As you can see from Dave Fry's intraday SPY chart, we had that big, fake pop at the open which I told you to short (see yesterday's post) and we had a fantastic ride down until 1pm and we turned up about a half hour later but not before giving us some very nice gains from our morning short picks in our Live Member Chat Room:
- /NKD (Nikkei Futures) fell from 15,800 to 15,700 – up $500 per contract
- /YM (Dow) fell from 17,120 to 17,000 – up $100 per contract
- /ES (S&P) fell from 2,005 to 1,993 – up $350 per contract
- /NQ (Nasdaq) fell from 4,093 to 4,078 – up $300 per contract
- /TF (Russell) fell from 1,179.50 to 1,171.50 – up $800 per contract
We are long Silver Futures (/SI) at $19.20 and Gold Futures (/YG) at $1,270 but tight stops below those lines and only if the Dollar is below 83 (now 82.88). Futures can give you some fantastic, quick gains – but also have the potential to deal devastating losses as well.
This morning's pop in the Futures came on news of a cease-fire in the Ukraine, which sent the EU markets flying at the open but it seemed like the usual political nonsense to us and that's why we shorted into the excitement. Even as I write this (7:30), we're down to 1,182 on the Russell (/TF) futures (stop at 1,182.50) and now looking for some real breakdowns on the Dow (target 17,100), S&P (target 2,005) and the Nasdaq (target 4,100) to confirm a bigger downtrend and start shorting again.
While there has been much debate about the relative p/e of the S&P 500, which has somewhat been able to justify it's rise because the component companies have, through stock buybacks and M&A activity, decreased the total amount of shares the generally flat earnings are divided by. That has kept the p/e of the S&P 500 well below the 1999 bubble levels and makes a good, bullish case.
As interest rates go, you are getting just over 2%. While that may be better than your bank, it's not better than the S&P, which, with dividends, is paying you about 5% to park your money there. The Nasdaq is in bubblicious territory simply because it is a much smaller index (in market cap) than the S&P and a disproportionate allocation of capital has been finding it's way into even the worst of the Nasdaq components, courtesy of a surge in index fund investing.
As you can see on the Fund Flow chart, all those "stimulus" Dollars that the Central Banks have been pumping out to the top 1% have not gone to create new jobs or to buy property, plant or equipment to increase production – it has simply put Trillions and Trillions of Dollars back into the stock market, which is why the price of all the indexes is rising so much faster than the actual earnings – there is simply more money around than there are places to put it.
So, while we are VERY skeptical of the merits of this rally, we're also not going to fight the Fed or the other Central Banksters as long as the money keeps flowing in. That's why, yesteray, our Live Trading Webinar was focused on 15 new BULLISH, long-term trade ideas for our Buy List and we'll be adding one or two of those each week those Must Hold lines hold up into the end of the year BUT FIRST – how about we see ONE, SINGLE DAY in which the S&P actually holds 2,000?
"What?" you may ask, "Haven't we been over 2,000 for over a week?" Actually, the truth is, just like yesterday's intra-day chart – we get pumped up over 2,000 for each open, sell off during the day and then get pumped back over it at the close. EVERY DAY. This is not what a strong market looks like – this is what a SCAM looks like:
Date Open High Low Close Volume Adj Close*
Sep 2, 2014 2,004.07 2,006.12 1,994.85 2,002.28 2,819,980,000 2,002.28
Aug 29, 2014 1,998.45 2,003.38 1,994.65 2,003.37 2,259,130,000 2,003.37
Aug 28, 2014 1,997.42 1,998.55 1,990.52 1,996.74 2,282,400,000 1,996.74
Aug 27, 2014 2,000.54 2,002.14 1,996.20 2,000.12 2,344,350,000 2,000.12
Aug 26, 2014 1,998.59 2,005.04 1,998.59 2,000.02 2,451,950,000 2,000.02
Aug 25, 2014 1,991.74 2,001.95 1,991.74 1,997.92 2,233,880,000 1,997.92
Aug 22, 2014 1,992.60 1,993.54 1,984.76 1,988.40 2,301,860,000 1,988.40
As the great GW Bush once said: "Fool me once, shame on you – fool me, you can't get fooled again." Don't be a fool – let the market PROVE it deserves to be here, let Draghi SHOW US THE MONEY tomorrow – not just talk about it, before we commit more of our capital at these levels.
Be careful out there.
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