After the sharp sell-off back to the flatline, stocks then soared, with the Dow closing up 147 points. While there were more jobs created than expected, the unemployment rate rose, and the largest categories of job creation were low-wage, part-time jobs in restaurants and bars. So we're now rejoicing that we're creating jobs only as waiters and bartenders? If that's not a case study of what constitutes bubble behavior, what is?
Friday, July 5, 2013
Jobs Sent Stocks Soaring
Copper Collapse
Copper is a fascinating economic indicator in itself, because it is one of the commonly-used industrial metals. Thus, as demand falls, so does the price. It has collapsed today!
Stocks Sell Off After Jobs Report, Now Buying Again
Amazing that the Fed so controls this market, that no one even cares any more about the economy of jobs. All they care about is whether the Fed will continue to provide free money forever! The Fed OWNS and CONTROLS the market!
Jobs Report - Tumultuous Market Response
Various media responses:
Here's the market response:
It's a part-time economy now! Part-time jobs are up, and full-time jobs are DOWN! The UNDERemployment rate has leaped to 14.3%!
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Precious Metals Turn Lower Following One-Day Rally
After rallying about $40 yesterday, gold has turned down again. Those who put their faith in treasures are being humbled.
Monday, July 1, 2013
Don't Get Caught In a Sucker's Rally!
"For all of these reasons I am bullish on the bond market through the end of this year. Furthermore, with market volatility rising, economic weakness creeping in and plenty of catalysts to send stocks lower - bonds will continue to hedge long only portfolios against meaningful market declines while providing an income stream.Will the 'bond bull' market eventually come to an end? Yes, it will, eventually. However, the catalysts needed to create the type of economic growth required to drive interest rates substantially higher, as we saw previous to the 1980's, are simply not available currently. This will likely be the case for many years to come as the Fed, and the administration, come to the inevitable conclusion that we are now in a "liquidity trap" along with the bulk of developed countries. While there is certainly not a tremendous amount of downside left for interest rates to fall in the current environment - there is also not a tremendous amount of room for them to rise until they begin to negatively impact consumption, housing and investment. It is likely that we will remain trapped within the current trading range for quite a while longer as the economy continues to 'muddle' along."
"Bond king Jeff Gundlach says the selling wave that roiled credit markets in May and June has come to an end.'The liquidation cycle appears to have run its course with emerging market bonds, U.S. junk bonds, munis and MBS—all of which substantially underperformed Treasurys during the rate rise—now recovering sharply,' he told CNBC's Scott Wapner.Gundlach, the founder of DoubleLine and co-manager of the $39.4 billion DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund, told Wapner in an email that 'the 200-basis-point-yield rise on certain sectors brought absolute yields up to levels high enough to create a compelling value proposition.'
'Not surprisingly, investors have been drawn to these values leading to interest rate stabilization,' he added."
"At Cumberland, we have lengthened duration while moving to the buy side. We are buying where we can and altering accounts and mixes of accounts as we can. We are taking advantage of this very opportunistic time."
"Don’t jump ship now. We may have reached an inflection point of low Treasury, mortgage and corporate yields in late April, but this is overdone. Will there be smooth sailing tomorrow? 'Red sky at night, sailors delight?' Hardly. Will you be able to replicate annualized returns in bonds and stocks for the past 20–30 years? Hardly. Expect 3–5% for both. But sailors, don’t panic."
"There is one truth about the markets, despite Federal Reserve interventions, that remains true: 'Stocks do not go in a straight line.'During unfaltering advances in the market investors begin to migrate towards the belief that the stock market will continue its current trajectory indefinitely into the future. This is particularly true near market tops when almost every pundit, analysts and investor is touting why now is the time to 'jump in'. Of course, history is replete with examples of the disaster that followed such advice.As we discussed at length in our recent weekly missive 'An Initial Sell Signal Approaches' prices can only move so far away from their long term average before 'gravity' sucks prices back. The chart below shows the S&P Index on a weekly basis (which smooths out day to day volatility) with a set of Bollinger bands representing 3-standard deviations from the mean."
Friday, June 28, 2013
Corn Plunges on Larger Crop Forecast
The other grains seem to be trading down in sympathy!
"Corn farmers in the U.S., the world’s biggest producer, planted the most acres since 1936 this year, more than a prior government forecast, as growers responded to low stockpiles with more planting."
Agrimoney:
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Kocherlatkota Says "Risk On"
Minnesota Fed Governor Kocherlakota said that the market have misunderstood, thinking that the Fed is "hawkish". It isn't! This was the result (circled in blue).The Fed now so completely controls the stock market that one can say that there no longer IS a market. The Fed OWNS the market! The bubble! It's baaa-aaack!
Monday, June 24, 2013
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Cattle Futures Break Out, Prices Rise
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Drought conditions in the United States have improved
since last September, but they remain severe in the West and are
affecting consumers across the nation.
CHICAGO, June 21 (Reuters) - The number of cattle placed in
U.S. feedlots last month slipped 2 percent, a government report
showed on Friday, which analysts attributed to rising feed costs
discouraging the fattening of cattle for slaughter.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture showed May placements at
2.049 million head, compared with 2.084 million a year earlier.
Analysts, on average, expected a 5 percent decline.
