1. U.S. Futures


Stock Market Today: September 19th - 23rd, 2022

Discussion in 'Stock Market Today' started by bigbear0083, Sep 16, 2022.

  1. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Top of the morning StonkForumers! :coffee: Happy FOMC rate decision day to all and welcome to the new trading day and a fresh start. Here is a quick check on those futures as we are a little under 4 hours from the cash market open.

    GLTA on this Wednesday, September the 21st, 2022!

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  2. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Good Wednesday morning StonkForumers! :thumbsup:

    Here is this morning's pre-market news thread for those of you wanting to get a quick read before today's open-
    [​IMG] <-- click there to read!

    Hope everyone has a great new trading day ahead. ;)
     
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  3. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Morning Lineup - 9/21/22 - Washington in Focus
    Wed, Sep 21, 2022

    Despite some bellicose comments from Putin overnight regarding the war in Ukraine, futures are higher this morning as US Treasury yields are modestly lower and oil prices trade moderately higher. There's also been some positive earnings news as General Mills (GIS) reported better than expected EPS and raised guidance, while Coty (COTY), a smaller company, raised Q1 guidance and sees full-year estimates inline with forecasts. You can read all you want into these early moves, but it's likely to all be irrelevant by the end of the day after the FOMC rate decisions and Powell's press conference.

    The comments above come from the prepared remarks of Citibank CEO Jane Fraser in testimony to Congress today. Mid-term elections are just over a month away, so our elected representatives need some campaign soundbites. What better way to do that than bring a bunch of bank CEOs to DC in person and give them a good scolding? Anyways, the prepared remarks of Citibank CEO Jane Fraser and JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, who will say that “many Americans are being crushed by high inflation eroding real incomes, particularly from higher prices on gas and food,” don’t paint a very positive picture for the economy. Whatever happened to the roaring 20s we were supposed to have after COVID?

    On the same day that bank CEOs present these dour economic forecasts, the FOMC will announce what is expected to be an increase of at least 75 basis points (bps) in the Fed Funds rate which would be the third straight increase of at least that magnitude. Not only that but Powell is widely expected to set the stage for more rate hikes to come. How much more in rate hikes that follow today’s meeting may depend on what the stock market does. In an article earlier this week, Nick Timiraos at the Wall Street Journal reported that Fed officials were unhappy with the market’s positive reaction following the July rate hike of 75 bps. Powell’s displeasure with the market rally was so intense that he scrapped his prepared Jackson Hole speech in favor of a more direct and forceful message that the FOMC would “Keep At It” and do everything it could to bring inflation down.

    Powell got exactly what he wanted from the market following that speech as stocks have been cratering ever since. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari reinforced the Fed’s intent to get stock prices lower when he remarked that “I was actually happy to see how Chair Powell’s Jackson Hole speech was received…I certainly was not excited to see the stock market rallying after our latest Federal Open Market Committee meeting”.

    Investors always discuss the Fed’s dual mandate of maximum employment and stable prices, and lately they have questioned whether the Fed has shifted to focus on a single mandate of stable prices. With Powell taking the unusual step of completely ditching his Jackson Hole speech last month and then Kashkari outright endorsing the negative market reaction to Powell’s speech, the idea of a single mandate Fed – one intent on lower stock prices – now seems accurate. Now, if only we knew how much of a bear market would satisfy the Fed’s new mandate.

    When you have members of the Federal Reserve openly rooting for lower stock prices, you can’t be surprised by the performance of equities this year, but when you put it in a historical perspective, 2022 ranks right up there with the worst of them. Yesterday, the S&P 500 fell more than 1% for the 45th time this year. That works out to 25% of all trading days, or more than one 1% decline a week. Since the five-trading day week started in 1952, the only other years with a higher percentage of 1% down days were 1974, 2002, and 2008. With declines of 29.7%, 23.3%, and 38.5%, respectively in those years, this year’s decline of 19.10% seems pedestrian.

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  4. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Here is a final look at today's market and futures maps, as well as how each sector performed individually at the close on Wednesday, September 21st, 2022.
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    #24 bigbear0083, Sep 21, 2022
    Last edited: Sep 21, 2022
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  5. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    [​IMG]

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  6. stock1234

    stock1234 Well-Known Member

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    They are definitely not done yet, we would need to get extremely lucky to get inflation under control without a pretty big economic slowdown :eek:
     
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  7. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Top of the morning StonkForumers! :coffee: Happy Thursday to all and welcome to the new trading day and a fresh start. Here is a quick check on those futures as we are a little under 3 hours from the cash market open.

    GLTA on this Thursday, September the 22nd, 2022!

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  8. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Good Thursday morning StonkForumers! :thumbsup:

    Here is this morning's pre-market news thread for those of you wanting to get a quick read before today's open-
    [​IMG] <-- click there to read!

    Hope everyone has a great new trading day ahead. ;)
     
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  9. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Morning Lineup - 9/22/22 - Central Bank - Palooza
    Thu, Sep 22, 2022

    Futures are modestly higher following a slew of central bank rate hikes around the world and a currency intervention from the BoJ. Jobless Claims were just released for the latest week and came in at 213K which was 4K below consensus forecasts. Continuing claims were likewise lower than forecasts coming in at a level of 1.379 million versus forecasts for a level of 1.418 million. While yesterday's close at the lows was disheartening for the bulls, when you consider how the market has performed following positive initial reactions to the Fed this year, maybe the Fed day weakness wasn't so bad.

    Years before he became Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell received an undergraduate degree from Princeton, a law degree from Georgetown, was a partner at the Carlye Group, and even served as under-secretary of the Treasury for domestic finance. He’s not only extremely intelligent, but unlike many of his colleagues on the FOMC, he has real-world experience of how the private sector and financial markets work.

    Given his experience, we’re sure Powell is familiar with the yield curve and how its shape impacts the economy. Specifically, when the curve inverts and short-term interest rates rise above long-term rates, it tends to slow down economic activity. While at the Carlyle Group and the private equity firm that he started after (Severn Capital Partners), he probably experienced these slowdowns firsthand and was able to make investments on good terms for his clients.

    The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of the yield curve is the spread between 3-month and 10-year US Treasuries, which still has a modestly positive slope at about 25 basis points (bps). Besides that, another widely followed point on the curve is the spread between the 2-year and 10-year US Treasuries (2s10s). As of yesterday’s close, the 2s10s curve inverted to the tune of 52 bps making it the most inverted it has been since 1982! It was nearly as inverted in April 2000, but back then the maximum point of inversion was 51 bps. Think about that for a minute. A lot of people – maybe up to half- reading this right now weren’t even alive the last time the 2s10s curve was as inverted as it is now! Looking at the chart below, since the mid-1970s, there has never been a period when the 2s10s yield curve was as inverted as it is now that a recession wasn’t just over the horizon.

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    Getting back to Chair Powell, at one point in his press conference yesterday, he responded to one question with the answer that “No one knows whether this process will lead to a recession.” Let’s get this straight. The yield curve is extremely inverted, GDP growth in the first two quarters of this year has already been negative, and forecasts for growth in Q3 have been steadily declining as we close out the month. All this is before the recent unprecedented round of 75 bps rate hikes have had the opportunity to filter through the economy, and yet the Fed Chair is unsure of whether the US economy is either already in or on pace for a recession. Now we know that it’s not a good look for a Fed Chair to forecast a recession as the base case scenario, but does he really believe what he’s saying?
     
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  10. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Here is a final look at today's market and futures maps, as well as how each sector performed individually at the close on Thursday, September 22nd, 2022.
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    #30 bigbear0083, Sep 22, 2022
    Last edited: Sep 22, 2022
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  11. stock1234

    stock1234 Well-Known Member

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    The market is cutting some of its losses here, let's see if the SPX can manage to close green with a late rally :eek:
     
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  12. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Top of the morning StonkForumers! :coffee: Happy Friday to all and welcome to the final trading day of the week and a fresh start. Here is a quick check on those futures as we are a little under 3 hours from the cash market open.

    GLTA on this Friday, September the 23rd, 2022!

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  13. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Morning Lineup - 9/23/22 - Not Another Friday
    Fri, Sep 23, 2022

    Down and down she goes, where she stops, nobody knows. Global equities are tanking this morning as interest rates surge at what, in some cases are unprecedented rates. In Europe's STOXX 600, just 19 stocks are currently higher on the day, and the UK government's 5-year gilt has seen its yield surge by nearly 100 bps this week alone. Over at least the last 30+ years, there has never been that large of an increase in the 5-year gilt yield in such a short period of time. Fixed-income markets around the world are caught in an upward spiral of yields that most of the traders trying to navigate them have never seen. Alongside the surge in rates, stocks are flushing, and while the magnitude of the decline is not as severe as the move in fixed-income markets, good luck convincing anyone to step up and buy on a Friday against a backdrop where the Federal Reserve is getting exactly what it wants. If today’s declines hold at 1% for the S&P 500, it will be the twelfth 1% to close out a week this year which would already rank as the sixth most since at least 1952 and there are still another 14 weeks left in the year.

    With the 2-year yield surging another 7 basis points (bps) on Thursday and another 13 bps this morning, it is trading more than 2.5 standard deviations above its 50-day moving average (DMA). Since 1976, there have only been 288 other trading days where the 2-year yield finished the day more than 2.5 standard deviations above its 50-DMA, and six of those occurrences have been in the last nine trading days!

    The 2-year yield is also on pace to finish the day at ‘overbought’ levels (more than 1 standard deviation above its 50-DMA) for 24 straight trading days. As shown in the chart below, though, overbought closes for the 2-year yield have been a regular occurrence lately, and there have been two other streaks this year that have lasted considerably longer. Maybe a better question is how often this year has the two-year yield not finished a trading day at overbought levels?

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    The answer to that question is less than 25%. Of the 182 trading days this year, there have only been 41 where the two-year yield closed the day less than one standard deviation above its 50-DMA. Flipping that around, the yield has finished the day at overbought levels 77.6% of the time. Going back to 1977, there has never been another year where there was a higher percentage of days that the two-year yield finished the day at overbought levels. The only two years that were even close were 1978 (72.7%) and 1994 (71.6%). There’s still a quarter of the year left, so this percentage could decline, but at the current pace, the pace of relentless increase in the two-year yield has been unprecedented.

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  14. bigbear0083

    bigbear0083 Administrator
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    Here is a final look at today's market and futures maps, as well as how each sector performed individually at the close on Friday, September 23rd, 2022.
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    #34 bigbear0083, Sep 23, 2022
    Last edited: Sep 23, 2022
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  15. stock1234

    stock1234 Well-Known Member

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    Looks like the DOW hit the intraday lows of this ongoing bear market today :eek:
     
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