Tag Archive for markets

Thoughts on Today’s Markets

So this morning we bounced on more “belief” that QE3 was coming, but later in day in the Q&A session, Dr. Barnacle declared that right now is not the appropriate time to accellerate the printing presses. Gold and silver shrugged off the news on the Euro Pigs insolvency and continued their breakout above resistance levels, with Silver notably clearing the $38 dollar level which has held as multi-month resistance. It’s hard to be anything but contructive on silver here, while equities still look overvalued.

Earnings season will be in full swing next week but the short term focus will be on the debt ceiling debate, but mark my words the Republicans will fold under pressure — politicians simply love spending money on pet projects, like the research project placing shrimp on treadmills for example.

So the market may squiggle briefly higher on a debt relief announcement, but this will likely be another selling opportunity. The only thing that can prop up the humpty dumpty stock market it seems is Dr. Bernankenstein’s rampant, sweaty printfinger.

So for my part I am remaining bearish but watchfull of the 50 and 100 day moving averages. I will be posting a chart study again this evening but it looks as though the 50 day will not hold on SPY today and we will not get another cheesy bounce off of this level for Options Expiration tomorrow (think SCAMATHON 3000 HFT program)…

In any event, I expect the unexpected short term, but I’m sticking with my long gold and silver calls/long IWM QQQ put thesis for now.

Note the SPY is now below the 100 and 50 day moving averages here.

Will update as more information becomes available.

Markets At Crossroads — Watch the 200 Day Moving Averages

Over the past 7 weeks, stocks have moved lower in a relatively calm, and controlled manner with small daily losses and the occasional oversold bounce higher. These oversold bounce rallies usually begin with a gap up in morning trade following higher overnight futures prices but so far during this correction each and every rally has been reversed the next trading day.

       This type of market action can be difficult for many investors and traders looking for a bottom to the interim down trend in equities. The volatile and violent “snapback” rallies are even more frustrating for short sellers who find themselves covering positions at a loss only to see their favorite short move lower the following day.

       In my opinion there are three main factors at play in the current market. The first is valuation. Stocks are said to be cheap by most Wall Street long only managers who are more or less fully invested in all market climates from the long side. To brokers pitching clients a long only approach, there is always a bull market over the horizon as these managers have the luxury of relative performance benchmarking and the ability to “not time the market.” If the market drops, the goal of these managers is to lose less than the index. In the long only manager’s view, the market always rises over the long term, so gaging the absolute valuation of the stock market is futile and the main concern to these investors is buying stocks that attractive relative to other stocks in the market. For the rest of us, we don’t have the luxury of earning money whether the market rises or falls — if the market falls, we lose money. In the hedge fund industry, when the market falls we must preserve capital. The basic idea for most investors is to never lose money and to be on the right side of the tape day in and day out. Valuations of the overall market are absolutely key because most stocks are at least 70% correlated to the overall stock market. During market corrections, most stocks fall regardless of valuations by about the same percentage as the overall market. this trend was evident in 2008, as liquidity driven factors forced people to sell stocks regardless of PE ratios or growth rates. When looking at the valuation of today’s market, it is clear that on a longer term PE 10 basis that the market is expensive at 23X ten year average earnings. Robert Shiller argued this point quite clearly on Tech Ticker, stating that the market is 40% overvalued and that it’s not “different this time.” So for the first main factor driving equity prices, we have to score one for the bears — stocks are expensive, not cheap, on an absolute basis.

       The second factor that will decide the direction of equity markets in the coming weeks is the technical picture of the major index funds. Traders and hedge fund managers pay particular attention to the 200 day moving averages. Many famous trend followers use only the 200 day moving average system to invest in the equity markets. When the market crosses below the 200 day, these managers and traders sell and go short the stock market in a mechanical fashion. Managers like Bill Dunn, Paul Tudor Junes, Monroe Trout, and many others will be looking closely at the 200 day moving averages which were breached on Wednesday for the NASDAQ 100. The S&P 500 held the 200 day, however, so we have conflicting signals on the technical front for stock prices going forward. That said, the markets could crash if we finally do get a break below the 200 day as many HFT and systems traders will be unloading their long book and going net short on stocks here. Even if you don’t think technical analysis works, you should study the discipline because many other investors do believe in a trend following approach and their actions will drive the prices in the markets over the near and medium term. So for the second factor driving equity prices, we are very close to getting a second bearish confirmation on stock prices. With that said, many other technical indicators are short term bullish because the markets are oversold on the RSI, MACD, and Stochastic. We are truly at a crossroads and I expect more whipsaw action in the days to come.

       Finally, the third factor that affects the direction of stock prices is the Federal  Reserve monetary policies. Since August of last year, the stock market has glided higher on a wave of easy money stimulus. Short sellers have been all but bankrupted, and there are very few bears left int he equity market. This is worrisome because the FED is winding up their QE program in less than two weeks and the backstop of stimulus will be gone from the market altogether. Many investors have argued that the Fed’s low interest rates and reinvestment of proceeds will result in a de facto QE3, but the bottom line is that without more Quantitative Easing, the third factor driving stock prices, the FED, will be almost entirely out of the market. This is also very bearish for equity prices over the medium term. Remember, however, that the FED will be in the market for the next two weeks and that we may see a sharp bounce from oversold levels before resuming a larger correction this summer.

       In conclusion, I believe that equities are fairly expensive, are flirting with a major technical sell signal, and are losing the “Bernanke Put” which has pushed stocks up some 26% from last year’s lows. I feel playing defense here will be very important and that value investors would be well served holding a higher percentage of cash than normal.

Markets Gap Higher Today

So investors like me are bargain hunting today… I am glad I was cash heavy into yesterday’s trading but I do wish I had covered ALL of my short exposure yesterday. That said, this bounce here looks kind of sketchy because it was a gap up — gaps usually get filled. In other words, because the rally was a late night futures driven “ramp job” and not a gradual ease higher, this type of action might easily be reversed. In any event, I think the downtrend is over for a while so I would not be shorting anything right now but I do think remaining hedged or at least in a covered call stance makes more sense than being 100% long. If I were looking to add stocks here, I would consider buying the following:

RSH

MSFT

RIMM

INTC

NWLI

JBSS

VOXX

CVX

COP

FCX

VALE

JNJ

PEP

Tuesday Could be Lower if QQQ Doesn’t Break $57.43 — Short IWM Calls Into Weekend

If you aren’t hedged here, buy some IWM puts to hedge your risks… Tuesday is NOT June 1st but May 31st so I am expecting lower stock prices to another slow grind up like we had today… Either way, play defense here and hold 20% in commodities/silver over the weekend to hedge your FIAT risk…

Again, I am still in a sell signal at Hedgephone.com and NOT uber bullish… We are still below the 50 day moving average at $57.43 on QQQ so watch that level for your signal into Tuesday…

Have a great weekend! (And sell some options going into the end of the day to capture theta decay over the long weekend — Ie sell front month calls against your longs, and front month below or at the money puts against your shorts!)

Selling premium is the best way to make money in your sleep… and the only way to earn money in the stock market over the weekend!

World Markets Crashing: Yawn… No Suprise for Hedgephone.com Readers

     While other sites are telling you to buy CRM, NFLX, and AMZN hedgephone.com was telling you the bubble was about to pop and to move into cash, shorts, or gold… We still feel the market has a long way to fall from here…

S&P 500 futures down $10 to $1317 — our target is $1310 for the short term… Below $1310 look for $1270 to hold again as it did in the March Japanese contagion meldown…

IWM is the strong short sell here… Look to go short and and hold.

TNA, TYH, etc…

time to play defense, but POMO will hold this up in the afternoons so try to keep that in mind.

The markets were lower monday morning, with gold firm at $1508 per ounce. Until Real Estate bottoms look for more QE… Goldman is getting nailed again this morning under investigation worries… the stock is down some $40 or so in the past 3 months… Ouch…

Elsewhere, AIG is still getting its clock cleaned and trading well below book…

Will keep readers updated today, but MDY and IWM still look like the best short candidates here.

Macro Monday: Buy Physical Silver and Gold, Short Treasuries and Stocks, Long RJI, Short IWM QQQ and CANDIES/FADSCAN (FADSCAM?)

So there you have it, by gold and silver and put it in your safe at home, short the TLT or buy TBT, buy RJI and buy IWM put options… QE2 POMO is going to be light tomorrow and tuesday, the debt ceiling fears will manifest in the market, discounting of the end of QE will be played out, but the longer term trend is for inflation and weak economic data such as employment and wage data… A barbell approach in options may be appropriate here…

In other words, a large chunk of TBT calls, a large chunk of SGOL calls, a large chunk of SIVR and SLV calls, and a large chunk of IWM put options may be appropriate with an eye towards shorting stocks as your hedge for QE ending discount – no doubt in my mind that the end of QE is not factored into the market enough at this point with valuations as high as they are currently…

Having farmland, real estate, gold, silver, etc… is a good way to play it while shorting the IWM and QQQ…