Monday, August 17, 2015

FED Empire State Business Conditions Crash … DOW in Down Trend … McClellan Calls the Top … Market Can Go Higher … Stock Market Analysis

FED EMPIRE STATE BUSINESS CONDITIONS CRASH ((MarketWatch)
“The Empire State general business conditions index nose-dived to a reading of negative 14.9, from positive 3.9 in July, marking the worst level since April 2009, the New York Fed said. The index, on a scale where any positive number indicates improving conditions, was far worse than the positive 4.5 forecast…” Story at…
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/empire-state-index-tumbles-to-recession-era-levels-2015-08-17
I usually don’t follow the Empire State data, but it was a big drop.
 
TOM MCCLELLAN CALLS “THE” TOP (MarketWatch)
“[Tom] McClellan said his timing models suggest “THE” top in stocks will be hit sometime between Aug. 20 and Aug. 26. He expects “nothing good for the bulls for the rest of the year,” he said in a phone interview with MarketWatch.” Story at…
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/market-timer-tom-mcclellan-sees-stocks-set-up-for-ugly-decline-as-early-as-thursday-2015-08-17?dist=lcountdown
 
DOW NOW IN NEGATIVE TREND (ChartWatchers)
“The US markets continue to s-l-o-w-l-y roll over with the Dow Industrials leading the way…When a market rolls over slowly like this, the first thing to go is the uptrend's momentum and, yes, we see that as the MACD {a measure of moving averages converging or diverging} has been moving lower for months. The next thing to happen is increased interaction with the 50-period moving average. Next up are tests of the 200-period moving average and it draws closer and closer. Then comes a definitive break below the 200-period average and then finally the "Death Cross" {the 50-day crosses below the 200-day} occurs - which is where we are at with the Dow.”

Chart and analysis from ChartWatchers, the Stock Charts.com Newsletter at…
http://stockchartscom.cmail1.com/t/ViewEmail/r/A2F1B22872944DE92540EF23F30FEDED/AAB2A0774A84F6EA16B21F2806CB3AEB
The article pointed out that the S&P is not there yet and the Nasdaq looks in better shape still. The S&P 500 50-day moving average (d-MA) is 2095 and the 200-dMA is 2077 so it would only take a 1% drop to create a death cross on the S&P 500. That seem less likely now because it appears that the S&P 500 made a short-term bottom Monday.
 
MARKET REPORT / ANALYSIS
-Monday, the S&P 500 was up about 0.5% to 2102  at the close. 
-VIX was up about 1.5% to 13.02.
-The yield on the 10-year Treasury dipped to 2.15%.
Gee…the options and bond guys didn’t get the message.
 
After my recent blog comments and the commentary from others above, you might surmise my take on the market is negative.  Surprisingly, no - the markets look much better today, at least in the short run. Here’s why:
-Monday, the S&P 500 tested the 7 August prior low of 2078 in the AM and bounced up from there.  With today’s lower volume (compared to the 7 Aug value) it looks like the market will move up from here. Lower volume implies less fear and less selling
-Market Internals made a complete reversal Monday and are now positive. (Gomer was right; “Shazam!”)
-Tick (the last trades of the day) was a very high 670 suggesting follow thru is likely going forward.
-I suspect the market will make it back to prior highs – after that, it’s anybody’s guess.  I am short-term bullish, but long term bearish.
 
LONG TERM BREADTH – STILL NEGATIVE, BUT IMPROVED
The 50-dMA of stocks advancing on the NYSE rose to 48.6% Monday, from 48.3% Friday.  Below 50% is not good; it simply means that more than half of the stocks on the NYSE have gone down over the past 2-1/2 months.  To counter that negative, the 10-dMA of Breadth moved up to 51%, so the more recent trend is up and I think it will carry the 50-dMA up too fairly soon. (No guarantee there – we’ll see.)
 
Only 40% of Stocks on the NYSE are above their 200-day moving average as of Friday – this number is way too small. Unless this improves – markets are going down. (The average is 64%.) All we can do here is to watch this number and see if it improves and by how much. A correction hasn’t been avoided yet.
 
MARKET INTERNALS (NYSE DATA)
The 10-day moving average of the percentage of stocks advancing (NYSE) was 51% Monday vs. 48% Friday.  (A number above 50% is usually GOOD news for the markets.  Again, New-lows outpaced New-highs Monday. The spread (new-highs minus new-lows) was minus-51. (It was -54 Friday.)   
 
The 10-day moving average of change in the spread rose to +5, Monday.  In other words, over the last 10-days, on average; the spread has INCREASED by 5 each day. Internals switched to positive on the markets.


Market Internals are a decent trend-following analysis of current market action, but should not be used alone for short term trading. They are usually right, but they are often late.  They are most useful when they diverge from the Index.  In 2014, using these internals alone would have made a 9% return vs. 13% for the S&P 500 (in on Positive, out on Negative – no shorting).  Of course, few trend-following systems will do well in an extreme low-volatility, nearly straight-up year like 2014.
 
NTSM         
Monday, the NTSM long term indicator is HOLD.  Indicators haven’t changed in a while. Price is positive, because up-moves have outpaced down moves recently.  All other long-term indicators remain neutral.

MY INVESTED STOCK POSITION:
 
TSP (RETIREMENT ACCOUNT – GOV EMPLOYEES) ALLOCATION
G-Fund (Risk-free yielding 2.1% over the last 12-months): 50%
C-Fund (S&P 500): 25%
I-Fund (EFA): 25%
 
(This is a conservative position most appropriate for retirees or conservative investors.)  I think all investors would be well served to cut their stock investments to a lower than normal (for each individual) allocation. Until longer term technicals look better, the old adage that one’s stock allocation should equal your age subtracted from 100 seems reasonable.  (40years old: 100-40 = 60% in stocks) 50% would be the lowest stock allocation unless conditions deteriorate.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

10 – 14 AUGUST: WEEK IN REVIEW

Unchanged Volume: Unchanged Volume was low on Tuesday and Friday.  This is suggesting bullish action ahead, but it’s not a great indicator, and unchanged volume did not get to an extreme low level, so let’s not get too bullish.
 
Breadth: Neither Long term breadth (% of stocks advancing over the last 50-days) nor the 10-day breadth has managed to get over 48.3 % in the last three days; a number under 50% is not good.
 
Market Internals: Internals turned negative on Wednesday and have remained so Thursday and Friday.
 
New-Highs / New-Lows:  The new-high/new-low data also turned down Wednesday and remains negative.  The spread (new-highs minus new lows) was in negative territory Tuesday thru Friday and is still looking pretty bad, even with the up-day Friday. (The spread was a negative -54 on Friday.)
 
VIX: The options indicator, VIX, is neutral and is not signaling much of anything except continued complacency which is not good.  The markets haven’t gone anywhere this year, but the options boys aren’t worried.  That’s a worry.
 
RSI: The Relative Strength Indicator never did get to an oversold reading last week and has climbed to 58 - a surprisingly high reading for such a “Nowhere Week”. (Where’s John Lennon when we need him?  Actually, I can’t forget; I remember December 8, 1980 as a very sad day.)
 
The %-of-stocks above their 200-dMA remained flat at about 40% as it has for all of August.  That has climbed from its low around 37% in late July, but it hasn’t managed to breakout from its range between 38% and 40% in August. 40% is a low number and is bearish.
 
Sentiment: Sentiment has dropped back to 80% [{5-dMA of bulls/(bulls+bears)} in selected Rydex/Guggenheim funds].  That’s a good sign; it was 85% in early July and 83% 3-weeks ago.  It doesn’t sound like much, but this is a slow moving indicator. The lowered sentiment value “allows” the markets to go higher, but it is not a great timing indicator unless it climbs above the sell point…now 85%.
 
The yield on the 10-year Treasury climbed to 2.21% Friday morning but, closed the week at 2.2% on Friday.
 
Volume. Volume was one of the few bright spots as volume dipped on Thursday, at the retest of the prior low suggesting a possible end to the selling.  Investors thought so too and bought on Friday.  Market Internals remained negative though, so I am not yet convinced that Thursday was the low. Calling short term small moves is more witchcraft than analysis – maybe Thursday was a low; maybe not.
 
All in all it looks like the market “Doesn’t have a point of view, knows not where he’s going to…”
 
MARKET INTERNALS

Market Internals are a decent trend-following analysis of current market action, but should not be used alone for short term trading. They are usually right, but they are often late.  They are most useful when they diverge from the Index.  In 2014, using these internals alone would have made a 9% return vs. 13% for the S&P 500 (in on Positive, out on Negative – no shorting).  Of course, few trend-following systems will do well in an extreme low-volatility, nearly straight-up year like 2014.
 
NTSM         
Friday, the NTSM long term indicator is HOLD.  Indicators haven’t changed in a while. Price is positive, because up-moves have outpaced the size of down moves recently.  All other long-term indicators remain neutral.

 

I am currently 30% invested in stocks, because I decided to take a conservative position while away on vacation. Whether I reestablish my 50-50 stock/cash portfolio in the TSP (retirement account) remains to be seen, but I probably will add to the stock portfolio.  It depends on Market Action and whether I feel lucky. “Well, do ya? Punk.”

Friday, August 7, 2015

OFF THE AIR FOR A WEEK

I’ll be traveling without a laptop next week, 10-14 August, so I can’t post the blog or enter data.  My next post will be 16 August.
 
FRIDAY’S POST IS BELOW…

Non-Farm Payrolls … Payroll Report …Jobs Report … Hourly Earnings … Stock Market Analysis

NON-FARM PAYROLLS / HOURLY EARNINGS (Reuters)
U.S. employment rose at a solid clip in July and wages rebounded after a surprise stall in the prior month, signs of an improving economy that opened the door wider to a Federal Reserve interest rate increase in September. Nonfarm payrolls increased 215,000 last month…Average hourly earnings increased five cents, or 0.2 percent, last month after being flat in June.” Story at…
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/08/07/us-usa-economy-idUSKCN0QB1FP20150807
 
FOSBACK HIGH LOW LOGIC INDEX
The Logic Index slipped to 9.3%, less than the 10% crash-danger level, but Fosback’s data showed that if the Index was above 5% the markets were down around 1.4-percent, 3-months later (data thru 1980).  At 9.5%, it suggests little reward going forward. For further details on the Fosback High Low Logic Index see my previous blog at…
http://navigatethestockmarket.blogspot.com/2015/07/tech-problems-norman-fosback-high-low_21.html
 
MARKET REPORT / ANALYSIS
-Friday, the S&P 500 was down about 0.3% to 2078 at the close. 
-VIX fell about 3% to 13.39.
-The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.17%. (The 10-yr yield was almost 2.5% 6-weeks ago.  That’s may be an indication of worry over the stock market.)
 
RSI is 33 and falling.  30 is the oversold number so it is possible that the markets will bounce at 30 and that could happen as soon as tomorrow…but…Markets can remain oversold for some time so RSI isn’t a guarantee of a bounce, but it is a bit encouraging. 
 
LONG TERM BREADTH
The 50-dMA of stocks advancing on the NYSE remained 47.2% Friday, from 47.2% yesterday.  Below 50% is not good; it simply means that more than half of the stocks on the NYSE have gone down over the past 2-1/2 months.
 
Further, I read a surprising fact on CNBC that over half of the stocks in the S&P 500 are down more than 10% (week of 1 Aug). 
 
And in another measure of long-term breadth, the % of Stocks on the NYSE above their 200-day moving average as of Thursday dipped to 37% – this number is way too small and has been trending down since mid-April. Unless this improves – markets are going down. (The average is 64%.)
 
It is now difficult to be bullish.  It looks like a correction is coming soon, but that belief has been wrong a lot in the last 3-years, so I won’t go into it any further. If the internals improve, perhaps a correction will be avoided once again.
 
MARKET INTERNALS (NYSE DATA)
The 10-day moving average of the percentage of stocks advancing (NYSE) was 49% Friday vs. 49% yesterday.  (A number below 50% is usually BAD news for the markets.  While the 10-day value got better, the 10-day value is skewed by the brief upturn 28-31 July.  Friday’s value for breadth was 38% and that is the lowest in the last 10-days. Bottom line: Even though the 10-day value increased, the %-stocks advancing is not a good news story yet.
 
New-lows outpaced New-highs again Friday. The spread (new-highs minus new-lows) was minus-158. (It was -283 Thursday.)  This was a solid improvement.
 
The 10-day moving average of change in the spread rose to +23 Friday.  In other words, over the last 10-days, on average; the spread has INCREASED by 23 each day. Internals remained neutral on the markets, but currently, only Breadth is negative.  This hints that a correction may be avoided yet again.  Too early to say, though - there are other negatives to be resolved.

Market Internals are a decent trend-following analysis of current market action, but should not be used alone for short term trading. They are usually right, but they are often late.  They are most useful when they diverge from the Index.  In 2014, using these internals alone would have made a 9% return vs. 13% for the S&P 500 (in on Positive, out on Negative – no shorting).  Of course, few trend-following systems will do well in an extreme low-volatility, nearly straight-up year like 2014.
 
NTSM         
Friday, the NTSM long term indicator is HOLD.  Indicators haven’t changed in a while. Price is positive, because up-moves have outpaced down moves recently.  All other long-term indicators remain neutral. 
 

Thursday, August 6, 2015

OFF THE AIR NEXT WEEK

I’ll be traveling without a laptop next week, 10-14 August, so I can’t post the blog or enter data.  I’ll post tomorrow, Friday.  After that, my next post will be 16 August.  
 
I am going to play defense for the week in the TSP (retirement account) by cutting my stock allocation on Friday to:
15% - C fund (S&P 500)
15% - I fund (EFA, Euro Pacific)
70% – G fund (Cash, paying 2% risk-free)
This isn’t a recommendation – it’s just what I’m doing so I won’t even think about the stock market while I’m gone.
 
The NTSM long term indicator is currently HOLD, but the markets are unsettled and it would be nice to not think about the markets for a while. 
 
THURSDAY’S POST IS BELOW…