Seeking Alpha
About this author: By this author:
Submit
an article to

<<Return to Page 1 - Global Markets in Review: FOMC Announcement Stuns Markets

Turning to the stock market again, the 800 level on the S&P 500 Index needs to be exceeded for stocks to make further headway. It not only represents a 50% retracement of the January/March decline, but is also the resistance level of the two-month downtrend and the 50-day moving average.

22-mrt-v7.jpg

Source: StockCharts.com

The key chart levels for the major US indices are provided in the table below.

22-mrt-v8.jpg

Kevin Lane, technical analyst of Fusion IQ, said: “… we continue to view this current rally as having legs with maybe another 10-15% up from present levels. However, ultimately we think this rally will fade and we will get a retest of the recent lows (check the history books, we almost always get a retest). How the market handles that retest will tell us a lot with regard to the longer-term picture.”

“While our sense is that the rally has more to go on the upside in the weeks to come, we feel it is still too early to say the final bottom has been put in place,” added Jeffrey Saut of Raymond James.

Back to the venerable Richard Russell, who said: “The rally is running into some hesitation. Transports have been down four out of the last six sessions. When the Averages disagree, it’s often a sign of distribution. Let the market have its fun. As far as I’m concerned, the primary trend of the stock market remains bearish although the secondary trend has turned up. When a market becomes too oversold, the secondary correction acts like the ‘release valve’ in an over-heated boiler. Some of the steam escapes, and they call that an upward correction.

“Often, these explosive corrections look better than the real thing, Furthermore, they can prove costly to both bulls and bears. Corrections in a bear market are always tricky and deceptive, and I’ve learned not to fool with them.”

In the extreme bearish camp, Nouriel Roubini shared the following caveat emptor (via Tech Ticker, Yahoo Finance): “Dear investors, do enjoy this dead cat bounce and bear market sucker’s rally … don’t wait too long until you jump ship while the financial Titanic hits the next financial iceberg: you may get squeezed and crashed in the rush to the lifeboats.”

The Achilles' heel of the stock market is the uncertainty regarding corporate earnings. The graph below, courtesy of Chart of the Day, illustrates that 12-month, as-reported S&P 500 real earnings have declined over 80% over the past 18 months, making this by far the largest decline on record (the data go back to 1936). “During Q4 2008, the S&P 500 came in with its first negative earnings quarter ever and the amount lost during the quarter was more than the index has ever earned during a single quarter,” said Chart of the Day.

22-mrt-v9.jpg

Also, it is important that confidence be restored for the recent gains to be more enduring. The chart below shows the strong historical relationship between the US Consumer Confidence Index and the 12-month change in the S&P 500 Index. One needs to take a view on the direction of confidence, but should it for argument’s sake pick up from 30 to 40 by the end of June, the relationship indicates a S&P 500 decline of 30-35% in year-ago terms. Using end-of-quarter prices, this means an Index at between 832 and 896.

22-mrt-v10.jpg

Source: Plexus Asset Management (based on data from I-Net Bridge)

Taking one step at a time, the next hurdle is the release of potentially ugly earnings and guidance announcements in April. By then a clearer picture should also start emerging on the results of the Fed’s medicine and whether credit markets are thawing and confidence is beginning to improve. Very selective stock picking is in order, but tread carefully otherwise.

For more discussion about the direction of stock markets, also see my recent posts “Video-o-rama: Fed employs nuclear option” and “Technical Talk: Rally continues …“. (And do make a point of listening to Donald Coxe’s webcast of March 20, which can be accessed from the sidebar of the Investment Postcards site.)

Invitation
I will again be embarking on a long-haul flight from Cape Town to the US in a week’s time. My final destination is San Diego where, amongst others, I will be attending a Richard Russell Tribute Dinner. However, in order to catch up with business associates and “feel” the East Coast economic temperature, I have arranged to connect via JFK and will be spending Tuesday, March 31 in New York City.

I am keen to meet as many of the Investment Postcards readers as possible on the one day I will be in the Big Apple and have scheduled an informal get-together in midtown Manhattan from 17:30 to 19:00 that afternoon. If you are interested in joining me for a drink, and “putting a face to the name”, please get in touch through the “comments” or “contact” sections of my site so that I can send the details to you.

Economy
“Businesses remain darkly pessimistic across the globe. Sentiment hit a new record low in Asia last week and is close to record lows everywhere else,” said the latest Survey of Business Confidence of the World conducted by Moody’s Economy.com. “Hiring intentions have taken a decided turn for the worse in recent weeks and suggest that there has been no let-up in the massive global layoffs and rising unemployment in March.”

Confidence is very poor across all industries, particularly in manufacturing, where it has never been as bleak. For example, Eurozone manufacturing activity continued to plummet in January, falling by 3.5% from the previous month, when it dropped by a revised 2.7%. In year-ago terms it fell by 17.3% - the steepest fall on record.

22-mrt-v11.jpg

Source: Moody’s Economy.com

As shown by Rebecca Wilder (News N Economics), retail sales are likewise anemic around the world.

22-mrt-v12.jpg

The World Bank has reduced its 2009 growth forecast for China from 7.5% to 6.5%, but indicated that the country’s economy was showing “early signs” of stabilization as government-sponsored investment mitigated the negative impact of contracting exports. “In an era when exports may continue to shrink due to an external demand collapse and consumption may prove difficult to stimulate as deflation has arrived, fixed asset investment championed by the government would be vital for China’s economic growth this year,” said US Global Investors.

“Although corporate savings played a more important role in financing investment than bank loans in the recent cycle, credit expansion, which has accelerated rapidly since December, remains a key driver for public sector investment which is likely to dominate this year.”

22-mrt-v13.jpg

It hardly comes as a surprise that the International Monetary Fund has cut its forecast for global growth this year from +0.5%/-0.5% to -0.5%/-1.0%. According to CEP News, the report said Japan’s economy will contract by 5.8% in 2009, that of the US by 2.6% and the Eurozone’s by 3.2%. In 2010, the US and Eurozone are expected to see anemic growth, and the Japanese economy is forecast to see a mild annual contraction in GDP.

A snapshot of the week’s US economic data is provided below. (Click on the dates to see Northern Trust’s assessment of the various data releases.)

March 20
• None

March 19
• Index of Leading Indicators - continued contraction of economic activity
• Jobless claims - new high for continuing claims and insured unemployment rate

March 18
• Fed adopts more aggressive measures to fix the credit machine and facilitate working of the economy
• Higher gas prices mostly responsible for sharp increase in Consumer Price Index
• Current account deficit shrinks as imports fall

March 17
• Multi-family starts lift total housing starts; recovery in home building not there yet
• Core wholesale prices show moderating trend

March 16
• Factory production remains weak, but pace of decline shows moderation
• Home Builders Survey shows flickering signs of stability

“In sum, although the economy remains mired in a severe recession, we have seen nothing of late to dissuade us from our forecast of recovery getting under way in the fourth quarter of this year. In fact, what we have seen of late increases our confidence in the forecast,” concluded Paul Kasriel (Northern Trust).

Not disputing the downward momentum in economic data, Binit Panel, economist at Goldman Sachs, asked in a recent research report (via the Financial Times ) “what could go ‘right’ for the world economy”. He listed a number of developments that might be potential bright spots.

“First, a stabilization in consumer demand in the US - and an improvement in the UK and Germany.

“Second, an early end to the US housing downturn and a stabilization in the UK housing market.

“Third, the successful operation of the Federal Reserve’s term asset-backed securities loan facility, or Talf.

“Fourth, greater international co-operation - for example at the forthcoming G20 meeting.

“Fifth, better signs from the Bric (Brazil, Russia, India and China) emerging market economies - in particular China.”

Interestingly, after months of bleak economic news, an increasing proportion of Americans now say they are hearing a mix of good and bad economic news, while fewer say they are hearing mostly bad news. “As has been the case for the last few months, very few say they are hearing mostly good news about the economy,” reported The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.

22-mrt-v14.jpg

Week’s economic reports
Click here for the week’s economy in pictures, courtesy of Jake of EconomPic Data.

Date

Time (ET)

Statistic

For

Actual

Briefing Forecast

Market Expects

Prior

Mar 16

8:30 AM

Empire Manufacturing

Mar

-38.2

-33.0

-30.80

-34.65

Mar 16

9:00 AM

Net Long-Term TIC Flows

Jan

-$43.0B

NA

$45.0B

$34.7B

Mar 16

9:15 AM

Capacity Utilization

Feb

70.9%

71.1%

71.0%

71.9%

Mar 16

9:15 AM

Industrial Production

Feb

-1.4%

-1.2%

-1.3%

-1.9%

Mar 17

8:30 AM

Building Permits

Feb

547K

500K

500K

531K

Mar 17

8:30 AM

Housing Starts

Feb

583K

445K

450K

477K

Mar 17

8:30 AM

PPI

Feb

0.1%

0.3%

0.4%

0.8%

Mar 17

8:30 AM

Core PPI

Feb

0.2%

0.0%

0.1%

0.4%

Mar 18

8:30 AM

Core CPI

Feb

0.2%

0.0%

0.1%

0.2%

Mar 18

8:30 AM

CPI

Feb

0.4%

0.2%

0.3%

0.3%

Mar 18

8:30 AM

Current Account Balance

Q4

-$132.8B

NA

-$137.1B

-$181.3B

Mar 18

10:30 AM

Crude Inventories

03/13

1942K

NA

NA

+749K

Mar 18

2:15 PM

FOMC Rate Decision

-

0.00%-0.25%

NA

NA

0.00% -0.25%

Mar 19

8:30 AM

Initial Claims

03/14

646K

640K

655K

658K

Mar 19

10:00 AM

Leading Indicators

Feb

-0.4%

-0.4%

-0.6%

0.1%

Mar 19

10:00 AM

Philadelphia Fed

Mar

-35.0

-40.0

-39.0

-41.3

Source: Yahoo Finance, March 20, 2009.

In addition to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s testimony to the House Financial Services Committee (Tuesday, 24 March), the US economic highlights for the week include the following:

22-mrt-v15.jpg

Source: Northern Trust

Click here for a summary of Wachovia’s weekly economic and financial commentary.

Markets
The performance chart obtained from the Wall Street Journal Online shows how different global markets performed during the past week.

22-mrt-v16.jpg

Source: Wall Street Journal Online, March 20, 2009.

“You are too concerned about what was and what will be. There is a saying: yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. That is why it is called the present,” said Oogway (Kung Fu Panda - hat tip: Charles Kirk). These words ring especially true as I mourn the sad loss of Bennet Sedacca. He was not only a brilliant strategist and regular contributor to the Investment Postcards site, but also a dear personal friend. Rest in peace, Bennet.

That’s the way it looks from Cape Town.

22-mrt-v17.jpg

Print this article with comments
Comments
2
Comments 1 - 2 out of 2
You are viewing the latest 20 comments
  •  
    Dow Theory went with the Bobby Socks. I am surprised anyone with any knowledge about the extent of Global Markets would even be thinking about it. When they put airlines in the average, an industry that history-to-date has not been profitable the indicator lost what little credibility it had left.

    Today the stock market is a lagging indicator. It hasn't correctly discounted an economic turn in thirty years, if not longer. This gives the speculator, which all buyers of stocks are, the opportunity to get ahead of the game. As most money managers are lemmings, those who still have jobs, they pretty much advertise where they are going to put there money and they continue to do so until things top out. Strategies are available, and I don't mean charts, in which to take advantage of this reality without committing too much capital or taking too much risk. Long term investing is dead!
    Mar 22 06:17 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    stock market always has been a leading indicator, everywhere and every time. long term investing has always worked tioll now, and shall rise again
    Mar 22 09:12 PM | Link | Reply
Viewing Comments 1-2 out of 2