Monday, April 30, 2012

The Monday “Hussman” effect

I suspect that sometimes the market drops on Monday because of the “Hussman Weekley Comment.”

Excerpts from the Weekly Market Comment, April 30, 2012, by John Hussman, PhD, of Hussman Funds follow:
 “Over the past 13 years, and including the recent market advance, the S&P 500 has underperformed even the minuscule return on risk-free Treasury bills, while experiencing two market plunges in excess of 50%. I am concerned that we are about to continue this journey.  At present, we estimate that the S&P 500 will likely underperform Treasury bills (essentially achieving zero total returns) over the coming 5 year period, with a probable intervening loss in the range of 30-40% peak-to-trough....

...Presently...we have signs of oncoming recession. This is particularly evidenced by collapsing economic measures in Europe, softening economic performance in developing economies including China and India, and jointly weak year-over-year growth in key U.S. economic measures such as real personal income, real personal consumption, real final sales, and reliable leading indicators from the OECD and ECRI, as well as our own measures.”  Full Comment at: http://www.hussmanfunds.com/

Readers of this blog may wonder why I post John Hussman, PhD, excerpts so frequently.  I do it to remind myself (and readers) that we must follow the data – not our emotions or the prognostications of the TV talking-heads.  The economic data at present is not pretty.  Hussman presented a couple of graphs that show the Eurozone is already in recession, based on Purchasing Manager Index (PMI) readings.  As was reported last week, the United Kingdom is officially in recession.  That doesn’t bode well for the US.

There is a strong correlation of the economy and stock market performance between the US and Europe. 

Another important reason for following the Hussman Weekly Commentary, and I hope you will all read the full article at Hussman Funds, is that his analysis is completely different than mine.  He is following economic trends and those are often not immediately translated into the stock market.  My analysis at NTSM follows Sentiment, Price, Volume and VIX of the S&P 500 and is a very short-term oriented system.

Currently, the market is starting to look stretched by even our short term standards.  The NTSM system has not issued a sell signal since September 2011, but I think that will change within the next month or so.  The size and related volume of moves to the up side is much smaller than it was 2-months ago.  Sentiment peaked briefly into the sell zone and then quickly fell back to neutral levels. 

It has been about 37-months since the last major bottom (March of 2009).  On average the bull periods in a secular bear markets have lasted 26-months with the longest at 63-months from 2002 to 2007.  One may guess that the long bull market was due to Fed meddling.  I suggest “meddling” because the drop of 57% after the 2002-2007 bull was the largest drop after a bull-market during a secular-bear on record, going back to 1907.  That suggests the Fed didn’t avoid any pain; it just pushed it into the future.  (Last October's low isn't looking as significant right now.) 

Some have called the recent market action a “mini-correction.  We saw similar market action last year a few months prior to the 19% decline last summer.  The NTSM VIX indicator is at a level that has produced a sell signal in the past.  If we begin to see some fear in the market, VIX will climb and NTSM will switch to sell rather quickly. 

Bottom line: If the market can’t get above its recent prior high of 1417, the odds are that it will fall.  I am less sure that this will just be a re-trace back to the 200-dMA since Europe is again coming into play and the US employment data has been worse than expected. 

Of course, no one has a crystal ball and the markets may just continue to climb the “wall-of-worry.”

I commented a week or so ago that it was not time to be complacent.  That is truer today.  I will be closely watching the NTSM analysis.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was DOWN 0.4% Monday to 1398.  VIX rose 5% to 17.15.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remained HOLD today, Monday. 

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (and 100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).  100% in stocks is quite extreme so don’t do it unless you have a high tolerance for risk.

Friday, April 27, 2012

GDP Report, Earnings, and ICI Inflows

EARNINGS GOOD NEWS
The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported that with half of the S&P 500 companies reporting, 1st quarter company earnings have risen 6.5% from a year earlier.  The expected number was only 0.9%.  As quoted in the WSJ, UPS CFO, Curt Kuehn, said, “We feel that the momentum in the domestic economy continues unabated, so we feel good about the US economy.”  That’s from the shipper UPS, so they are in a position to see advance shifts in the economy.

GDP BAD NEWS
From MarketWatch The Wall Street Journal, Mediocre GDP report even worse in the details:  “The economy grew at a 2.2% annual rate in the first quarter of the year, down from a 3% growth rate in the last three months of 2011, the government estimated Friday….Strip away the inventory growth, and final sales in the economy increased 1.6%, the fourth quarter in the past five that was below 2%.”  Full Story at:

The expected rate from economists was 2.5% according to several reports.  The previous quarter was 3%.

MUTUAL FUND UGLY NEWS
The Investment Company Institute (ICI) reported that 10-billion dollars was withdrawn from Long term domestic stock mutual funds in the 2-week period ending last week.   

STOCK MARKET ADVICE FROM CLINT EASTWOOD
Those mutual fund investors should have listened to Blondie (Clint Eastwood) who said, “If you do that, you'll always be poor...”   

Maybe the NTSM Blog needs a theme song?...

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 1/4% Friday to 1403.  VIX rose 1/2% to 16.32.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remained HOLD today, Friday.  Every indicator is neutral.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (and 100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).  100% in stocks is quite extreme so don’t do it unless you have a high tolerance for risk.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

RECESSION!…in UK…not US

RECESSION IN ENGLAND
The United Kingdom (England et al) is the first of the European countries officially in recession with 2-consecutive contracting quarters of GDP.

US RECESSION?
The Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index has underperformed the S&P 500 by about 2% over the past month.  That’s hardly indicative of panic-selling in advance of recession.

CATERPILLAR
Speaking of cyclical stocks, Caterpillar did well, earnings-wise, but some investors were disappointed they didn’t do even better.  Caterpillar expects the world’s economy to get better and result in better sales ahead.  If that isn’t right they will be stuck with too much capacity and the naysayers will be right.  For now, I’ll just suggest that the performance last quarter doesn’t look like recession, but the world-wide economies have slowed.

APPLE
Not for Apple though.  I joked yesterday that the QQQ was changing its name to Quaple.  That’s not too far off.  Last time I looked, Apple was 16% of the QQQ and it must be higher now.

UNEMPLOYMENT
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- "First-time claims for unemployment benefits remained elevated for the third straight week, the government said Thursday, a sign that a job recovery might be stalling.  The Labor Department said the number of people filing for first-time unemployment benefits totaled 388,000…”  That’s a high number.     Full Story at:

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 2/3% Thursday to 1400.  VIX was DOWN 3.5% to 16.24.
The S&P 500 dipped below the bottom trend line only to bounce back yesterday so that’s a good technical sign. 

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remained HOLD today, Thursday.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).  100% in stocks is quite extreme so don’t do it unless you have a high tolerance for risk.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Durable goods orders drop sharply…

DURABLE GOODS ORDERS
from NPR, Apr 25, 2012,
"Orders for durable goods dropped 4.2 percent in March, the steepest fall since January 2009, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Commercial aircraft orders, a volatile category, fell by nearly 50 percent.
 
Excluding transportation equipment, orders declined 1.1 percent. That's the second drop in that category in three months... "'This was a weak report,' said Ellen Zentner, senior economist at Nomura Securities. It 'certainly points to slowing business investment as we enter the second quarter.'"  Story at…
http://www.npr.org/2012/04/25/151349743/durable-goods-orders-down-steeply

This month’s number still represents a 2.7% increase over year-ago, durable-goods orders.  I should also point out that the rate of rise of the Durable Goods orders since the end of the Great Recession is unprecedented in the last 20-years.  This month’s decrease may simply represent a return to a more “Normal” rate of increase based on the past 20-yrs of records.  April’s number (available near the end of May) will be closely watched.

AAPL
One stock did well today, but I can’t quite…oh, yeah.  Apple did something, but....  Oh, wait!   Apple reported earnings twice last year’s earnings and AAPL was up 9%. That’s the only stock that was reported today.  One more note: They are changing the name of the QQQ ETF to QUAPL.  


FEDERAL RESERVE
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) – “The Federal Reserve believes the economy is improving, but not enough to warrant a change in its stimulative policies just yet.”  Story at…

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 1.4% Wednesday to 1392.  VIX was DOWN nearly 7% to 16.85.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis switched to HOLD today, Wednesday.

We had a buy reading Monday and Tuesday, but that was due to the negative market action and reduced sentiment that triggered a bottom indicator in the NTSM system.  The market is a bit too extended for a real bottom.  As I said yesterday, we are much closer to the top than a bottom.  I wouldn’t be surprised to see a quick reversal followed by a sell..on the other hand…I wouldn’t be surprised if we move up from here for another 5% or 10% gain.  In other words; who knows?  The NTSM analysis is squarely neutral. 

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Another Stock Market Crash Warning

“Dreaded IPO-crash signal flashes bear warnings, by Paul B Farrell
Replay of '90s IPO mania blows new bubble
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (MarketWatch) - Yes, this really is the hottest IPO market since 2000. And that's bad news. Very bad. Remember my last column back in 1999...”
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/dreaded-ipo-crash-signal-flashes-bear-warnings-2012-04-24?pagenumber=1

Yes, this article is a crash warning.  He offers few specifics and says that ‘History just keeps repeating ... for 800 years ... but we learn nothing.’"
I didn’t learn much from the article either except that he loved the book, “This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly” by economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff.

I’ve quoted research by Reinhart and Rogoff a couple of times. They reported that when countries are indebted as much as the US, they incur no-growth or recession based on 200-years of data.  That’s ok, this time is different.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 0.4% Tuesday to 1372.  VIX was DOWN nearly 5% to 18.1.
NTSM
When I updated yesterday’s data with the late breaking Sentiment figures and final Volume numbers, yesterday turned out to be a BUY and the NTSM analysis was BUY again today.

The reason is counter intuitive: the continued down action in Price and Sentiment moved NTSM to buy.   I don’t think this is a reason for having a buying party though.  We are much closer to the top than we are to the bottom.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).


Monday, April 23, 2012

John Hussman, PhD - Recession may be here.

RECESSION
“...we've never seen the ensemble of broad economic drivers and aggregate output (real personal income, real personal consumption, real final sales, global output, real GDP, and even employment growth) jointly as weak as they are now on a year-over-year basis, except in association with recession... My guess is that we'll eventually mark a new recession as beginning in April or May 2012.”

STOCKS
Mr. Hussman Characterized the market as an “...overextended market coupled with a loss of supporting factors...among the most negative 1% of observations on record, particularly on a 6-18 month horizon..."  Weekly Market Commentary for 23 April 2012, Hussman Funds at... 

MARKET COMMENTARY FROM GORDON LIGHTFOOT
“Sometimes I think it’s a sin,
when I feel like I’m winnin’ but I’m losin’ again.” 
...so much for my Friday optimism.

LONDON (MarketWatch) — “It’s been a black weekend for economic and monetary union (EMU). The first round of the French presidential elections has torpedoed German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s strategy for guiding cash-strapped EMU members out of trouble. The euro area’s No. 2 creditor country after Germany, the Netherlands, is without a functioning administration after the government fell on Saturday in another row over shoring up the single currency’s faltering framework.” 

It seems austerity is not popular.  Go figure.  Full story at...

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was DOWN 0.8% Monday to 1367.  VIX was UP 9% to 19.07.

NTSM
In spite of the bad day, the NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Monday and, depending on the final numbers, may actually be a Buy. 

That’s a real surprise to me.  I thought I might find a sell at the close today considering the market is down so much.   

Some indicators are suggesting sell; others buy.  Still, there is no volume increase.  There is almost always some volume increase, either before the top or after a top.  Nothing yet!

The water is getting warmer, but the frogs aren’t jumping.  (Referring to that old idea that if you heat the water slowly enough, the frogs won’t know they’re getting cooked.)  I don’t know about you, but I am feeling warm.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).


Friday, April 20, 2012

An Optimistic Stock Market Prediction


TODAY’S HEADLINES
Today’s Wall Street Journal headline was “Economic Reports Fan Fears, Dimmer Jobs Picture and Sluggish Home Sales Cast Doubt on Recovery’s Footing”.  That news may not be new, however, since many economists predicted that the jobs data over the winter was overly optimistic.  As you may recall jobless claims were increasing in real numbers, but the adjustments for the winter actually showed decreases after the adjustments were applied.  While this might appear to be a Government conspiracy, it isn’t; the data is always seasonally adjusted.   This year the warm winter may have skewed the data.    

Earnings numbers continue to look good. The railroads have reported good earnings with some growth from additional freight so it doesn’t look like the economy is slipping based on earnings or transportation.  It continues in very slow growth.  

We’ve had good earnings in individual stocks that were followed by down days in the respective stocks, so this appears to be a case where the market got a little ahead of itself; in other words, stocks got a little overpriced in the euphoria since the bottom last October and the down patch we have seen so far is correcting prices.  This simply means that I don’t expect a correction to get much below the 200-dMA of the S&P 500 (about 8% below today’s close), although (as noted before) if the employment numbers keep coming in worse than expected, the market may get rattled.

In the end stock prices are all about earnings and investor’s expectation for earnings one to two quarters down the road.   

MORGAN STANLEY CYCLICAL INDEX
I am experimenting with an indicator that compares the spread between the S&P 500 index and Morgan Stanley Cyclical index.   The theory is that sophisticated investors will sell the cyclical stocks faster than others if there is a recession coming, so it should give an advance warning of recession, or at least investor’s perception of recession and that is all that counts.  So far the indicator does not indicate a recession is in the works.  I need to do a lot of back-testing before this becomes part of the NTSM analysis, but it is interesting to keep an eye on this piece of data.  

CRASH PREDICTIONS
I like to write about crash predictions because I think it’s important to keep in mind that the world’s economy is very fragile; worldwide debt issues remain; and we have gridlock in Congress.  A crash is possible, though not likely in the near term.  Only about 1/3 of investors in the US are confident that there won’t be a crash in the next 6-months.  That means that there is actually very little chance of a crash since this is a contrary indicator.  The last crash (2008-2009) started only after the Crash Confidence Index (from the Yale School of Management) hit 60%.

AN OPTIMISTIC PREDICTION
Baring some bad news over the weekend, I think we will go up from here; so next week should be more fun than the past several weeks.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 0.1% Friday to 1379.  VIX was DOWN  5% to 17.4.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Friday. 

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Unemployment Claims Disappoint…Stock Market Crash Coming?

CRASH PREDICTION 1
StreetTalk: ‘Massive Wealth Destruction’ Coming, Well-to-Do ‘May Lose 50%’
“The critical question over the next decade isn’t “where will my returns be highest?” but “where will I lose the least money?”... Marc Faber(‘s)... pessimism during a recent appearance on CNBC wasn’t surprising for a man whose nickname is “Doctor Doom.”   Article at...
http://www.moneynews.com/StreetTalk/Faber-massive-wealth-destruction/2012/04/04/id/434832?PROMO_CODE=E969-1

CRASH PREDICTION 2
The same article also covers another guy who has written a book, “Aftershock” about a coming economic collapse.  The above article had an embedded link to an “interview” with Robert Weidemer:  Wiedemer’s outlook includes “... 50% unemployment, a 90% stock market drop, and 100% annual inflation for three-years.”

I put interview in quotes because this “interview” is an infomercial for his book.  I watched it, and while he makes some very good points, there’s a lot of fear-mongering.

Basically he points out: The Fed has already increased money supply by 300%, but most of that money remains in the big banks.  As the economy improves and it is loaned out, inflation will increase.  The Government can’t raise interest rates high enough to fight the inflation because that would make our payments on the National Debt too expensive.  High inflation will cause interest rates to rise anyway as foreigners refuse to loan to the US.  The Federal Government will be unable to pay its debt due to the high interest rates. (He cited rates of 12% when Paul Volker ran the Fed.) Along the way, bonds go to zero, housing get’s killed and we have a 90% (down) stock market CRASH.  


I don’t know about that.  I didn’t buy the book; surely the Fed can reduce money supply and the Fed balance sheet without raising rates to 12%?  But we can’t dismiss the theories completely; here’s a chart that shows why there is a reasonable probability that the S&P 500 will drop back to around 800 or so - let’s guess the drop (if it happens) won’t start until late 2012 or in 2013.



NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- The number of people filing for unemployment benefits fell slightly last week, but was still much higher than expected.
 
The Labor Department reported that 386,000 people filed for their first week of jobless claims. While that was a decrease of 2,000 claims from the week before, it was only because the previous week's number was revised higher than originally reported.
http://money.cnn.com/2012/04/19/news/economy/jobless-claims/index.htm?iid=HP_LN
 
The Spain auction went OK so that issue was set aside for awhile but a more troubling issue again rose to the forefront.  Jobless claims numbers were worse than expected (as John Hussman predicted several weeks ago) so the market fell, as one might expect.  I suggested after Hussman's analysis that the unemployment data would be the catalyst for a correction if indeed the numbers came in worse than expected.  2-weeks in a row is sure to rattle the markets.  It's going to take a lot of good earnings announcements to counter the employment report and we can't know the future so it is anybody's guess how this plays out.
 
Rather than guess, I choose to watch the market reaction and the NTSM analysis for guidance.

Here’s a chart taken from the NTSM output.  The blue line is the daily output of the NTSM analysis.  (Above the green is a buy; below the red is a sell.) The black line is the S&P 500.  It shows the S&P is sitting at its lower trend line.  If it breaks that line significantly the correction will get going in earnest; but no, I don't expect a crash. A 10% correction might be in the cards.


It won't take much for the NTSM analysis to slip to a sell, so I'll be watching the market reaction carefully.  A sell would push me to 100% cash in the retirement account.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Thursday. 

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).



Wednesday, April 18, 2012

More good earnings reports…and the Market went down

American Express reported earnings up 7%, but it was down 1/4% in after-hours trading.   Ebay’s earnings were up 20% and, finally, a stock went up in after hours trading! Ebay was UP almost 7% after-hours.

When stocks are down on good news…well, that’s bad news.

MarketWatch reported earlier today that about 10% of the S&P 500 companies had reported so far and 80% of them beat expectations.  That’s the number I’m going with.  Let’s get upbeat!

Here’s what seems to be influencing this market…
MarketWatch (18 Apr 20120: “The country has high unemployment, weak growth and is saddled with enormous debts and a big deficit....(No not the U.S. - it’s Spain)...Yields on 10-year Spanish bonds touched 6% on Monday, a level not seen since before the ECB launched the first of its long-term refinancing operations. A level of 7% or higher could prompt the need for a financial bailout as it gets extremely expensive for a country to finance its needs on the open market.”
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/losses-hit-spanish-stocks-as-debt-auction-looms-2012-04-18?link=MW_home_latest_news

{We don’t know what our real interest rate is here in the U.S., since, as we noted a few blogs back, the Fed bought over 60% of US debt in 2011.  That screws with the “law of supply and demand” and lowers our interest rates.  The miners may all die, but our canary will be fine.}

Another Spanish debt auction is coming up Thursday (today if you’re reading this tomorrow…you know what I mean) and that seems to be spooking the markets.  If the debt auction fails we could see a big move down.  This looks like a replay of last year, but the U.S. economy seems to be in better shape than last year; not great, but better.

Thursday will be all about Spain, so I won’t even try to guess the outcome.
Let’s hope for good news in Spain because we could get a really nice bounce up.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was DOWN 0.4% Wednesday to 1385.  VIX was UP 1% to 18.6. 

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Wednesday. 

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).  That's way too much for most normal folks.  If you can't sleep because you're worrying about the stock market - sell some stocks.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Intel looks good – but not everyone agreed

INTEL
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Flat PC and server sales in the first quarter didn't give Intel investors much to be excited about, but the company swears this quarter is going to be sweet.  Calling the first quarter "a solid start, " Intel CEO Paul Otellini said his company has some big product launches coming in the next few months that will make 2012 "another growth year" for the company.  Full story….

Intel sold off about 3% in after-hours trading even though they were upbeat for the future in the conference call.  IBM didn't do well in after-hours trading either. That’s a possible indication that the correction may continue.  That’s more of a guess than anything else. Intel is up 48% from its September low and there could have been some “sell-the-news” action.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 1.5% Tuesday to 1391.  VIX was DOWN 5.5%. 

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Tuesday. 

Our volume indicator has again flipped over to hold.  The NTMS volume indicator is based on "on-balance-volume" analysis so it tends to be a bit of a market follower.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).




Monday, April 16, 2012

John Hussman is more negative; but volume refuses to confirm a correction is underway


SPAIN PROBLEM
John Mauldin pointed out in his weekly “Thoughts from the Frontline” (14 April 2012) that conditions in Spain are much worse than anyone had imagined.  It seems the previous Government cooked the books and now the new Government has revealed that the debt is actually 90% of GDP not 60% as had been previously reported.  Spain is a lot bigger than Greece so this could get messy.

JOHN HUSSMAN, PhD
“...our estimate of potential market losses over a 6-month window is now in the worst 0.5% of historical observations. In particular, we're seeing a very broad-based downward shift in market action across nearly every industry group... Though our market concerns are independent of our economic concerns, we see essentially the same downward uniformity in leading economic measures across the industrialized and developing world... Of course, our risk estimates are based on the average market outcomes that have followed similar evidence over the past century, and this particular instance may be different.” 
From: John Hussman, PhD, Weekly Market Comment for 16 April 2012 at

SHALLOW CORRECTION
CNN/MONEY "Stocks rally, but 'shallow correction' will resume" Full story at...
http://money.cnn.com/data/markets/
That's the headline at CNN/MONEY: The "shallow-correction"?  As I've suggested before, when everyone thinks the market is going to do something - it won't.  So maybe the correction will be deep instead of shallow; or perhaps the correction is over. One thing is certain; there’s been no volume increase.

WHERE’S THE VOLUME?
There has been absolutely no increase in volume as the S&P 500 has lost 3.3 % of its value over the last 3 weeks.  The 20-dMA of volume is 3,711 (That’s in millions, so it’s really 3.7-billion shares traded from all exchanges.).  A month ago it was 3,868. 2-months ago it was 4,033.   I don’t think there can be a correction without a volume increase.   That doesn’t mean that volume couldn’t increase tomorrow; but on the other hand, we might just get back to the prior high before this correction gets going.  Enough conjecture!  Let’s consider the data.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 0% Monday to 1369.  VIX was UP 0%.  Rounded off, today was a nothing day.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Monday. 

Our volume indicator has again flashed to sell, but the VIX indicator has not confirmed it so far, thus the overall analysis remains HOLD.   The Price indicator moved back to buy.  So NTSM is mixed all around.  Sentiment is securely neutral at 54% bulls as of Friday’s close.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).

INTERESTING NOTE: My readership has declined somewhat over the last several weeks.  That may mean I am boring, or it may be a sign of complacency.  Don’t be complacent – the system could generate a sell anytime…or not.  The bottom line is that the S&P 500 is much closer to a top than it is to a bottom and a lot of folks are calling for an outright crash.  A crash will happen when we least expect it.




Saturday, April 14, 2012

Correction resumes…


THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was DOWN 1.25% Friday to 1370.  VIX closed UP 14% to 19.55.

The S&P 500 is 8% above its 200-dMA.  That should represent a bottom to this correction…or for the optimists; there is a chance that this is just a drop to the lower trend line i.e., the trend lines have expanded as the rally has gotten older.  If that is the case, the “correction” is over and the S&P 500 should move up from here.

Many talking heads (CNBC, blogs, etc.) have been confident that this correction will be shallow and is nothing to worry about (and I said that too, a while back.)  Volume has not moved up on this pullback.  The only day that volume has been above its 20-dMA was on the 10th of April when the S&P 500 dropped 1.7%.  Normally, if there is a pullback, volume increases as selling picks up.  So far there has been no volume increase.  That’s good.  I have a concern though.

If everyone thinks the market will not fall much, “everone” is usually wrong.   

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Friday, but indicators continue to slowly deteriorate.  It could indicate sell fairly soon.   

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).

Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Market shrugged off bad employment data and ended well


WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The number of Americans who applied for jobless benefits last week rose to the highest level in two and a half months, partly because some school workers can file claims during spring break…Weekly jobless claims jumped by 13,000 to a seasonally adjusted 380,000 in the week ended April 7, the highest level since late January, the U.S. Labor Department said Thursday….Some economists also say the Labor Department may not have done a good job of making seasonal adjustments for the Easter holiday.  Full story at…

Interesting...few were complaining that the Dept. of Labor was wrong when the news was good during the warm winter. 

I doubt that the correction is over, but we’ll see.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 1.4% Thursday to 1388.  VIX closed down 14% to 17.2.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Thursday.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).


Wednesday, April 11, 2012

From Stock Market Crash to Buying Opportunity – Opinions run the gamut

BEIGE BOOK (Market Watch.com)
The Fed’s “Beige Book” said growth is  “modest to moderate.” It’s the same adjective used to describe the economy in the prior two reports...
“….generally, the report showed an economy chugging if not roaring along: manufacturing expanding, professional business services growing, freight volume increasing, strong new-car sales, growing tourism, favorable agricultural conditions, more mining and oil extraction and some improving loan demand….Institute for Supply Management surveys of purchasing managers showed expansion in both manufacturing and services sectors in March, and first-quarter U.S. auto sales were the strongest since 2008.”  Full story at

CRASH COMING (From CNBC .com)
Stock Markets are likely to see a selloff of around 10 percent in the second quarter but over the longer term share prices may go even lower, according to Bob Janjuah, co-head of global macro research and head of tactical asset allocation at Nomura Securities.... I think in the second quarter we should expect a nice 10 percent equity sell-off, with the S&P 500 falling...to 1280 (+/-20)," he said.... Ultimately, Janjuah expects the S&P 500...to fall to 800..."before we can begin the next multi-decade bull cycle."

BUYING OPORTUNITY (CNBC Video):
“Katie Stockton, MKM Partners chief market technician, said, "I think this pullback will ultimately be short-lived and present a buying opportunity.”
Video at...

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was UP 0.75% Wednesday to 1369.  VIX closed down 2% to 20.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Wednesday.  Our volume indicator has flashed to sell, but the VIX indicator has not confirmed it so far, thus the overall analysis remains HOLD.   The Price indicator pulled back quite a bit so it is more in line with the other indicators.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Is John Hussman, Khan?


Khan to Admiral Kirk: “Surely, I have made my meaning plain. I mean to avenge myself upon you, Admiral. I deprived your ship of power, and when I swing around, I mean to deprive you of your (bull market).”  Ok.  It’s a stretch. 

Monday’s Market commentary from John Hussman, PhD, is as insightful as ever:


“If you dig into the payroll data, the picture that emerges is breathtaking. Since the recession "ended" in June 2009, total non-farm payrolls in the U.S. have grown by 2.32 million jobs (establishment survey, or 2.03 million using Household survey figures). However, if we look at workers 55 years of age and over, we find that employment in that group has increased by 3.04 million jobs. In contrast, employment among workers under age 55 has actually contracted by nearly one million jobs, regardless of which survey you use. Even over the past year, the vast majority of job creation has been in the 55-and-over group, while employment has been sluggish for all other workers, and has already turned down...
 
In short, what we've observed in the employment figures is not recovery, but desperation. ...Meanwhile, overall labor force participation continues to fall as discouraged workers leave the labor force entirely, which is the primary reason the unemployment rate has declined. All of this reflects not health, but despair, and explains why real disposable income has grown by only 0.3% over the past year.”

From Hussman Funds at…

Sooner or later the market may agree with John Hussman.  Here's another sobering piece of information from CNN/MONEY...


“NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- While the stock market put up its best first-quarter performance in over a decade, the first three months of 2012 weren't as hot for Corporate America...Analysts are forecasting a 0.1% drop in first-quarter earnings for companies in the S&P 500 (SPX), compared with a year earlier, according to FactSet. While that's not exactly a major decline, it would mark the end of a nine-quarter winning streak.”


TIME TO PANIC?
Don’t panic yet, profits are predicted to increase in the quarters after this one, but I wouldn’t blame you if you sold out.  John Hussman’s comments are depressing, but I don’t know when that will contribute to the downturn.

For me, the purpose of the NTSM system is to take emotions out of the equation and try to rationally handle investing in the current “buy & hold is dead” climate.  Last year there were three sell signals here at NTSM and I finished even on the first two.  Basically, they were false sell signals.  The last one (the 19% correction) turned out well and I finished up 13% after it was over; this time?  I don’t know.  We may get a sell soon, but it may be too late if this turns out to be only a 10% correction.  If I tuned the NTSM system to react more quickly, I would be stuck with more false sell signals.  Enough musing – we’ll just have to wait and see how this turns out.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was down 1.7% Tuesday to 1359.  VIX closed up 8% to 20.4.  The S&P 500 is 7% above its 200-dMA and the correction is underway.  It looks like the S&P 500 will drop to the 200-dMA or possibly a little below to worry us.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Tuesday.  Our volume indicator has flipped to sell, but the VIX indicator has not confirmed it so far, thus the overall analysis remains HOLD.   Sentiment is still neutral.  The price indicator is in la-la land and not much help.  That’s unfortunately the nature of “top/bottom” models.  They are based on past history and sometimes an indicator can be an outlyer which is why we have 8-indicators in the 4-general areas of Sentiment, Price, Volume and VIX. 

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).

Monday, April 9, 2012

It's all about hiring...


News from Friday – Hiring

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Hiring slowed dramatically in March, clouding optimism about the strength of the recovery….Economists attributed part of the hiring slowdown to an unseasonably warm winter that boosted job growth in January and February. The Labor Department adjusts its data to account for seasonal trends, and the warm weather may have distorted those calculations….But still, seasonal adjustments didn't explain all of the slowdown.  Full story: http://money.cnn.com/2012/04/06/news/economy/jobs-report-unemployment/index.htm

We suspected that this might happen based on a Hussman commentary a few weeks ago.

The markets were closed Friday, but futures trading was still underway when the Friday employment data was released.  Futures were down 2% Friday.  Stocks were only down 1% today so maybe we had a moral victory today.

The S&P 500 broke the lower trend line today by about 1-1/2%.  That’s might not be enough to say that the market is headed to its 200-dMA, but it’s close.

THE MARKET
The S&P 500 was down 1% point Monday to 1382.  VIX closed up 13%.  Not good – but it could have been worse.  The S&P 500 is 9% above its 200-dMA.  If we have a correction, I don’t think it will be much more than about a 9% drop.

NTSM
The NTSM analysis remains HOLD as of the close Monday.

MY INVESTED POSITION
I bought back into the stock market at S&P 500, 1155 on 7 Oct after the 6 Oct NTSM buy signal.  I remain 100% long in the long-term portfolio (100% stocks in the 401k.). (See the page “How to Use the NTSM System” – the link is on the right side of this page).