1. For the time being, the equity market is going to have to contend with more chatter of the Fed’s exit strategy.
2. The market also faces a new reality. While employment stabilizing (maybe) is a good thing, it means the era of declining unit labour costs and margin expansion is behind us.
3. Market leadership is beginning to fade as seen by the receding advance-decline line on the big board.
4. Market complacency is a worry with the VIX index back down to 21.25. The good news is that insurance against a correction is priced about as low as it can go. Protection is cheap.
5. The WSJ (page C1) reports that not only have individual investors been selling into this last leg of the rally (then again, the S&P 500 has really done nothing for over six weeks), but pension funds have been rebalancing too.
6. Volume has declined markedly and has surpassed 4.7 billion shares on the NYSE just once in the past three weeks.
7. With the correlation between a weak greenback and a positive stock market above 90% over the past eight months (versus zero over the past 30 years), a countertrend rally in the U.S. dollar would likely coincide with sputtering equity prices.
8. The Dow transports/utilities ratio has turned in a classic triple-top and this is a signpost to get defensive.
9. The latest Investors Intelligence poll shows the bull camp at 50%; the bear share at a mere 16.7%. In other words, there are three bulls for every bear. This is negative from a contrary perspective (another sign of complacency).
10. Corporate bond yields have stopped narrowing over the past three months and have actually recently shown modest signs of an upward bias.
Source: The Pragmatic Capitalist
tisdag 8 december 2009
onsdag 25 november 2009
A thoughtful quote considering the last nine months of bullmarket
"One of the allures of this business is that sometimes the greatest ignoramus can do very well. That is unfortunate because it creates the impression that you don’t necessarily need any professionalism to do well, and that is a great trap."
Michael Steinhardt
Michael Steinhardt
tisdag 24 november 2009
torsdag 19 november 2009
tisdag 17 november 2009
Market recap
US stocks rise modestly, even as the dollar rebounds and the day’s data disappoint, but none of the markets moved very much, although there were some potentially significant signposts that appeared during the day.
Industrial production, producer prices reports rise, but not as much as expected, illustrating a lack of demand and pricing power. That could also be seen in earnings out of Home Depot and Target. Home Depot raised its year forecast, but it was still below both Street views and last year’s results, and while Target managed to boost both earnings and sales, it was cautious about the holidays.
It all paints a picture of an economy that’s just really nowhere right now, not expanding, not contracting. Just waiting for some kind of seed crystal to come along and get things growing.
Crude, gold, Treasurys all post slight gains.
Industrial production, producer prices reports rise, but not as much as expected, illustrating a lack of demand and pricing power. That could also be seen in earnings out of Home Depot and Target. Home Depot raised its year forecast, but it was still below both Street views and last year’s results, and while Target managed to boost both earnings and sales, it was cautious about the holidays.
It all paints a picture of an economy that’s just really nowhere right now, not expanding, not contracting. Just waiting for some kind of seed crystal to come along and get things growing.
Crude, gold, Treasurys all post slight gains.
måndag 16 november 2009
Conquered by the bulls?


söndag 15 november 2009
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