Friday, September 24, 2010

Breakout

Technically we broke out earlier in the week, but then we went back and tested the new support line. Today's big move is a confirmation of the breakout and is likely to draw shorts and cautionaries back into the fray. A comment by David Tepper that we're in a win-win situation (if the economy recovers, the market goes up, and if the economy tanks, the Fed will intervene and the market goes up), looks to have got things going. Volume is still enemic, but breadth is humongous. Even though we may be entering a new range, I doubt we're out of the woods and this could all be a little premature. Having said that, if the market gets its courage up, it could have a real nice end of year rally.

If you're looking for a fundamental spin on the breakout, about the best I can surmise is that some of the leading edges may have started looking beyond the current soft patch, and are anticipating greater recovery in the future (leading to sustainable earnings growth and expanding multiples). Right now, all we have are expanding multiples (risk on).

The Idea Behind POMO's

I don't think the Fed would articulate their monetary policy quite this way, but it seems to me that the theory behind their non-sterilized permanent open market operations (POMOs) is that by juicing asset markets they are promoting greater confidence in the future (via the wealth effect), thereby leading to increased consumption and greater business investment (economic growth).

Twill be interesting to see if any parts of that transmission mechanism misfire.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Big picture update

Things unchanged.

Since the crisis, the authorities have propped the system up through QE and fiscal stimulus. But even that failed to stop asset price deflation. Into the bargain, people are still unemployed resulting in contracted incomes, and scared witless consumers. Worse than that, we have seen no credible attempts to address the real flaws in the system (global structural imbalances, unfunded entitlement liabilities, financial moral hazard).

Recovery will ensue, but it will be a languid, stop-start affair. Even as the recovery takes hold and confidence returns, the economy will be racked by secular headwinds (interest rate unwind, higher taxes, delevering consumer, fiscal belt-tightening). None of which means that equities will necessarily be a bad place to reside (they'll be solid because we're starting from a low base, they just won't be spectacular).

The costs of the artificial pumping will be bourne by current taxpayers and future generations.

Implications: multi-year stagnation.

Defenses Probed

The market probed the 1130 defensive line on the S&P 500, but it was only a reconnoiter.

Expect another test on post-expiration Monday ramp. Could be a great jump-on point for a nice retracement trade.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Holding Pattern

We've been in a fairly volatile holding pattern, waiting for instructions from the tower.

This fog of uncertainty is causing havoc with hairlines and blood pressure.

Which way will we break? When will we break? Will we break at all?

Inquiring minds want to know!