Sunday, April 5, 2026

October 7, 2009

Market Rap 06.October.2009

Meanwhile, back at the office, Gold hit an all time high today and the S&P 500 closed +14.26 points or 1.37% at 1054.72.

The gold market is going to offer an obscene amount of trading opportunities, both long and short, in the years to come. The breakout today is big news.

Gold - Weekly Chart

Gold - Weekly Chart



Now, the big bad question is what to do from here. It has been my viewpoint that gold is vulnerable to a violent sell off–if there is a sudden risk aversion rotation into the US Dollar. Last night, there were rumors that oil traders would abandon the US dollar and attempt to denominate oil against a basket of currencies. These rumors make the rounds now and again, and they are always funny. Oil is not going to trade against anything else anytime soon. After all, if you were an oil trader, what would you like the contracts settled in? I prefer my oil settlements in dollars (just fine thanks). That said, not everyone thinks like I do. The rumors of oil re-denomination, a 25 bps rate hike in Australia and weakness in the greenback all pointed to the the new high in gold today.

I remain sidelined in the yellow metal for the moment, and it feels lonely. The move in gold is starting to be about momentum and trading the technicals–an endeavor which I have a decent track record.

The next chart speaks to the conspiracy theory of the day. Rumors of a derivative loss at Goldman Sachs (GS) between 9:30 and 10:00 AM PST. These rumors come up from time to time. I discussed my thoughts on Goldie in a prior post. I’ll leave them at that. Before you dismiss the Goldman oil rumors straight away, check out the price action. They traded in lockstep throughout the equity session. Conspiratorial as these rumors may be, the charts sure move together.

Goldman Sachs Vs. Oil

Goldman Sachs Vs. Oil



After the bell today, a slew of oil numbers were released. They all seemed inline except the distillate numbers, which were -2.9 million versus a flat estimate. Oil traded a tad firmer on the news.

Tomorrow before the bell we’ll see numbers out of Monsanto (MON) and Costco (COST). After the bell Alcoa (AA).

I am off to dinner with a vice cop turned lawyer turned trader. Reinvention is the mother of innovation. And the beat goes on.

October 5, 2009

Market Rap 05.October.2009

The stock market showed strength Monday as we began the first full trading week of October. The S&P 500 closed +1.49% or +15.25 points at 1040.46. There were 5 advancers for every decliner on the NYSE. The Nasdaq Composite closed at 2068.15 or +.98% with 2.7 advancers for every decliner.

Oil showed weakness at the open of the pit session on the NYMEX at 9AM EST. After initially trading lower, it found support at the lows from Friday. It then showed strength for the remainder of the session and closed at $70.41–just below the high of Friday–off a low of $68.05.

Light Sweet Crude Oil - Pit Session

Light Sweet Crude Oil - Pit Session



On Wednesday September 30th, Crude Oil and the U.S. Oil Fund ETF (USO) rallied strongly. Since that time, any attempt to take oil lower has been met with buyers. If a meaningful correction is in the cards in the S&P 500, the dollar needs to strengthen. The recent strength in oil has been due to dollar weakness. If oil is strong, the dollar is not. As the dollar weakens, stocks inflate. Oil is the key to the equity puzzle into the end of the year. For that reason, X is traveling around to oil rich nations and meeting with business leaders. Any data he gathers will be important to my year end positioning.

USO - Daily Chart

USO - Daily Chart



Gold closed higher by 1.5% in what smelled like a rally that was due to more than just softness in the greenback.

Gold Futures - Daily

Gold Futures - Daily



I continue to see a deflationary–as opposed to inflationary–macroeconomic landscape and I am positioned accordingly.

Tomorrow is the William Blair Emerging Growth Stock Conference, ICSC/UBSW Chain Store Sales are due out at 7:45 EST–last 0.1%, Redbook Retail Sales at 8:55–last -2.3%.

After the bell this evening Mosaic (MOS) announced Q1 $0.23 versus $0.35 expected, revenues $1.50 billion versus $1.54 billion expected. Margins were 37% versus 52% year/year.

Research In Motion was notably weak today. After the bell we found out why: Bernstein initiated (RIMM) with an underperform rating and a $60 price target.

And the beat goes on.

September 25, 2009

Market Rap 25 September 2009

The S&P cash index closed lower by 6.40 points or .61% at 1044.38. The S&P mini futures contract closed at 1041.00 — 4.75 points off it’s low print of 1036.25, which was printed just after 10AM PST.

ES - 15 Minute

ES - 15 Minute

Overnight, credit spreads in Asia were wider by 9% on bearish news out of Aiful as well as a 30% dilutive secondary offering out of Nomura Holdings (8604.TSE). In the states, credit spreads were wider across the board. Default swaps were active with about 7 wideners to every tightener.

Gold came into the week at $1,006.15/oz. and closed slightly lower at $991.35/oz. Crude oil closed a tad higher today, but lower on the week to settle at $65.05. Crude has broken lower out of consolidation in what could be a harbinger of further weakness in the near term.

Crude Oil - Weekly

Crude Oil - Weekly

Research In Motion closed lower by 17% at $68.91, just above it’s low print of $68.47.
The $VIX closed at 25.61, up 2.65% on the day.

I’d sum up this week’s trade in equities as mildly distributive. I saw evidence of defensive posturing (risk aversion) amongst traders. In order for the sell-off to gain momentum, we will need a catalyst. What that catalyst could be is yet to be known. The situation will continue to be monitored and the beat will go on.

Market Rap 24 September 2009

The S&P cars roared out of the gate and climbed a few points on euphoria from the better than expected employment claims headline: 530,000 versus 550,000 expected. 30 minutes after the open, existing home sales hit the wire and were light of expectations: 5.1 million Vs. 5.35 million expected or -2.7% month over month. After selling off, the market traded in a range for the remainder of the session, closing lower by 10.09 or just under 1%.

S&P 500 - September 24, 2009

S&P 500 - September 24, 2009



Oil and gold mirrored weakness in equities as the dollar was well bid. Inversely, the Euro was weak.

US Dollar - 15 Minute

US Dollar - 15 Minute



Volatility is beginning to pick up and closed higher by 6.22% at 24.95.

VIX - Daily

VIX - Daily



Credit spreads were wider across the board. US bonds were well bid. The 7 year $29 billion auction drew 3.005%, bid to cover ratio: 2.79 Vs. 2.63 prior. Indirect bidders took 61.2%. Even Rick Santelli — who grades on the curve — gave the auction an A.

After hours, Research In Motion (RIMM) traded lower on lighter than expected top line revenues and weak year over year margins: 44.1% Vs. 50.7% a year ago.

I have been cautious and positioned for risk aversion — strong dollar, weak equities and commodities. The market is pulling back and distribution is increasing. I will continue to watch how players react to the distribution. Whether this pullback will develop into something more meaningful is yet to be seen. For the short term, the path of least resistance is lower.

And the beat goes on.

September 21, 2009

Market Rap 21 September 2009

Meanwhile, back at the office, I just hung up with Tony Stark. Due to client confidentiality, I am unable to disclose whether I run money for Tony. I can say that due to the magnitude of cash flows in and out of Stark Industries, Tony often comes to me for guidance. He has also borrowed my plane, The Errol Flynn, on occasion.

Before I run off to afternoon meetings, my thoughts turn to the replay of today’s tape.

The S&P closed off .34% or -3.64 points. The NASDAQ closed positive 5.18 points or .24%. Spot gold was off $3.25 and sits at $1,002.90. Oil futures closed lower by 3.57% to settle at 69.50.

Friday Night Announcement

After a strategic late Friday night lowering of guidance, Potash (POT) gapped lower this morning. The bookies — who make money no matter where Potash trades — were out in full force and their comments boosted the stock off it’s lows at $90.82 to close at $93.09. Broadpoint AmTech reiterated their buy rating, price target $116. BofA/Merrill maintaned their buy rating, price target $114. Fading the crowd was Soleil Securities, who cut POT from to hold from buy, price target $88.

Friday night press releases are an ominous sign. If I owned any Potash, I’d be selling it as fast as I could.

Caterpillar Stats

In other news of interest, Caterpillar (CAT) released dealer statistics for the June to August period. Retail machine sales were down 48%. CAT has rallied from the low 20s to the mid 50s since March. Valuation seems unjustifiable here, especially when the forthcoming rally in the dollar is factored in.

Ponzi Accounting

One of my favorite shorts of yesteryear, Prologis (PLD) was back in the news today with an announcement of a consent solicitation for $2.96 billion in debt securities. Prologis has taken advantage of the market strength over the past 6 months to — through various mechanisms — raise an exorbitant amount of capital. The accounting at Prologis continues to resemble that of Enron. At some point, the common equity in this company will be wiped out. In reaction, Wall Street will respond with the ever popular retort: How could we have known?

Nostalgia

On September 23, 2008 I posted my analysis of Research In Motion (RIMM). In what was one of the largest profits on my P&L last year, RIMM moved from $100 down to $40 in just over a month. This year, sports analysts on business TV are pushing RIMM even harder than they were last. On a technical basis, the price action in RIMM looks healthier this year. However, the cycles run with the seasons. When RIMM lowers guidance this week, the shock factor will be of greater magnitude than last year. In what mirrors the timing of their release last year, RIMM is announcing their earnings on the same date — September 24th — and the same day of the week — Thursday. I own puts in RIMM and my nostalgic mind is counting down the time until their numbers hit the wires.

Rimm - September & October 2008

Rimm - September & October 2008

The market is gearing up for something big and I’ll continue to document it here — where as always — the beat goes on.

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