The Dollar is Falling!
The dollar is falling… the dollar is falling!
That’s what I noticed today as the dollar index fell 0.59% (that’s big in the currency world).
It’s a big deal because a falling dollar has usually led to gains in equities. But this time the market ended the day mixed. The Dow Jones was up 0.43% and the S&P climbed 0.23%. The Nasdaq stuck out like a sore thumb, falling 0.21%. It seems that the old dollar/stock market pattern isn’t holding up as well as it used to.
This indicates to me that the dollar carry trade is losing some of its luster. In the end, these ultra-low interest rates probably won’t last forever. I expect the dollar carry trade to be replaced with the Yen carry trade (since Japan apparently doesn’t believe in higher interest rates). The new Bank of Japan governor has also shown a preference for a weaker currency. So moving forward, we should see a big correlation between the Yen and the US stock market.
As you can expect from a falling buck, gold was on the up and up, gaining $14 to close at $1,151 an ounce.
Honestly, though, I wouldn’t read too much into a falling dollar. The market has been data driven as of late. Investors are all looking for signs that the recession is truly over. And as long as this week’s reports show an improving economy, the market could head higher, taking the US dollar along for the ride.
The report I’m most interested in is the December Consumer Price Index report this Friday. This report measures inflation at the consumer level. If this report shows a big bump in consumer prices, the market could easily sell-off. That’s because higher inflation means the Fed is more likely to boost interest rates.
And higher interest rates signal an end to cheap money.
Will the CPI come in very high? I doubt it. Gas prices were close to flat in December. And at the same time, retailers were discounting everything. So I wouldn’t be shocked if CPI came in at or under consensus (0.0%-0.1% gain).
At this point I’m cautiously bullish, especially on the commodity complex.
Categories: Macro View Points, Short Term Timing Tags: Consumer Price Index, CPI, Dow Jones, inflation, Nasdaq, S&P 500, US Dollar Index, Yen
My Love for Android Knows No Bounds
This has been one of the laziest market weeks I’ve ever gone through. As a result, I’ve had more coffee this week than I’ve had in a long time.
I tell you, the girls over at Dutch Brothers (a drive-thru coffee joint here in Oregon, which hires shockingly good looking people) not only know my name by this point, but they’ve also figured out exactly what I love to drink, and what car I drive.
They have my coffee ready for me by the time I drive up to them! It’s fantastic. But it goes to show you how much time I’ve spent getting coffee this week in order to cope with this flat market.
After all the excitement of Monday’s rally, the rest of the week was flat, flat, flat.
Just look at that. The Dow Jones stayed in a 33 point range for most of the week.
A big reason why the market was so flat is that investors were posturing for today’s Bureau of Labor Statistics employment report. At the start of the week people were throwing around all sorts of optimistic jobs numbers. I even saw Zero Hedge –- the most bearish blog I’ve ever read in my life — point out analysis calling for a jobs number surpassing 300,000 due to seasonal fudge factors.
From ZH…
An analysis out of Stifel Nicolaus points out that due to various seasonal adjustments, an NFP print of up to +100,000 could be expected (which incidentally does not reflect anything favorable at all about the actual employment picture as it is due exclusively to seasonal fudge factors). In fact, Stifel argues, a print of +316,000 is theoretically possible
Alas, the positive number never came. Instead the employment report showed an 86,000 job drop.
A couple things you should be aware of regarding the employment report…
- Bernanke said himself that it would take 100,000 new jobs a month for the unemployment rate to start dropping.
- When trying to look for a bottom, it’s best to look at how many hours the average work week is. Right now it’s at 33.2. Once employers start feeling better about the economy, we’ll see this number increase. That’s because an employer would rather give an existing employee more hours rather than hiring a new employee.
- There are 2.5 million people that have no job and want one… yet are still not counted in the unemployment report.
- In February the BLS will make revisions to the 2009 unemployment numbers. Analysts are expecting a HUGE decline as the BLS accounts for fewer jobs created at small businesses. Calculated Risk, who is very good when it comes to predicting economic numbers, has calculated that revision to lead to 824,000 more jobs lost. This would most certainly shock the market and lead to a higher unemployment rate.
So while the jobs report has certainly been improving, we’re not out of the woods yet.
As for the market…
The three major US indexes are at or near 52-week highs and overbought. Investor sentiment is at extremely bullish readings. And the VIX is at a 52-week low.
Even the commodity companies I love so much are sitting at 52-week highs. So what does that leave for us, the guys who profit off of short-term market swings?
One rout we could take is getting into some bearish credit spreads. In other words we sell call options in hopes that they are never profitable for the buyer. But honestly I just don’t feel comfortable going against the dominant uptrend right now. Nearly ten years of playing the stock market has shown that type of play to be a painful one.
What it comes down to is good old fashioned stock picking.
One stock I’ve recently loved up is Google, mainly because of the Android operating system for mobile phones. It’s really started picking up market share after Motorola’s recent release of the Droid for Verizon.
Admittedly I think the Droid is a hideous excuse for a phone. But everyone seems to be eating it up. Most of that love is because it runs on Google’s OS.
In just the last year the Android operating system has picked up 12.4% market share in the smartphone sector, mainly at the expense of the iPhone and the Blackberry.
And with a slew of new Android devices hitting in the first quarter of 2010, I fully expect that market share to hit 20% or more by the end of the year.
This is great news for Google, and so I expect GOOG to be a low risk way of riding the Android OS higher. Another way to take part is to get into Motorola itself. The company has picked up pace ever since the release of the Droid. Analysts expect 1.4 million Android devices sold for Motorola in the 4th quarter alone. In all, Motorola sold 12.5 million handsets for the year. For a company everyone expected to vanish by 2010, that’s remarkable.
Motorola isn’t sitting on its ass either. It’s gone ahead and released another phone, the backflip, for AT&T. It also plans on introducing more new Android based models this year.
At this point Motorola has good exposure to AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon Wireless. That’s good in my books. All it needs to do now is charge for the European market and sales should beat expectations.
Just be aware that positions in these companies should be held over the mid to longer-term (about 6 – 12 months).
Take care,
Charles Delvalle
Categories: Macro View Points, Stocks, Technical Analysis Tags: android, ATT, Bernanke, BLS, Dow Jones, employment report, GOOG, MOT, smartphone, VIX
2010 Prediction
The market didn’t move one way or the other yesterday. The Dow Jones – the lagging index – ended the day slightly down. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed slightly in the green.
The reason why the indexes didn’t move much had to do with economic news. The Commerce Department reported factory orders for November that were twice as good as what had been expected. This good news was offset by data that the National Association of Realtor’s Index of Pending Home Sales dropped 16%. That was the first drop in nine months.
Plus, dollar started trending higher again, moving up almost 1%. Not only did this put pressure on the stock market, but it also helped push down the price of spot gold by 3.35%.
When you look at the technicals, the market is pretty overbought. Don’t get me wrong, if the technicals were overbought and everyone hated the market, I’d probably take it as a sign of higher prices. But right now everybody is bullish.
The American Association of Individual Investors Bullish Ratio hit its highest level since February of 2007. The market topped out later that year.
Another sentiment indicator, the Investors Intelligence Advisors’ Survey (they all sound the same), showed the lowest percentage of bears since March of 1987. We all know what happened a few months later…
So, while investors can stay bullish for a long time, the contrarian in me says that we’ll see a drop in the next 3-6 months. But that’s not the only reason why i think we’ll see a drop in the second half of the year.
During a typical recovery, the inventory rebuild leads to more jobs, which leads to more domestic consumption, which finally starts a growth cycle. But right now, consumers are up to their ears in debt. Most have been laid off. And a good number have seen their hours cut. People out there are picking and choosing what bill to pay. And the credit card ends up being the last one.
Consumer demand can’t take off in that type of environment. Cash is tight. And the next dollar is used to pay the next bill.
To make matters worse, the Fed may end up tightening in response to this inventory rebuild and the effects of the stimulus. Could the Fed be so stupid? Sure they could!
Listen, the Fed typically begins tightening as soon as job growth begins. Over the next 12 months, the US government will hire up to 1.4 million people for the 2010 census. And even though these 1.4 million jobs will probably only last about 6 months, it could definitely push the labor market up over the next few months.
It’s enough to make you go “hmmm”.
An overbought market with record bullishness… poor consumers… and tighter money, spells a recipe for a nasty second half.
Categories: Macro View Points, Stocks Tags: Dow Jones, Nasdaq, National Association of Realtor’s Index of Pending Home Sales, S&P 500, sentiment
The Trend is Your Friend
Listen, I don’t know how many times I have to repeat that the trend is your friend.
I mean seriously, have a beer with the trend. Talk with the trend. Don’t try and punch it in the face. The trend is stronger than you are. And it WILL smash your face in if you’re not careful.
While bears were out celebrating a stronger dollar and trying to spit in the trend’s face, the trend came back and hunted them down with a machine gun from a helicopter flying overhead.
If I recall correctly (and I do, because my blog tells me so) two days ago I told you to be careful about calling the recent 3-day rout another bear market.
And today, just like that, the Dow popped right back above its 20-day moving average.
Not only that, but the RSI is heading higher (forming an uptrend even) and the Slow Stochastic is nearly crossing over and heading higher as well.
That’s not all though. If you look at the dollar index, the buck is clearly overbought. And today, it was practically unchanged. I wouldn’t be shocked to see the dollar decline over the next few days.
If you’re bold, you might want to start buying.
If you’re a little more on the safe side, then wait for the dollar index to get back under its 50-day moving average before jumping into the market. At the very least, pay attention to the S&P 500 and make sure it gets above its 20-day moving average.
Oh what the hell. I’ll probably tell you as soon as it happens anyways.
Categories: Short Term Timing, Technical Analysis Tags: dollar index, Dow Jones, moving average, overbought, Rsi, S&P 500, Slow Stochastic
What does the dollar rally mean to investors?
When I used to date (before I got engaged), I never tried to kiss a girl unless she confirmed her interest in me.
A first date was never enough. People date all the time and it leads nowhere.
But if the girl was fiddling with her hair, touching my arms and telling me how I was a “strong and powerful Puerto Rican”, well, I would definitely kiss her by the end of the date.
Other guys I know aren’t as conservative. They try and kiss a girl whether she shows interest or not.
These are the same guys that spend money that they don’t yet have. Or that put all of their money on one big bet. And the same ones that try and predict tops and bottoms before they ever happen.
Their success in the stock market – as with the ladies – was limited.
I guess you can say I’m on the safer side of things. I like to wait for confirmation before I act. With the girls, as I explained above, I like them to show an interest in me. I don’t like to spend money I’m not holding in my hand. And I definitely don’t try and pick tops and bottoms in the market before they happen.
Rather, I ride out the trends and look for predictable buying or selling opportunities to take advantage.
In yesterday’s issue, I told you that I wouldn’t become a bear until the 50-day moving average was breached on the major indexes.
One thing I didn’t cover though was the dollar.
Careful observers have noted that the buck is now above its 50-day moving average. On Friday, I explained the relationship between the dollar and the stock market. Suffice it to say, a rallying dollar is bearish for the stock market.
But just because the buck is above its 50-day doesn’t mean I’ve become a bear. As I said before, I like to see confirmation first. In this case, confirmation would only happen if the major indexes drop under their 50-day moving averages (10,076 on the Dow Jones).
In the end, you have to stay realistic. Don’t let ideology drive your actions in the stock market. Instead let the market guide you.
Even though the dollar broke through a major resistance point, the trend is still up for the stock market.
Act accordingly.
Categories: Macro View Points, Market Tips and Tricks, Short Term Timing Tags: 50-day, dollar, Dow Jones, stock market
The Bear Market We’ve All Been Waiting For?
Bears are dancing in the streets, biting the heads off of random bulls they see.
The Dow Jones, Nasdaq, and S&P all broke under the 20-day moving average. The 50-day is in the line of sight. Will all three indexes plunge below the 50-day? I may not have a crystal ball, but I do have technical analysis.
Dow Jones Industrial Average
This is what the chart is telling me right now
- The Dow Jones saw significant resistance at 10,500. It even tried six times to break above 10,500 with no success.
- Huge spike in buying volume followed by selling might indicate a blow-off top.
- The RSI and Slow Stochastic are both in neutral territory. This signals more downside left (I’d like to see these two oversold before buying).
- The Dow broke under its 20-day average but is still above its 50-day.
It looks like we might have a few more days of selling. But I expect buyers to come back in as soon as the major averages hit their 50-day moving averages. If we see a decisive break UNDER this average, it could signal a change in trend.
In other words, buying now might be a bit silly. But getting heavily short right now is equally as silly. It’s kind of like betting against the Yankee’s in the first inning because the Red Sox barely hit a home run. It’s just too soon to make that bet.
In times like these, you want to use these small downturns to hedge your portfolio.
Yesterday I recommended you get into January VIX out of the money call options to hedge your portfolio. If you had done what I said, you would probably be in the green (the VIX is up over 6% today!).
Until the trend becomes bearish, I simply won’t get heavily short this market. And that won’t happen until the 50-day is breached on all three indexes.
Categories: Short Term Timing, Technical Analysis Tags: 20-day, 50-day, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, S&P, Technical Analysis, VIX
Is 10,500 a no go?
10,500 is like the land the Dow dare not close above.
It didn’t even matter that the unemployment count for November was far better then expected (a 11,000 drop). After starting the day up over 1%, the Dow Jones and the other two indexes both ended the day barely in the green.
The funny thing is that the good economic news actually contributed to the markets rough going. It all has to do with the complex and far reaching implications of an improving labor market and its effect on the dollar.
You see, most currency traders like to see an economy producing jobs. It makes them want to buy more of that currency, pushing the price higher.
The problem is, the dollar is being used to fuel a huge carry trade. If the value of the dollar increases, the carry trade becomes more expensive. Eventually any fund that is short dollars (borrowing) will have to unwind its carry trade (close out the loan and take a loss). And the dollar moves up, up, up.
This scenario is pretty much what happened today, albeit on a small scale. The November unemployment report came in strong, and some currency traders took that as a sign of strength for the buck. At the same time, the increase in the dollars value spooked carry traders into closing out their positions.
This drained liquidity from the global markets and resulted in all three major indexes closing at the lows of the day. Frankly, i’m shocked we didn’t close out deeply in the red.
Here’s the kicker…
If the market is weakening over employment numbers, how badly will it weaken once the Fed announces an end to its MBS purchases in the first quarter of 2010? How will the market react if the Fed raises rates by June 2010?Or the passage of FAS 167 in January 2010? All of these things are dollar bullish and should add downside pressure to the stock market throughout the year.
And on a finally note, let me show you a chat of the Dow Jones. It shows the important inflection point we now sit at.
Categories: Macro View Points, Technical Analysis Tags: carry trade, Dow Jones, FAS 167, Fed
Bailouts, Bailouts Everywhere
Gold has officially broken through $1,200.
All it took was the hope of a bailout of the world’s most extravagant real estate bust – Dubai. Well, not entirely.
Japan also promised it would inject another $114 billion into its economy by offering banks cheap short-term loans. It’s also expanding the type of collateral it receives.
Bailouts are happening all around the world. It’s the new “in” thing to do. Think about it: Nearly every major credit catastrophe has been delayed by a big bailout. Only Iceland and Lehman slipped through the cracks. And now the talking heads use those two stories to convince everybody that a bailout is the best option.
So moving forward I don’t see an end to the bailout bonanza.
You also shouldn’t forget about what money printing means for Japan. It could begin another Yen carry trade. A Yen carry trade plus a Dollar carry trade would allow for a massive bubble to blow. The ending wouldn’t be pretty.
But who knows, maybe the Feds will figure out another way to keep the Ponzi scheme going…
With cheap money pouring into the economy by means of the Yen and Dollar, it’s hard to envision the uptrend breaking. But I still feel that by early next year we could see prices 10-20% lower than they are today.
In the short-term, a break above 10,500 in the Dow Jones would signal more gains ahead. As of right now, though, the Dow isn’t able to settle above that level, which will keep me away from getting into any short-term long positions.
As for gold, I’m not a buyer at these levels. I tend to stay away from any asset that’s gone parabolic (like gold). I loved gold at $1,050. But over $1,200 is hard to swallow, especially with no other significant corrections.
Categories: Macro View Points Tags: bailouts, carry trade, Dow Jones, Dubai, Fed, gold, Yen
Richard Russell’s Now a BULL
After staying most of the day in the red yesteday, all three indexes advanced to close the day in slightly positive territory. The Dow Transports even rose past its October high.
Overnight, oil pushed higher on news that crude inventories dropped 4.37 million barrels last week. Gold fell a little off its highs of $1,144 an ounce and the dollar strengthened a little bit.
Even Richard Russell, the editor of the Dow Theory Letters, has become bullish on this market. To him and other followers of the theory, the fact that the Dow Transports broke above its October high while the Dow Jones is making new 52-week highs signals a bull market.
Other Dow Theorists of course believe that the market isn’t in a bull run. You see, one of the prerequisites for having a genuine bull run is that a rally must overcome a “significant” correction. And so, the drop from September 2008 until March of 2009 was simply too short to be considered “significant”.
What I can pull from this is that there is still a lot of debate as to whether this rally is real or not, even among the traders of one investing theory.
At this point, economic data will matter more than ever in persuading traders to buy or sell. A big report comes next week when we see a revision of 3rd quarter GDP. Most analysts expect it to drop, as the preliminary GDP figures didn’t account so well for the pain small businesses are in.
If we see a big drop, we’re likely to see the catalyst for a nicely sized correction.
But my money is still on the rally continuing into next year. In the end, the dollar carry trade is fueling this reliquidation. And it will take deliberate monetary policy to stop that.
Categories: Macro View Points Tags: Dow Jones, dow theory, GDP, gold, richard russell
This Chart of the Dow Shows Opportunity…
I woke up this morning… grabbed a cup of coffee… and sat down at my computer looking through charts.
Most of what I saw was ridiculous crap. Stuff not even worth mentioning (expect to say that they sucked)
But then this GEM popped out at me…

Dow Jones Chart
This is a 15-minute chart of the Dow Jones.
Notice that 200-unit resistance that has proved quite resiliant. Well, if the Dow can hold its 8,000 support and break above this 200-unit average, then the Dow is rallying.
I really like the fact that neither the RSI or Slow Stochastic are anywhere near overbought. That means the fuel is there for a move much higher…
Hmm… There’s a great credit-spread one can do : )
Categories: Market Tips and Tricks, Short Term Timing, Technical Analysis Tags: Credit-Spread, Dow Jones, Rsi, Slow Stochastic
