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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Pitera who wrote (18294)6/17/2016 7:51:17 AM
From: John Pitera2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Blasher
The Ox

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 

Deal" Lyrics by Robert Hunter and Jerry Garcia

Since it cost a lot to win
and even more to lose
You and me bound to spend some time
wondring what to choose

Goes to show you don't ever know
Watch each card you play
and play it slow
Wait until your deal come round
Don't you let that deal go down

I been gambling here abouts
for ten good solid years
If I told you all that went down
it would burn off both your ears

It goes to show you don't ever know
Watch each card you play
and play it slow
Wait until your deal come round
Don't you let that deal go down

Since you poured the wine for me
and tightend up my shoes
I hate to leave you sittin there
composin lonesome blues

It goes to show you don't ever know
Watch each card you play
and play it slow
Wait until your deal come round
Don't you let that deal go down

Don't you let that deal go down, no
Don't you let your deal go down

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Thu, Jun 16 2016 11:30 AM ET Previous Market Message Next Market Message
FOREIGN STOCKS LEAD US STOCKS LOWER -- EUROPE ETFS TUMBLE -- TEN-YEAR TREASURY YIELD FALLS TO FOUR-YEAR LOW -- FALLING FOREIGN CURRENCIES BOOST DOLLAR -- BOUNCING DOLLAR HURTS OIL, WHILE FALLING YIELDS BOOST GOLD -- BANK STOCKS LEAD U.S. STOCKS LOWER -- S&P 500 MAY RETEST APRIL LOW

By John Murphy
FOREIGN SHARES TUMBLE... Foreign shares continue to fall sharply and are pulling U.S. shares lower. The biggest drops are being seen in developed markets. Chart 1 shows MSCI iShares (EFA) falling to the lowest level in early three months. The biggest losses are being seen in Europe and Japan. Chart 2 shows Europe iShares (IEV) also at a four-month low. Japanese stocks are down 485 points (-3%). Part of the Japanese selling is the result of a surge in the Japanese yen to the highest level in two years versus the dollar. Emerging markets are also selling off. Hong Kong shares are down -2%. Naturally, those losses are spilling over to U.S. stocks. The plunge in global bond yields continues which is pulling money into the relative safety of government bonds. The drop in yields has increased fears about the state of the global economy.

(click to view a live version of this chart)
Chart 1

(click to view a live version of this chart)
Chart 2

TREASURY YIELD TUMBLES TO FOUR-YEAR LOW... Chart 4 shows the 10-Year Treasury Yield falling to a four year low at 1.52%. Treasury yields are being pulled lower by record lows in developed markets all over the world. The German 10-year maturity has fallen into negative territory for the first time in history. The extraordinary plunge in global bond yields is a vote of no confidence in the global economy. As is normally the case, that leads to higher bond prices and lower stock prices. While that may benefit defensive stock groups that pay dividends (like staples and utilities), it's bad for financial shares and banks in particular. Traditional safe havens like gold and the yen are rising today. Economically-sensitive commodities like copper and oil (along with their respective shares) are down. The bouncing dollar has a lot to do with that.

(click to view a live version of this chart)
Chart 3

FALLING EURO AND STERLING BOOST DOLLAR... The flight out of most foreign currencies continues to boost the U.S. dollar. Chart 5 shows the PowerShares Dollar Bullish Fund (UUP) trading at two-week high today. A lot of that gain is coming against European currencies. Chart 5 shows the British Pound falling to a two-month low (on Brexit fears). That's also hurting the Euro. Chart 6 shows the Euro bearing down on its May low and 200-day average. Commodity currencies in Australia and Canada are also falling along with most commodity markets. The rising dollar may also be exerting downside pressure on large cap stocks in the U.S. that depends on export business.

(click to view a live version of this chart)
Chart 4

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Chart 5

(click to view a live version of this chart)
Chart 6

OIL FALLS WHILE GOLD SURGES... My weekend message suggested that the price of crude oil was up against chart resistance and due for a pullback. That appears to be happening. Chart 7 shows the United States Oil Fund (USO) down -2% today. It's fallen back below its 200-day average and threatening to break its 50-day. The 14-day RSI (top of chart) has fallen below the 50 line for the first time in more than two months. That's why energy stocks are among today's biggest losers. By contrast, gold prices are soaring. Chart 8 shows the Gold SPDR (GLD) surging the equivalent of $17 (1.3%) to the highest level since early 2015. Gold shares are also rising. Gold is rallying in the face of a bouncing dollar for two reasons. Falling bond yields are bullish for gold (which is a non-yielding asset). Gold is also being bought as a hedge against falling global stocks.

(click to view a live version of this chart)
Chart 7

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Chart 8

BANK SHARES LEAD MARKET LOWER... Falling bond yields are especially hard on financial stocks, and banks in particular. Bank shares in Europe are leading those stock markets lower. The same is true in the states. Chart 9 shows the KBW Bank Index ($BKX) falling below its May low to a two-month low. They're also showing relative weakness. The KBW/SPX ratio (solid line) has been dropping all month and is also at a two-month low. U.S. stocks are also falling, but not as much as foreign shares. Chart 10 shows the S&P 500 falling below its 50-day average. My weekend message suggested a possible drop to its May low and/or its 200-day moving average. That still appears to be a likely scenario. The unusually dovish comments from the Fed on Wednesday showed a lot more pessimism on the U.S. economy. There also appears to be a growing fear that central banks are losing their ability to boost global stocks or economies. The June 23 British Bexit vote is also causing a lot of global volatility. At least we'll know how that turns out a week from today.

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Chart 9

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Chart 10




To: John Pitera who wrote (18294)6/17/2016 10:13:18 AM
From: Chip McVickar  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
Interesting how gold sold off hard --- how the pound and the euro railed sharply
After the tragedy was announced in the UK

I think this trading was an example of the "Black Box" news triggered trading machines

The other interesting news was Canada looking into Bitcoin's Technology.
These are the first known tests of a digital currency by a major central bank

John -- what do you give to the chances on digital currency on an international basis?
And will currencies like the Swiss Franc and the US dollar still stay safe havens...?

Chip