Archives for the day Friday, October 30th, 2009

Leaders Update – Massive reversals again

12:16 pm EDT:  This probably will come as no surprise, with equities retracing nearly all of yesterday’s gains, but some of the leaders’ action is truly astonishing.  Namely, in the EuroYen, which has now traced out three days of serial reversals, each of which has been at least 2.7 big points.  30 Year T-Bond futures have nearly broken out of the downward channel decisively and the 10 Year has made new highs for the week.  This pretty much negates the bull’s Hail Mary to new highs we wrote as a possibility in the morning report.  It probably does not help that the NYSE has had quote dissemination problems all morning.

leaders 10-30-09

#eMini Trading Levels

10:08 am EDT:  Some volatile price action on the Chicago PMI upside surprise, as the ES rallied off the combined session daily pivot, then sold off at yesterday’s settlement in confluence with one of yesterday’s points of control.  Consumer Sentiment came in as expected. 

Critical resistance is now 1061.50 to 1063.00 and shorts will defend it aggressively as the ES approaches it again, as we write.  If the ES can break above, then one of the daily R1′s, 1071.25 or 1068.75 will likely be the high, but an end of month directional move is always possible to take it beyond.  If the ES makes new lows, we will not fade long.  Until then, we continue to look for longs.  No bottom or top picking today.

It’s the end of QE (as we know it)

With the Fed’s $300 billion gift card to PD’s Treasure Island maxed out, one wonders who will support the vendors chomping at the bit to offload Uncle Timmy’s 3 to 7 year wares (much less the 30 year, being so two-thousand-and-late).  But with the sun setting, the Japanese tourists trickling out, and the kids tired from a hard day of play on the S&P 500 Coaster and the SPY IOI Whack-a-Mole, it would be easy to settle into a semi-euphoric complacency, thinking ahead to a frolic-filled night on Pleasure Island

This is the season when retailers typically look ahead with glee and patriotic investors hit the buy button on their stock accounts, not to return to their screens until January.  With equities awash in the greatest liquidity bath since Emperor Claudius built up Aquae Sulis from a Celtic mud pit, one hopes the proverbial plug has not been pulled here because, without the foundation of a stable and growing money supply, equities need the spigots set to max.

True, we still have QE in the form of Agency and Agency MBS, the latter of which could be considered a $1.25 trillion fire hose astride the puny Treasury QE faucet.  Then, there’s always the odd SFP wind-down.  But the sun rises and falls with the 2s10s and, should they get out of hand, already-difficult-to-secure business funding costs will rise along with mortgage rates.  This, ahead of record CRE resets, cannot be had.  Worry, not–Uncle Ben has a plan (aside from backstopping E-Trade in exchange for removing the sell button from their platforms), and all will be revealed soon.  Not at the next FOMC meeting, mind you, but surreptitiously, through the back channels of the Fed’s PR page

Will it be QE 2.0, usurpation of the money markets, or will the lamb of choice be the Primary Dealer Credit Facility?  We’re on pins and needles here, so please don’t disappoint us. 

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Update:  Ironically, a crashing stock market relieves the yield bloat.  Perhaps the Fed is content to watch the carnage for a while.

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Pre-open eMini S&P 500 Morning Report

The Precise Take – Equities attempt to hold on to gains on the close of the month

Leaders Analysis:  Big reversals yesterday in just about everything and overnight, mostly consolidation.  30 Year T-Bonds look poised for another test of the upward boundary of the downward trend channel, so we will watch them closely today to see if they can break out (equities bearish) or reverse down (equities bullish).

Medium Term Analysis:  We wrote toward the close yesterday that it would take a near perfect storm for bulls to reach new highs in the S&P 500 and that the deck is stacked against them.  However, they have pulled many rabbits out of their hats, so here’s how a rally would need to unfold.  Today and Monday are key because they contain the most likely negative reports–Chicago PMI, Consumer Sentiment and ISM Manufacturing–for nearly two weeks.  The second week of November features no major report until Thursday, and even then, nothing likely to be interpreted too negatively if equities are up.  The third week is much more difficult and begins with Retail Sales on Monday at 8:30 am, then PPI, Industrial Production, CPI and Housing Starts.  Back to the present, if bulls can get over this two day hump, and FOMC next Wednesday and Employment Situation next Friday support, there is a chance of another short covering rally with new material highs.  As we have written before, FOMC is unlikely to say anything that rocks the boat, and many of their policy changes are being announced in separate press releases.  Barring the perfect bull storm outlined above, we still expect sideways to down action for November.

Trading Today:  As we write, the two 8:30 am reports have not moved the markets much, so the two reports prior to 10:00 am today will be the catalysts if they are out of line with expectations.  We prefer to be…

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