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Market Summary April 18, 2001 Posted Daily Between 5 and 6:30 PM EST
by Lance Lewis
Uncle Al Panics: Stocks Party, Dollar Disapproves
Asia was higher last night as Hong Kong rose 4 percent and Japan rose 3 percent. Europe was up 3 percent this morning as we rolled around to the open in Vegas... errrr I mean New York where the futures were limit up on the Naz. We gapped up at the open and were off and running. About 2 hours into the session things slowed down a little as those in the "know" waited on the rate cut from their buddy Uncle Al. The Fed announces a surprise 50 bp rate cut and whoosh, the spoos launched 2 percent quicker than you can say "print more money!" From there, volume picked up considerably as we flopped along for the rest of the day near the highs in a sideways chop. The last hour saw us drift lower and end at levels below where the majority of trading took place today after the rate cut jam. The day is coming when this sort of nonsense will be laughed at and sold hard, but the currency has to come under pressure first. Speaking of the dollar, it didn’t like today’s rate cut. The US dollar index slipped into the red by a percent and ended on the low. With today’s act of recklessness, the fed funds rate is now at 4.5% and below the ECB’s comparable rate at 4.75%. Volume today was near a record (1.9 bil on the NYSE and 3.1 bil on the Naz.) Breadth was 2 to 1 positive on the NYSE and just shy of 3 to 1 positive on the Naz. Big winners were in the semis as the SOX rose 12 percent. Big losers were in the oil services as the OSX fell 3 percent.
INTC said last night that they think the 2nd half will be better (like they always do and are then forced to warn repeatedly just like they have for the last 2 quarters), and they kept their ludicrous $7.5 bil cap ex number. HWP warned this morning and announced more job cuts, but said that Q2 might be the bottom. However, that remains to be seen. TER, a semi equipment maker, said orders were at the lowest level since Q3 of 1998. TXN said orders fell 32 percent sequentially, and they expect revenue to decline 20% sequentially. They also cut their cap ex estimate to 1.8 bil from 2 bil. LLTC said next quarter’s revenue would be down up to 30% sequentially. However, nobody cared about any of that today because as a friend of mine said earlier this week: we’re back in "nothing matters" mode. All anybody wanted to focus on was INTC’s fairy tale, HWP’s hope, and the coming Fed cut that somebody obviously knew about, which explains the buying over the last few days in the face of all the horrendous news. All that mattered today was that Uncle Al was passing out cheaper confetti, and now that things have turned the derivative momentum monkey is running the show till it has exhausted itself, at which point we’ll go down again and take out lows. Whether we finally get the "acceleration" I have been talking about depends on when the dollar breaks. Financials were the same story as tech. The BKX rose 4 percent, and the XBD rose 7 percent. GE rose 5 percent. Credit insurers were the anomaly of the day. ABK gapped down this morning and was down as much as 10 percent even after the rate cut, and I don’t think it had anything to do with their earnings report. MBI was hit for 5 percent. Clearly there is a problem out there somewhere, and that’s probably one of the big reasons that Uncle AL panicked today. Maybe he just wanted to jam stocks? That wouldn't surprise me either, but we'll probably know which it was in a few days if and when some bad news leaks out somewhere. Anybody that thinks this was done today because of some economic data is fooling themselves. Retailers were hot as the RLX rose 6 percent.
Oil fell 29 cents. The XOI fell a percent, and the OSX fell 3 percent. Gold rose 20 cents, and lease rates were quiet. The HUI rose 2 percent. The US dollar index fell a percent on the news of the rate cut. The euro traded down to 87 cents this morning before recovering to close above 88 cents and in the green for the day. Treasuries were a touch higher.
With this latest panic move by the Fed (recall the last one was in January at higher levels), the dollar may now finally get sold as foreigners give up on the Fed and the US economy. Once the currency comes under pressure, the countdown to a collapse begins. I continue to be amazed that the dollar has lasted as long as it has. The fact that the dollar remains near its highs against most currencies as the economy and stocks collapse even as the Fed is slashing rates is simply amazing. And stocks have certainly been propped up to some extent because of it. However, once the currency is moving to the downside, the Fed’s hands become severely tied (much like the ECB's have been). Today’s rate cut will not erase the enormous amounts of consumer and corporate debt in the US. Rate cuts aren’t going to encourage anyone to go out and buy a new PC or server, and it doesn’t mean that the banks would loan you the money even if you wanted to. You can’t reinflate a bubble once it has popped. The fact remains that we have a huge glut of equipment, enormous overcapacity, and gargantuan debt levels. And, the rest of the world is beginning to suffer as we slow as well. The Fed may have played its final card today and put the stake in the heart of the dollar. What we’ll want to watch for now is how the dollar trades over the next few days. If it begins to slide hard, you'll know that a collapse is just around the corner. Otherwise, we'll have to wait and see where this rally in stocks exhausts itself and go from there. I'm not ready to say we have indeed put in a tradable low and this is the rally I thought we'd get off that low, because we haven't had a panic yet. However, I am now open to the possibility that the March low was that low, and I failed to recognize it at the time. We'll just have to see what happens over the next couple weeks and reevaluate at that point. Make no mistake though, unless the dollar comes under severe and sudden pressure, the bulls are in control for the moment. And they can flop things around for a while before we inevitably roll over again and go lower. The only certainty is that we have by no means seen the lows in this bear market.
Close Change % Change Close 12/29/00 YTD Change Dow 10615.83 399.10 3.9% 10786.85 -1.6% S&P 500 1238.16 46.35 3.9% 1320.28 -6.2% NASD 2079.44 156.22 8.1% 2470.52 -15.8% NASD 100 1830.79 159.28 9.5% 2341.70 -21.8% Morgan Stanley Hi Tech 608.17 52.08 9.4% 668.22 -9.0% TheStreet.com Internet 251.83 19.29 8.3% 300.63 -16.2% Biotech Index 554.65 33.44 6.4% 634.32 -12.6% S&P Banking Index 892.54 37.18 4.3% 901.42 -1.0% Morgan Stanley Cyclical 542.71 29.54 5.8% 511.18 6.2% Morgan Stanley Consumer 535.99 2.10 0.4% 613.91 -12.7% Russell 2000 466.51 10.93 2.4% 483.53 -3.5% Wilshire 5000 TOT 11343.78 419.98 3.8% 12175.88 -6.8% Gold Bug Index 53.47 1.02 1.9% 51.41 4.0% Dow Utilities 394.44 -1.24 -0.3% 412.16 -4.3% Bloomberg IPO 761.68 35.37 4.9% 932.37 -18.3% Dollar 116.15 -0.21 109.32 6.2% Euro 0.88415 0.00 0.94 -6.2% Gold $261.25 $0.25 $272.25 -$11.00 Oil $27.88 -$0.36 $26.70 $1.18 10 Year Bond Yield 5.15 -7 5.112 4 30 Year Bond Yield 5.66 0 5.457 21 Spreads: Last Peak 12/29/00 YTD Change Dollar Swap 84 102 102 -18 US Treasury vs: 10 Year Fannie 74 90 90 -16 10 Year Freddie 70 90 90 -19 10 Year FHLB 69 85 85 -15 Cur. Coup. Mtg. 145 179 179 -34 10 Yr AA Corp 104 127 127 -23 TED Spread 0 79 66 -66 |