Monday, September 27, 2010

No Fear

Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in his First Inaugural Address, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” Traders in today’s markets apparently have framed that phrase as their credo. There have been technical analysis warning signals flashing galore. Including but not limited to VIX sell signals, low volume rallies, black crosses, Hindenburg omens, and irrational exuberance from the AAII crowd (51% bulls recently). Yet the S&P has rallied significantly higher over the last 18 sessions without a meaningful pullback.

In the span of a few weeks, a new consensus view has emerged that the double-dip scare of July/August has diminished. New bullish technical patterns have emerged such as a break above 1132 on the S&P 500 and 2342 on the NASDAQ. The charts show a pattern of higher lows and higher highs since the July bottom. The markets have also crossed above the neckline of an inverse head and shoulders pattern which when measured properly should run the markets back to the old highs of this year. The technical picture certainly has a lot more positive aspects that didn’t exist just a few short weeks ago. There is now a shift in trend that could really make this market go.

So why am I still holding up the caution flag? First: The pace of the recent run up is unsustainable. While we could climb a little higher from here, some sort of pullback would alleviate some of the frothiness of the markets. Second: the autumn equinox, was Wednesday the 22nd, and over the past 13 years, major declines have occurred after the first day of fall ten times. Seven were crashes. Next: Prices have reached the upper boundary of their trend-channel which could signal a pullback is coming. However, it could also mean that we are about to see an upside breakout, so we are once again at a crossroads on the markets.

The final concern is that gold and silver are rallying to record highs as the stock market is rallying. Those precious metals are the fear trade. They also reflect a concern for our currency that the US fiat dollar may be in trouble. I can’t imagine investors believe that a weak dollar equates to a strong economy. A weak dollar helps the multinational companies – sure, but the words “Our economy is strong because our money is weak” don’t go together. I would think a disconnect should occur between gold and stocks, as well as bonds and stocks. Everything should not be going up simultaneously.

On Friday 98% of the S&P 500 companies were up. Generally fast run ups like the one we’ve just gone through, followed by exponential blow offs like what we witnessed on Friday causes me to take a more cautious point of view. It seems that the Fed is attempting to juice the markets with their Permanent Open Market Operations. This week alone the Federal Reserve purchased $11.15 Billion worth of various US Treasury securities from the seven primary banks. What the banks did what that immediate boatload of cash is unknown, but one would suspect that a portion of those founds found its way into the stock market. The alternative is to believe that the negative, but less bad durable goods order number and the second worst ever, but still improved from July’s all time low, new home sales drove the markets up 2% on Friday. There is a long held belief on Wall Street that you should never fight the Fed or the trend. That holds true today. The Fed is driving the markets.

According to Reuters, after the midterm elections, the S&P 500 has posted gains 18 out of the last 19 times. In the following six months the returns were up 13% on average, and up 17% after 12 months. Further the best combination for market returns has been when a Democrat held the White House with a Republican-controlled Congress. Maybe the markets are looking ahead.

I can understand the need to be optimistic and I am, but let’s not get too carried away too quickly. The market should probably have a new uptrend with a target of around 1240. But with the sudden shift in sentiment and the ‘ignore all the bad news mentality’, the markets will most likely have a pullback first to work off some of this overzealous false sense of security. The markets are acting as if the real economy does not matter. Over the short term maybe it doesn’t. It seems that the Fed is hoping that the stock market can pull the rest of the economy out of the mud slog that it is in. Former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan said as much in a speech a couple of weeks ago. However, technical factors still apply and a pull back to at least 1090 seems reasonable given all the headwinds facing the markets today.

Someone once said; “Efficiency is doing things right. Effectiveness is doing the right things.” It seems the Fed is doing things effectively to drive the markets up. I’m not so sure we have done things efficiently to solve our economic woes yet.

No comments:

Post a Comment