The market has yet to give Obama a break. Earlier this week the words he eloquently poured out to congress in his first State of the Union speech should have prepared the market for the actual numbers that were revealed today in the 2010 budget and proposed spending changes for the rest of 2009.
Based on trading since Obama’s speech on Tuesday, the broader market has tested the lows of 2008 (November lows) and held while making higher lows in intra-day trading since Tuesday.
Even the futures market predicted a strong open today and traders were not disappointed. The markets were up nicely by mid morning, with the broader financial market up as much as 4.4%, suggesting that Bernanke and Geithner had succeeded in their assignments to allay fears of bank nationalization.
Then the details and actual bound copies of the new Obama administration budget hit the wires and the hands of congress, revealing a whopping $3.6 trillion budget for 2010, with significant new spending on health care, education and other top priorities while at the same time predicting a $1.75 trillion deficit for 2009.
The budget contained immediate spending changes for 2009 as well, pushing spending for 2009 to a record high $3.94 trillion, resulting in the unexpectedly large deficit prediction figure for this year.
The budget "lays out for the American people the extent of the crisis we inherited, the steps we will take to jumpstart our economy to create new jobs, and our plans to transform our economy for the 21st century," Obama said.
The title of the new budget was “A New Era of Responsibility – Renewing America’s Promise.”
It is clear that investors saw a big disconnect between the words of the administration this week and the proposed spending plans. This week began for Obama with a special economic summit on Monday that explored ways to reduce the deficit and make the government books sound.
Obama himself even stated that he plans to trim the deficit in half during his first term, even with these huge new spending programs.
I am thinking that even his most ardent supporters have a feeling of disconnect between the concepts of huge spending to get out of this economic recession and cutting the deficit in half at the same time. As I said late last week, the only way this can be done is through massive tax increases or dilution of the dollar by having the printing presses run overtime printing fiat money. The market won’t like either of these paths.
I still have faith though that one day this year the markets will rally when something new from the Obama administration hits the press. Nevertheless, the message is clear that the market is voting its disapproval of how things are unfolding from our new administration.
It should be clear to our new administration and the congress that a collapse in the stock market means a collapse in the retirement accounts of millions and millions of people – people who “vote”. Look how the public howled last fall when the markets collapsed after the senate voted the initial TARP plan down.
While it is fine to say the buck stops being passed around and Wall Street is not going to be excused for any more financial abuses, it is disconcerting to many that stock market performance is so low on the list of our leaders right now. True, a poor performing stock market may allow new programs to be rushed through congress under a veil of economic urgency, but these new kids are playing with fire and could get burned if they take this too far too fast.
Fortunately, broad market critical support is still holding, i.e., last November’s lows - but today’s selling was disappointing, nonetheless.
To my knowledge there is no new summit or economic plan being announced by the administration or Fed over the next week. So, perhaps a quiet period from Congress and the Obama administration will allow this window dressing period to move forward and upward next week.
There is one concern in tomorrow’s schedule of economic reports - an updated preliminary GDP for Q4 2008. I suspect that this is a discounted statistic that will not spur further selling, since almost everyone who is still breathing knows in their heart of hearts that 2008 was a bad economic year for everyone and everything. We’ll know more tomorrow.
I know some of you remain nervous and I share your concern. Just know that in the development of market bottoms, whether they are short-cycle bottoms seen once or twice a month or intermediate bottoms seen every few months, there is continued back testing to prove that supports are indeed providing support.
When the market is convinced that the supports are going to hold, then a nice advance often results.
We are simply going through another test of supports. There have been a lot of them lately and there will be many more in the year ahead. For now, just watch what is happening – we will tell you when and if supports are violated.
Remain defensive and in cash.