As you can see in Dave Fry's DIA chart, we're still having trouble with 13,600 – same as last week. We did a full analysis of the Dow components in last week's post so we were ready for yesterday's action as I said to our Members in Chat at 10:28:
Volume very low on this rally – just 29M on the Dow at 10:26 so hard to say anything we see is significant – maybe just short-covering on that ISM report so let's grab 30 DIA weekly $137 puts for $1.60 in the $25KPs while they're cheap with a stop at $1.40.
We also (gasp!) shorted AAPL and sold some long QQQs in subsequent comments (10:32 and 10:34) and we took $2.05 and ran on the DIA puts at 1:24, when we made a well-timed, non-greedy exit (up 28%). We could have done better if we had held them into the close as they finished the day at $2.30 but we were bottom-fishing by then and had flipped long for the overnight as the sell-off seemed a bit silly, what with the Chairman of the Federal Reserve telling us:
“We expect that a highly accommodative stance of monetary policy will remain appropriate for a considerable time after the economy strengthens.”
Like it or not, that's our market reality. "God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference" is AA's "Serenity Prayer" and we at PSW are trying to take it to heart and ignore those pesky fundamentals and ACCEPT the free money – because it's NOT going to stop – not for a long time…
That money supply is up from $8Tn to $10Tn in the past 3 years and it's all from the Fed – who expanded their balance sheet by just under $2Tn. The trick is, this is the M2 Money Supply, which measures only money in circulation – NOT large time deposits, institutional money market funds, short-term repurchase and other larger liquid assets. In other words, M2 does not measure the money held by rich people and, since 2006, M3, which used to measure those things, is no longer tracked by the US. Why? Because, unless you were Mitt Romney rich – you'd probably be outside with a gun right now hunting for rich people.
The earnings gap between rich and poor Americans was the widest in more than four decades in 2011, Census data show, surpassing income inequality previously reported in Uganda and Kazakhstan. The notion that each generation does better than the last — one aspect of the American Dream — has been challenged by evidence that average family incomes fell last decade for the first time since World War II.
From 1979 to 2007, about $1.1 trillion in annual income shifted to the top 1 percent of Americans — more than the entire earnings of the bottom 40 percent, according to Alan Krueger, chairman of Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers and an economics professor at Princeton University. If income were distributed as it was in 1979, there might be $440 billion in additional spending each year — a 5 percent boost to consumption. The chart on the left clearly indicates what's going on – workers no longer get paid for what they produce – wages have become disconnected from productivity. An honest day's work gets you an honest day's pay – from 1973!
I'm sure many of our Conservative readers are saying that's "fair" but if that's fair, then why not hire some overseers – give them guns and force the workers to work for no wages at all? It's just as "fair" – it's just our new negotiating position. If they won't do it, maybe we'll go find people in other countries who will. We'll send some boats over to pick them up. That's right, America is just one step away from going back to slavery – that's how successful the top 1% have been in rolling back 200 years worth of progress for the working class.
Despite Bernanke's protests to the contrary, these are deep, systemic flaws in our economy and they aren't going to be fixed by trickle-down economics (talk about a policy that has failed for 40 consecutive years!). Free money and the promise of more free money is the ONLY reason we're bullish on the markets – you do NOT want to be around when this punch bowl goes away and people begin to sober up but, for now – call us market optimists…