The Clash of Generations, Fed, China, And The S&P500

We begin the new week with the S&P500 up over 15 percent from the December 26th intraday low at 2346.58 and sitting right at the 100-day moving average (2710.88) and the key .618 Fibo retracement at 2713.88.    Last weekend we wrote,

Nevertheless, the market feels like it wants to go higher. Buoyed by the  Friday’s WSJ article the Fed is rethinking the balance sheet – big hat, no cattle, in our opinion – decent earnings and better sentiment on China’s economy, which is reflected in RMB appreciation.  We expect the S&P to take out the recent high at 2675.47 and then set its sight on 2710-2720, which is the zip code of a yuuuge Fibo level and the 100-day moving average.   – GMM,  Jan 27th

Here we are.  Friday’s intraday high traded through the 2713 but couldn’t hold it.

The strong employment data, which was very noisy including furloughed Federal employees taking part-time jobs, is leading some to ask was the Fed cave premature?   It could be that the policy mistake the markets were worried about in December is the exact policy – dovishness — Mr. Market, Mr. President, and Mr. Cramer were advocating.

Retrofitting Fundamentals

What we saw in December/January, folks, was the new socialism — privatizing profits and nationalizing losses.  The government (in the form of the Fed) was moved into action – switching, softening its tone, or what you will  —  as losses of stock investors mounted.  There was little domestic data to cause the Fed to switch x/ market worries and pressure from POTUS and the market cheerleaders.   It was the classic case of “retrofitting fundamentals.”  That is the market is going down so the economy must be going down.

China will always be China until their exchange rate and reserve position breaks.  The economy weakens, President Xi dials up some public sector investment, banks fall in line and GDP increases.   The RMB is strengthening so, in our opinion, it’s working.

Stocks And The Economy

The NASDAQ fell over 80 percent after the turn of the century and we had at worst a mild recession, which was caused mainly by the business sector pulling back on cap ex. and not the consumer tanking.   We are in a new economy now, however, which is highly dependent on asset prices.

Fleecing Of The Millenials

Unfortunately,  the policy of manipulating asset prices higher to save the economy from the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) over the past decade has created unsustainable politics

It has set the young, who own relatively few assets, versus the old, who own the most.

For Americans under the age of 40, the 21st century has resembled one long recession…

This loss of dynamism hurts millennials and the younger Generation Z, even as baby boomers are often doing O.K. Because the layoff rate has declined since 2000, most older workers have been able to hold on to their jobs. For those who are retired, their income — through a combination of Social Security and 401(k)’s — still outpaces inflation on average.

But many younger workers are struggling to launch themselves into good-paying careers. They then lack the money to buy a first home or begin investing in the stock market. Yes, older workers face their own challenges, like age discrimination. Over all, though, the generational gap in both income and wealth is growing.  – NY Times

 

Wealth

The young finally came out to vote in the 2018 midterms and they brought and will continue to bring their pitchforks.  Here is the latest from the Hill,

Taxing the rich becomes hot topic of debate for 2020 hopefuls

A debate over how hard to tax the rich is taking center stage in the early days of the 2020 presidential race.

Likely candidates who are more to the left are leaning heavily on messaging that says wealthy Americans need to be taxed significantly more, and they’re backing that up with proposals to make their mark on the issue.  – The Hill

We hear many in the political dumb-dumb class dismiss these policy prescriptions. Comments such as the “Democrats can’t win because they are moving too far left.”   At our nicest, we would call that naive.

What if the country (the majority) is moving left, which we believe it is as the younger generations, saddled with debt and carbon from the baby boomers enter the political fray en masse.   We don’t advocate for these policies at GMM, but try to anticipate and skate to where the political puck is going to be, not where it has been.   You were warned, comrades.

Moreover, we’ve been writing about the coming “Clash of Generations” for years.  See here.

Back To The Market

The Fed has thus far been all talk and has done nothing yet to back up its dovishness.  But if the labor markets continue to tighten, and tight they are  – ask any contractor trying to build or a young couple trying to buy their first home — the Fed will have to move back to a tightening bias.

We concede WalMart and the Home Depots can draw upon a pool of labor that was once the retired class as many baby boomers cannot afford to retire at 65 years-old.  That is what may be happening as the experts try and discredit the Philips Curve.

We saw this all throughout the Northeast during our summer trip back to east coast.

Surprised at the poverty of seniors in New England.  Most of the cashiers in retail were closer to 80 years old than 40 years old.  My friends tell me one factor is simple demographics. Maine, for example, is the oldest state in the country;  – GMM, August 15th

The last thing the market needs up here, after the 15 percent bounce, is a “ball busting” Fed, which is losing its cred faster than a Todd Gurley 40-yard dash.   But that’s a bit way off into the future.

What Now?  

One thing we have learned over the past decade of trading is that the algos love to set bull and bear traps to confound the market gurus and ruin the P&Ls of individual traders.  We sense another major bull trap is forming right here.

MarketWatch had a good piece out this weekend,

Note the common and concurrent elements of the previous two big market tops (2000, 2007) versus now:

  • New market highs tagging the upper monthly Bollinger band on a monthly negative RSI (relative strength index) divergence — check.
  • A steep correction off the highs that breaks a multi-year trend line — check.
  • A turning of the monthly MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) toward south and the histogram to negative — check.
  • A correction that transverses all the way from the upper monthly Bollinger band to the lower monthly Bollinger band before bouncing — check.
  • A counter rally that moves all the way from the lower Bollinger band to the middle Bollinger band, the 20MA — check.
  • A counter rally that produces a bump in the RSI around the middle zone, alleviating oversold conditions — check.
  • All these events occurring following an extended trend of lower unemployment, signaling the coming end of a business cycle — check.
  • All these events coinciding with a reversal in yields — check.
  • All these events coinciding with a Federal Reserve suddenly halting its rate hike cycle — check.

I submit that the counter rally is consistent with all of those factors. Indeed, as with counter rallies in the past, this rally remains below its broken trend line. – MarketWatch

Upshot

The next big macro factor to move the market is a China trade deal.

We do expect more happy talk, though the final deal will be nothing more than a “pig in a poke“, in our opinion.   Trump may also come under pressure for caving or meeting Xi “halfway”  adding some Mad King risk to markets.

Thus we expect the market to trade through the .618 Fibo at 2713 and kiss or temporarily pierce the 200-day moving average at 2740, getting the bulls Super Bowl lathered up, before reversing and setting on a new trajectory to test the December low.

Big support at 2610-2625, which includes last week’s low and the 20 and 50-day moving averages.

Happy hunting this week, folks.   Rams by 10.

This is will be the last actionable piece for the free riders.  More to come on that.

 

S&P

 

S&P_Chart

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