As you can see on the S&P 500 chart, we've fallen about the same amount and bounced about the same amount this week and last and if we slow-step our way to a correction – that can be nice and healthy for the markets. Notice we have support on the Strong Bounce Line at 4,559 on the S&P 500 and, if that holds today – it bodes well for next week. If the week bounce line at 4,512 fails, however, we'll be looking to add more hedges into the close.
- Dow 36,000 to 34,200 has bounce lines of 34,560 (weak) and 34,920 (strong)
- S&P 4,700 to 4,465 has bounce lines of 4,512 (weak) and 4,559 (strong)
- Nasdaq 16,500 to 15,675 has bounce lines of 15,840 (weak) and 16,005 (strong)
- Russell 2,400 to 2,080 has bounce lines of 2,144 (weak) and 2,208 (strong)
We're still watching the Russell as our canary in the coal mine as that index is undergoing the bigger correction (10% vs 2.5% for the others) and failing that (2,160) will almost certainly drag the others down with it. As you can see – we've barely held that line for the last two days so one day above it is no cause for a party.
We have picked up plenty of stocks while they were on sale. We added 4 of them to our Money Talk Portfolio when I was on that show on Wednesday evening, so we are bullish enough for the following quarter. As I said on the show, I'm bullish that the Government and the Fed have at least one more bailout left in them but I would certainly take that opportunity to cash out – because we're at a real tipping point with our debt.
Speaking of debt, the "good" news this week is that Congress has kicked the debt ceiling can down the road again – all the way to Feb 18th and it passed with bi-partisan support in the Senate: 69-28, which indicates the next one will pass as well. Extending current federal spending, set under the Trump administration, through mid-February will give lawmakers more time to negotiate and pass a new set of funding bills. Republicans have sought to preserve the current funding levels for as long as possible, while Democrats are pushing for more funding for a variety of domestic programs, including education, healthcare and research efforts.
8:30 Update: Not good is only 210,000 jobs created in November, missing the estimate of leading Economorons of 545,000 by 159%. 6.9M less people are employed now than before the pandemic and, at this pace, we will be finding jobs for them by maybe 2030. The good news is that weak jobs numbers keep the Fed on the table and gives them and excuse to put off raising rates a bit longer.
We'll see how the market digests all this but, to me, it's just another sign that we're heading into Stagflation – and that is a very unpleasant economic situation to be in.
Our $29 Trillion Deficit, Interest Rates, Inflation, And Debt
Stock Market Struggles to Reprice Risks That Credit Traders Saw in September
"Staggering 1-Day Moves": Nomura Warns The Market "Remains Shockingly Dysfunctional"
When Everything Is a Growth Stock And All Money Is Venture Funds
Oil Extends Gains After OPEC+ Takes Flexible Stance on Supply
U.S. sues to block Nvidia merger with Arm, the largest semiconductor deal in history
N.Y. Hospitals Fill as State Sees Most Covid Cases Since January.
Google workers in U.S. won’t return to office as expected on Jan. 10
Suburban NYC Home Sales Plunge Because There’s Nothing to Buy.
Tesla says it needs graphite from China for batteries, requests tariff waiver
Have a great weekend,
- Phil
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