Friday, December 11, 2009

Market Commentary:

Better Retail Sales and Consumer Sentiment data helped bulls push equity prices higher today. The dollar continued its climb while commodities (energy and gold) and bonds fell. The ongoing “dollar carry trade” seems at risk but that didn’t seem to bother bulls in the short-term.

Volume is hitting holiday-like lows which help bulls manage a positive day easily. Breadth was mostly positive.

If you have been short the stock market for the last month or so you have gone nowhere with your investments. If you have been long the stock market for this same period your results have been the same. If you have been in cash, you have done as well or better than most of those invested in either long or short positions.

However, if you have been long gold you are really starting to hurt. As the dollar has hammered out a bottom and broke above both trend line support and trend line resistance, creating a minor dollar breakout, gold bugs have been hammered.

The recent high for the dollar was set today, at 76.74, up from the recent low of 74.21, set on November 26th. The dollar has retraced clear back to the lows set on September 11th. During the last seven days gold has dropped from a high of 1226, set on December 3rd to a recent low of 1111, set today … a painful 9.4% drop in only seven trading days. The only bright spot today was that gold closed above today’s low, though not much.

We continue to see defensive sector rotations. Those sectors which traditionally are strong during a bullish trend have performed poorly over the last two months and those sectors which are traditionally weak during bullish trends have reversed course and are now doing much better during the same two months – a clear indication of defensive rotation in equities.

John Murphy of StockCharts.com illustrates this rotation well. Check out his chart:

Although the stock market remains stuck in a short-term trading range, a more cautious tone has been revealed by sector rotations beneath the surface. Over the last month, for example, the two top market sectors have been utitilities and healthcare which are traditionally defensive groups. The two weakest sectors have been financials and energy. Chart 1 shows relative strength ratios of those four groups since the start of July plotted around the S&P 500 (flat black line).

Two of the things I always look for in sector work are absolute and relative strength. Absolute strength refers to a strong chart pattern. Relative strength refers to the group's performance versus the S&P 500. Charts 2 and 3 show strong absolute performance in the Utilities (XLU) and Health Care (XLV) SPDRS. Both charts show strong chart patterns. The XLV (Chart 3) has been hitting new-52-week highs. The XLU (Chart 2) has just broken out of a big basing pattern. What's especially noteworthy, however, is the recent upturn in their relative strength ratio (solid lines). Both ratios have recently broken down trendlines in place since March when the stock market bottomed. The last time the ratios turned up was the autumn of 2008 as the market was selling off. Investors usually turn to defensive stocks when they think the market is in danger of dropping or has rallied too far and is looking over-extended.

John Murphy, StockCharts.com

To give you an idea of the malaise recently seen in the stock market take a look at the S&P 500:

Notice the shaded area, where the S&P 500 has traded in a very narrow range for more than a month. While the bullish among you might say that this is clearly a bullish flag, suggesting that a breakout rally is short around the corner, there are just too many warning signs right now (like the defensive rotation discussed above and technical bearish divergences.)

What I think is happening is that the large intervention players (read Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan … the too-big-to-fail banks doing massive insider account trading this year) are milking the public for what it’s worth.

These large institutions have controlled 50% or more of the total NYSE volume this year. It is not much of a stretch to imagine them taking advantage of the individual investors and small money managers by pushing the futures market either up or down during the night and then trading equities in the opposite direction during the following day.

We have seen this kind of manipulation a lot during the last month, where the market moves strongly to the upside at the open and then sells off the rest of the day – or the market moves strongly to the downside at the open and then rallies for the rest of the day.

As this scenario is repeated again and again, these volume traders are effectively transferring more and more shares out of their hands into the hands of some other unsuspecting soul.

There may yet be a final push near the end of the year to mark as high a YTD figure as they can (to offset the terrible YTD results of 2008). But know that if it happens it is likely going to be a final manipulated rally that will likely collapse in the first month of the New Year.

There are just too many bearish divergences and evidence of defensive rotation to be comfortable fully embracing the bulls right now.

Be patient and cautious here. At what appears to be a topping pattern we will either see better entry on a pull back or the bulls will be forced to prove that this rally can indeed break out of the topping pattern and be sustained to the point that all these divergences begin to disappear.

That’s it for today’s little light volume exercise. Next week is another Fed meeting with an announcement Wednesday. Let’s see if they stick to their guns or give markets a holiday present. Then on Friday we get quadruple witching again as the Street shuts down for the holidays at least in terms of volume.

In between those events we’ll have other data to digest but those two events should take center stage.

Have a great weekend!

Friday's day trading result



Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Oil trade USO/UCO

We are stopped out of our UCO/USO trade and so should you if you took that trade. Oil and gold are selling off against a strengthening dollar. We expect this to continue for an extended period of time. Read my update for details.

NO STICK SAVE TODAY

The market headed down out of the gate this morning following Asia and Europe and mixed-in with Dubai worries; country credit rating downgrades; and, a strengthening dollar which weakens the “dollar carry trade”. But then the president made a curious speech stating among other things, “We must spend our way out of” this recession. Since this White House, like so many others before, read poll data and with the public very much against more spending and higher deficits, it made no political sense and perhaps exacerbated further selling today. And yes, that’s just a guess; but, the 2:15 Buy Program Express didn’t make it out of the station today.

Before the open this morning, came a bullish prediction from GS: “The S&P 500 may rally a further 13 percent to 1,250 by the end of next year as interest rates remain low, revenue grows and investors pour money into U.S. stocks. Continued profit margin resiliency from prior aggressive cost reductions should drive strong returns in early 2010 and push the S&P 500 towards 1,300. Equity investors will begin to rush for the proverbial exit ahead of what consensus believes will be the start of an interest rate tightening cycle.”

So, the rally we’ve seen is based on financial engineering but not job growth or real production gains. At least that’s what one can infer from the prophets on high at GS as they continue “God’s work”.

Volume was heavier than yesterday which isn’t saying much while breadth was highly negative.


DOLLAR VS COMMODITIES

The US dollar has begun to firm over the last few days and for the first time in quite a while is now trading “above” its 50-day moving average.

Notice that the dollar is beginning to break out above some key resistance levels (light colored blue lines). I am not comfortable at all in declaring the beginning of a new uptrend in the dollar, but even this small rising dollar event is having a noticeable effect on the commodity laden S&P 500 index, which looks to be forming a topping pattern.

Any strength in the dollar means weakness in the commodities. Crude oil prices peaked at $82.50 with oil now trading at $72.76 on the nearest futures contract. Gold has corrected $53 since the dollar has strengthened over the last week.

As you can see from this monthly chart of crude oil prices, oil has been unable to penetrate above its monthly middle Bollinger Band line and is now forming what also looks like a topping pattern.

I am glad to see this, though, as crude oil prices above $80 a barrel is ruinous to our economy and will offset any stimulus efforts and will only cause more troubles for the banking industry, more mortgage defaults and stress on corporations.

So far Gold has suffered a minor correction, but does this correction have more downside?

As you can see from this chart, the 14-day RSI values had reached into 80%, an extreme overbought condition. At a minimum, a test of the weekly middle Bollinger Band lines at 1041 is likely, which is about $100 an ounce lower. The weekly stochastics are just starting on the downside, so gold buying on dips is not recommended until the intermediate cycle has fully discounted current gold prices.

As I have repeatedly stated, there is a huge short position on the dollar from all parts of the world and among all levels of investors. These short dollar positions have done well for them in 2009 and if these short dollar gains are threatened, then expect to see big short covering spikes in the dollar – and consequent selling in commodities and equities.

Time for continued caution here – don’t buy the dips on this sell off yet.

A weak day as Dubai’s problems resurface and the dollar rallied accordingly. This challenges the previous cozy “dollar carry trade” where commodities and higher beta EMs prospered. Perhaps it’s just a temporary correction in that trend especially coming at this year-end period where traders hope to close their books and go on holiday.

Again, there’s not much economic data until Thursday and Friday. Until then we’ll get more jawboning from the Fed, Treasury and, I guess, the WH.