FactSet just updated their second-quarter earnings season stats for S&P 500 companies so let’s take a look at just how awful things are: -69% of companies are beating earnings estimates (vs. 5-year average of 67%) -54% of companies are beating sales estimates (vs. 5-year average of 55%) -Q2 earnings have declined -3.5%, which is less awful than the -5.5% estimated as of June 30. -Health care and tech have had the highest percentage of companies reporting earnings beats So the same trend that’s persisted for several quarters is still in place — earnings are nothing to write home about. But they are just a little better than expected, so investors are holding their noses and buying. Or maybe they’re just fooled by central banks drenching the market in monetary perfume? However, Q2 will go down as the fifth straight quarter of earnings declines, something we haven’t seen since the 2008-2009 crisis. I accept the market for what it is, and I always roll my eyes are melodramatic bear cases because they always omit the most important variable — WHEN. It does feel somewhat “wrong” for SPX earnings to be so weak while the index is regularly making new all-time highs. That’s creating stretched valuations. Aside from Telecom Services, all services have forward P/E’s is above 5 and 10-year averages: But consider the flip side. Stock prices are a current representation of the perception future earnings and cash flows. Pretty soon, companies will be facing weak comps, so stocks could simply be discounting a return to normalish growth. Maybe that’s simplistic thinking, but complex thinking has gotten the permabears absolutely nowhere.
Continue Reading -->If you look for perfection, you’ll never be content. -Leo Tolstoy Markets are mostly in a happy mood following Friday’s NFP-driven rally. I have serious doubts as to whether the Fed’s going to raise this year, but traders are now pricing in a 47% chance of a December rate hike, up from 9% post-Brexit. I peg the odds as more like 20-25%, though admittedly, that’s based on a feeling more than anything. The yen is down on news that Japan’s Emperor Akihito publicly hinted that he will be stepping aside. German industrial production beat expectations in June (pre-Brexit data), while Visa and Market said UK consumer spending accelerated in July from June, thouhg it was Q1 numbers. France’s central bank said its economy will rise 0.3% in Q3. Economists expected a 0.2% increase. This data implies that perhaps the UK really kitchen-sinked its growth forecast, creating low expectations it can beat. As you can see in these charts of the Citi UK and EU economic surprise indexes, European economic data remains pretty solid relative to Wall Street forecasts: UK: EU: The hot bio/pharma complex may get a lift today on solid numbers from Allergan (AGN) and Horizon Pharma (HZNP). Crude oil is still on the upswing with a move over $42 this morning. OPEC’s president predicted the current dip in oil will be short-lived, and that OPEC members are in “constant deliberations” on stabilizing the market. The group will hold talks in Algiers in September. Gold is selling off as the aforementioned rate hike expectations get ratcheted up. However, bonds are pretty flat — there’s no big rush to sell. On the deal front, TIAA said it is acquiring Everbank (EVER) for $19.50/ share in cash. Everbank has been rumored to be in play for a while and just surged big-time, which explains the small premium over Friday’s $18.64 close. Sentiment is still leaning bullish, as based on the shape of the VIX curve, ISE Sentiment Index, and the Investors Intelligence Survey. The AAII survey shows that individual investors are bearish, but overall, the bulls are still quite giddy. This is why it’s important to respect price above all else. A lot of folks were declaring the market as overheated at 2100, then 2150. And today, with futures up a few points, the S&P looks like it will open at all-time highs around 2190. As far as game planning goes, I wouldn’t think too hard. Watch small caps, biotech, oil, and high-yield. When they’re moving in the right direction, it’s hard to stop the bull. I’m really zoning in on oil right now. Its ascent off the $26 February low was a major factor in the bull’s revival this year. But when it broke down from $51 to $39, the bulls didn’t skip a beat. We could be a situation where the bulls ignore oil when it goes down, and they get encouraged when oil goes back up. I hear a lot of folks complaining that the Russell 2000 hasn’t confirmed the SPX record highs, but remember: there is no such thing as a perfect rally. In almost every rally in the past few years, there’s been one type of problem or another — lousy earnings, lousy economic data, low volume, narrow leadership, etc. Good enough can be good enough. Good luck friends.
Continue Reading -->1) Jobs Report Delivers, and Then Some! For the second month in a row, the monthly nonfarm payrolls report blew away expectations. The US economy added 255,000 jobs in July, easily smashing the 180,000 consensus. Plus, June and May’s numbers were revised higher, and average hourly earnings beat forecasts with a 0.3% gain. With two strong months in the bag, the awful May jobs report now looks like a statistical anomaly, and traders are also quickly forgetting last Friday’s weak GDP report. The market’s conclusion reaction was clear… 2) The Fed Is Gonna Hike. Really? In the aftermath of the report, investors see a higher probability of a Fed rate hike this year. Fed Funds futures now imply a 47% chance of a December rate hike, up from 37% yesterday, and just 9% post-Brexit on June 27. Plus, all the usual hawkish trades quickly fell into place today: The US dollar ripped Gold took a major hit US Treasuries fell Now as far as whether this report actually moves the Fed, I have my doubts. The Fed’s been sitting still for so long that I doubt a couple data points makes a huge difference at this point. The Brexit is also still an issue. The Bank of England made a huge downgrade to its growth forecasts, and European commercial/investment banks are doing the same, which implies a good degree of fallout. This could give the Fed another reason to hold off. But either way, the numbers had equity traders in a great mood today… 3) New Record Highs! After the numbers hit, I said I would not count out a strong rally in stocks today. I thought it would take an upward reversal in bonds to make that happen, but that was wrong. Unlike in last month’s post-NFP rally, bonds stayed down, as did gold. The S&P 500 hit a new all-time record high at 2182.87, led by a big move in bank stocks, which benefit from higher interest rates. The index rose 0.9% to close right on the highs. Regional banks were especially strong with the KRE ETF powering 3.5% higher. Small caps and transports also posted strong gains. The decliners’ column was led by the G.U.T.S complex that has dominated the action in 2016: Gold, Utilities, Treasuries, and Silver, all instruments that suffer from higher rates. Crude oil was down for most of the day on the dollar’s rise, but nearly squeezed into the green by day’s end. Monday’s Trading Calendar US Economics (Time Zone: EDT) 10:00 Labor Market Conditions Index Change (Jul): prior -1.9 Mortgage Delinquencies (2Q): prior 4.77% MBA Mortgage Foreclosures (2Q): prior 1.74% Global Economics 08:30 CAD Building Permits 21:30 AUD NAB Business Confidence 21:30 CNY CPI y/y 21:30 CNY PPI y/y Earnings Before the Open: Allergan (AGN) Dean Foods (DF) Horizon Pharma (HZNP) After the Close: Arena Pharma (ARNA) Ctrip.com (CTRP) Hertz Global (HTZ) Nuance Comm. (NUAN)
Continue Reading -->The July NFP report hit this morning at 8:30 a.m. ET and it was pretty impressive. The headline number was 255k, smashing the 180k consensus. We also saw an 18k upward revision to the past 2 months and better-than-expected hourly earnings. This is the second big beat in a row, which has the big May miss looking like a one-time statistical aberration. We’re seeing a big rip in the dollar, a big dip in gold, and US and German government bonds are sliding. The big question now is whether this will be a repeat of last month. Last time around, we had a huge dip in bonds and gold that was bought very, very quickly. Then, equities followed through after a bad start with SPX ripping 1.5%. I would watch USD/JPY very closely. If the dollar pulls back, that means the dovish status quo trade may keep on raging. Also watch gold. If it bounces back, maybe the doves still wanna rock. Keep in mind we’re less than 30 minutes past the report and NFP is an anything goes day. But as I write this, USDJPY is dipping back. SPX futures are now up 8 handles I am not counting out a big run up in stocks today. I would watch the following levels as possible signals for a reversal: USD/JPY: 101.05 Gold: $1367/$1368 10YR US Treasury Yield: 1.500% 10YR German Bund Yield: -0.085%
Continue Reading -->With market volatility at 20-month lows, I’m falling asleep. It’s like April-May all over again, but worse. Thankfully, we’ve got a pivotal NFP report coming today at 8:30 a.m. ET. So maybe, just maybe we’ll get some real movement today. Economists are looking for 180K on the headline number, 0.2% MoM growth in hourly earnings, and a 4.8% unemployment rate. Last month, we saw a huge 107K beat on the headline number, which just about made up for the 122k miss the month before. On the surface, it seemed like a very much hawk-supporting report, but the market’s reaction said otherwise. Gold and bonds dipped on the report, then ripped like mad. Equities followed through on the decline in rates with a big 1.5% rally in SPX. Traders assumed that the report wouldn’t necessarily make the Fed get more hawkish, and it turns out those traders were right. Based on some weak economic data (GDP, PCE Deflator) and the Bank of England’s huge forecast cut for UK growth (which implies a nasty Brexit impact), the Fed’s forward path looks pretty dovish, at least-near term. But remember, Fed expectations tend to turn on a dime. Fed funds futures are now pricing in a 37% chance of a December rate hike — but that mumbers was down to 9% post-Brexit. I’m not in the silly business of making NFP guesses. But the scenario I would like to see is a modest beat on the headline numbers — say 190k-220k — which I think could drive a rip above 2200 within a day or two on the basis that “the number’s not hot enough to move the Fed but it’s good enough to show things aren’t falling apart.” SPX futures are up fractionally this morning following modest gains in Europe. The dollar is down a tad against the euro and yen, while gold is up a hair. Gold miners are indicated up after strong performances in euro-areaminers. Cybersecurity name FireEye (FEYE) is getting hit hard on its awful quarter. It may end up in the M&A rumor column soon, so maybe put it on your radar screen. LinkedIn (LNKD) beat by a mile, which means Microsoft (MSFT) timed the deal pretty well. Well done fellas. The sideways grind means we’re working off overbought conditions, and some sentiment indicators have cooled off. The AAII survey shows that individual investors are fairly bearish, and the ISE Sentiment Index’ 10-day moving average is coming down a bit. I will admit that some others like the shape of the VIX curve (though the VIX could drop even more) and Investors Intelligence Survey indicate serious complacency. So sentiment is still bullish, but slowly moving towards being mixed. I’d rather see more outright bears, but let’s deal with what we’re given instead of what we want. Good luck friends!
Continue Reading -->Kick Your Options Trading Up a Notch My buddy Doug Robertson is hosting a FREE options trading webinar this afternoon where he’s teaching his secrets for generating major options profits in volatile markets. Click here for more information 1) The Bank of England Throws Money at the Brexit The Bank of England is afraid of the Brexit, so they’re throwing everything including the kitchen sink at the problem. This morning, the BoE cut rates by 25 bps, expanded its QE program by 60 billion pounds, and started a new 10 billion-pound corporate bond purchase plan. The BoE took a massive hack at its growth forecasts, and now sees 2017 GDP at 0.8% vs. 2.3% previously, the biggest cut in its history. 30-year UK Gilt yields dropped to all-time lows, and European equity markets rebounded intraday. The UK’s FTSE 100 Index rose 1.6%, while the German DAX was up 0.6%. 2) The Grind Continues Markets have been in a holding pattern over the past few days ahead of tomorrow’s pivotal NFP report, which could move markets in a big way. (more on this below) And the S&P 500’s epic boring sideways grind continued today with the index rising 0.02% to 2164.25. Not 2%, not 0.2%, but 0.02%. So you have some perspective on the action, the index has not made a 1% move since July 8, and market volatility is even lower now than during the April-May snoozefest. In fact, S&P 500 volatility hasn’t been this low since December 2014! Check out this chart of S&P 500 volatility: No wonder we can’t stay awake… Once again, the Russell 2000 showed a smidge of outperformance, though biotech (IBB) cooled off after 2 days of solid action. The Bank of England’s stimulus package pushed up gold and US Treasuries, and crude oil notched a 2.4% gain on what appears to be short covering. Energy stocks were mixed, but high-yield bonds were strong. When crude oil goes up, high-yield energy bonds perform well because default expectations fall. 3) NFP Preview Traders are expecting a 180K increase on nonfarm payrolls with a 4.8% unemployment rate. (see the full consensus estimates below) Last month, we saw a huge 107K beat on the headline number, which just about made up for the 122k miss the month before. Gold and bonds dipped on that report, and then ripped like mad. Equities followed through on the decline in rates with a big 1.5% rally in SPX. At this point, it seems like it may take a big headline number to get traders believing the Fed will hike rates — perhaps 250K or more — and it would also help to have the June number revised up. Click here for my in-depth NFP preview. Friday’s Trading Calendar US Economics (Time Zone: EDT) 08:30 Trade Balance (Jun): exp. -$43.0b, prior -$41.1b 08:30 Change in Nonfarm Payrolls (Jul): exp. 180k, prior 287k 08:30 Two-Month Payroll Net Revision (Jul): prior -6k 08:30 Change in Private Payrolls (Jul): exp. 171k, prior 265k 08:30 Change in Manufact. Payrolls (Jul): exp. 4k, prior 14k 08:30 Unemployment Rate (Jul): exp. 4.80%, prior 4.90% 08:30 Average Hourly Earnings MoM (Jul): exp. 0.20%, prior 0.10% 08:30 Average Hourly Earnings YoY (Jul): exp. 2.60%, prior 2.60% 08:30 Average Weekly Hours All Employees (Jul): exp. 34.4, prior 34.4 08:30 Change in Household Employment (Jul): prior 67 08:30 Labor Force Participation Rate (Jul): prior 62.70% 08:30 Underemployment Rate (Jul): prior 9.60% 13:00 Baker Hughes U.S. Rig Count (8/5): prior 463 13:00 Baker Hughes U.S. Rotary Gas Rigs (8/5): prior 86 13:00 Baker Hughes U.S. Rotary Oil Rigs (8/5): prior 374 15:00 Consumer Credit (Jun): exp. $16.000b, prior $18.558b Global Economics 02:00 EUR German Factory Orders m/m 03:00 CHF Foreign Currency Reserves 03:30 GBP Halifax HPI m/m 08:30 CAD Unemployment Rate 10:00 CAD Ivey PMI Earnings Before the Open: Cognizant Technology Solutions (CTSH) SouFun Holding (SFUN) After the Close: None of significance
Continue Reading -->Tomorrow, we’ll get the big bad July NFP report, and like last month, it feels like a big one. Here are the consensus numbers: Change in Nonfarm Payrolls (Jul): exp. 180k, prior 287k Two-Month Payroll Net Revision (Jul): prior -6k Change in Private Payrolls (Jul): exp. 171k, prior 265k Change in Manufact. Payrolls (Jul): exp. 4k, prior 14k Unemployment Rate (Jul): exp. 4.80%, prior 4.90% Average Hourly Earnings MoM (Jul): exp. 0.20%, prior 0.10% Average Hourly Earnings YoY (Jul): exp. 2.60%, prior 2.60% Average Weekly Hours All Employees (Jul): exp. 34.4, prior 34.4 Change in Household Employment (Jul): prior 67 Labor Force Participation Rate (Jul): prior 62.70% Underemployment Rate (Jul): prior 9.60% (source: Bloomberg) Last month, we saw a huge 107K beat on the headline number, which just about made up for the 122k miss the month before. On the surface, it seemed like a very much hawk-supporting report, but the market’s reaction said otherwise. Gold and bonds dipped immediately, then ripped like mad. Equities were fired up on the decline in rates, and the SPX put in a big 1.5% rally. Traders assumed that the report wouldn’t necessarily make the Fed get more hawkish, and it turns out those they were right. Based on some recent weak economic data (GDP, PCE Deflator), plus continued worries over the impact of the Brexit, the Fed’s forward path looks less certain than ever. Fed funds futures are now pricing in a 37% chance of a December rate hike, up from 9% post-Brexit, but down from 45% a week ago. At this point, it seems like it may take a big headline number to get traders believing the Fed will hike rates — perhaps 250K or more — and it would also help to have the June number revised up. One scenario to consider: we get a modest beat (190K-220K), we see a dip in gold and bonds, and then they rip all over again, just like last month. The Bank of England’s stimulus package is driving the action right now, so traders may just see any NFP-related dips as buying opportunities.
Continue Reading -->5) Tesla Destroys Options Traders Yesterday, I opined that Tesla (TSLA) options were probably not as cheap as they looked. It turns out they were way oveprriced. As of yesterday morning, they were pricing in a $12.84 move. Tesla is down only $1.30, which is absolutely murdering holders of puts and calls. Weekly at-the-money $225 calls are down -67% while the $225 puts are down -55%. Meanwhile, sellers of the weekly $225 straddle are up an amazing 61% in one day — I wish I was in that crowd! 4) Watch Dem Bios! For the past 2 days, the SPX has looked pretty sleepy. However, relative strength in biotech (IBB,XBI) and the Russell 2000 implied more bullishness under the surface. Today, both IBB and XBI are in the red, but making little moves off the lows, even with sector heavyweight Biogen Idec (BIIB) sinking another -1.7% as takeover rumors extinguish themselves. If I was a bear, I would most definitely not want to see biotech turn green and lead again, especially since the Russell is outperforming SPX by about 30 bps. 3) Sentiment Update Sentiment is still getting more bearish. The CBOE Equity Put/Call is at 0.94 this morning, which is right in-line with the YTD average, but well off the early July lows. However, the ISE Sentiment Index is at 66 this morning (66 calls for every 100 puts). That’s a of aggressive hedging in the early going. Plus, the AAII survey shows 29.8% bulls — well below the long-term 38.6% average. Overall, it looks like traders are looking a little more skittish ahead of a pivotal NFP report tomorrow. 2) Oil Crude oil is still hugging the $40-handle pretty tightly. I’m still a bit puzzled as to how well both equities and high-yield are ignoring oil’s 20%+ drop off the highs. Take a look at this chart of crude oil vs. HYG year-to-date: Energy stocks have been slipping, but overall, the market’s basically yawning at oil weakness. Maybe folks are just rotating into metals? GLD is up 28% YTD while SLV is up 46%. Meanwhile, the miners (GDX) are up 127%! 1) Why the VIX Could Collapse Lots of traders are out saying the VIX is low, but I believe it could drop to the 10-11 range. Remember what the VIX is — a representation of volatility expectations, as measured by 30-day SPX options. With the recent lack of movement, 20-day realized SPX volatility has collapsed to 5.4. So the 12.6 VIX is actually trading at a massive premium to actual market volatility. This means it’s already pricing in an expansion in volatility. If the market continues to go flat (which I expect for the next month) — or if it climbs slowly — the VIX could easily drop below 11 as traders reprice options to reflect persistently low actual market volatility. Now with a wild move, all bets are off (we do have NFP tomorrow) — buyers of puts or call could make a lot of money. But if the markets go flat as I expect, folks buying what look like “cheap” options will find out that they overpaid. P.S. If you’re into this fancy options stuff, check out today’s FREE webinar with my buddy Doug Robertson.
Continue Reading -->Want to Kick Your Options Trading Up a Notch? My buddy Doug Robertson is hosting a FREE options trading webinartomorrow where he’s teaching his secrets for generating major options profits in volatile markets. Click here for more information 1) This Market of Ours… The bull kept on charging ahead today, once again frustrating naysayers crying “what goes up must come down!” The S&P 500 rose 0.3% to 2163.79 today, which is not exactly a huge move. But markets looked very strong below the surface. The Russell 2000 was up 0.9%, showing pretty solid outperformance. The action in biotech was particularly impressive. Even with Biogen Idec(BIIB) down 2.7% on media outlets denying yesterday’s takeover rumors, theIBB ETF rose 1.1% to $297.92. That’s pretty surprising given that BIIB constitutes 8.7% of IBB. We also saw a major intraday rebound in crude oil prices on today’s E.I.A. inventory report, which in turn pushed up energy stocks. And on the flip side, traders took profits in safety assets like gold, silver, and utilities stocks. 2) Rumor Has It… Twitter Edition Twitter (TWTR) was once again the subject of takeover rumors, and traders are buying in even though we’ve seen this story play out all too many times. The alleged buyer is Steve Ballmer and Saudi Prince al-Waleed. Twitter call options traded at 3.2X normal volume and the stock rose 7.3% today. The recent wave of reminiscent of the nonstop rumored takeovers of BlackBerry (BBRY) back when we called it Research In Motion (RIMM). Frankly, I have a hard time believing any company’s going to pony up the $15 billion+ required to acquire Twitter, given its collapsing growth during a booming news and social media ad cycle. Plus, Twitter almost feels like it’s out of style. Ask any teens or college students what they’re hooked on, and you’ll hear Instagram and Snapchat way more than Twitter. And if you know anyone doing online marketing, ask where they’re putting their ad dollars. Many industry folks I know are throwing piles of money at Facebook (FB) because of its sophisticated targeting technology. Twitter… not so much. 3) Is Gold About to Correct? This morning, my colleague Jeff Cooper gave his views on why the Junior Gold Miners ETF (GDXJ) may be set to pull back: As the daily GDXJ below for 2016 shows, there have been 3 tests/undercuts of the 20 day line this year. Each has perpetuated a continuation in keeping with the idea of pullbacks to a rising 20 day as a Holy Grail Buy signal. When the 20 day m.a. was regained in early June, a new high followed. Ditto late July. 50 is a key level squaring out the low of the year. GDXJ broke out in the first week of February and this week is 180 degrees/days opposite early Feb. Yesterday, GDXJ gapped up setting an opening high and tailed off a tad, leaving a little Gilligan sell signal. Markets often play out in 3’s and GDXJ shows 3 tests which perpetuated 3 drives to new highs. So theoretically, a stab back below the prior swing high from July 13 at the key 50 level probably indicates a correction is on the table. P.S. T3’s Doug Robertson is hosting a free options trading webinar tomorrowafter the close. Click here for more information.
Continue Reading -->Make sure you check out Doug Robertson’s options webinar, which is scheduled for Thursday after the close. Click here for more details. 1) Biotech Looks Great The SPX and NASDAQ are basically flat, but the Nasdaq Biotech ETF (IBB) is up 0.4%. That’s pretty impressive given that Biogen Idec (BIIB) is off -3.6% today as cold water was thrown on yesterday’s takeover rumors. BIIB is 7.8% of IBB, so biotech really is doing well on this shaky dayy. The S&P Biotech ETF (XBI), which is muct more diversified, giving a better view of biotech overall, is up 0.7%. 2) Crude Oil Too Strong? I’d rather see crude oil down into today’s inventory number at 10:30 a.m. ET. Oil has acted horribly and I’d rather just see an all-out collapse of expectations ahead of the data release. Economists are pricing in a -1.75 million barrely draw. We’re about to find out if that hurdle is low enough to clear. 3) Sentiment Weakening Just a Tiny Bit The VIX is flat today, but other indicators show that traders are getting a tiny bit spooked. The CBOE equity put-call ratio is still above the YTD average and the ISE Sentiment Index shows increased demand for put options. But one thing I don’t like is that the Investors Intelligence Survey has barely budged. 52.9% of newsletter writers are bullish, down just 1% from last week. That’s still within range of II’s danger zone. On balance, I’d say that traders are still pretty complacent — just not extremely so. 4) Tesla on Tap Tesla (TSLA) reports earnings today after the close, and a few options guys are chattering that Tesla options look cheap into earnings. Tesla options are pricing in a $12.84 move, which is actually small relative to some of its recent post-earnings report reactions. But I’m not so sure the options are cheap. Tesla has recently announced a boatload of news, including a capital raise, launch of Model 3 reservations, and the SolarCity (SCTY) deal. So Tesla may not have many big ‘shockers’ left to move the stock. And when you buy options into earnings, you want a big move in your direction. So tread carefully. (by the way, if you’re into options, make sure you sign up for Doug Robertson’s webinar) 5) Respect Price As of late, we’ve seen a lot of market commentators making “what goes up must come down”-type arguments against the market. Yes, we’ve come a long way since the Brexit bottom. But that’s been for good reason. Earnings season has not been as bad as expected, and economic data has generally been pretty decent. You must always remember the biggest lesson Mr. Market likes to teach — that price trends tend to last a lot longer and go further than may seem reasonable. So always respect price… even when it seems crazy. Remember, the most important question in markets is now who, what, why, or how. It’s WHEN. A great thesis means zero without equally great timing. So avoid a rush to judgement when it comes to price.
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