Time to Fade the Raging Bull

Although our technically derived target for the Dow is still a very bullish 16800, we wrote here recently that we were keeping one foot out the fire escape.  Given yesterday’s display of bravado on Wall Street, however, we’ve now put the other foot out as well. After being down 116 points, the Industrial Average rallied nearly 200 points to end the day 80 points higher, at 15040.  We had anticipated the initial weakness with a bearish forecast for Thursday of a 15-point drop in the E-Mini S&P futures. This equates to a Dow fall of about 120 points.  At the lows, which occurred midway through the session, both came close to hitting their respective targets. Although the rebound therefore came as no surprise, the relentlessness of it did. After bottoming, the broad averages ratcheted steadily higher for the remainder of the session, strongly suggesting with each new upthrust and shallow pullback that the rally was being driven solely by short covering.

If so, bears will still be on the hook when stocks begin to trade Friday morning. We’ve told subscribers to be ready to short into whatever illusion of strength a bear squeeze might create, so convinced are we that the insanity that has been goosing shares has reached an unsustainable extreme.  There were plenty of reasons for the broad averages to have exceeded our downside targets yesterday and kept going.  For one, the U.S. dollar was in the throes of its worst day in recent memory. This suggests that at a psychological level, at least, all was not right with the world. Couple that with the horrific slide in T-Bond prices over the last month, and the very sharp, upward skew in mortgage rates that has resulted, and one could almost believe the Fed is starting to lose control.

Why QE Is Permanent

Unlike most observers, we view an end to QE as highly unlikely. To keep the U.S. economy nominally afloat, the Fed has been absorbing $85 billion of Treasury and mortgage paper each month. Mere talk of cutting back on this subsidy, let alone ending it, has sent stocks and bonds into a swoon. Under the circumstances, any real change in Fed policy would risk crashing the financial system.  In the meantime, the meager fruits of easing are no longer sufficient to provide cover for the spinmeisters. The rate of job creation has fallen three million positions shy of previous recoveries, and wages remain stagnant. The manufacturing sector has begun to weaken precipitously. And although housing numbers have been strong, there is no reason to think this can continue with mortgage rates sharply on the rise.

With yesterday’s 200-point turnaround in the Dow, the disconnect between Wall Street and the real world only grew more worrisome. Accordingly, we’ll be looking to fade buyers on Friday while acknowledging that the insanity could continue for yet a while longer. We’d rather risk a few bucks going against the herd at these levels than try to get short on a day when stocks are plummeting.

  • Luke June 10, 2013, 8:53 am

    Summer correction. Buoyant market setting up for a blowoff 2014. S&P 3200 by 2015? Firming USD with the US indexes leading world markets higher. Counterintuitive.

  • Rich June 9, 2013, 9:13 pm
  • mario cavolo June 7, 2013, 9:45 am

    Freddie et al, gentle reminder not to forget that China, very soon to be the world’s largest economy, is right up there with the rest liquidity steroiding its economy…

    If one were to take a single breath to relax and breath and ponder, that the FED’s QE has been going on for years and is now at a steady $85/billion per month is in fact, an UNFATHOMABLE state of affairs with respect to the financial system. Throw in HFT shenanigans, and a host of other unfathomably corrupted yet ignored goings on to the tune of multiple billions and there’s not a single thing even I the perpetual China optimist” could say if a cog in this financially hallucinogenic wheel gives way…

    The fact alone that U.S. wages are stagnant for a decade against the ultra-rich becoming even more ultra-trillions richer (yes I typed it that way on purpose) is an abomination of capitalism and free markets, complicit with those in power.

    I can sight much good news Gents! In China, there are TRILLIONS of unseen cash, in China’s case, lower/middle class wages and lifestyle ARE rising well with the overall economic modernization. I could go on and on about why the last place in the world you need to worry about is China, quietly the wealthiest country on the planet I have no doubt…blah, blah. In the U.S. , the top 30% are living better than ever! Life IS very good for them and they are spending alot of money, corporate earnings ARE quite good, quite reasonable, PE ratios are not unreasonable…blah, blah…

    But I think we can easily realize that all those arguments aren’t going to add up to a hill of beans in the sudden days and weeks which can rain upon us due to a rung in the shaky ladder suddenly snapping.

    We are indeed citizens truly afraid of those in power in the West more and more each day….the outrages and extremes of the few seen comparably to their obligation to give a responsible hoot about the societies upon which they are leeching and preying is really sickening. Yet, hey hey hey friends let’s not forget, today’s version is just another bad movie rerun of what has been happening for centuries since the very beginning of modern man, right?. No, that’s not right; the stakes today are MUCH higher and broader, the destruction will be even more massive…

    Cheers, Mario

    • Jason S June 7, 2013, 7:21 pm

      Mario, you paint a sad but true picture. All of this comes from the majority of people abdicating their responsibilities to an authority. Too damn much trouble to be accountable, better to leave that to someone else. I guess it is time to get another drink and rearrange the deck chairs on this unsinkable ship.

  • Luke June 7, 2013, 6:58 am

    Beg to differ with your market timing instinct here, which seems less than astute to me Mr. Ackerman. This bull run from 2009 will only end in **early 2015**. Your dancing about with market timing calls (it’s a bull, no wait, it’s a bear, no wait, it’s a bull, etc.), reiterating perennial skepticism at all it’s legs up, constantly it seems, since end of ’08 – this kind of frenetic editorial speculation, bereft of a clear view of the market trajectory – it obscures rather than promotes a clear view of the big (actionable) event. I have no use for the airing of political views in a forum dedicated to discerning the markets actual moves, or frankly technician’s analyses of trigger points and whatnot, nor economic analyses which purport to provide actionable intelligence about the direction of equities, because after all the portentous verbiage they keep showing that they misunderstand, or mis-call or endlessly waffle about the simple three to five year stock market event. Call the major direction – up or down, or rangebound for five years? – Just **call the five year trend** and then stand by your call without the customary wiggling so many pundits do. If you have not yet been able to discern the 2009 and 2015 start and end dates of this inflationary bull run, then what use is it to dance around on it’s periphery, taking speculative mini-trades on everything. – as you are so clearly distrusting it’s extent? Meanwhile all one reads is the endless editorial talk mill analyzing every minor turn, all bedecked with technician’s razzle dazzle techno-waffle. You have not yet discerned this inflationary bull run has bookends at 2009 and 2015? Well then, discern it – and take strategic positions for it’s extent without all this fuss and chatter. Start making plans for the exits in 04-QTR 2014 with an actual exit in 01-QTR 2015. I’m not impressed with your community’s savvy on this simple bit of situational awareness.

    &&&&&

    You can get on your hands and knees and beg to differ, if you want to show your sincerity. And while you’re at it, by all means bet with forecasters who presume to know what the world will look like in five years. My only goal is to help subscribers make money. If you doubt I’m succeeding, take a free trial subscription and ask them yourself in the chat room.

    For the record, lurker Luke, I’m looking to short into the current rally — very nearly risklessly, using ‘camouflage’ trading tactics. However, if stocks should continue higher to my 16800 Dow target, then so much the better. That’s because subscribers own a bull spread in Goldman (32 times) that was legged on at ZERO cost, including commissions. If it comes home, the gain on the position could be as much as $16,000. RA

  • Freddie June 7, 2013, 5:51 am

    Martin — check this link, I posted it in the chat room months ago and the issue is the SEC has no handle on the HFT problem they have helped create by OK’ing Algos and special orders they did not even understand years ago, let alone the issue of Quote Spam and how it affects the markets: http://www.nanex.net/aqck/2804.HTML

  • Freddie June 7, 2013, 5:35 am

    Rick, the QE to Infinity nobody seems to be talking about much — but the Sovereign Wealth Funds are not really interested in our Treasuries, so if the Fed does tamper then what buyers are going to step in ?? Also, your point regarding the USD is right on — i believe it was the Dollar’s worst day in a year. The Currency War is in full mode now, with Japan and the Euro vs. the Dollar, and even emerging economies like Brazil printing fiat currency full steam to keep up with our FED. Can Japan crash the world with this new ABE-economics 3-Pillar program he announced? Not well received today. One thing of note today, Gold did not take off like a rocket with the Dollar sell-off like it would have a year ago, and even Goldman Sachs sent out a warning of soft world buying of commodities today…………

    • Rick Ackerman June 7, 2013, 8:17 am

      Japan is the true home of the carry trade, and it would be fitting if their failure to make it happen again — especially after such a spectacular effort –takes the global system down with it. Who needs to borrow yen these days when you can do your borrowing in Swiss francs, even, or just about any other currency, without having to sweat the due date?

      Regarding gold, you’re right. Considering how hard the dollar was falling, it should have done better.

  • Rick Ackerman June 7, 2013, 3:29 am

    Fascinating tidbit if true. On the lesser charts, however, the rally looks like a pretty routine series of short-covering thrusts, each followed by a shallow pullback. Also, the quote-stuffing theory described by ZeroHedge assumes that the perps were able to put up tons of phony bids all day long without enticing an in-your-face response from other players.

    Here’s a link posted in my chat room that provides a perhaps more logical reason for a strong rally to have occurred from Thursday’s lows:

    http://www.screencast.com/t/GgwiphU2Bh

    • redwilldanaher June 7, 2013, 4:08 am

      It would take a Gary to not see this so-called stock market for the massive PSYOP that it has been and remains…

      &&&&&

      Yeah, right. With him, it’s all about earnings. RA

  • martin schnell June 7, 2013, 1:57 am

    Zero hedge and Nanex claim that it was not just short covering driving the rally but also (mainly) HFT quote stuffing .. a kind of reverse flash cash.
    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-06-06/spy-option-quote-stuffing-or-how-sp-levitated-25-points-without-aid-carry

    Apparently there are now 14,000 quotes for every trade actually made. And today alone there were 1.1 BILLION options quotes on SPY.

    The market is totally broken. The goose that lays the golden egg has been ripped apart.