Weekly Results:
S&P 500 896.42 -2.59%
DJIA 8,280.74 -2.26%
NASDAQ 1,796.52 -1.80%
Russell 2000 497.21 -2.35%
MSCI Emerging Markets 32.11 +.89%
Painting the Big Picture:
Interestingly, June presented key Macro reversal points across six market indicators. In other words, ongoing trend shifts in commodities, US interest rates and global stock markets. Meanwhile, a slow recovery process is taking hold in the US Dollar. Perhaps, this signals less enthusiasm for risky assets. At the same time, economic numbers and credit conditions mostly confirm the downturn in this cycle.
Key trend reversal in June:
June 1, 2009: Gold paused at $981 and down 5.3% since that point. For the second time this year, Gold failed to climb above $990.
June 1, 2009: MSCI Emerging Markets index marked annual highs of 802.21. Eventually, the index closed few point lower at 761.30.
June 2, 2009: US Dollar Index reached annual lows of 78.34 and sparked a 2.5% appreciation. An early indication of relative strength versus other currencies.
June 11, 2009: S&P 500 paused at 956.23 and closed the week below a key support level of 900.
June 11, 2009: US 10 Year Treasury Yields toped at psychological level of 4% and current trades near 3.50%.
June 30, 2009: Crude paused at $73.38 at the last trading day in June. Remains overbought after a weekly close of $66.
Investor Feel
From a sentiment perspective, these pullbacks set the stage for additional sell-offs. For example, the S&P 500 turned slightly negative for the year. Short-term history reminds us, that July can present an eventful market action. At this point, participants are poised to reexamine the substance behind the first half rally. That said, clues from fundamentals and momentum offer less favorable odds for a recovery. Now, investors await earnings in upcoming weeks to gauge market expectations versus actual results.
"The recovery in global manufacturing has come primarily because companies have sold off much of their accumulated stocks and are re-starting mothballed production lines. Once this temporary boost is completed, serious questions remain about the source of longer-term demand to maintain the current momentum. (Financial Times July 2, 2009)
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