miércoles, 16 de diciembre de 2015

miércoles, diciembre 16, 2015

The Investor's Great Divide; Crossing the 200

By: Doug Wakefield


"Reuters, the British news agency, moved a story on its wire at 11:39 A.M. Tuesday, May 8, saying that Continental had denied as "totally preposterous" rumors that the bank was considering bankruptcy....

Ordinarily, Continental would have refused to comment on the rumor by Reuters. Instead, it reacted with a quick denial, perhaps in the hope of placating the foreign depositors....

The run took hold domestically when, a little more than twenty-four hours after Continental had said bankruptcy was "totally preposterous," the Board of Trade Clearing Corporation (BTCC) just down the street from Continental withdrew $50 million. The BTCC, a clearinghouse for trading on the Chicago Commodity Exchange, had been a long-standing customer. Word of its defection moved promptly on the wire services, and the panic was on." [An account of the 1984 collapse of Continental Bank in Chicago from Bailout: An Insider's Account of Bank Failures and Rescues (1986) by former FDIC Chairman, Irvine Spraque, pg 152 & 153]

In the summer of 2013, I released the article, The Nirvana Trade, discussing how relentless the 200-day moving average had been throughout 2012 and 2013. This was the line in the sand that "the crowd" refused to cross without almost immediately getting its footing, and moving right back above it.

This past August, on the 21st, I released the article, The Stock Nirvana Has Been Broken.

Every investor tracking the S&P 500, watched as this index fell 10% between August 20th and the close on August 25th.

SPX Daily Chart


Yet, by the end of October, "the crowd" had managed a rally back above this line, and the talk of yet another "all time high" was everywhere.

So while the S&P 500 is back under its 200 as we close out this week, the larger picture and the American public's understanding of risk is what is now foremost on my mind as we head into next week's Fed "will we raise rates or will we stall again" release on December 16th.


SPX Daily Chart 2

Since 2012, the American people, looking at the world through our broad equity markets, have been given the impression by the Federal Reserve that "We have your back." When they look at statements and look at the S&P 500, especially since the 10% four day drop into August 25th, it really has looked like someone has made sure that US equity investors would not go below this "nirvana line".

This type of obsession to break above 2100 after last November's 2100 target released by Goldman's equity strategist David Kostin took place multiple times this year. Yet never was there a strong breakout to the upside.

So as everyone will wait and see if the Federal Reserve will finally raise rates on December 16th, or yet again kick the decisions down the proverbial road, markets around the globe have certainly produced an extremely volatile picture far different from US equities.

Volatility, The New Venue

If there ever was a warning to the American investment community, it is now, and it has already come from watching the largest markets in the world this year.

US Dollar Weekly Chart
XEU Weekly Chart

Can millions of investors watch massive swings in the two most traded currencies in the world over the last 2 years, and not expect something to take place in US equity markets?

Crude Oil Weekly Chart

How can the price of oil drop this much over the last 18 months without having huge ramifications to the finances of oil producing nations, as well as the oil industry in the US, which has been a major factor in the growth of the American economy since 2008?

Hang Seng Weekly Chart

Can we watch global investors experience this level of volatility in China, a nation that has quadrupled their debt load since 2008 (another first in history event) and not wonder how this would impact American stocks and economy?

The massive rally (plunge in yields) in German bunds and then sell off (yields rise) with the turning point being the lowest yields in German history, should tell us all that central bank planning has NOT made our financial world more "stable".

10-Year German Treasury Yield Weekly Chart

So while we wait to find out what Chairman Yellen will tell us next week about interest rates, the short end of the bond markets have already told us they are certainly expecting her to raise rates for the first time since the Fed Funds rate was lowered on December 16, 2008.

Libor Daily Chart
1-year US Treasury Weekly Chart

If you are reading this article, you are thinking. Never has skeptical thinking been more important.

Never stop trying to influence the thinking of others who think that information like this is only for those interested in finance.

The dominant central banks of the world and the unending commentary by the financial media and industry have lead the average investor to the conclusion that constant intervention is now the new abnormal. Without them, how could what's left of the free markets survive?

"These breakdowns come about not in spite of our efforts at improving market design, but because of them....The steps that we have taken to make the markets more attuned to our investment desires - the ability to trade quickly, the integration of the financial markets into a global whole, ubiquitous and timely market information, the array of options and other derivative instruments - have exaggerated the pace of activity and the complexity of financial instruments that makes crises inevitable.

Complexity cloaks catastrophe." [Comments by Richard Bookstaber, who served as managing director of risk at Salomon Brothers during the 1987 crash, and as Morgan Stanley's first market risk manager during the meltdown of Long Term Capital Management in 1998. Comments are from his book, A Demon of Our Own Design: Markets, Hedge Funds, and the Perils of Financial Innovation (2007) pg 5]

Be a Contrarian, Remember Your History

The big shift from longs to shorts and shorts to longs continues pounding global investors and traders.

Calm markets are coming to an end. Whether raising rates or using NIRP, volatility will be the word for 2016.

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