Monday, June 06, 2011

Market Outlook | June 6, 2011

“The hopes of the Republic cannot forever tolerate either undeserved poverty or self-serving wealth.” -Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945)

A New Month

Plenty of questions were raised in May and unclear answers will be found in June. For starters, both stocks and Crude peaked on May 2, 2011. As usual, this is a directional issue, making observers wonder if broad indexes are pausing or gearing for significant decline. A debate resurfaces, given the upcoming puzzle to the established uptrend, especially with the weakening economy. However, the major macro themes are hard to shake, and it’s even harder to know when things will change. In fact, the last few weeks have witnessed further deterioration in interest rates . This showcases more of the same, as the US 10 Year Treasury Yield is lower than it was at the start of the year, while breaking below 3%.

Self-serving Traits

Human behavior in market pattern should not be underestimated, despite rapid advancement in information technology, logic-based models and fast-paced trading platforms. Yet, the “human element” has a lot of say in shaping market trends. Beyond chatter, the reality points to an opaque approach to policymaking; this is far removed from being fully reformed. As usual, self-serving models persist and dominate the timing of a market trend or policy shift as well as news releases. These topics are magnified, especially during a well-documented election year.

Similarly, preserving the status quo benefits traditional money managers promoting buy-and-hold strategies and other larger firms aligned with the current revenue sharing plans. In other words, turbulence can easily tilt the existing fee model and revenue structure. Changing the existing market and political dynamics is a battle that takes an exorbitant amount of time.

For some media outlets, disappointing economic numbers are worth highlighting to stir up further fear (which is usually handy for the non-incumbent party). At the same time, emphasis on fund managers wrongdoings and European debt problems produce headlines at a rapid pace. In turn, sifting through key events can be misleading. Financial leaders and regulators are spending time on rebuilding previous mistakes rather than on encouraging new business activities. Yet, less publicized events related to the entrepreneurial spirit might have a bigger future impact on overall economic health, but they barely get equal attention unless a handful of new media based initial public offerings (i.e., LinkedIn and Groupon) address them.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve at certain points is forced to save face, build investor confidence, and show allegiance to the current administration. Skepticism alone can help discern some hype, but it can hurt the confidence-building exercise, especially in a fragile economic condition. Financial regulators are bombarded with a lot of cases from crisis fall outs and new complex rules to implement and ponder for years ahead. In all this, legal counseling is at a premium just as much as a solid public relation manager.

Basically, the motives of each participant are deeply interlinked. Therefore, investors will be tested on their ability to categorize each event. The real reward is in tracking meaningful events to eventually connecting the dots on big picture movements—perhaps, a valuable approach to a sideways market for the weeks ahead.

Article Quotes:

“Banks, it is true, need entrepreneurs to provide the most dynamic links to the real economy in the real world. Banks could sit in front of computer screens creating electronic money all day and all night if they liked (and they do like. They did exactly this during the last "boom"). But without a solid outlet into transactional reality (such as an invention, or the discovery of a natural asset, or even, for a time, an unsolid one, such as a housing bubble), their electronic money is worthless, figures on a flickering screen, no more meaningful than if you or I opened a text file, typed in some gargantuan number, shoved a pound-sign in front of it, and said: "This is mine." The velveteen rabbit, in the eponymous children's story by Margery Williams, needs love to make it "real." In a similar sort of way, the banks need borrowers to make their money ‘real’.” (The Guardian, June 2 2011).

“No other country is now rising to challenge China's manufacturing power. Hence, it can pass cost increases to global consumers through higher prices. This gives China time to deal with the inflation problem. If exports were falling due to rising prices, China would be forced into pushing inflation down quickly, which would make a hard landing more likely. The slowdown may accelerate in the third quarter as local governments and developers give up hope that the central government may loosen policy again. They'll have to accept lower liquidity levels and cut expenditures accordingly. When that occurs, electricity consumption may drop below the 10 percent growth rate, possibly falling back to below 8 percent.” (Caixin, May 24, 2011)

Levels:

S&P 500 Index [1300.16] – In a corrective mood since May 2, 2011. Next noteworthy level is at 1280 followed by 1260. That’s where buyers would look to reconsider buying based on charts.

Crude [$100.22] – Sitting tight around the $100 range—a glaring trend in the last few weeks.

Gold [$1540] – Resurging after a pause in early May, now revisiting, and near all-time highs.

DXY – US Dollar Index [73.78] – Quite evident that the recent recovery is very short-term and not producing a major follow through.

US 10 Year Treasury Yields [2.98%] – Broke below 3% level, reemphasizing that the low rate environment is not shaken. The peak in February 2011 was a prelude to a four month decline.

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