Archive for July, 2010

Stock Market Outlook Improving Short-Term

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Yesterday’s sharp rally in stocks produced some positive developments on the S&P 500’s daily chart. Let’s start with the Relative Strength Index (RSI). Notice how long it has been since it was able to make a turn up from near the center line (50). If RSI can make a higher high, above most recent high, it would really help the bullish case in the short-term (next few weeks). Yesterday, we closed 7 points above the 50-day, which is the 2nd close above the 50-day in the last six trading sessions. Breaking the 50-day twice shows a change in market behavior. A few additional reasons for bullish hope are shown in the chart below.

Stock Market Outlook Improving Short-Term

Remaining patient and focused on the longer-term has paid some dividends in recent weeks. The S&P 500 is now over 8% above the intraday low set on July 1, 2010. We still have the 200-day to contend with at 1,113. If, emphasis on if, the market breaks through the 200-day in a convincing and sharp manner sometime in the next two weeks, it would fit well with the profile of the end of a stock market correction. For now, another close over the 50-day would be a welcome sign. We have taken a few more steps towards the edge of the bearish woods, but we are not out yet.

Bernanke, the Fed, Deflation, and the Dollar

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

On June 18, 2010, we presented the second chart below, which stated a move back toward 83 in the U.S. dollar was possible. This morning the U.S. dollar is trading at $82.82 (last night’s close shown in first chart). Yesterday, Ben Bernanke told the Senate Banking Committee, “We remain prepared to take further policy actions as needed to foster a return to full utilization of our nation’s productive potential in a context of price stability”. This means the Fed stands ready to take further action to support the economy and asset prices. You may think there is nothing the Fed can do with interest rates already near zero, but with deflation a real threat, the Fed has a few tricks left up their sleeve. The dollar may end up being the sacrificial lamb.

 U.S. Dollar as of July 21, 2010

Bernanke, the Fed, and the Dollar

The Fed is a wild card in making portfolio decisions in the coming weeks and months. Let’s use an example to illustrate. Let’s assume, hypothetically, the S&P 500 falls to somewhere between 945 and 1,000. As we approach these levels, the threat of deflation starts to become very real. The average investor, driven understandably by fear, sells their entire portfolio moving to 100% cash. The next day, the Fed announces they are no longer going to pay interest on bank reserves held at the Fed (to encourage lending). Stocks rally, but the incoming economic news continues to disappoint. Ten days later, the Fed announces a new asset purchase program to pump more money into the economy. Commodities rally strongly; stocks rally; gold and silver rally; the U.S. dollar tanks. Driven by the Fed’s actions (right, wrong, or indifferent), the S&P 500 finishes the year between 1,200 and 1,325. Investors who sold out between 945 and 1,000 on the S&P can’t sleep at night. Some investors, who knew the Fed would not remain on the sidelines as the threat of deflation rose, held their positions and breathed a sigh of relief as they began to wrap holiday gifts in December of 2010. U.S. Dollar as of June 18, 2010

Deflation, and the Dollar

The above scenario is not a forecast, it is simply a scenario investors must understand and respect in the present day. We firmly believe the Fed will not remain on the sidelines if asset prices begin to fall rapidly again in the next few weeks. In the longer-term, we believe this “solution” will fail as inflation eventually will eat into corporate profit margins. However, a bigger than anticipated rally in risk assets could occur in the meantime. If you do not consider this hypothetical scenario to be a realistic possibility, we suggest you use the link below to Chairman Bernanke’s remarks from November of 2002, “Deflation: Making Sure “It” Doesn’t Happen Here”. The following appears on our Inflation vs. Deflation page:

At a time when interest rates are near historic lows around the globe, it is important to understand possible nontraditional ways for policymakers to fight deflation. These 2002 comments made by then Fed Governor Ben Bernanke outline in detail Federal Reserve options in a low interest rate environment. It may help us better understand the possible range of Fed actions in the next 24 months.

After you read the paper above, you may want to consider how commodities, like gold, silver, oil, and copper, may fit into your future contingency plans (as hedges against a falling U.S. dollar). In our view, there is quite a bit of “Fed risk” to short positions in the current market. The Fed can announce anything at anytime; and they most likely would do so when the markets are closed, giving the shorts little or no time to prepare. The odds are probably greater than 50% we will see some type of non-standard move by the Fed in the next six to eight weeks. We have to build those odds into our portfolio management decisions. We are not making predictions; we are simply trying to understand all possible scenarios and outcomes.

Stock Market Produces Some ‘Unexpected Sparks’

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Samuel Johnson (1709-1784), the English poet, once said, “Our brightest blazes of gladness are commonly kindled by unexpected sparks”. After an awful trading day last Friday, Monday’s and Tuesday’s stock market action definitely fall into the unexpected sparks category. Technical analysis is about discerning the composite mood of all market participants. When the market does something unexpected, it is something worth keeping an eye on. Some other minor and subtle shifts have occurred in market behavior in the last four trading sessions; (1) we closed above the 50-day moving average (red line in chart below) for the first time in over ten weeks, and (2) the 20-day (blue line below) is attempting to act as support in the past two trading sessions. These are minor occurrences, but they are steps in the right direction. Another close above the 50-day moving average (now at 1,088), would be a fairly significant short-term event for the stock market.

Stock Market's Unexpected Sparks - Financial Blog


Subtle Shifts In Market Behavior
On July 19, 2010, we postulated the market may find its footing between 1,030 and 1,064. The intraday low yesterday was 1,056, which may not hold, but it was a fairly logical area for a possible turn. Maybe Apple’s strong earnings this morning can lead to some more ‘unexpected sparks’. The bears are still a relatively healthy in the short-term, but at least the bulls are putting up a fight.

Debt Sales In Europe Good Sign

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

Not much new on the technical front this morning. Yesterday’s gains did improve things moderately, but as of 7:00 am ET, it appears as if a lower open for stocks will reverse those gains.

There is some good news out of Europe today related to the ever important debt markets:

Spain, Ireland and Greece sold almost 10 billion euros ($13 billion) of debt, with demand rising for shorter-dated securities, on optimism the European Union’s aid programs will contain the region’s fiscal crisis. (Full Debt Story).

Sloppy Stock Market Hard To Call In Short-Term

Monday, July 19th, 2010

While it was only one day, Friday’s stock market action was concerning. In the post Can Earnings Break Technical Funk, we discussed how strong markets tend to have RSI spend the majority of its time between 48 and 72; weak markets between 30 and 52. On Friday, the turns in both RSI (relative strength index) and CCI (commodity channel index) are not what we want to see. The current market is difficult to call in the short-term. Despite the recent move off the lows, the bulls never regained full control of the market from the bears. The market is there for the taking in the short-term. We will see who steps up; bulls or bears.


Stock Market's Technical Profile - Hard To Call
Friday’s action opens the door to numerous scenarios for the next few weeks. While further deterioration in either the fundamentals and/or the technicals could change our outlook, we still believe the odds favor higher stocks prices in later in 2010 or in 2011 (see Stocks May Surprise By Year End).

CCM Clients: Some Moves Today

Friday, July 16th, 2010

After the close: We did some limited and selective selling in numerous client accounts today. For now, we still see the market being higher later in the year, but some additional corrective activity may be in store. It is a little too early to read too much into today’s action, but it was not good. We are working on a client update and will continue work on it over the weekend.

Stocks Have Neutral-to-Bullish Outlook

Friday, July 16th, 2010

The CCM Bull Market Sustainability Index (BMSI) closed Thursday at 1,193, giving stocks a neutral-to-bullish longer-term outlook S&P 500 performance following historical BMSI scores between 1,000 and 1,400 is shown below. While we are concerned about today’s market activity, S&P 500 returns following similar technical profiles to today’s market are favorable from a risk-reward perspective, especially over the next nine to twelve months.

Stock Market's Technical Profile Is Neutral To Bullish - Outlook

Falling Consumer Confidence: Not a Death Knell for Stocks

Friday, July 16th, 2010

A review of recent history illustrates falling consumer confidence does not necessarily forecast poor stock market performance. Today’s report and market action is concerning, but consumer confidence’s peak early in the last recovery cycle did not mark the end of the bull market. In fact, while the University of Michigan/Reuters consumer confidence Index dropped 27% from January 2004 to October of 2007, the S&P 500 Index gained 42%. It should be noted 2004 represents a very similar part of the recovery cycle to where we are today in 2010.

Consumer Confidence and Stocks

Earnings Have Little Resemblance To 2007

Friday, July 16th, 2010

As of early Friday morning, fourteen companies have reported earnings. Eighty-six percent of them have met or exceeded expectations. We fully understand and respect the deflationary forces that are present in the global economy, such as high levels of debt, excess capacity, tighter credit conditions, etc. It is possible future economic data and earnings figures will deteriorate to a point that supports both a double-dip recession and a bear market, but the evidence we have in hand today supports neither. Let’s compare and contrast, in an admittedly unscientific manner, recent earnings releases with earnings for Q3 2007. We chose Q3 of 2007 because those figures were released as we were entering a painful bear market (2007-2009): Below is from Bloomberg on Q3 2007 earnings:

S&P 500 companies have posted an average profit decline of 0.6 percent in the third quarter of 2007, the first drop since 2002, according to Bloomberg data. Twenty-seven percent of the 132 companies in the index that have reported results so far have trailed analysts’ estimates, compared with 21 percent in the second quarter.

The key phase above is “profit decline”. The economy in present day 2010 is far from robust, but the data is moving in the right direction, albeit at a relatively tame pace. Compare the “profit declines” in 2007 with a sample of recent earnings announcements:

  • Intel reported its biggest quarterly profit in a decade.
  • Alcoa reported a $136 million profit on stronger-than-anticipated 22% revenue growth and hiked its global aluminum consumption forecast.
  • General Electric Co. (GE) reported a 16% profit rise.
  • Freight rail hauler CSX beat earnings expectations on both the top and bottom lines. EPS came in at $1.07 versus the 98 cents that analysts had expected. Revenues of $2.7 billion topped the $2.64 billion that analysts forecast (Source: WSJ).
  • Bank of America said Friday its second-quarter net income rose 15 percent to $2.78 billion as improvements in the company’s consumer loan businesses made up for a drop in trading revenue The bank’s results beat expectations and provided further evidence that losses from failed loans at the nation’s big banks may have peaked in the first half of 2010 (Source: AP).
  • Mattel Inc.’s second-quarter net income more than doubled, boosted by sales of Barbie and toys tied into the Pixar smash “Toy Story 3,” the toymaker said Friday. Mattel’s revenue rose 13 percent to $1.02 billion, matching analyst expectations. (Source: AP)

The financial markets, from both technical and fundamental perspectives, need to be monitored closely in the coming weeks and months. We originally referenced, in Stocks May Surprise By Year-End, the Wall Street Journal article, Fear of a Stall Hits Market. To re-emphasize the point that slower and disappointing economic growth does not necessarily lead to a bear market, we again present the following from the WSJ (6/30/2010):

Pauses aren’t uncommon early in a recovery. After rebounding from recession in late 2001 and early 2002, the economy had a 12-month stretch in which it grew at a paltry 1.5% annual rate, sparking fears of a double-dip recession. In late 1991, growth waned after a recovery had started. In the past 12 months, the economy has gotten off to a faster start than in 2002.

We remain concerned, but not overly so, about the market’s current condition. We continue to monitor the situation closely. We will post some additional comments on the markets later today.

Bloomberg Poll ‘very, very grim news for the Democrats’

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

The fall elections will obviously impact our economy and the financial markets. How significant that impact may be is highlighted in a Bloomberg National Poll conducted July 9th-12th. Here are some of the more interesting numbers from the detailed results (link to article appears below):

  • Among those who say they are most likely to vote, Republicans are favored, 48 percent to 40 percent. The Republican advantage is even greater among likely voters who view the election as exceptionally important, with Republicans beating Democrats 56 percent to 34 percent.
  • Among independents likely to vote, Republican congressional candidates are preferred to Democrats, 50 percent to 29 percent.
  • Karlyn Bowman, who studies public opinion at the American Enterprise Institute, a public-policy research group in Washington, calls the poll “very, very grim news for the Democrats.”
  • The proportion who feel the nation is headed in the wrong direction is about the same as at this point in 1994, when Republicans took control of Congress, and 2006, when Democrats took over. (Full Bloomberg Poll Story).

On the last point (1994 & 2006), the stock market performed well in both 1995 and 2007. In the present day, the S&P 500’s 200-day moving average sits at 1,112. Markets can be volatile near the 200-day, which is something that would not come as a big surprise. The markets have been relatively quiet for the past 24 hours. The S&P 500 closed yesterday above its 50-day moving average (1,093), which is good all things being equal.