Post
Election Traumatic
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Current Market Analysis Last
Month's Results Statistics to Watch Trends To Watch What I'm Thinking
and Doing Professional News and Notes
Current Market Analysis
As
the market finished trading for the week, the Dow Jones Industrial
Average stood at 12,588, down about 758 points, or 5.7%, from when I wrote
to you last month, and down 7.5% from the October 5
closing high of 13,610. The latest decline started the day after the election.
It was the classic story of buy the rumor and sell
the news. Plus, now that the election is finally behind us, we can
focus on the looming fiscal cliff, the threat of escalating fighting the the Middle East and the lethargic domestic
economy. Given all that, it's not surprising that the stock market
has dropped. The $64 trillion question (that's inflation for you) is whether
this is a simple correction or the beginning of a larger Bear Market.
After hitting a new four year high
on October 5 the market has tumbled badly, on increasing
trading volume, as you can see below. It appears that we're now
seeing the problems forecasted by the poor action in the
transportation average over the past few months. The DJIA has plunged
below both moving averages and
two supports after carving a clear head and shoulders pattern. It's
now sitting right near another support level (red line). If it falls
further, the next support would be around 12,035 (light blue line). If that
doesn't hold, we've got real trouble. The one silver lining is
that RSI is oversold, suggesting we could be in for
a bounce.
The transportation average looks terrible. It is
well below both moving averages and sitting right at a big
support level. The next important support comes in around 4,500. The fact that
the transportation sector is doing so poorly is a
very ominous indicator for our economy.

I have to admit,
the sudden drop in the Dow Jones Utility Average took me by surprise. The price had been gaining strength over the past two months before
this decline. What's especially dangerous is that the 50-day
moving average is poised to fall below the 200-day. That's bearish. The good news is
that RSI is now quite oversold, suggesting that we could be
near a bottom. I'm sticking with my long-held position that I'd
use any weakness to buy a stake for investors seeking
conservative, high-yielding income opportunities.

Interest rates have been trading between 1.4% - 1.9% over
the past six months. You can see that resistance was firm three times while support
held twice. Should equities experience a prolonged decline, yields could again
test the 1.4% support level as investors would flee stocks and
seek the safety of treasuries.
As always, I provide the
following chart to
show
the raw results for the preceding month, the quarter-to-date and
the year-to-date. After a very strong third quarter, the market
turned south in October (and got even worse so far in November). Riskier
growth and technology stocks, led by a big declines in tech
bellweathers like Apple and Goggle, were particularly hard hit. I warned
last month that lags in technology harbored a warning
for diminished returns in the fourth quarter. This is not a good
omen. While the return on Treasury bonds continues to lag, investors continue to pour
money into high yield bonds. These type of annual returns, along with the
ever diminishing yields, suggest the easy money has already been made and
trouble could be ahead for "junk bonds". Finally, the EAFE added to the
its earlier gains and delivered positive results in an otherwise dismal month. What
does that mean?
Name of
Index |
Oct |
QTD |
YTD |
Description |
S&P
500 |
-1.8 |
-1.8 |
14.3 |
Large-cap
stocks |
Dow Jones Industrial
Average |
-2.4 |
-2.4 |
9.5 |
Large-cap
stocks |
NASDAQ
Composite |
-4.1 |
-4.1 |
15.8 |
Large-cap tech
stocks |
Russell 1000
Growth |
-2.9 |
-2.9 |
13.4 |
Large-cap growth
stocks |
Russell 1000
Value |
-0.5 |
-0.5 |
15.2 |
Large-cap value
stocks |
Russell 2000
Growth |
-3.1 |
-3.1 |
10.5 |
Small-cap growth
stocks |
Russell 2000
Value |
-1.3 |
-1.3 |
12.9 |
Small-cap value
stocks |
MSCI EAFE |
0.8 |
0.8 |
11.5 |
Europe, Australia, Far
East |
Barclays Aggregate |
0.2 |
0.2 |
4.2 |
US government
bonds |
Barclays High
Yield |
0.9 |
0.9 |
13.1 |
High-yield corporate
bonds |
* Return numbers include the reinvestment of dividends
Statistics To
Watch
- According to the Department of Labor, the
figure for seasonally-adjusted initial jobless claims for the week ended November 10 was 439,000, an increase
of 51,000 from a month ago and 78,000 higher
than the prior week's revised figure. The four-week average of 383,750 is
about 18,000 higher than the prior month's tally. After falling
the past few weeks, initial claims spiked in the recent report. About
3.33 million people continue to collect unemployment insurance, up from the prior month. While
some of this can be attributed to Hurricane Sandy,
the increases are ominous.
- Non-farm payroll employment in October
showed some improvement, but remained a mixed bag. The
establishment survey reported that 171,000 jobs were added in the month
while the household survey said that the unemployment rate inched up to 7.9%. In
this instance, the increase wasn't bad news as it meant that more people
were re-entering the work force. If they cannot find jobs soon, then the
unemployment rate will likely move back above 8% in
the next few months.
- Revisions to prior August and September
added 88,000 jobs, on top of the 86,000 that were added in the September report for July and August.
The trend is very good, suggesting next month will see even
more jobs added retroactively. The total number of workers counted as unemployed rose
to 12.3, which helped move the unemployment rate up to 7.9%. The labor force
participation rate ticked up to 63.8%. The more comprehensive U-6
"underemployment" rate dipped to 14.6%.
- 5.0 million people continued to be
unemployed longer than 27 weeks. The seasonally adjusted number of people who could only find part-time
work fell to 8.3 million and the number of marginally attached
workers inched down to 2.4 million. The number of people
holding multiple jobs remained at 7.0 million. The average hourly wages for blue
collar workers fell slightly to $19.79 while the average work week fell to
33.6 hours. While the headline number of jobs added looked good, the fact
that people are working less hours, for less money, is very disturbing.
- The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that
on a net present value basis, the Treasury reported a federal budget
deficit of $115 billion in October, about $15 billion more than the first
month of fiscal 2012. After four consecutive years of deficits greater
than $1 trillion, let's see if our elected officials are able to enact any kind of meaningful debt reduction plan
this coming year.
- The Census Bureau reported that the U.S. trade deficit
of goods and services was $41.5 billion in September, down from $43.8 in
August. The trade gap was $52.5 billion in January, so real progress has been made.
- The Census Bureau reported that privately owned housing
starts surged 15% in September, building on a 4.1% gain in August. Housing
starts are now a whopping 34.8% higher than a year ago, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 872,000
units. New building permits were up 11.6% from the prior month and 45.1% higher than the
year before. This is a strong sign that the recovery is continuing.
- The National Association of Homebuilders/Wells Fargo Confidence Index gained
1 point in October to 41. That marks the sixth straight
monthly increase in builder confidence, and its slowly creeping up towards a healthy
figure of 50. This metric too shows a strengthening recovery in housing.
- The Census Bureau reported that on a
seasonally adjusted annualized basis, 389,000 new homes
were sold in September. That's 5.7% higher than last month, and
27.1% better than a year ago. In fact, it's the highest level
since April 2010. The estimate of homes for sale was 145,000, which represents
only 4.5 months at the current rate of sales. The median sales price
dipped this month to $242,400, after a big increase in
August. That remains solidly above the rising 12-month moving average price of
$233,067. The new home sale market remains very tight, which augurs well
for future price increases.
- The National Association of Realtors reported that on a
seasonally adjusted annualized basis, sales of existing
homes were 1.7% lower in September, after rising 8.1% in August, to 4.75 million units,
but remained 11% higher than a year ago. The estimate of 2.32
million homes for sale means there's only an estimated 5.9 months supply
on the market. The median sales price fell a
smidge to $183,900, which is well above the rising 12-month
average of $171,742. As with new homes, the existing home
market is getting tighter and tighter, which suggests that prices will start
rising soon.
- The S&P/Case-Shiller
Home Price 10-city index, which uses a three-month
moving average to track the value of home prices across
the US, rose for the fifth straight month in August, posting a decent
0.9% increase. There's little question that the trend of increases will
continue through the rest of the year.
-
The Institute
for Supply Management (ISM) index of manufacturing activity was 51.7 in October,
marking two months of tepid expansion in the manufacturing sector. The service sector,
on the other hand, shows no sign of slowing
down. The ISM index of non-manufacturing activity was 54.2, down a
bit from September, but still marking growth in the service
sector for 34 consecutive months.
- The Conference Board reported that it's
index of Leading Economic Indicators increased by 0.6% in
September after a decrease of 0.4% in August. Says
Ataman Ozyildirim, economist at The Conference Board: "The
U.S. LEI increased in September, more than offsetting the decline
in August. The LEI has been signaling an economy that is
fluctuating around a slow growth trend. The six-month growth rate
has slowed substantially, but still remains in growth territory
due to positive contributions from the housing and financial
components."
- According to the Bureau of Economic
Analysis, the "advance" estimate of GDP growth for Q3 2012 was
2.0%, a decent improvement from the 1.3% growth in the second quarter and
matches the growth from Q1. Unfortunately, it's a ways away from the 3% recorded in Q4
2011. We are all still waiting for the economic recovery we've
been promised. I'll say it again: no amount of QE is going to
make things any better. What we need is a clear and simple tax policy, a resolution
to the fiscal cliff and the government getting out of the way of business.
-
The Federal Reserve reported that in September
the amount of outstanding consumer credit was $2.74 trillion, up from the prior
month and growing at an 5% annualized rate. A second
month of growth in consumer credit can only be helpful to retail sales,
which would in fact help the economy.
- According to the Census Bureau, retail
trade and food service sales increased 1.1% in September, following a 1.2%
increase in August, leaving them 5.4% higher than a year ago. These numbers are
telling us that either the economy is better than we're led
to believe, or that consumers are simply delusional. The big winners were
electronics and appliance stores and gas stations. Most other sectors saw modest gains.
- The Federal Reserve reported that in October the
six month rate of growth in the supply of M-2 (a broader
view of money) was 6.4%, up slightly from September. The supply of M-1
(a narrower definition of money), on the other hand, rose a
much faster 14.2%. I'm getting bored with reporting this increase month after month.
- The Conference Board's Consumer
Confidence Index increased again in October, rising to 72.2.
Says Lynn Franco, Director of The Conference Board Consumer
Research Center: "The
Consumer Confidence Index increased again in October and is now at
its highest level this year. Consumers were considerably more
positive in their assessment of current conditions, with
improvements in the job market as the major driver. Consumers were
modestly more upbeat about their financial situation and the
short-term economic outlook, and appear to be in better spirits
approaching the holiday season."
- According to the FDIC, 4 banks failed in
October, bringing the total number of bank failures so far this
year to 47, which is 38 less than this time last year. It's clear
that there will be far fewer bank failures this year than the 92
banks that failed in 2011, which was a big improvement over the
record 160 banks that were either closed or merged into healthier
banks in 2010, and 140 in 2009. By comparison, only 26 failed in
2008 and a negligible 3 in 2007. I wonder if we'll return to the
2007 levels any time soon.
Trends To
Watch
The dollar
has been in a strong uptrend since bottoming out last October. A strong trading range
has been carved out this year between
support at 79 (red dotted line) and resistance at 84. Recently, a stronger greenback has meant bad
news for equities and could mean more trouble if it continues to
rise.
For the past year the trading range
for gold has been between $1,500 - $1,800/oz. Most recently gold tumbled
a bit before bouncing off minor support around $1,675 (green dotted
line).
I think the green line might offer a great entry point
for those still waiting to build a position in the shiny metal.
The price of silver has carved out a solid trading range this
year between $26.15 - $35.70. After bouncing off resistance in early
October there's been some profit taking recently. Silver still looks bullish to me.
We may be at, or nearing, the next buying opportunity I mentioned last
month.
The price of copper doesn't look quite so
healthy. The recent drop has dropped the price below the interim
support/resistance line at $3.50
(green dotted line). The next line of defense appears to be around $3.20.
As the price of copper is often thought to be a proxy
for the health of the economy, the price weakness is not
a surprise. With RSI so oversold we could be due for a
bump.
Similar
to the price of copper, the
weakness in the price of West Texas crude is likely
a reflection of the dismal state of the global economy and the assumption
of lower consumption going forward. Giving some support to the
price is the geo-political unrest in the Middle East which increasingly appears to
be headed towards an escalated level of conflict. Looking ahead, given the risks, I think the
more likely direction is higher prices, not lower.
The financial index failed once again to breach resistance at $16.30. The financial sector is
facing some head winds due to some unintended consequence of QE. In particular, banks are
seeing their net interest margins, which is the difference between their
borrowing and lending costs, get squeezed, which negatively impacts earnings. So I'm going
to maintain my stubborn position of avoiding bank stocks.
Even with the recent
weakness, the housing sector continues to be a winner. Unless the
housing data suddenly turns south, it's hard to be opposed to this trade. In
fact, further weakness due to general market conditions could provide a nice
buying opportunity.
The index for the
developed international markets has failed
six times over the past year to pierce resistance around 55.50 The good news
is that it also failed to fall below support at
46. This index is going to track news out of the EU and
will also likely follow the lead of the US markets.
The chart of the emerging markets
continues to be virtually identical to the one for
the developed countries. I've been waiting for months for this
correlation to end and I've been wrong all along. I don't understand why this
synchronicity exists and I don't know how much longer
it will continue. It just makes no sense.
The Shanghai index continues to be a horror
show. Each time there's been a hint of recovery it's been
quickly squashed. The index is in danger of dropping below another
important support level. If it does that, the next support comes in
around 1,700, a level not seen since the financial crisis of 2008.
Considering the world is MUCH better off than it was back then, why
is the Chinese market doing so badly? What's going on that we
don't know about? Stay tuned.
Now we come to our three contrarian indicators.
First is the NYSE Bullish sentiment index. This chart suggests that the market
is no longer too bullish. In fact, we're beginning to look
a bit bearish, especially according to RSI which has just reached oversold
territory. Past history suggests we could have a bit farther to fall
before the recovery begins.
Next we see that only about 22% of stocks
traded on the New York Stock Exchange are currently trading above their 50-day
moving average, down from 85% only two months ago. It's
also below 30% threshold that's provided support in the past. This is very
bearish. If we get down to the 12% level, we could set up
for a huge rally.
Finally, we look at the VIX, or the
"fear index". I'm surprised that the VIX hasn't moved higher
given how far the broad market has fallen and
given the two charts above. This suggests that we may have further to fall. Until
there is more "fear" we're probably not ready for a recovery.

What I'm
Thinking and Doing
About the only good news these days is that the election is
FINALLY over. In my Fearless Forecast edition back in January I said
"I believe President Obama will defeat Mitt Romney in a relatively
close election as a divided GOP is unable to coalesce behind
Romney. The Tea Party is marginalized and the Senate remains
in Republican control. Fiscal austerity, job creation and tax
policy are the main debate points." I'd say I nailed that
one right on the head. Now, Obama and the lame duck
Congress MUST figure out a way to avoid pushing this
country over the "fiscal cliff". Should every possible tax increase and spending
cut go through the 4-5% reduction in GDP would push the United States
into a deep recession. But I believe that the
self preservation instincts of our politicians won't allow that to actually happen.
Somehow they will figure out how to avoid the cliff. It's likely that they'll
compromise on some easy tax increase wins and entitlement
cuts then push the harder decisions into next year to let
the next Congress fight it out. And the sooner they do
this the better for the stock market, which hates uncertainty.
At the
end of the day, I don't think the results of the election will
change things very much. We still have a left-leaning president
with no real mandate and a divided Congress with a weakened Tea
Party. That's a great prescription for more of the same where
there's lots of talk and very little real action. I think the best
we can hope for, in the short run, is some modest compromise and
lots of procrastination. Looking longer term, I truly hope the
President looks to his legacy and makes a real effort to articulate
a tax and spending policy that makes sense. If he does, the
Republicans will be forced to the table and maybe a plan that can
save us from becoming Greece and Spain can be shaped. Or
not.
Last month I said that "we're at a dangerous inflection point" in the market. Between the "fiscal
cliff", weaker than expected Q3 corporate earnings, a domestic economy in a stupor and a heightened
conflict in the Middle East the market is teetering between a correction and a Bear
Market. As a result, I'm being extra cautious right now. I haven't bought anything new since September
because I'm allowing our cash reserves to build. At some point I think we'll have a
great buying opportunity and I want to be ready.
Professional News and Notes
First of all I'd like to send my thoughts and
prayers out to everyone who suffered through the effects of
Hurricane Sandy. My family and I were fortunate to only lose power
for four days and have no damage to our home or property other than
the loss of five trees. Hundreds of thousands of people were not so
lucky. Even today there are a few still without power and many
without heat or
hot water. That doesn't include
the countless people who have lost their homes and
businesses. It will be years before the full
impact of this storm is absorbed and the people and land recover. I sent some
money to my local Red Cross chapter this
week. It's only a very small drop in the bucket but
I hope it can help someone in need.
In collaboration with my new web designer, I have just begun work on my
new website. It was time to "freshen the look"; make
it more current and accessible. I hope to have it up
and running before the end of the year.
I've now written two dozen original articles in my blog
and I'm slowly building up a a following, which is extremely gratifying. I imagine
there will be plenty to write about between now and the end of the year.
I'd be very interested in hearing what you have to say. So
please check it out and share your thoughts by clicking here. As I'm trying
to expand its coverage, I would really appreciate it if
you could forward the link
to some of your friends and colleagues and comment
on one or more of the existing blog
posts. It would also be helpful if you could let me know what you'd like
me to write about, because after all, it's
about your money. If you "follow" the blog, you'll be notified by
email any time I post some new copy.
As always, I
thank you, my readers, and remind you that this newsletter is for you.
I have been writing News and Views for over nine years now. If you'd
like to read any prior edition, simply go to my website and click on
the link to my newsletter archives. I hope you have learned
something about our economy and our stock market, and that you will
continue to follow along with me in the future. If you have any
thoughts or suggestions on how to make it better, please let me
know. And if you'd like to speak with me about your investment
needs, I'd be pleased to be of service. Simply give me a call or
drop me an email.
Best
regards,
Greg
Werlinich President
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