As I've been saying, now they are trotting out the same reasons that have existed the past few days, weeks, and in fact months for reasons for the selling.
a) Oil is high. As if $132 matters more than $128. That's the reason.
b) Financials stink. As if they improved substantially the past few days, weeks, months. That's the reason.
c) The Federal Reserve is beginning to face reality instead of constantly calling for an end of inflation (if we had any) or a 2nd half recovery. That's the reason. Because until the Fed spoon feeds traders a dose of reality, they can ignore it. And let me be clear, the Fed is still an eternal optimist compared to what is really happening and will be happening down the road. Notice how the Fed is changing their tune slowly but surely, to our view. But only until the evidence is smacking them in the face, to prove their earlier predictions were wrong. And these are our best prognosticators? Yikes. Maybe I need to go work for the Fed. Nah. No fun.
- The Federal Reserve on Wednesday sharply lowered its projection for economic growth this year, citing blows from the housing and credit debacles along with zooming energy prices. It also expects higher unemployment and inflation. (shocker!)
- Fed officials viewed economic activity "as likely to be particularly weak in the first half of 2008; some rebound was anticipated in the second half of this year," the documents stated. (oh still clinging to 'some' rebound; down from 'a hell of a' rebound, then in fall 2008 they will say, nevermind that rebound thing, it's coming next year)
- Under its new economic forecast, the Fed said it now believes gross domestic product will grow between just 0.3 percent to 1.2 percent this year. That's lower than a previous Fed forecast, released in late February, that estimated growth to be between 1.3 percent and 2 percent.
- With economic growth slowing, the Fed projected that the national unemployment rate will rise to between 5.5 percent and 5.7 percent this year. That is higher than the central bank's old forecast for the rate to climb as high as 5.3 percent. Last year, the unemployment rate averaged 4.6 percent. (not with this government's reporting methodology - I expect unemployment to be 1% or maybe 0.001% with our reporting - I mean its an election year - we can't be showing the truth can we?)
- the Fed raised its projection for inflation. The Fed now expect inflation to be between 3.1 percent and 3.4 percent this year. That's higher than its old forecast for inflation, which was estimated to come in at around 2.1 percent to 2.4 percent. (not with this government's reporting methodology - I expect inflation to drop to 0.0001% as well! See if we were playing with a serious set of books we'd have unemployment in 11-12% range and inflation in 11-14% range - but since it's all fiction, does any of this matter? No.)
- the Fed's documents indicated that their rate-cutting campaign may be winding down.
So now we will begin the next drumbeat which should be starting by July - the "everything will be fine in 6 months aka 1st half 2009" - you know, since "2nd half 2008" did not work out so well, now we can bid up stocks to outrageous levels on the "economic and earnings recovery of first half 2009". And once again for months on end we will hear "the market is discounting everything"... and it's time to buy stocks for the coming recovery. In 6 months. They just never tell you which 6 months.
Again, until reality hits the traders with an overwhelming amount of evidence, the Kool Aid continues. Since no one can think for themselves it appears, when the Federal Reserve induces even a touch of reality that seems to set off panic. No one can think out loud.... hmm, ya think this $132 oil will actually pinch profit margins? Keep in mind - again - Fourth Quarter 2008 PROFIT expectations are 60% HIGHER than Fourth Quarter 2007. The 2nd half recovery party is still alive and well to the analyst community. Sorry to be the rain on their parade.
We said last Friday "Risk is High" and it was not a time to press bets. We mentioned Monday that we had the "2nd Intraday Reversal in 4 Sessions" - the market was warning us there was a nasty undertow beneath the surface. Further, speculative rallies in the "worst of breed" stocks were everywhere (even now they continue). All classic signs to get the heck out of Dodge - yes you're going to miss that last 3-4% move in your stocks, but so what. Capital preservation is job #1. Always.
Technically, I will be looking to pare some short exposure around S&P 1380; I thought S&P 1400 would hold up better than it did. But it cut through like a knife. I expect a bounce off 1380 but won't trust that first bounce - we'll have to see how it holds. If we do break 1380 later in the week or next week, the plan is to buy back the short exposure I will be lightening up on on the first "test" of this level. Because that would indicate we could be headed meaningful lower. Despite the "2nd half recovery". Either way, I'll be heavy in cash and expect to outperform the market and my peers here in periods like this - those who throw caution to the wind and go 100% long because they drink Kool Aid in huge quantities. Weeks like this are when the hedged strategy will benefit us. In fact, we were up yesterday during the sell off. And today. Boo... and Yah.

Conclusion: With unemployment at 0.0001% by 2nd half of 2008, and inflation down to 0.0001% by 2nd half of 2008, this is a great opportunity to buy stocks ahead of the 2nd half recovery. Please do so.










7 comments:
mark, all i can say today is Booyah!
But now I need to go back and review all my bids.
TraderMark: As you know, I have been stating for weeks now that: 1) this is a bear market; 2) this rally is built on a poor foundation (i.e., bad breadth); 3) the rally would likely stall at the 40 week MA; 4) sentiment was getting too bullish so one of the main "reasons" for the rally was no longer true; 5) there is no edge in technical buying in closes above the 40 week MA.
Having said all that, it would not surprise me to see a bounce going into the holiday weekend; wouldn't want to spoil everybody's picnic and potato solid? Seriously, this market has been very gracious in my opinion to traders. Why? You will have another opportunity to sell higher.
**1) this is a bear market**
American middle class is in a bear market, but that doesnt necessarily mean the stock market will be. 60% of S&P earnings come from overseas.
Here is a chart for you to consider:http://bespokeinvest.typepad.com/bespoke/images/2008/05/14/19901991.png
Marko.. You deserve a crowning ceremony for calling the Coal rally way ahead of the whole world... :)..
BTW, CNBC is hosting a show tonight, "Americas Oil Crisis". Is this a sur e sign of the near term top - I think it is. What say about oil and OIH near term?
Cheers,
Pankaj
Listening to CNBC on the Sirius Radio this morning, and it is clear that there is a belief that if oil wasn't so high then the stock market would do better. Second, there are many who are participating in oil who are calling this a bubble; yet these same folks had no problem calling the NASDAQ bubble a new paradigm only because they were part of it. Third, for a bubble to happen, both the fundamental and price must be out of sync; prices are ahead of fundamentals (up 10% in 2 weeks) but the fundamental picture for crude oil is unlikely to change for a long time. Fourth, those darn speculators are the new boogie men.
Lastly, my statement above that "this is a bear market" is based upon my own work across not only theSP500 but multiple markets. I would ask two questions in relation to the chart that Bespoke Research shows: 1) what does this mean for prices going forward? 2) how does this help me make money. This kind of research in my opinion is just noise unless you can answer these two questions.
pankaj,
my purchase yesterday of DUG shows you where I think things are going in the near term
The long term outlook has remained unchanged. We are in a World of Shortages - and American leadership is too busy grilling oil executives instead of thinking of real solutions.
Manhattan project for Energy needs to be started - it should of been started 5 years ago. By the time they start - we will still have a 5-10 year lag.
The only "saving grace" is the higher commodities go, the closer we get to a worldwide recession. At some price point China and India can no longer afford to subsidize their costs and I'm reading some smaller countries stopping doing so now (or increasing the costs to their people)
At $150-$170 oil we will have bankruptcies in airlines, and closings of stores, and other assorted things. All "good things" to the stock market I guess. People do not realize petrol goes into everything. Why are the railroads doing well - they are passing along all costs to producers in surcharge. This is a zero sum game. Someone pays for it, either producer (lower margins) or consumer (higher prices) or both.
If the predictions of $170-$200 oil do come true and its anytime in the next 6-18 months, I am fully confidant we will have global recession. Demand destruction will happen everywhere. In the end economics 101 will win out.
shax, that bespoke graph is amazing
but the difference is back then, banks were allowed to go bankrupt (S&Ls at least) and they admitted the truth
We are now in a Japanese era where the regulators are helping the banks avoid the truth and the Fed is sucking up all the bad assets in return for Treasuries in hopes things improve in '2nd half' or 'soon'.
Where are we in comparison to the 00-02 slowdown? I mean isnt it better to compare bubble (tech) to bubble (credit/housing)?
I know you are comparing to financial corrections BUT that was a different era of relative transparency and honesty. We are in a new era. Japan style!
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