30 Haziran 2010 Çarşamba

MARKET TOO OVERSOLD TO PRESS THE SHORT SIDE

I noted in yesterday's daily update that we should be nearing not only a daily cycle low but an intermediate cycle low any day now. (the February intermediate bottom came on a reversal off the jobs report. Guess what's coming on Friday?).

Not only that but sentiment is again back to bearish extremes. We are even starting to see the haters & trolls appear again on the blog (generally a pretty good sign of an impending bottom), although not as much because gold and miners have for the most part completely decoupled from the stock market.

Not withstanding all of that the market is now just about as oversold as it was in March of `09. There are only 27 stocks in the S&P trading above their 50 DMA.


You can see from the chart these kind of oversold levels always  spawn some kind of bounce and often bear market rallies begin out of these kind of oversold levels.

Considering how late we are in the intermediate cycle the market is due to put in an intermediate level bottom at any time.

Now just isn't the time to get brave and press the short side. Much safer to just let that trade slide on by than risk getting caught in an explosive bear market rally or a continuation of the cyclical bull which ever the case may be.

On Tonight's Kudlow Report

Tonight at 7pm ET on CNBC:

HUSSMAN SAYS DOUBLE DIP RECESSION, DARDA SAYS NO

- John Hussman, Portfolio Manager Hussman Strategic Growth Fund (HSGFX)
- Michael Darda, MKM Partners Chief Economist

IS SELLOFF IN STOCKS OVERDONE?

- James Altucher, Formula Capital Managing Director
- Danielle Hughes, CEO of Divine Capital

DEFENDING THE AMERICAN DREAM: THE CANADIAN HOUSING MODEL VS. U.S.
CNBC’s Diana Olick reports from Washington.

GOV'T POWER VS. BUSINESS POWER … AUSTERITY VS. STIMULUS
Should we be unleashing the power of business to create jobs?
Did the government spending stimulus work?

- David Stockman, Fmr. Reagan Budget Director
- Ezra Klein, Writing Fellow The Washington Post

HARRY REID & THE NEVADA SENATE RACE
- Sharron Angle, (R) Nevada Senate Candidate

AMERICA'S CRUDE REALITY: BEYOND THE GULF DISASTER
How do we use the disaster to unleash private biz and jobs?

CNBC’s Melissa Francis reports.

Please join us. The Kudlow Report. 7pm ET. CNBC.

European Bank Concerns Ease, At Least For Now

The market is slightly higher in early trading, after yesterday's pronounced selloff. Asian markets were lower overnight, with China -1.2%, but European markets are higher this morning after a short-term debt offering from the ECB showed low demand. This was taken as a sign that liquidity concerns related to an expiring ECB lending program may not be as bad as feared.

In economic news, the ADP employment report showed payrolls for June increased by only 13,000 (vs. 61,000 consensus). This has some worrying that Friday's jobs report could also be weaker than expected. Current estimates are for a decline of -100,000.

CNBC reported that new bank fees and taxes of roughly $19 billion have been removed from the financial regulation bill, in an attempt to get it passed.

The dollar is lower this morning, while the euro is bouncing. Oil is higher near $76.40, while gold is also bouncing to $1246.

The 10-year yield is flat at 2.96%, signaling weak economic growth expectations; and the VIX is down 4.3% today to a still high 32.65, after yesterday's 17% ramp higher. (we trimmed our VXX position into the spike).

Trading comment: I got some comments on why I had been counseling being defensive lately, but I think recent market action has pretty much justified my stance. Today should be interesting as many leading stocks are testing their 50-day averages, so if they can bounce the broad market should bounce as well. But if they fail at this key moving average, it could mean more rough sledding.

Here are some examples of the stocks I am watching: GMCR, AAPL, FFIV, VMW, AKAM, MELI, APKT, SNDK, DECK, NFLX, PRGO, RBCN

long AAPL, FFIV, VMW, VXX

29 Haziran 2010 Salı

Double-Dip Trade Is Probably Overdone

Stocks took a real drubbing today, with the Dow off 268 points and the major indexes basically falling 3 percent. Call it the double-dip trade.

But are we really heading for a double-dip recession? I think not. And I say this as someone who has been advising investors to take profits this year before the IRS takes them next year, as taxes on capital gains, dividends, estates, and top incomes are all scheduled to rise in 2011 — unless, of course, a tea-party Republican Congress overturns all this following the midterm elections.

Investors are worried about China and Europe in addition to a U.S. double-dip. Consumer confidence plunged this morning, but that largely may be a function of the BP oil spill, as the Gulf states reported the biggest confidence drops. And then there’s Team Obama, which shows no sign of spending restraint. Nor do they see any need to call off the tax hikes. In fact, bank taxes are going up.

Whatever the reason for today’s market drubbing, economists like John Ryding and Michael Darda do not see a double-dip. The manufacturing sector is still displaying a V-shaped recovery, while profits continue to rise across-the-board. And private-sector incomes have begun to rebound, despite the jobless recovery. This is because hours worked are being extended while hourly wages increase modestly.

Of course, the Fed remains ultra easy with a steep upward curve. And corporate balance sheets are pristine, with net corporate cash flow standing at about $1.7 trillion.

If you bet on the profits story, the price/earnings multiple on the S&P 500 stands just over 11-times earnings, which translates to an 8.8 percent earnings yield, much higher than the 6 percent corporate bond rate and the incredibly shrinking 3 percent 10-year Treasury rate.

So as a final thought, if you bet on profits and the tea-party movement, the big stock market correction is probably overdone. However, let me reiterate, unless tax policy changes, investors should sell into relief rallies in order to take profits before the Tax Man does.

On Tonight's Kudlow Report


PLEASE JOIN US THIS EVENING AT 7PM ET ON CNBC.

TODAY’S STOCK PLUNGE

CNBC’s Bob Pisani reports from the NYSE.

BONDS, CURRENCIES, TREASURIES

CNBC’s Rick Santelli reports.


WHAT’S DRIVING THE MARKETS DOWN?

- Jim Iuorio, Options Action Contributor; Director, TJM Institutional Services
- Peter Navarro, "The Coming China Wars" Author; University Of California - Irvine Business Professor
- Art Hogan, Managing Director Director, Global Equity Product
- CNBC’s Rick Santelli

MARKETS IN TURMOIL
Uncertainty: global debt fears; tax hikes, spending, austerity vs. stimulus - Is the Stimulus Model working or failing? Are we pouring money down a rat hole?

- John Mauldin, Millennium Wave Investments President
- David Joy, RiverSource Investments Chief Market Strategist
- Patricia Chadwick, President of Ravengate Partners

THE AMERICAN DREAM & FANNIE & FREDDIE
CNBC’S Diana Olick reports.

FIN REG VOTE: BANK TAX & SCOTT BROWN & OTHER SENATORS
CNBC’s Eamon Javers reports.

MARKETS STRATEGIES// THREATS FROM WASHINGTON

- Jim Paulsen, Wells Capital Management Chief Investment Strategist
- Dan Fitzpatrick, StockMarketMentor.com; Pres. & CEO; RealMoney.com Sr. Contributor

The Rahn Curve and the Growth-Maximizing Level of Government

Here's the latest and greatest from my old friend Dan Mitchell over at the Cato Institute. Dan offers a layman's explanation of the scholarly evidence showing how excessive government spending is hindering economic performance.

1-2-3 REVERSAL, LOW RISK ENTRY

The S&P may be in the process of forming a 1-2-3 reversal. It broke the down trend line during the recent rally and is now in the process of testing support. For you trader types this is the lowest risk entry on the long side. You could place stops slightly below the previous lows at 1040 and risk less than 2% on the trade.


If the market does hold support and rally from here your risk reward ratio would be very large. There are large momentum divergences forming in RSI and and MACD.

Hint: The least risky trade is to buy below support. If you end up being wrong your risk is even less than 2% and you may catch the bottom of a 2b reversal.

China Slowdown Stirs Global Worries

The market is lower this morning after a weaker than expected leading economic indicators report in China (+0.3% vs. +1.7% consensus). China has been a big driver of global economic growth, so signs that it could be slowing are bound to have pronounced effects on markets.

There is also a concerning report out of Europe that the ECB has refused to extend liquidity measures to banks, and instead asked for billion in repayments from banks. I have commented recently that one of the reasons I remained concerned was that the credit indicators were flashing warning signs. This news seems to fit that bill.

Asian markets were lower overnight, led by Shanghai which tumbled -4.3%. European markets are also lower this morning, to the tune of -2% to -3%.

On a positive note, the CaseShiller home price composite rose 3.8% in April, above expectations. But it has done little to improve investor sentiment today.

Economic concerns can clearly be seen in the rise in Treasury prices, which today are pushing the yield on the 10-yr Note down below 3% (to 2.97%), the lowest yields we've seen in over a year.

For its part, the volatility index (VIX) is spiking higher by +16% this morning to 33.70; and the TRIN is very high at 4.19.

Oil is lower today, down to $75.80, and gold is off a bit as well. But the other 2 out of 3 flight to safety trades are higher, namely the dollar and US Treasuries.

Trading comment: I have recently warned to keep an eye on the rising VIX levels. Today we are seeing that big spike higher that often comes when the VIX hovers near that 30 level. We have been long the VIX etf (VXX), but will look to trim our positions a bit this morning.

The lowest close on the S&P 500 this year was 1050 on 6/7, so this is a very key level to watch.

long GLD, VXX

28 Haziran 2010 Pazartesi

Monday Morning Musings

The stock market is a bit lower in early trading, but not on much newsflow. The G-20 leaders met over the weekend, and for the most part agreed to work on slashing deficits. No major headlines were released that really moved markets.

Asian markets were mixed overnight, while Europe is higher this morning. This despite the euro trading lower, and the dollar up as a result. Oil prices are down this morning near $78.25, and gold is just off its recent highs near $1254.

Apple (AAPL) is bucking the broad market weakness so far, after news that it had sold 1.7 million new iPhone 4's in its first 3 days. I stopped in the Apple store, and put my name on the waitlist for the new phone, which is expected to take about 3 weeks to arrive. Seems like a long time to make the customer wait.

In economic news, personal income was a bit lower than estimates today (0.5%), but personal spending was a touch higher (+0.2%), despite the savings rate also ticking higher for the month to 4.0%. It appears consumers continue to balance spending with shoring up their personal balance sheets.

The 10-year yield continues to drift lower, now down to 3.05%. This is a very low level, and likely a reflection of the economic slowdown that seems to be coming. Friday's ECRI Index supports this thesis also, coming in with a negative growth rate for the third straight week.

And the VIX is up +4.5% right now to 29.82, rising towards that 30 level again after pulling back right to its 50-day average on Friday.

Trading comment: We are very close to quarter-end, where we could see some window dressing by fund managers. I continue to think that near-term strength should be used to lighten up on marginal positions and develop a more defensive posture. The 50-day average is quickly converging on the lower 200-day average, and if and when the former crosses the latter, it will confirm another bearish indicator. There have been times when the 50/200 cross was only temporary, but more often then not it is a warning to stay cautious. I will continue to monitor this one, and post charts accordingly. Also, the sentiment indicators I follow are not flashing high enough bearish sentiment to signal a bottom in here.

long AAPL, GLD

PATIENCE

If you are one of those people who absolutely loath ever taking a draw down then you might want to wait a bit before jumping in with both feet.

Gold is due for a daily cycle low any time now. It is possible that the low formed last Wednesday.


I would like to see a more decisive decline to mark a cycle low though. If you are a long term "OldTurkey"  type investor just ignore the daily cycles. But if you are still trying to enter positions with as minimal draw down as possible you might wait a bit and see if gold experiences a larger drop this week into a more normal daily cycle low.

26 Haziran 2010 Cumartesi

Get off the Deficit-Spending Treadmill

As the G-20 meets in Toronto, I want to make a point: Stop the crazy spending and borrowing and stocks will start rising again while economies pick up recovery speed.

In the U.S. and around the world, stocks have fallen about 11 percent this spring. It’s a signal of lost confidence. Out-of-control deficit spending has swept the world toward a leftist vision of big government. We need a return to free-enterprise incentives in order to speed up recovery.

My simple point: Get off this left-wing Keynesian treadmill of deficit spending. Get off it. In fact, cut spending and borrowing, hold down tax rates, and try restoring confidence in private enterprise for a change.

Team Obama will give the G-20 that old-time liberal religion of more and more spending. It’s wrong. Meanwhile, the new Tory government of David Cameron in Britain is cutting $170 billion out of the deficit. In Germany, Chancellor Merkel is cutting $100 billion. They’re not taking our advice. Good. Japan is slashing its corporate tax rate to 25 percent. Why don’t we do this?

Create investment and jobs rather than deficits and welfare. Instead of mangled multipliers, let’s have some new economic-growth incentives to spark real world economic recovery.

25 Haziran 2010 Cuma

Quote of the Day

"When I hear somebody sigh, 'Life is hard,' I am always tempted to ask, 'Compared to what?'"
— Sydney J. Harris: American journalist

With FinReg Uncertainty Out Of The Way, Can Financial Stocks Rally?

The markets are slightly higher in early trading, after Congressional leaders seeming to reach an agreement on what the financial regulation bill would look like. The "Volcker rule", which is aimed at banning banks from proprietary trading, was watered down by the Senate.

These types of sweeping regulation are often overkill in terms of regulating behavior from the paste that is probably unlikely to be repeated anyway, due to the lessons learned from the recent collapse. Nonetheless, markets hate uncertainty. So to the extent that this removes a layer of uncertainty from the financial markets, bank stocks should be able to lift.

The financial etf is up +1.25% so far, not a terribly exciting reaction. So that is something to watch.

In economic news, final Q1 GDP was revised lower to +2.7%, which is a bit disappointing. And I think its safe to assume that future quarter's growth rates will be below those levels. On a positive note, the Univ. of Michigan consumer sentiment index rose to 76.0, its highest level since Jan. 2008. So that is a bit of a bright spot.

In corporate news, Oracle (ORCL) reported strong earnings last night and its stock is higher. Research In Motion (RIMM) topped estimates, but its mixed guidance is not being well received by the market, and the stock is lower so far.

At the close today comes the annual rebalancing of the Russell indexes, which is likely to add some volatility at the close of what would likely otherwise be a quite close on a summer Friday.

Asian markets were lower overnight, and Europe was down this morning. The euro is also lower, while the dollar is higher. As for commodities, gold is higher to $1254, and oil is also up to $77.20.

The 10-year yield is off its 52-week lows, currently at 3.11%; and the VIX is fractionally higher to 29.85, just below the key 30 level that I like to watch as a red flag.

Trading comment: The market continues to feel heavy to me. I haven't done a lot of selling this week, as the market could still bounce into quarter end. I have been moving in slow steps to adopt a more defensive posture in portfolios, and I still think that is the right call.

It could be that the market will remain in a wide trading range for the near future. If that is the case, then there is still room to move lower before another good buying opportunity presents itself.

long GLD, RIMM, VXX

Santelli & Dobbs Talk Tea Party Power

So what exactly is the real message of the tea parties? And how large an impact will they have on the upcoming elections? These are just a couple of the questions I posed to my old friends Rick Santelli and Lou Dobbs on last night's Kudlow Report. Rick's rant on CNBC a little over a year ago of course helped launch the whole tea party movement. We also welcomed David Webb to the show for the first time. David's a big tea party player and is the co-founder of TeaParty365. I guess you could call it a tea party trifecta.

Click below to watch last night's fireworks.





Click here to watch the final portion of last night's interview.

FedEx Founder Fred Smith Explains How to Keep America #1

FedEx's terribly smart and successful front-man, Fred Smith, joined me to discuss his take on how to keep America number one and whether Washington is standing in the way of true economic recovery.



24 Haziran 2010 Perşembe

On Tonight's Kudlow Report


Tonight at 7pm ET:

WHAT’S THE FIN-REG END GAME?
IS A TAXPAYER BAILOUT OF FANNIE & FREDDIE IN THE CARDS?

CNBC’s Eamon Javers reports from Washington.


WHY ARE DEMOCRATS INSISTING ON TAX HIKES THAT WILL WRECK INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS AND FAMILY-OWNED BUSINESSES?

- Marcos Rodriquez , Palladium Equity Partners Managing Member
- John Carney, CNBC Business News

AN INTERVIEW WITH FEDEX’S FRED SMITH
-BIZ LEADERS SLAM WASHINGTON POLICIES
-FIXING THE ECONOMY & U.S. MANUFACTURING
-HOW TO MAKE AMERICA #1 AGAIN

- Fred Smith, FedEx Founder & CEO

iPHONE TESTING AT&T BROADBAND & THE FCC CHALLENGE

CNBC’S Dennis Kneale reports.

TEA PARTY POWER: WHAT’S THE REAL TEA PARTY MESSAGE?
OPTIMISM VS. PESSIMISM … WILL THE TEA PARTY HELP OR HURT A GOP CONGRESSIONAL TAKEOVER THIS NOVEMBER?

- CNBC’s Rick Santelli
- Lou Dobbs, Business & Political Commentator
- David Webb, Host of The Grinder on AM 970; Co-founder TeaParty365

Please join us. The Kudlow Report. 7pm ET. CNBC.

Soft Earnings, Guidance Hitting Retail Stocks

The market is lower in early trading. It would be interesting if we could see a reverse of the recent pattern of strong opens and weak closes, with the market opening weak today but finishing on a strong note.

The Fed met yesterday and left interest rates unchanged. But they did lower their forecast for growth a bit. The market often does not have a big move on the day the Fed meets, but then experiences larger moves the next day. That could be playing out today.

In economic news, durable goods orders for May fell -1.1%, less than expected. Orders ex-transportation rose +0.9%, and figures for the prior month were revised upward. Initial jobless claims for last week slightly better than expectations.

In corporate news, Darden (DRI) and ConAgra (CAG) missed estimates, while NKE was in-line and BBBY was above estimates. But guidance was soft, and all of the stocks are lower today. The retail index (XRT) is down the most so far, falling -2.75%.

Among the sector ETFs, financials are weakest (-1.72%) followed by energy (-1.66%); utilities are down the least (-0.10%), then healthcare (-0.58%). Real estate is also getting hit by -2.62%.

The dollar is roughly flat. Gold is higher to $1237, while oil prices are lower to $75.95.

The 10-year yield is hitting new 52-week lows at 3.07%, not a sign of confidence on the part of the bond market. The VIX is up another +9.6% to 29.50. I view the VIX over 30 as a signal that investors are expecting big whipsaws in the market.

Asian markets were mostly lower overnight, but not by a lot. Europe is lower this morning, and the bad news seems to be percolating there again, as credit default swap yields are rising, with Greek CDS near record highs.

Trading comment: I have commented that the news and credit indicators I follow were flashing caution signals. That is why I haven't gotten overly bullish recently, despite the intermittent rallies. The S&P and Nasdaq are both back below their respective 200-day averages, and the flight to safety trade (US dollar, gold, Treasuries) looks to be back in force. Be careful out there.

long GLD, VXX

23 Haziran 2010 Çarşamba

Soft Patch or Double-Dip?

The latest batch of lousy economic data took a sharp turn for the worse this morning with an awful report on new home sales for the month of May. New home sales plunged a record 33 percent to a record four-decade low. In addition, the April sales number was revised lower while inventories jumped from 5.8 months in April to 8.5. This ain’t good.

Making matters worse, existing home sales surprised on the downside yesterday with a 2 percent decline. Before that, we had big drops in housing starts and retail sales, and an upward tilt to weekly jobless claims. So it’s really no surprise that there’s a growing debate over whether we’re muddling through a soft patch, or whether a double-dip recession lies ahead.

Housing does look particularly vulnerable to a double-dip. All of these temporary, goofy, big-government tax credits, mortgage modifications, and other forms of temporary stimulus merely steal economic activity from the future. They are shortsighted thieves. As the late Milton Friedman successfully argued in his permanent-income theory decades ago, these measures simply do not work. Friedman’s work, of course, won him a Nobel Prize in economics.

The only bright spot out there? A V-shaped recovery in manufacturing.

It’s been about six weeks since I first recommended that investors take some stock market profits off the table, before the IRS does it for them next year. Since then, the market has roiled around a 10 percent correction. I’m still sticking to my call. The Tax Man is coming. Take profits on up days.

The Fed will announce its interest-rate policy decision later this afternoon. Here’s one conundrum: I believe market prices are smarter than Fed computer models. The very strong King Dollar is suggesting a deflationary trend in the economy which would call for a Fed easing. And yet, the soaring gold price is suggesting an inflationary trend calling for a Fed rate hike. So what will the Fed do? In the short run, until it levels out, the deflationary rising dollar is a bigger influence on the economy. Longer run, gold is screaming for a normalized Fed policy.

One particularly interesting story I’ll be paying attention to is that of hawkish Kansas City Fed chief Thomas Hoenig. Will Hoenig abandon his tightening stance in light of all this lousy economic data? Now that would be a big deal.

As for me, I remain in the slow-growth camp. No double-dip, just slow, muddied growth. I also think an overly strong dollar — neglected by many on Wall Street — is interrupting the rate of recovery.

Stocks Languish Ahead of Today's FOMC Meeting

The market is off to a sluggish start, after yesterday's early gains evaporated by the close and the S&P 500 finished below its 200-day moving average.


Volume will likely run light this morning, until the announcement comes out following today's FOMC meeting. I think few are expecting a big change from the Fed's language, but it will be interesting to see if they make any comments about growth moderating.


In corporate news, Jabil (JBL) and Adobe (ADBE) both reported solid earnings, but JBL stock is higher while ADBE is lower.

In economic news, new home sales for May just hit the wires, and the number was far weaker than anyone was expecting. Most analysts expected May sales to be lower after the new homebuyer tax credit expired, but the actual numbers showed a -32.7% plunge in new home sales. This is a very weak number, and the stock market has just ticked lower on the news.

Taking a look at the euro, it is down for a third straight day today. In commodity land, gold is higher to $1245, while oil prices are lower near $76.75.

The 10-year yield also ticked lower on the home sales report, with the yield now down to 3.10%, the lowest yields we have seen since October 09. The volatility index (VIX) is up +4.58% today, back above the 50-day average to a level of 28.28.

Trading comment: I kind of think the market indexes are in no-man's land right here. If we look at the recent trading range for the S&P 500, it bottomed at 1040 and topped near 1130. So the mid-point of that range would be SPX 1085, which is exactly where we are trading right now.

That said, the fact that we have fallen back below the 200-day average gives me pause, and I would likely lean toward making sales if we bounce back to the underside of that key moving average.

long GLD, VXX

From New Jersey to Beijing and Back Again

Here are some thoughts on a few recent and important money-politics headlines.

Garden State Millionaire Tax Defeated. Some late-breaking news was delivered in New Jersey Monday afternoon on the tax front. Democrats there failed in their efforts to override Gov. Chris Christie’s veto of the millionaire tax. Make no mistake: This is a big win for GOP maverick Chris Christie, and a big win for limited, tea-party-inspired government. This story has national election implications.

The Democrats needed two-thirds of the assembly, but without Republicans they couldn’t do it. This ill-conceived tax on income over a million bucks would have hit roughly 16,000 households at an anti-growth 10.75 percent rate.

I call it the “Move to Florida” tax. It would have destroyed New Jersey job creation. One study after another demonstrates what a bad idea it is for states to go down this road. It’s a fiscal dead end. After all, capital goes where it’s treated best. Apparently, this lesson was lost on the New Jersey Democrats, who fortunately lost their tax-hike bid.

And get this: the millionaire tax would have represented the 116th tax increase in the last eight years in the Garden State. Unbelievable.

That begs an obvious question: If the first 115 tax increases failed to balance the state budget, why on earth did they think the 116th would? New Jersey is a mess. My hat goes off to Chris Christie.

The BP Mess. Two important headlines on the Gulf oil catastrophe:

First, the Senate may finally be moving to overturn the Jones Act. That act, of course, is preventing foreign flag ships from helping in the Gulf clean-up effort. What in the world has taken them so long?

Second, in what could become a major story, a federal judge in Louisiana might conceivably overturn Obama’s job-killing drilling moratorium as early as Tuesday.

So at least there’s a chance of some better news out there. Lord knows we need it.

Yuan Appreciation. So China announced a more flexible exchange rate for its yuan. I call it an upward managed, crawling peg against the dollar. It’s ultimately a slow delinking, one that will take years, but it could liberate China from Fed head Ben Bernanke.

Near-term, it’s much ado about very little. There will be no big yuan shift. But at least the China move might stave off a Smoot-Hawley protectionist trade war. That’s the last thing we need right now. So it’s likely good news on the trade front.

And while China’s move represents a tax cut for Chinese consumers and workers (better purchasing power) it’s ultimately a tax hike on American consumers, since imported goods will cost more at the cash register.

A message to all those people blaming China for our slow, jobless recovery: Shame on you. Stick to your own knitting.

Washington is the problem, folks. Our government’s massive overspending, over-taxing, and over-regulating has caused corporations and banks to hoard $2.5 trillion in cash and credit. If all that money was unleashed, it could ignite the economy. But the problem is everyone is absolutely scared to death of Washington’s anti-business, anti-profit, anti-investment policies.

The Market: Sell into Rallies. The yuan-based stock market rally completely fizzled on Monday as triple-digit gains were wiped out by the end of trading. The biggest market mover was gold, which dropped about $25, while the greenback held firm.

Let me raise a few key questions: Did the yuan crush gold? Is the strong dollar deflating stocks and the recovery? Is gold overvalued right now?

Stocks are still off about 8 percent from their late-April peak. From my perch, I think it’s going to be difficult to return to that peak, or to surpass it, for some time. Not impossible, but difficult.

I also happen to agree, at least partly, with Nobel Prize‒winning economist Robert Mundell’s recent take on the dollar. He believes that the 20 percent overshoot of King Dollar, relative to the euro, possesses some deflationary consequences that could slow the recovery rate. And the euro decline will speed-up the German and (northern) Euroland recovery rate.

Here’s a little economic reality check: Despite Monday’s gains, copper is still off around 20 percent. Jobless claims are moving up, not down. U.S. retail sales and housing starts have both recently surprised to the downside.

These are not good signs.

While manufacturing production remains the single strongest part of the economy, I’m wondering whether it also might slow with the decline of industrial commodity prices, due to an overly strong dollar. Now, you know me. I’m all for a strong, stable, and reliable dollar. But huge swings in the greenback always produce lagged consequences in our economy. This worries me.

Let me state for the record that I’m not a double-dipper. I’m just in the slowdown camp. And tepid growth could very well slow down the stream of corporate profits.

In other words, a slowing economy, a big 2011 Washington tax-hike wall, an overly strong dollar, ongoing debt concerns in Europe, and bad economic news from the BP catastrophe in the Gulf all leave me feeling realistically cautious on the stock market. For now.

Let me conclude with the following thought. I’ve mentioned this a bunch in recent weeks, and I’m sticking to my guns here: Why not consider taking some profits off the table, before the tax man arrives next year? Taxes on capital gains and dividends are heading higher folks. Why not book some gains before the IRS grabs them?

I’m not suggesting that investors sell everything they own. But investors may want to seriously consider lightening their portfolios a bit. Take some profits on these mini-market rallies.

No, I am not going all doom and gloom. I’m just saying this is a good time to be cautious. That’s all.

HOW WILL WE KNOW?

Question: How will we know when the bear has returned?

Well, for one, the market will break back below a yearly cycle low initiating a series of lower lows and lower highs. This year that cycle low was set in February.

But didn’t the market break that low during the recent correction?

Well yes and no! The S&P and Dow did both marginally break below the February lows. However a big part of the weakness that dragged these two indexes down was due to crumbling energy stocks as the mess in the gulf unfolded.

The rest of the market held above the February lows. Some like the transports comfortably above those levels. I tend to think if the economy was ready to fall back into recession again we would be seeing a lot more weakness in the trannies.

The banking industry has also held up quite well during the recent crisis. Surprising since it was the failing European financial sector that has been blamed for the current market swoon. If the financial sector is collapsing again how come the banks are holding above the February lows?

 
 
So we are kind of up in the air right now on whether we are indeed making lower lows.
 
The next thing I would need to see before I would be willing to call another leg down in the secular bear would be a Dow Theory sell signal. In order for that to happen both the industrials and the transports would need to break below a secondary low point. I think we just put in that low a few weeks ago. So if the Dow were to close back below the June 8th low of 9939 and it was confirmed by the transports closing below 4089 then I would have to say it’s time to hunker down bad times are a comin’. (They are surely coming eventually - we are just trying to get the timing right.)
 
Then the final straw would be for the 50 day exponential moving average to cross back below the 200 and for the 200 to turn back down.
 
Obviously none of these things have happened yet. Until they do it’s just too early to get beared up.

22 Haziran 2010 Salı

Weak Home Sales Could Weigh On Economy

Yesterday's action was again disappointing, and another example of why I don't like to see strong opens. The market was nicely higher in early trading, but completely faded by the end of the day to close in negative territory.

You can see on the chart below that the S&P was getting close to its overhead 50-day, which I think will act as resistance, and might have already. The index is now back sitting on support at its 200-day, which will remain a key level to watch.

This morning, the market opened a little weak following weakness in the euro and overseas markets. The weaker than expected existing home sales report for May (-2.2%) didn't help improve sentiment any either. Home sales are an important metric for the economy, and their weakness could have pronounced effects on consumer sentiment and the economy going forward. Yesterday Meredith Whitney cited her conviction that housing would continue to be a problem.

Commodities are lower today, after yesterday's big rally. Oil is lower to $77.50 and gold has fallen to $1232, but is stabilizing.

Asian markets were mostly lower overnight, but China eked out a small gain; the 10-year yield is lower to 3.21%; and the VIX is down slightly to 24.82 after a reversal higher yesterday.

long GLD

21 Haziran 2010 Pazartesi

On Tonight's Kudlow Report


Tonight at 7pm ET:

THE RAMIFICATIONS OF CHINA'S CURRENCY SWITCHEROO
What does it mean? Will this stave off the G20 & a Smoot-Schumer trade war?


- Peter Navarro, "The Coming China Wars" Author; University Of California - Irvine Business Professor
- Peter Morici, University of Maryland Robert H. Smith School of Business Prof; U.S. Internat'l Trade Commission Fmr. Chief Economist
- Dave Goldman, Senior Editor First Things Magazine

FINANCIAL REFORM ENTERS THE HOMESTRETCH

CNBC chief Washington correspondent John Harwood reports.

THE MARKET: SELL INTO RALLIES?

- Jason Trennert, Strategas Research Partners; Chief Investment Strategist & Managing Partner
- David Kotok, Cumberland Advisors Chairman & Chief Investment Officer; CNBC Contributor
- David Malpass, President, Encima Global; Deputy Asst Secy of Treasury Under Reagan '86-'89

OIL SPILL DISASTER LATEST
Slick Politics…BP CEO Tony Hayward out yachting this weekend...Obama golfing...White House deal with BP lobbyists?...What about the Jones Act?

CNBC’s Eamon Javers reports.

WILL THE DRILLING MORATORIUM LEAD TO ANOTHER CRISIS? AND WHY HASN’T THE JONES ACT BEEN SUSPENDED?

Republican Senator Roger Wicker from Mississippi will offer his take.

Please join us. The Kudlow Report. 7pm ET. CNBC.

China Relents On Currency Moves

The markets are nicely higher in early trading on the heels of an announcement out of China that it is prepared to allow its currency to move more freely. Pundits have been critical of China that their rigid peg to the US dollar was unfair to global trade. Its decision yesterday will benefit companies that export to China. It also signals confidence in China's recovery prospects, as it will raise the cost of China's own exports.

The news led Asian markets to rally overnight, with China climbing +2.9%. European markets were also higher this morning on the news.

Commodities are leading the action so far, with the materials etf up +2.30%. Oil is trading higher to $78.65, while gold is just off its highs near $1256.

The 10-year yield is higher to 3.28%; and the VIX is lower again, trading down to 23.74.

Trading comment: The recent action in the stock market has been nice, including today's rally. Plenty of leading stocks continue to act well and push to new highs. But the ECRI Index last Friday continued to point to a slowdown, and the persistent drop in the Baltic Dry Index could be signaling similar concerns.

So while I continue to play the growth names in the stock market, I also want to be mindful of what I think could be a fairly pronounced second half slowdown. As such, I don't think the recent rally signals a new, sustainable uptrend. Rather, I view it as a nice relief rally after things had become overdone on the downside. But I want to stick by my mantra to take profits on marginal positions and trim back my equity exposure as the market climbs higher. I think this will position our portfolios better for the second half if I am right about the coming economic slowdown.

long GLD

20 Haziran 2010 Pazar

GOLD BUBBLE? WHAT BUBBLE?

We continue to hear pundits describe gold as a bubble. Certainly it will turn into a bubble before this is all over but we are hardly in the bubble stage yet. In order for a bubble to form you need the public to come into an asset class. The public is pretty dim and it can take 15-20 years before they "catch on". It took 18 before they noticed the tech bubble.

Once they do start to "get it" we will have about a year to a year and a half as gold enters the parabolic stage before the bubble pops. See the Nasdaq chart below from late 98 to March of 2000.

At gold's top, half of your neighbors will be buying gold (not selling like they are doing now).

At the top there will be lines outside the the local coin dealer waiting for the next shipment of gold to come in.

At the top 7 of 10 billboards you see driving down the highway will have something to do with precious metals.

At the top the guy standing next to you in the grocery store will tell you how many thousands of dollars he made last month off his gold coins.

At the top everyone will have become convinced the dollar is toilet paper and will only continue to decline until it has become worthless.

At the top the population will believe that we have to go back on a gold standard.  By the way, a gold standard never stopped any country from debasing its currency. In ancient Rome they clipped some of the gold out of the coins. Roosevelt confiscated and arbitrarily revalued gold in the 30's. A gold standard will not prevent a government from trying to get something for nothing by debasing the currency.

At the top stocks will be universally hated and gold universally loved. In reality, stocks will at that time, represent true value. Much more so than a shiny metal with virtually no industrial uses. 


At the top smart money will eventually come to their senses and realize that true value (profitable companies making the necessities for life on Earth) are being given away for pennies on the dollar to purchase a shiny metal that really has no intrinsic value.

Here is a chart of the Nasdaq followed by a chart of gold. You tell me, does gold look like a bubble yet?




Of course not!

I think we might be getting close to the Nasdaq 1998 level, but gold is hardly in the runaway parabolic stage where it rallies over 100% in a year. Not to mention that none of the other signs I noted above are even remotely present yet.


But no one needs to worry about a bubble just yet.  We need to have at least one more serious correction similar to what happened in `08 or in tech stocks in 1998 to wash out bullish sentiment before we can start the final parabolic run into a true bubble top.

If I had to guess I would say that will occur during the next liquidation event which should be due in mid to late 2012 as the stock market collapses down into the third leg of the secular bear market.


That should mark the next four year cycle low and possibly the nominal bottom for the secular bear market in stocks that began in March of 2000. I expect the selling pressure at that climactic event will also drag gold down into the correction that should separate the second phase (what gold has been in since early '06) from the third and final bubble stage. Gold will quickly recover, like it did from the last selling climax, and when it does this is when we will see the public begin to panic into gold.

Then and only then can we start talking about a bubble.

At the moment I think we are about to enter the second leg of an ongoing C-wave advance that began in September of last year. I'm expecting this leg to take gold to the $1400-$1500 level before experiencing a major D-wave correction.

I'll be monitoring the advance on a daily basis to keep subscribers appraised of where gold is in its intermediate cycle. When I think we are getting close to the top of the C-wave I'll warn subscribers to take profits and exit the precious metals market so as not to get caught in a D-wave correction.

18 Haziran 2010 Cuma

BP, the White House, and Congress Are All Dirty

Amidst all the political jockeying over the BP catastrophe, the main players are missing what is really uppermost on America’s mind: It’s the spill rate, stupid. It’s jobs, stupid. It’s the economy, stupid. And none of it is happening.

All eyes in Washington, Wall Street, and Main Street were turned this week to the congressional show trial featuring beleaguered BP CEO Tony Hayward. Hayward was a disaster. He played dumb. He stonewalled. And he never got honest about the colossal failure of human judgment at BP that caused this catastrophe.

But folks, seriously, what did you expect? Before this thing is said and done, Hayward and others at BP may very well be criminally indicted by the Justice Department. Hayward could eventually do hard time for all I know. So, of course, he stonewalled. Thank Eric Holder.

What Hayward should at least have done is talk about the progress being made in capping the spill rate, which is gradually going down. To most Americans, and especially those in the Gulf, it’s the spill rate of capture that matters most. Hayward also should have talked about the new BP relief well, which could be up and running in less than a month, to end this disaster. That would be great news for America, and her economy and stock market. Plus, he could have mentioned that BP is hiring thousands of workers to fill new jobs in the cleanup effort.

But Hayward was lawyered to the gills, which doesn’t make anyone happy, including me. And that’s precisely why these congressional show trials leave me bored, tired, and depressed.

And oh, by the way, what’s the role of Congress in this catastrophe? What exactly is it doing besides presiding over these show trials? Doesn’t it have oversight authority when it comes to the Minerals Management Service that utterly failed to regulate the safety of BP’s deep-water drilling operations? Why aren’t more people talking about this?

And why in the world hasn’t Congress suspended the Jones Act, thereby allowing foreign-flag tankers into the Gulf area? What is it waiting for? We’re basically two months into this never-ending disaster. The Gulf cleanup could have been greatly aided by at least 15 foreign countries that were instead spurned after offering their tankers and other equipment. Why aren’t we accepting these offers of help?

And where, really, is the president in all this? Speaking to the nation from the Oval Office earlier in the week, he failed to declare a Jones Act waiver, and he made no call for a task force of hands-on oilmen from the likes of ExxonMobil and other big oil sisters who actually know what they are doing.

Another problem with Obama’s address was his arrogant announcement that he would inform BP’s CEO “that he is to set aside” an asset amount ($20 billion) for the government-run escrow fund to pay for the spill damages. Trouble is, there are no laws to permit our government to force such financial retribution. Not even a new TARP, at least not yet. Did someone say nationalization?

The government has no right interfering with the financial decisions of a private, shareholder-owned corporation. This sounds like GM and Chrysler all over again. Or maybe health insurers, pharmaceuticals, private investment funds, and multinational corporations. And it could end up having a serious and chilling effect on corporate investment.

Look, at least BP already agreed to pony up. Why should the government control this? Isn’t this another case of the Obama administration bullying, taxing, and regulating business as part of a social agenda to redistribute income and power from private enterprise to government? It’s a war on profits and capital.

Consider this: American companies are sitting on an astonishing pile of $1.5 trillion in unused cash. Why aren’t they investing to create new jobs? Well, it’s because massive tax and regulatory threats coming out of Washington have created a tall barrier of disincentives and uncertainty that is blocking the normal efficiency of the free-market capitalist system.

The instincts of our free economy are to promote growth. But when government blunts these instincts, the system ceases to work efficiently.

Americans do not want a cap-and-trade system. What they do want is a full-throated and comprehensive energy plan conducted on all fronts -- carbon and non-carbon -- that would unleash energy entrepreneurs and existing businesses to create more power and more jobs and more economic growth. Besides stopping the spill, this is the key point that Obama misses.

So, if BP is dirty, and if BP is incompetent, then so is Congress. And so is the White House, as far as I’m concerned.

The BP story is a total outrage. Once again America is not getting what it needs.

Stocks Flat, Gold Pushes To New Highs

Stocks are roughly flattish in early trading on relatively light news flow. There were no economic reports this morning to speak of, nor earnings reports. Today is options expiration, which could add some volatility to the session.

Asian markets were mixed overnight, with China lower by -1.8% after the PBOC said that the country's economic growth might slow in the second half of the year. China has been a major driver of global economic growth, so its slowdown will be felt everywhere, and could effect commodity prices, etc.

The dollar is flat so far today, with oil and gold prices mixed. Crude prices are lower to $76, while gold has hit new highs for the year near $1260.

The 10-year yield is a tad higher to 3.20%; and the VIX is another -3.5% lower, now below 25 to 24.13.

Among the sector ETFs, utilities are down the most (-1.32%), followed by energy (-0.40%); materials (-0.13%) and financials (-0.30%) are down the least, but all sectors are in negative territory so far.

Trading comment: The S&P has been holding above that 200-day average (see below), which is a good sign. The market is a bit overbought short-term, so we could see a pullback. But there is also a good chance that we see another rally into quarter-end later this month. If that occurs, we will probably start talking about the overhead 50-day average as the next area of resistance. As it stands currently, the S&P is exactly flat on the year.

long GLD, VXX

BREAKOUT

We may see gold breakout of the triangle consolidation today. However I don't think one should expect gold to just "runaway". It is late enough in the daily cycle that we have a short term correction coming due soon. It's probably more likely that gold breaks out, then re-tests the breakout level at $1250.


I'll have more in the weekend report of what I think is unfolding in the precious metals markets.

17 Haziran 2010 Perşembe

The Strong-Dollar Slowdown Scenario

Bob Mundell, the Nobel Prize‒winning supply-side father, is talking about the rapidly rising dollar versus the euro as a growing threat to the pace of economic recovery. He basically argues that the euro is a very important currency, and that the dollar’s appreciation signals a significant shift in the terms of trade. (Hat tip to The Supply Side blog.)

So, when the dollar ratcheted up against the euro by 30 percent in the second half of 2008, it imparted a major deflationary impulse that drove the already fragile U.S. economy deeper and deeper into recession. Then, in 2009, the dollar’s decline imparted a stimulative impulse to the U.S. economy, which began to recover. Over the past six or seven months, however, the greenback has rallied nearly 20 percent against the euro and about the same against a basket of currencies that includes the Japanese yen. As a result, Mundell sees a slowdown in the U.S. and a speedup in the Eurozone economy.

I argued a few months ago that the rapid dollar rise, especially in April and May, was a deflationary event. Since mid-April, copper -- which is a key economic indicator -- has fallen 15 percent in dollar terms. Crude oil has fallen about 10 percent. And the 10-year Treasury bond has dropped 55 basis points in yield. This sets up a slowdown in the recovery. And the stock market correction parallels the dollar appreciation, adding fuel to the slowdown fear.

Recent weakness in retail sales, housing starts, the Philly Fed manufacturing index, and the drift upward in weekly jobless claims confirm the slowdown threat. I’m not talking about a double-dip recession. But for whatever reason, the upward rate of economic recovery seems to have been interrupted.

Of course, there’s a big tax wall out there beginning next year. And the many regulatory threats to businesses and job hiring -- from Obamacare, other government interventions, and the BP catastrophe -- will also play a role in the slowdown scenario.

Corporations are sitting on a record volume of cash, $1.5 trillion, perhaps as a defensive measure against tax and regulatory uncertainties. And banks continue to hoard money, with a gigantic excess-reserve position, including money laying fallow on deposit at the Fed.

Now, it’s hard to talk about long-term deflation with gold near $1,250. And it’s hard to reconcile a strong dollar with the continued record-high level of gold in dollar terms. But I think what Mundell is saying is that the shift in the terms of trade to a strong dollar and a weak euro has near-term economic consequences, whereas the rise in gold has long-term inflationary consequences.

In any event, I continue to believe that investors should take profits this year before the IRS confiscates them next year when tax rates go up for capital-gains, dividends, and estates.

Euro Gains On Successful Spain Debt Offering

The market is lower in early trading, mostly due to some soft economic data that came out this morning. Initial jobless claims were worse than expected, and the Philly Fed Index really plunged. The Philly index fell to 8.0 (well below 20.0 consensus) from last month's 21.4.

The euro is bouncing today after news that Spain had a successful debt offering. This has helped spreads tighten in Greece, Portugal, Italy, etc. The strong euro is weighing on the dollar, which might be boosting gold today (currently higher to $1244).

The weak economic news is pushing bond yields lower too. The 10-yr yield is down a lot, back below 3.20%.

Asian markets were mixed to lower overnight; and the VIX is slightly higher to 26.25.

Among the sector ETFs, only consumer staples (+0.22%) are bucking the weakness; materials (-1.16%) are down the most, followed by energy. Homebuilders (XHB, -2.86%) are down the most among the sub-sectors, after TOL said that they were seeing a slowdown in housing. Tech is hanging in fairly well so far also, with AAPL hitting a new all-time high earlier.

Trading comment: The market still seems a bit bifurcated, with leading growth stocks making good headway, but other sectors (like financials) acting heavy and languishing. So we continue to hold those leading growth stocks, but also look to continue to use market rallies to pare back exposure to marginal names or sectors that are losing relative strength.

Sentiment is a bit mixed in here. The ISEE call/put ratio has been very low recently, reflecting high pessimism, but today's AAII survey showed considerably more bulls than bears, reversing a 3-week trend. Also, the markets are back in overbought territory in the short-term.

long AAPL, GLD

16 Haziran 2010 Çarşamba

FREE UPDATE

I was going to post part of tonight's report to the blog but decided I didn't want to go through the hassle of transferring it over. So I just unlocked it on the premium website. If you want to read the report just click on the link to the right and it will take you to the subscriber website.

Weak Speech from an Indecisive Obama

One problem with President Obama’s Oval Office speech was his declaration that 90 percent of the oil spill would be captured in “coming days and weeks.” Ah, if only government were that strong and powerful. Trouble is, the spill rate late yesterday afternoon was again revised upward toward 60,000 barrels per day from the prior estimate of 25,000.

To most Americans, and especially those in the Gulf, it’s the spill rate of capture that matters most. Perhaps there’s a magic wand to cure this problem — maybe a spill-rate de-stimulus package — but so far the magic cure remains elusive.

In addition, the president did not announce a Jones Act waiver to bring foreign-flag tankers into the Gulf area. Nor did he announce a new task force of hands-on experienced oilmen from the likes of ExxonMobil and other big oil sisters who actually know what they are doing.

Another problem was Obama’s arrogant announcement that he will be informing BP’s chairman “that he is to set aside” some undisclosed asset amount ($20 billion) for the government-run escrow fund to pay for the spill damages. Trouble is, there are no laws to permit our government to force such financial retribution. Not even a new TARP, at least not yet. Did someone say nationalization? But stock-option and credit-default-insurance markets are already pricing in a BP bankruptcy.

And while the media waited breathlessly for a clear Obama push for cap-and-trade, there was only a passing mention of the House bill, rather than a full-throated call to arms. So it was an indecisive Obama, a rather meek and defensive Obama, in terms of reducing carbon dependence. Of course, Obama knows that cap-and-trade politics will drive up Republican numbers even more in the fall.

But folks would rather see a full-throated and comprehensive energy plan conducted on all fronts — carbon and non-carbon — that would unleash energy entrepreneurs and existing businesses to create more power and more jobs and more economic growth. Besides stopping the spill, this is the key point.

Obama’s weak speech really missed the point.

Stocks Slightly Lower Following Yesterday's Strong Rally

Yesterday's rally was pretty strong. Lots of leading stocks either broke out to new highs, or are now close to doing so. Volume was higher than the preceding day, so if you follow IBD's rules, yesterday would be considered a follow-thru day from the recent start of a new rally.

Recent follow through's haven't proven sustainable in the face of waves of bad news from Euorpe to BP, etc. Time will tell if this one holds up and leads to a nice summer rally.

The multi-day bounce in the euro looks to end today and debt spreads in Spain are widening ahead of their meeting with the IMF later this week. Rumors are that they may seek financial aid. That is pushing the dollar higher today. Oil is flatting near $76.95, and gold is down slightly at $1232.

The Producer Price Index for May fell -0.3%, showing no signs of inflation anywhere in sight. The housing reports were especially weak, and are likely weighing on the market. Housing starts for May dropped -10% for the month, and building permits fell -5.9%. Both results were below consensus expectations.

In corporate news, both Fedex (FDX) and Nokia (NOK) reported earnings and gave cautious guidance. Both stocks opened lower today.

In Asia, China and Hong Kong markets were closed, but Japan rose +1.8%; the 10-year yield is lower to 3.26%; and the VIX is up slightly to 26.25, but still well below the 30 level after a nice 4-day drop.

Trading comment: The S&P got above its 200-day average yesterday, and is sitting right on that support currently (1109). So this will be an interesting level to see if it holds.

Many of the leading stocks (AAPL, FFIV, VMW, DECK, NFLX, etc) continue to act well and make new highs. These are the names I would stick with, as only select growth names continue to work well, while many other sectors and stocks struggle. The financials really can't gain any traction, especially with financial regulation looming.

Last, two stocks that had been lagging, but look like they might have turned the corner are GMCR and PCLN. Priceline has a little too much exposure to Europe for my tastes, but that doesn't mean it couldn't rally a bit more.

long AAPL, FFIV, GMCR, VMW, GLD

15 Haziran 2010 Salı

Will Obama Go Nuclear on BP Tonight?

Is Obama going to launch the nuclear option against BP in tonight’s Oval Office speech? That option would terminate all BP oil and gas leases and suspend all federal contracts with the oil company. BP is the Defense Department’s biggest oil supplier, with a contract worth more than $2 billion yearly, according to energy analyst John Kilduff. Such a move by the president could conceivably bankrupt BP.

One wonders, by the way, why the Defense Department has never applied the Iran sanctions law against BP, given numerous press reports that the energy company continues to trade with the enemy Iran. In fact, BP has partnered with Iran in at least two oil fields and a pipeline outside of Iran.

But back to the nuclear option: It is possible that debarring BP is going to be an Obama threat, as the administration seeks to push BP to create a $20 billion oil-cleanup escrow fund run by the government. That looks suspiciously like a nationalization move. Remember Citigroup.

The other oil sharks are already swimming in the waters around BP. It has been reported that the beleaguered oil company has sought the services of several Wall Street banking firms for a takeover defense against ExxonMobil, Royal Dutch Shell, and Chevron.

Of course, the suspension of, or moratorium on, offshore drilling will continue to damage BP’s bottom line and cash flow, along with the bottom lines of other big drilling companies. Many of these big drillers are already looking to move their operations to China, Africa, and elsewhere.

The Gulf area supplies nearly 30 percent of U.S. oil, and suspension of drilling seems already to be putting upward pressure on oil prices. Oil is up $2 today to $77 — nearly $10 higher than its low in recent months. Retail gas prices are creeping up, too, which could set the stage for a somewhat slower economic-recovery rate. So will rising unemployment in the Gulf region, along with lost tourist dollars.

In today’s congressional hearings, ExxonMobil and other big oil companies blasted BP for human malfeasance. And now there is talk that Obama wants the U.S. military to take over the whole cleanup operation.

Meanwhile, the president is expected to make a clarion call tonight for cap-and-trade — a huge energy tax on the economy that could sink recovery hopes. Cap-and-tax will never play around the country, but it will mobilize tea-party candidates to overturn Obama supporters in the midterm elections.

Despite repeated trips to the Gulf to create the aura that he is “doing something” about the BP catastrophe, the president is digging himself into a deeper political hole. Nationalizing BP, taxing oil and gas companies, and promoting unpopular cap-and-trade policies all give the appearance that Obama is flailing about. It’s not a good appearance.

Euro Higher Again, But S&P Stuck Below 200-day Average

The market is nicely higher again this morning, but as we have seen lately when the market is up strong in early trading, it often fades by the closing bell. That is why I always say I prefer a market that opens weak and builds strength into the close.

Yesterday I commented that the S&P was approaching its overhead 200-day moving average, which would likely act as resistance. Right on cue, the market rallied to that level and then stalled (see chart below). When the news came out that Greece had its debt rating downgraded, the market began to selloff and by the close had given back all of its gains.

The market is higher again this morning on another bounce in the euro, following news that Spain and Ireland both had successful debt offerings. This is overshadowing corporate news here from Best Buy (BBY), which missed earnings and its stock is lower.

The lower dollar is helping most commodities. Oil is higher, near the $76 level. Gold continues to struggle, but hasn't given back all that much from its recent highs, trading near $1223 again today.

Asian markets were slightly higher overnight; the 10-yr yield is lower to 3.25%; and the VIX is -6% lower, now well below the 30 level to 26.85. The VIX is approaching its 50-day average, so it will be interesting to see if it bounces from this level.

Trading comment: If this market is going to build on its recent rally attempts, it really needs to hang on to today's gains into the close. A lot of this feels like short covering. We know that every trader has been short the euro, so short covering there should not be surprising. I also think its likely that with all the bad news, many traders have also been short the market. So if we get above that 200-day moving average on the S&P, that could spark another round of short covering.

It's nice to see tech names leading again. This is a sector where we remain overweight, but I still don't see enough improvement in the credit gauges (TED spread, CDS yields, etc) to get overly bullish here for more than a trade. Stay nimble.

long GLD

14 Haziran 2010 Pazartesi

On Tonight's Kudlow Report


Tonight at 7pm ET:

Earlier today, I sat down with former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker and former FDIC president Bill Isaac. We covered a lot of ground on the economy and financial reform on the eve of Congress sitting down to work out final details of the historic FinReg legislation. We'll take a look at the highlights this evening.

Also on tap tonight...a $1 TRILLION MINERAL FIND IN AFGHANISTAN is all over the news today. Syndicated columnist Tony Blankley will be joined by Foreign Policy's Blake Hounshell with a look at what it all may mean.

Plus...a look at all the latest developments in the BP oil spill with CNBC chief Washington correspondent John Harwood and CNBC energy analyst John Kilduff.

Please join us. The Kudlow Report. 7pm ET. CNBC.

Take Some Profits

Stocks are up strong across-the-board with renewed hopes of global growth fueling a roughly 1 percent gain in all three indices. Of course, today’s move to the upside follows last week’s strong equity performance.

So here’s what I think, folks: This is as good a time as any for investors to think long and hard about taking some profits off the table.

Why, you ask?

As my old friend Art Laffer continually reminds us, the Tax Man is coming to town on January 1, 2011. Taxes are going up across-the-board. So investors should seriously consider selling into any stock market strength ahead of the tax deadline. Doing this will enable investors to lock in a lower capital-gains tax this year and beat next year’s higher rates.

It’s a lesson investors literally cannot afford to forget: If after-tax investment returns decline, because the key capital-gains tax rate and other investment taxes go up, the future value of stocks is damaged.

In other worrisome news, despite some improvement in consumer sentiment, U.S retail sales fell on Friday for the first time in eight months. That was something of a shocker.

Incidentally, the Economic Cycle Research Institute’s important weekly leading index continues to fall. A lot of smart money guys pay a good deal of attention to this thing.

The question must be asked: Are we setting up right now for a second-half slowdown? Not a double-dip recession necessarily, but some sluggishness and inertia in the V-shaped recovery?

Oh, by the way, in addition to slowing economic growth and rising tax rates here at home, I’m also concerned about the lingering unsolved problems in Greece and the rest of Euroland. The European debt-crisis story is simply refusing to die. Like it or not, headline risks like Europe and the BP oil spill are still on the radar screen.

Bottom line: Investors should at least consider taking some profits off the table on days like today.