The S&P finished "Will We Hold It Wednesday" at 2,984, dropping 19.62 points from Tuesday's close and, since our run was from 2,800 to 3,000, that wasn't even a weak retracement, which would have been 40 points so we're still on a very bullish path unless 2,960 fails today but, so far, the Futures are improving, though we do expect to at least see 2,860 tested at some point.
The Philly Fed came in quite strong this morning at 21.8 vs just 5 expected and 0.3 in the prior reading and we can add that to strong Empire State Manufacturing (4.3 vs 2 expected and -8.6 prior), strong Retail Sales (0.4% vs 0.2% expected and 0.4% prior), lower than expected Business Inventories (0.3% vs 0.4% expected and 0.5% prior) although we did have declining Import (-0.9%) and Export (-0.7%) Prices and Industrial Production (0% vs 0.2% expected and 0% prior) was awful and Housing Starts (1.25M) were a bit disappointing.
We will get Leading Economic Indicators at 10 am and they are expected to be flat and tomorrow we get the Michigan Consumer Sentiment reading, which was last seen at 98.2 and that's it for our data so mixed – no matter what happens with the last two. Still the mixed economic reporting doesn't seem like the Fed is likely to cut rates. Yesterday's Beige Book Report from the Fed showed most businesses see economic activity expanding modestly despite concerns over the Trade War:
Businesses also continued to complain of worker shortages. Some construction companies in Idaho debated relaxing drug testing for applicants. Wages grew at a modest-to-moderate pace, the report said, with some employers expanding benefit packages to draw workers – something we discussed in detail in yesterday's Live Trading Webinar.
Rising wages takes the Fed off the table and if traders begin to think that the Fed is not going to lower rates at their upcoming meeting – we could quickly go back to the May lows at 2,750 and I don't see how the Fed can justify even a 0.25% drop, let alone the 0.5% drop people are talking about. If not for the Trade War, the economy would be chugging along and rate cuts aren't going to fix that.
There was literally nothing NFLX could do to justify trading at over 100x earnings and that does not bode well for Amazon (AMZN) who are failing right at the $1Tn line at $2,000 for a company earning "just" $12Bn this year so 83x earnings means we need to see a path to $50Bn for AMZN (July 25th earnings) or it's time to bring that stock lower as well.
Also, despite the BS spun by the Trump Administration, NO actual meetings with China have taken place since the G20 summit and none are currently scheduled – that's worrying people too. Keep in mind the market rallied 2,500 Dow points (10%) since early June on hopes of a Trade Deal and hopes of a Fed Cut and it's very possible, at the moment, that neither one of those things is actually going to happen.
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