Archive for the ‘Stock Market Actions’ Category

Dow 15,000 = $10 Soda?

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

The Dow Industrial Average has rallied from 6,500 to just over 10,000 in a matter of months. Great news right? Maybe not if you consider at what expense, literally.

In my view the US economy is like a large aquarium. If you lean it in one direction the level may seem like it is going up on one side, but it is always at the expense of the other.

This stock market rally (Since March 2009) is undeniably at the expense of the US Dollar. Every time the dollar is weak the Dow is strong. This weakness in the dollar causes commodities to go up and US buying power to go down. So if the Dow manages to soar another 50%, don’t be surprised when your cost of living soars with it.

The famed “Dr. Doom” Nouriel Roubini has been expressing his concern over the “carry trade” where investors are borrowing dollars (shorting) and buying commodities. Many asset managers of recent have referred to the short dollar trade as “crowded”. This “rally” seems more like a another misuse of leverage. Looks like Wall Street gave up drinking by switching to beer.

Dow Industrial in red and US Dollar in green

Dow Industrial in red and US Dollar in green

Cheeseburger Futures, Options Maybe ETFs?

Friday, October 30th, 2009

We have gasoline futures, why not cheeseburger futures. Traders could speculate on the demand for cheeseburgers seasonally and cyclically. A lot of traders eat cheeseburgers and are amateur cheeseburger producers. This experience would give them great insight into the supply and demand of cheeseburgers around the world.

Trading cheeseburger futures could stabilize earnings of fast food giants. Fast food giants could save on innovation in the production of cheeseburgers because when prices are high their no need to change a good thing. When prices are low they could just stop producing as many cheeseburgers thereby reducing the supply and supporting the futures price, even though demand is falling. Maybe we should also have pizza futures or even ice cream futures.

I hope you could smell the sarcasm. Just my perception on how ludicrous it is to have gasoline futures.

Supply and Demand….Not in todays market!

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

Earning season is off to a positive start. A large percentage of companies are beating profit expectations and exceeding revenue. The question is whether this revenue and profit push is from a very predictable inventory bounce and continued cost cutting or from an actual improvement in the consumer spending.

Wal-Mart recently commented on the continued sluggish sales. A common theme in earnings released so far is the continued cost cutting. If companies are still cutting back how can the consumer expand if they are employed by these very same companies?

All economic (non government) activity can be summed up with Supply and Demand. When the economic problem fails to include the primary variables of supply and demand the answer is incomplete and therefore not a solvable solution. When the perceived problem has no answer, then that cannot be the real problem. There is always a solution to a problem. Right now I see the weak dollar as the real problem, the variables make sense and the solution is solvable.

Earnings – Where is the Surprise?

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Over the 3rd quarter US Government officials and the majority of the Wall Street community had declared an end to the recession. Consumer expectations where the driving force behind Consumer Sentiment numbers. So is it any surprise that earnings for the 3rd quarter are showing some signs of life. Earnings are a reflection of the past. The real questions is whether the 4th quarter and 2010 can live up to the lofty expectations of Wall Street for the “V” shape recovery in the face of extremely high unemployment and conservative consumer spending. Eventually the facts have to live up to the predictions or the market will fall and 6500 on the DOW will look like a gift.

Price to Earnings JPM 28!?

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

According to Yahoo Finance the current trailing P/E of JPM (J.P. Morgan) is around 28 at the time of this post. The forward P/E is about 15. During the peak of the real estate boom JPM’s stock price peaked around $52 ish and as of this post it is about $46 and change. Are the future prospects for JPM that good? This market has very high expectations, the question is wether JPM can live up to them.

Q1 Earnings Down 35% Year over Year – Bull Market?

Tuesday, May 5th, 2009

With over 50% of companies earnings reported so far, earnings appear about 35% lower (of the S&P 500 included stocks) than last year’s same period. At the beginning of the year, analyst only expected 12.5% lower. Even with earnings so much lower than forecasted at the beginning of the year, expectations where reduced so dramatically over the quarter that that over two thirds of earnings have exceeded estimates so far.


Healthcare seems to have held off the impact of the recession with a 2.2% average growth over last year. Consumer discretionary companies have felt the most dramatic effect with an average earnings decline of 96.8% over last year. Interesting though how the Healthcare Sector Spider ETF (XLV) is down -8.66% this year and the Consumer Discretionary Sector Spider ETF (XLY) is up 5.27% for the year.

Although expectations where clearly lowered in the first quarter, the second quarter remains largely unchanged. Earnings are expected to be down 20% year over year in the second quarter and just a 4% drop in the third.

Wall Street seems to be either too pessimistic or overly optimistic. So the question is whether the future estimates are overly optimistic of too pessimistic? If Wall Street is ends up being too optimistic then we will likely retest the lows of early March 2009. If Wall Street turns out to be too pessimistic then we may have more to gain. The question is do you think earnings next quarter only declined 20% over last year’s same period?

Over Shooting Expectations

Friday, May 1st, 2009

In the first week of March 2009, the sentiment on Wall Street was very negative. Analysts started adjusting their earnings expectations down to match sentiment. By the end of the week the sellers were overtaken by buyers and now the stock market has moved over 20% in record time.

The general expectation was that the stock market would retrace some in April due to earnings season. So far nearly two thirds of earnings released have beaten expectations. Since expectations have been better than expected, the stock market has held up.


Sales and earnings for most of the companies who released are way off over last year. Companies who beat typically had their earnings expectations adjusted lower at one point during the first quarter.

When the market was heading into the abyss of 6500 on the Dow Industrial average, Wall Street lowered their expectations of the future. Expectations now are being raised since the market has made a record jump to speedy recovery.

Wall Street seems to always over shoot their expectations. When they are bearish, the worst is expected. When Wall Street is bullish, the best case is expected. Expectations are just that, what someone expects to happen.

The markets generally move on expectations. If expectations are high then the bear is advantaged. If expectations are low, then the bulls have the leg up. Can the lofty expectations being set now be achieved? Some of Wall Street is starting to forecast the conclusion to this financial crisis by summer’s end, what if it does not happen?

Support and Resistance – What is really happening?

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Support and resistance in technical analysis typically refers to a price of stock, commodity, and similar investment tools that becomes a stopping point. The support is the low point of the trading range and the resistance is the top.

What causes a stock or other investment tool to find a support and resistance? Support is the point where buyers exceed sellers. Resistance is the point where sellers exceed buyers. Basically support and resistance is the tug a war between the bulls and bears. Some say that the winner is typically the one who convinces the long term investors to follow them.


Currently the bulls have made a stand at 6500 on the Dow Industrial and the bears have made theirs at about 8000. Over the past two months there have been several reports citing the lack of the individual investor participation. Consumer confidence released Tuesday April 28th, 2009 has shown that Main Street is starting to feel more confident about the future, but their current situation is rather unchanged.

So it would appear we are at a tipping point. I would assume if Main Street starts to see a more measurable improvement in their current financial situation the bulls could win the war. If Main Street current financial situation either stagnates or gets worse than the bears would probably win. So what if the bulls or the bears win this one, who will win the next one?

Support and resistance is all about expectations. If you are a bull and expectation are exceeded, then the market will move your way. If you are a Bear and expectation are missed, then the market will probably move in your direction. High expectations are negative for bulls, since they are harder to exceed. Low expectations are negative for Bears, since they are harder to miss. What are you expectations?

Who Leads the Economy?

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

The US economy is made up of two fundamental events which are expanding and contracting credit. While an economy is expanding credit typically it is a time of prosperity. When an economy is contracting usually it is a labeled a recession. The economic cycle of expansion and contraction describes an economy as a whole.

To best visualize this cycle you should imagine a wave. As you go up the wave credit is expanding which typically means more spending; when you go down the wave credit is contracting which leads to less spending. Since US consumer makes up about 70% of GDP, it is logical to imagine the consumer is the water that makes up the wave. As the old saying goes, “Life is full of ups and downs”. People are typically either going up or down the wave.


The world is made up of cycles. The sun comes up and then is goes down and seasons change. Peoples clothing and surroundings may change but history usually repeats itself.
Individuals have short and long cycles. Groups of people also share cycles. These groups could include 2 individuals to millions or even the entire world’s population.

Gustav Le Bon in his book “The Crowd” cited that individuals are smarter than the crowd. With this assumption one could argue that the larger the group included in a cycle the slower the cycles is to repeat itself since it will take the crowd longer to move to the next part of the cycle than an individual.

Individual’s private finances most of the time go through periods of expansion and contraction just like the economy as a whole. Actually if you believe that individuals are smarter than the crowd, then you should also believe that individual’s finances lead the broader economy, since they are more efficient at moving to the next part of the cycle.

With the current economic crisis the price of real estate skyrocketed to a point where more and more individuals no longer saw value and stopped buying. With less buyer and more sellers, real estate prices started to plummet. Once the first domino falls, the rest eventually do. Since the housing bubble was so widespread and included so many people, both in the USA and abroad, the cycle should take that much longer to progress.

What Happens if the Economy Gets the Flu?

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Every couple of years the term “Flu Pandemic” makes headlines. The term refers to a global medical disaster where a large part of the world population gets the fast spreading flu. Every year the flu kills thousands; during a flu pandemic it could kill millions. A side effect of this type of crisis is felt in the world economies. Fear of illness keeps people in their homes and out of the malls. Sick people miss work that leads to less productivity.

Several agencies have done research for the USA into the potential economic impact of a flu pandemic. Their research has estimated that the US GDP could contract from 4% to 6% in a severe flu pandemic. They also estimated that if there is a mild flu pandemic it could shrink GDP by 1%. The report also noted that the effect in other countries could be much worse. The real impact is the loss of life the side effect is the contraction of economic growth. The report does indicate that economies should snap back after the crisis from pent up consumer demand.


A global flu pandemic would make a time of prosperity difficult let alone its effect during a time of crisis, as we are in right now. The economy is at such a fragile point that even a pandemic scare could have a measureable effect.

With Wall Street and Washington citing glimmers of hope, a flu pandemic, or even a scare, could sidetrack their hopes for the near future. At this point, the health of the people who make up the world economies should be the concern then worry about the economic side effects.