today was a strong day for commercial real estate, with the iShares FTSE NAREIT Industrial/Office Corp Index (NYSE: FIO) gaining 5.48% (+$1.14, $21.94).

Gold topped $1,100 overseas before most alarm clocks even went off in New York.  New York Spot Gold traded as high as $1,110.60 an ounce before trading off to $1,103.20 (+0.57%, +$6.30, 4:12 p.m.).  The Spdr Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD) opened trading above its recent trend channel but traded off to close right at the top uptrend line, otherwise known as the ‘reaction or return line‘.

Nymex crude traded up $2.00 (+2.59%, $79.27, 4:12 p.m.) on the weak dollar as well as news that Hurricane Ida (downgraded to a tropical storm) is making landfall on U.S. gulf states.  Memories of Katrina and the resulting jump in oil and gas prices have traders a little hair triggered as far as Mother Nature in the Gulf of Mexico is concerned.

Coal led the commodity rally with the coal ETF (NYSE: KOL) up 4.82%.  Steel followed on at 4.12% (NYSE: SLX) with the gold miners ETF (NYSE: GDX) in third up 3.48%.  The copper ETF (NYSE: JJC) lagged the pack (+0.85) but finished just ahead of the agricultural ETF (NYSE: DBA) up 0.78%.

Looking forward on the Dow Jones Industrial chart, only one minor bottom resistance level at 10,365 is seen.  After 10,365, it looks like clear sailing up to 11,000 and with the latest pullback retrenching the stochastics, which are now bullish and pointing higher, it looks good for a rally into year end.

Radio Shack caught an upgrade from Credit Suisse and gained 14.26% (+2.53, $20.27) while retail was strong in front of the all important Christmas shopping season.  The S&P Retail Index was up 1.95% and closed at a 2009 high.

This looks like good news across the board, but consider that this is all happening on the back of very cheap money as the world’s central banks leave the liquidity spigot on full blast.  Many experts are already saying this is the inflation of the next bubble, something everyone so adamantly declared was a past pattern not to be continued.  Everyone likes it when the stock market goes up, but is abandoning the dollar and inflating the stock market the way to go with a jobless recovery underway?

Wall Street Wrap – Apple and the Dollar Jump, Caterpillar Creeps Back

By Robert Perrego, at 5:21 pm on October 20th, 2009

Apple Inc. (NSDQ: AAPL) handily beat earnings yesterday after the close and its stock jumped in thin after hours trading to as high as $204 a share.  Apple posted earnings of $1.82 to the $1.42 (analyst’s estimate), AND beat on revenues by $670 million, which is impressive as few companies are beating on both the top and bottom lines these days. We can give Apple the hat-trick and tip our hats here as not only did they beat analysts estimates for revenue and earnings, but they beat last years Q3 revenues ($7.9B) as they are expanding their business in a shrinking economy.

During the regular trading session today, Apple closed at $198.76 (+4.68%, +$8.90).

Dow Jones component Caterpillar Inc. (NYSE: CAT) had a good day after a surprisingly large earnings beat coming in at 64 cents a share vs. the analysts expected 6 cents.  This does not say a lot for the estimates put out by Wall Street.  The relative valuation of Caterpillar is getting a bit high if you look at the fact that they made $1.41 a share in Q3 2008 when the stock was trading in the mid 60’s.  Today, the company posts 64 cents and the stock closed at $59.61 (+3.04%, +$1.76), with a tax benefit that once you strip it out, the earnings would be about 43 cents a share.  On a relative P/E basis this makes the company 3 times as expensive today.

Overall the market was down as the Dow dropped 50.71 points (-0.50%, 10,041.48) and the S&P 500 dropped 6.85 points (-0.62%, 1091.06).  The Nasdaq 100 hung in there tough, dropping less than a point down only 0.49 (-0.02%, 1756.19) aided by Apple’s strength.  The weakest sectors today were consumer cyclicals down 1.37% and finance down 0.84%.  The tech sector was one of the few bright spots adding 0.32%.

Overall, the market was down as the recent trend of the market going opposite the dollar continues.  As mentioned in my Wall Street Wrap yesterday, the action in the dollar has been dictating where commodities and the stock market itself trade.  As the dollar gets weaker it takes more of them to buy a stock and it seems this is causing ’stock inflation’.  The PowerShares Bull Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) jumped 0.44% today (+$0.10, $22.46) as the market sold off, and the peak in intra-day trading of the UUP today at 11:45 a.m. (+0$0.16) was pretty close to the bottom in the Dow which was at 12:05 p.m. (-98.77).

Everything seems to be hinging on the dollar lately as Barron’s called for Bernanke to raise rates this weekend with their cover story.  The U.S. Government has pumped the economy liquid with dollars in response to the credit crash, and now with the dollar dropping, the amount of coverage this issue is getting seems to be non-stop.  Is all this media coverage and debate about the dollar, and what the Fed should do now, causing this liquidity and dollar issue to be so center stage that its impact is being overstated?  The stock market itself, it seems, is taking its cues from the dollar, where in the past commodities and commodity related stocks traded off the dollar through the inflation linkage.  Now, with the markets trading like a proxy inverse of the dollar, is this an implicit admission of the existence of ’stock inflation’ and of yet another bubble being pumped into the market via massive cash liquidity?

Earnings Scheduled for Tomorrow:  (AFFX, -0.09, after the close), (APD, 1.12, before the open), (ADS, 1.34), (MO, 0.47, bto), (AMGN, 1.27, atc), (CTXS, 0.41, atc), (CLB, 1.13, atc), (DST, 0.92, atc), (EBAY, 0.37, atc), (LLY, 1.02), (FCX, 1.35, bmo), (GENZ, 0.44), (KEY, -0.41, bmo), (KMP, 0.37), (NE, 1.53, atc), (PJC, 0.40, bmo), (STJ, 0.58), (BA, -2.12, bmo), (SWK, 0.62, bmo), (USB, 0.27, bmo), (WFC, 0.36, bmo)

Market Wrap – Housing and The Fed spark a Rally

By Robert Perrego, at 4:40 pm on August 12th, 2009

The Mortgage Bankers’ Association said that their purchase index rose 1.1 percent last week and Toll Brothers Inc. (NYSE: TOL) announced that their quarterly net signed contracts rose for the first time in four years.  These two positive pieces of information sent most every home builder up over 4% with Toll jumping over 14%.

Home sales are directly impacted by the cost of the mortgage used to buy the home, unless of course you have the cash money on hand to buy a home outright, with which very few people do.  So all we need now to keep this positive news flow on housing going is expectations that interest rates will stay low.  Where would we get such news?  Enter stage left – The Fed…

At 2:15 p.m. the Fed announced no change in its interest rate policy and with this one line;

The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.

BUY! BUY! BUY!

The Dow Jones Industrial Index, which was up over 100 points at the time of the announcement, got one ear on that statement and after a quick shake out move back to +107 rallied to as high +185 before finally reversing to close up only 120.16 points.  The dollar initially shot up right after the announcement but then sold off to right about where it had been trading before the announcement and the corresponding move in gold was exactly opposite that of the dollar.  Both the dollar and gold finished up where they started before the announcement.

The Fed did not change rates, the dollar and gold ended where they started, the Dow returned to where it started and rates dropped marginally.  Yawn.  Basically all that happened was that the traders gunned their race cars around the track for awhile and then went home for dinner.

At 1 p.m. the $23 billion 10-year Treasury Note auction went decently well with a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.49 vs. a 2.48 recent average and a high yield of 3.734%.  The cover ratio indicates that there was not an unusually large amount of bonds demanded and the yield was lower than where currently issued 10 year paper was trading.  This means that the government had to pay more (higher rate) to get bidders to buy their debt.  The last bid-to-cover ratio for the 10-year note was 3.28 that went at 3.365% in July.  The drop in the b-t-c and the rise in interest paid says, as far as the ten year maturity is concerned, that buyers were less interested in U.S. Government debt.  Well, those that bought into that $23 billion at 3.734% were rewarded for stepping up to the plate as after the announcement the current 10-year note traded 3.72% turning a nice little profit for the 1 p.m. buyers.

Emdeon inc. (NYSE: EM) priced their IPO at $15.50 and opened trading at $17.75.  Cramer told his audience that he liked the stock in the $13.50 to $15.50 area but not to chase the stock above $17 or so.  Well Jimmy was spot on with this one thus far.  The stock opened at $17.75 and immediately traded up to $18.24 then proceeded to roll over and close on the day low at $16.52 making every buyer on the day a loser.  Today it paid to listen to Mad Money’s mouth.

All day long with housing a front-line issue, the talking heads have been croaking about whether or not the housing market has bottomed.  I will  cast my vote right here – not a chance!  Cramer was right about Emdeon but he was dead wrong and called a housing bottom in June and prices are still dropping and have a ways to go.  The MBA index ticked up today as prices dropped and more buyers pulled the trigger.  The Toll brothers statements showed that they are selling more lower priced homes.  As any security drops in price, demand increases, but prices will go lower from here.  Why do I say this?  Easy – unemployment is still headed higher.  Last weeks statistical drop from 9.5% to 9.4% was misleading as more people’s employment insurance ran out (and they were taken out of that number) than new people got fired (put into the number).  Economists consensus is unemployment goes above 10% before it peaks and maybe we bottom out in housing a few months before we peak in jobs lost, but not much before.  Simply put – people need jobs to pay mortgages.  These talking heads and prognosticators on TV need a reality check before their optimism gets the best of your investing dollar.

iStock Analyst put out a nice piece today about Cramer and his housing call along with stating that the market PE’s right now are predicated on 5% GDP growth coming in the next few quarters.  If that is the case and 5% is priced in, stocks are in for a rude awakening.

The Dow closed up 120.16 points (+1.30%, 9361.61) and the S&P 500 added 11.46 points (+1.15%, 1005.81) with the Nasdaq 100 up 24.90 points (+1.56%, 1619.59).

The strongest sectors today were finance +1.91% and industrials +1.89%.  The weakest industries were consumer non-cyclicals still returning a positive 0.66%.

NYMEX Crude added $1.07 a barrel and was trading at $70.19 at 4:34 p.m.

Market Wrap – The Financial Risk Team Zombies lead the Market lower.

By Robert Perrego, at 5:14 pm on August 11th, 2009

Looks like we have a new trading group the Market players are toying with hereby named the ‘Financial Risk Team Zombies’.  The ‘Zombies’ rose from the dead last Wednesday and had huge gains together.  (August 5 Market Wrap for more info…)  First let’s define the team;  Meltdown epicenter stock American International Group (NYSE: AIG) is the Captain of the team (move over Derek Jeter) with MBIA  Inc. (NYSE: MBI), CIT Group Inc. (NYSE: CIT), MGIC Investment Corp (NYSE: MTG), Radian Group Inc. (NYSE: RDN) and honorary members Fannie Mae (NYSE: FNM), Freddie Mac (NYSE: FRE) and Citigroup inc. (NYSE: C) rounding out the team.

Most all these stocks traded up between 20 and 63% last Wednesday as traders jumped on these beaten down stocks and ran their momentum all day.  The ‘Zombies’ have been very active and traded high volume over the last week as they gained the focus of traders looking for volatility and profits.  While no one likes a boring market, these stocks are like playing with fire lately.

The Dow Jones dropped 96.50 today (-1.03%, 9241.45) and these stocks led the drop.  AIG dropped over 13%, MBI down 13%, CIT down 19%, Citi down 6%, MTG down 10%, etc…  With this same group of names running up big one day and then all getting hit another a few days later it looks like pools of money (most likely hedge funds) have this ’sector’ identified as active and profitable stocks to trade.  So what does this mean?  Considering all the chatter about a market top being put in after last weeks rally this means that traders are dumping the high volatility names to cut back on their risk exposure.

Looking at the sectors shows that finance led the losers dropping 2.75% with energy second down 2%.  Stocks were pretty much down across the board with only the bio-techs and chemical companies showing any strength at all.

New York Spot Gold was flat, the dollar was up slightly and NYMEX crude dropped $1.76 to $69.36 a barrel.

Productivity jumped 6.4% as employers tightened their belts and cranked out more product per factor of input.  When I hear numbers like this the first thing I think is that employees nationwide are worried about their jobs and employers are putting the screws to them to work harder.  Of course all the layoffs and trimming down of all non-essential employees and functions are creating lean, mean and more productive companies, but it does not hurt to have your employees scared of pink showing up in the pay envelope as added motivation.

Tomorrow at 2:15 p.m. The Fed will tell us they are not raising interest rates from zero to, well, anything.  Bernanke still wants his job and the economy is still losing jobs at way too fast a rate.  Worry points such as rising oil prices and a heavy Treasury auction schedule are constantly debated on CNBC as forces that could derail our ‘economic recovery’.  Call me dismal but I do not think much of this recovery – all we have seen recover really is a stock market that probably got hit too hard on the downside so it had some pop room to the upside to run.  We are still down some 34% from the top of the market, the U.S. economy has shed a full 1/9th of its GDP and people are still getting fired at a rate of about 5.7 per minute – 24/7.  That is one person fired or laid off every 10.5 seconds.  Sound like a recovery to you?

We had a good reception to the $37 billion 3-Year Note treasury Auction with a bid-to-cover ratio of 2.89 (average lately about 2.54).  As I wrote in a previous Market Wrap, I think large holders of our debt are still interested in the short maturities as they are much less risky but tomorrow we have a 10-Year note auction and then 30-Year Bonds on Thursday.  How these auctions go will tell us a lot about where interest rates will be soon.

So the times to watch tomorrow are 1 p.m. for the Ten Year Auction and 2:25 p.m. for the Fed announcement.

Technically speaking the charts all look to be pointing down and a quick look at the Dow shows moderate support at 9100 with a lower stronger support level at 8800 formed not only by tops but also have the 200 and 50 EMA moving averages converging here.