DIA

DIA

July Asset Class Performance

Hickey and Walters (Bespoke) submit:
The S&P 500 SPY ETF rallied 6.83% in the month of July. Below is a table highlighting the performance of key ETFs across all asset classes in July (as well as YTD and over the last week). Interestingly, largecaps here in the US outperformed smallcaps, which usually isn't the case during rallies. Growth and value both performed about the same, while Materials, Industrials, and Energy were the best performing sectors. Globally, Italy (EWI) did the best in July with a gain of 18%. France (EWQ) and the UK (EWU) came in second and third with gains of 14.5%. India (INP), Japan (EWJ), and China (FXI) were up the least during the month. Looking at commodities, oil and natural gas were up while gold and silver were down. The aggregate bond market ETF (AGG) was up 0.56% for the month, while long-term Treasuries (TLT) and TIPS (TIP) were down. And with the dollar down, the British Pound (FXB) was up 4.95%, the Euro (FXE) was up 6.57%, and the Yen (FXY) was up 2.24%.Complete Story »

Top 5 Graphs of the Week: U.S., South Korea, Japan, New Zealand

Econ Grapher submits:This week we look at the GDP numbers for Q2 from the US and South Korea. Then we look at the US consumer confidence and Case Shiller housing market data, and finish up with a look at inflation and unemployment in Japan, and New Zealand monetary policy.1. US GDPThe US economy grew 2.4% SAAR in the second quarter (0.6% in normal terms), slightly below consensus 2.5%, and slower than the revised 3.7% in Q1. On an annual basis GDP is up 3.2% vs 2.4% in Q1. The main drivers of growth were residential investment, investment in equipment & software, and inventories; the main detractor was (surprise, surprise) a shrinking of net exports. So overall not a bad result, but probably as good as it gets for now, especially given where much of the US data points are at, there are several indicators (as well as underlying fundamentals e.g. weak housing market) that will make the second half a lot harder. So rumors about the potential for more easing both on the fiscal and monetary policy fronts may end up validated in the second half of this year... watch this space.2. South Korea GDPThe South Korean economy grew 1.5% in the second quarter, slower than the 2.1% recorded in Q1, but above consensus of 1.1%. On an annual basis GDP was up 7.2%, off slightly from 8.1% in Q1, but also above consensus 6.6%. The expansion was driven by strong export-led manufacturing activity and facility investment, but the construction sector was a detractor (driven by a sluggish domestic real estate market). The continued expansion will likely spur the Bank of Korea to raise interest rates again (having increased 25bps to 2.25% early this month). But like all trade driven economies, the Republic of Korea will be closely exposed to the fortunes of the global economy in the second half.3. US Housing Market and Consumer ConfidenceUS consumer confidence fell again in July to 50.4 vs consensus 51.0 and previous 52.9. The drop was led by a fall in the expectations component. On the housing front, the May reading of the S&P Case-Shiller 20-city home price index showed a 3.9% rise year on year (vs 4.1% in April), and a 0.5% monthly gain (vs 0.6% in April). The residual impact of the tax credits continued to underpin house prices. But going into the second half of 2010, the theme of 'this is as good as it gets' will likely ring true in the housing market space also. The fundamentals point to sideways movement at best, and a fall at worst. Unemployment is still high, debt levels compared to house prices are still too high, consumers are still hurting, and interest rates are probably - if anything - going to rise, so this bit remains a key vulnerability for the US economic recovery.4. Japan unemployment and deflationJapan saw a slight easing of deflation on a headline CPI basis, with the annual rate at -0.7% in June vs -0.9% in May, on a core basis the rate also reduced slightly to -1.0% vs -1.2% in May and consensus for -1.1%. So on the deflation front there has been cause for at least a bit of hope with recent trends. On the unemployment side though, the jobless rate rose to 5.3% from 5.2% in May, but there were some positives in the data with payrolls rising 40k in June, vs a fall of -240k in May. The job offer to job seeker ration rose slightly to 0.52 in June from 0.50 in May. So signs are tentatively that inflation and employment are gradually starting to catch up with the trade-driven rebound of economic activity in Japan, but the serious deflation and government debt problems still remain, as do the global vulnerabilities.5. New Zealand monetary policyThe RBNZ (Reserve Bank of New Zealand) increased the official cash rate at its July meeting 25bps to 3.00%, and signaled that further rate rises will likely be on the go-slow. The bank noted that policy normalization may be more moderate going forward, but of course with the caveat of monitoring the economic environment and financial market developments. The New Zealand economy is in recovery mode and is growing, but is still dealing with the damage from the global financial crisis and the deep recession; as well as a spate of finance company collapses, beginning prior to the crisis and still continuing (the banking system remains firmly intact though, as none of the finance companies were particularly systemically important - but a lot of investors got burned). So, in spite of a projected short term (mainly artificial) spike in inflation, the outlook is for a few more interest rate rises this year, as appropriate.SummaryComplete Story »

The Market Continues to Sort Things Out

Jason Cimpl submits: The market activity was discombobulated on Thursday, which kept us on the sideline all day today. I challenged readers to explain how bonds were down, stocks were down, gold was up, oil was up and the euro was up. The number of people who read yesterday's alert were in the thousands, but I didn't get any replies. The market remained tricky again. Today every class was up, except the market was flat and euro traded down. The market is sorting out great corporate profits alongside tepid economic growth.Complete Story »

Today in Commodities: Goodbye July

Matthew Bradbard submits: Based on the last two days' action Crude oil appears to be making attempts at higher ground. We will be late to this move because I do not trust it and need further confirmation before getting bullish exposure for clients. A settlement above $79.50 would be the first hurdle. Natural gas will close 8% higher this week at a fresh one month high. We’re suggesting trailing stops on futures just below the 50 day MA and to purchase October and November 50 cent call spreads.The Dow bounced off the 200 day MA at 10275 and could revisit the week’s highs early next week closer to 10550. We would still suggest selling rallies, thinking a weak jobs number next week could be the nail in the coffin for the bulls. Likewise the S&P pared losses today, but as long as prices settle below 1104, the 200 day MA, we think it remains a sell rallies market. For now clients will be fading rallies and purchasing September puts in the ES.Complete Story »

It Could Be Worse

Trader Mark submits:The market has turned very choppy as we encounter many multiple cross winds on the charts. You have 1100 as a line in the sand, with S&P 1093/1094 being the exponential 50-/200-day moving averages below... but 1113, the 200 day simple moving average above... and then a Fibonacci level up there at 1128, and June intraday highs of 1130. It's not like it was 3-4 weeks ago when there was 'easy money' to be made in grand moves up and down. Hence I'm staying smaller and puttering around the edges waiting for easier intermediate term trades.While the index is relatively benign there is some serious damage going on in quite a few names; my watchlists have some gaping wounds showing in them. I'm going to start with a sleepy stock, Colgate (CL) which usually is going to move 6-7% in a year, spitting out dividends and boring you to death. Not today... it appears a couple of company's in the "consumer NON discretionary" are raising fears of pricing pressure. Translation = deflation potential among America's consumers as weak incomes are causing trade downs and trade "outs". What Colgate usually does in 4-5 months it is doing in one session alone. This would be akin to a high beta name like Baidu moving 35% in a session. (Click to enlarge)Complete Story »

AAII Sentiment Survey: Bullish Sentiment at a Six-Week High

AAII submits: Bullish sentiment rose 7.8 percentage points to 40.0% in the latest AAII Sentiment Survey. The percentage of individual investors who expect stocks to rise over the next six months is at a six-week high. The historical average is 39%.Neutral sentiment, expectations that stock prices will be essentially flat over the next six months, rose 3.9 percentage points to 26.7%. The historical average is 31%.Complete Story »

U.S. Market Investors Needlessly Obsessed with 'Fat Tail' Risk

Sean Maher submits:Investors have recently been obsessed with discounting 'Fat Tail' risks i.e. extreme economic outcomes like deflation and hyperinflation. PIMCO among others has been chasing the investment fashion du jour with a fund protecting investors from a 15% plus downside move. In fact, efforts to protect against another disaster, which helped drive up the relative costs of the most bearish credit derivatives to the highest in two years, look like an incipient bubble to me. One which is being fully taken advantage of by Wall Street. The Taleb 'Black Swan' thesis hasn't just gone mainstream, it's become a cliche. And that's a classic example of behavioral finance in action; earthquake insurance sales soared after the 1994 San Francisco event. Leverage is the common 'facilitator' for these cascading crises within a closely coupled system. While it remains systemically high, it is now gradually reducing in the private sector and recent central bank actions have created effective 'firewalls' between institutions. There are plenty of low probability but investment game changing events to be aware of, from the ongoing Iranian nuclear saga escalating to a North Korean regime implosion. But the acute fear of a rerun of the 2008/9 market slump reflects more the psychological scars inflicted on investors than a strictly objective assessment of the outlook and long-term expected returns. Complete Story »

Surging Profits Coming From Deeper Cuts

Trader Mark submits:This piece in the New York Times touches on a topic that is nothing new for FMMF readers, but is apparently a revelation for readers of the Times judging from its status as the 2nd most popular story of the day. (I only wish comments had not been disabled because I would have loved to have seen the reactions.) While the NYT story focuses on Harley Davidson (HOG), which ironically I just discussed last Thursday.... As I wrote the past 3-4 weeks I expected U.S. multinationals aka the master of the universe to do very well, and they are doing so. People truly underestimate how their top cost (labor) is ever decreasing as U.S. states and indeed nations desperate to employ their people are throwing ever better tax incentives to keep or attract these large corporations; these truly have been the biggest beneficiaries of globalization. While reading through the Harley Davidson report I saw how the company is baiting their labor in one state (Wisconsin) versus the threat of moving the work to another - I've read hundreds upon hundreds of these stories the past 10+ years... and those are simply the companies who bother to keep U.S. employees rather than just go offshore. Most of our states are running huge deficits now but still offering tax incentives to attract or keep corporations in house - that says it all. If you are a large employer, the world is your oyster. Complete Story »

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