Market Summary April 19, 2001 Posted Daily Between 5 and 6:30 PM EST
by Lance Lewis
Rate Cut Party, Day II
The rate cut party carried over to Asia last night as Japan rose 2 percent and Hong Kong rose 4 percent. Europe didn’t play along with the rate cut party though and was down a touch this morning, which is worth noting. The futures came off limit up in the Naz as we got closer to the open although they had held up there pretty well almost all night. We opened flat, took a little stutter step and then started to slowly march higher and basically grinded slowly up all day, taking out yesterday’s highs and ending on the high. Volume was good once again although down from yesterday (1.5 bil on the NYSE and 2.7 bil on the Naz.) Breadth was slightly positive on both exchanges. Big winners were in the Internets as the IIX rose 8 percent. Big losers were in the oil services as the OSX fell 3 percent.
IBM met its number last night and reassured guidance although they hedged by saying that they are not immune to an economic slowdown. Last night and this morning, we had some more less-than-stellar earnings out of BRCM, ALTR, NEWP, CY and KLAC where guidance was to expect continued deterioration in business conditions for the upcoming quarters as well as a warning from semi equipment maker CMOS for the current quarter. But, like yesterday, none of that mattered because the derivative momo machine was firmly in control, and it is currently chugging to the upside into expiration. Hence tech stocks were bought and bought hard. The general pattern in technology seemed to be that the worse the business is the more the stock got bought. I’m not going to waste time describing the various moon shots. There are a lot of people short these tech stocks that understand the way their businesses are falling through the floor and when they all get squeezed it can cause one heck of a rally, especially when the Fed gooses stocks the way they did yesterday in front of an expiration. What’s important to remember is that this rally is more of a trading event rather than any fundamental change as a result of the recent rate cut. Once it runs its course, we will turn lower again. The question now is whether this is a trading rally that can last a while or if like the January rally off the rate cut, it will be very short lived. I’m not ready to address that just yet as I said yesterday, but I am currently still leaning toward it being very short term in nature before what I believe will be an epic decline. We’re still in “nothing matters” mode at the moment. What we’ll want to watch for now is when that changes, and people start addressing the reality of the situation again rather than “hope.” Financials didn’t fair as well as technology, which is a red flag for any bulls out there. The BKX only managed to rally a hair, and the XBD actually fell a touch. GE rose another percent. We might want to keep an eye on how the derivative king (JPM) trades from here, as the big problem down the line will likely be a major derivative break at some point. JPM was off a hair today even amidst the general good cheer being passed around in stock-land. Credit insurers were quiet today, although they didn’t exactly snap back from yesterday’s pounding. Retailers were a sleeper for the most part as the RLX was basically flat.
Oil fell 13 cents. The XOI fell a percent, and the OSX fell 4 percent. Gold rose 4 bucks, and lease rates slid back to their recent lows. The HUI rose a percent. The US dollar index slid another percent, ending on the low. The euro rallied back above 89 cents. Treasuries were crushed in the long end as the yield on the 10yr rose to 5.25%. We may be seeing a long bonds/short tech trade being blown up here after the Fed’s action yesterday. Consequently, the move down in the bonds and the short covering rally in tech could be substantial, taking place into an expiration like this.
Tonight, we’ll hear from SUNW, NOK, GTW, and MSFT among others, and then tomorrow we have an option expiration. As always, trading often differs radically on the Monday following an expiration, so that may be when we want to watch closely to see if anything has changed or if we’re still in “nothing matters, buy everything” mode. The dollar’s continued weakness is also a big red flag that we’ll want to watch. Regarding the Fed rate cut yesterday (which I got several emails about), I basically addressed this yesterday, but I’ll just say that the Fed cannot print us back to prosperity once the bubble has popped. In order for the bubble to continue, it had to incrementally increase in parabolic fashion. Once it pops, as it currently has, it cannot be reinflated. It would be nice if we could print our way to prosperity, but we deal in a world of reality and facts, not fantasy and spin. The US is subject to the same economic laws as other countries. Her position as a dominant military power and the dollar’s status as the de facto world currency has allowed us to ignore reality for a long time. But in the end, facts always rule, and spin drools. As a reader wrote in an email to me last night: there is no such thing as a “FOMC-insured U.S. Stock Market Account.” Everybody should remember that as this current rally runs its course. |