Thursday, 31 July 2014

30 Jul 2014 AMC - Market ended mixed as FOMC tapers another $10b


30 Jul 2014 AMC - Market ended mixed as FOMC tapers another $10b
Market Summary 




European Markets Closing Prices
European markets are now closed; stock markets across Europe performed as follows:
  • UK's FTSE: -0.5%
  • Germany's DAX: -0.6%
  • France's CAC: -1.2%
  • Spain's IBEX: + 0.3%
  • Portugal's PSI: -3.3%
  • Italy's MIB Index: -0.9%
  • Irish Ovrl Index: -0.7%
  • Greece ASE General Index: -0.1%

Before Market Opens 
S&P futures vs fair value: +7.20. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +23.00.
The S&P 500 futures trade seven points above fair value.

Asian markets ended the day on a mostly higher note. Japan's weak preliminary Industrial Production report (-3.3% month-over-month versus expected -1.0%) prompted the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry to lower its industrial assessment.
  • In other data: 
    • South Korea's Industrial Production rose 2.9% month-over-month (expected 0.7%, previous -2.8%), while the year-over-year reading increased 0.6% (consensus 0.8%, previous -2.1%). Separately, Retail Sales ticked up 0.3% month-over-month (forecast 0.6%, prior 1.4%) 
    • New Zealand's Building Consents increased 3.5% month-over-month (previous -4.4%) 
------
  • Japan's Nikkei added 0.2%, closing at its best level in more than six months. Solid earnings reports provided support with Mitsubishi Electric rallying 3.4% following its beat and Honda Motor gained 3.1% after providing upbeat guidance. 
  • Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.4%, gaining for a seventh straight day as trade contends with its best levels in more than six years. Property stocks continued to see strength as Hang Lung Properties and Sun Hung Kai Properties jumped 3.4% and 3.2%, respectively. 
  • China's Shanghai Composite slipped 0.1% for the first time in seven sessions. Real estate giant Poly Real Estate was a laggard, tumbling 5.5%. 
Major European indices trade in mixed fashion with Spain's IBEX (+0.9%) showing relative strength. The European Central Bank released its quarterly lending survey, which indicated that lending standards eased during the second quarter with positive loan demand observed in all loan categories.
  • Participants received several data points: 
    • Eurozone Business and Consumer Survey ticked up to 102.2 from 102.1 (expected 101.8) as Business Climate held steady at 0.2, as expected, while Consumer Confidence slipped to -8.0 from -7.5, as expected. Separately, Industrial Sentiment ticked up to -4.0 from -4.3 (consensus -5.0) 
    • French Consumer Confidence held steady at 86, as expected 
    • Spain's GDP rose 0.6% quarter-over-quarter (expected 0.5%, previous 0.4%), while the year-over-year reading increased 1.2% (consensus 1.1%, prior 0.5%). Separately, CPI slipped 0.3% year-over-year (expected 0.2%, prior 0.1%) 
------
  • Great Britain's FTSE is lower by 0.1% with miners showing weakness. Antofagasta is lower by 2.9% and BHP Billiton holds a loss of 1.3%. Barclays leads with a gain of 4.3% after providing an upbeat on its cost-cutting efforts. 
  • In France, the CAC holds a loss of 0.1%. Industrials Legrand and Schneider Electric underperform with respective losses of 1.4% and 2.9%. Airbus is the top performer, up 4.3%. 
  • Germany's DAX is higher by 0.2% with support from drug makers. Bayer and Merck are higher by 2.9% and 2.2%, respectively. Infineon Technologies has tumbled 4.3% despite reporting strong results. 
  • Spain's IBEX outperforms with an increase of 0.9% with banks showing strength. Bankinter, BBVA, and Caixabank are up between 1.5% and 1.9%. 
Also of note, trading in Russian equities has been suspended with the MICEX index up 2.0% at the time of the halt.



U.S. Equities
  • Equity futures suggest strong gains at the open following the better than expected Q2 GDP-Adv. (4.0% actual v. 3.2% expected)
  • Technology is set to outperform with Twitter (TWTR) up ~%% following its earnings beat
  • The VIX (13.28) finished yesterday's session with its second highest close since May
  • MBA Mortgage Index (-2.2%)
  • ADP Employment Change (218K actual v. 215K expected)
  • GDP Deflator-Adv (2.0% actual v. 2.1% expected)
    • S&P Futures +9 @ 1972
    • Dow Futures +62 @ 16,907
    • Nasdaq Futures +24 @ 3976
Asia
  • Markets gained across most of Asia
  • Japan's weak preliminary industrial production (-3.3% MoM actual v. -1.0% MoM expected) data prompted the Ministry of Economy to lower its industrial assessment
  • Japan's Nikkei (+0.2%) closed at its best level in more than six months
  • Hong Kong's Hang Seng (+0.4%) gained for a seventh straight day as trade contends with its best levels in more than six years
  • China's Shanghai Composite (-0.1%) slipped for the first time in seven sessions
  • India's Sensex (+0.4%) ended just shy of all-time highs
  • Australia's ASX (+0.6%) finished at its best levels since June 2008





Market Internals




Market Internals -Technical-
The Nasdaq closed up 20 (+0.45%) at 4463, the S&P 500 closed flat at 1970, and the Dow closed down 32 (-0.19%) at 16880. Action came on slightly above average volume (NYSE 667 mln vs. avg. of 651; NASDAQ 1734 mln vs. avg. of 1669), with mixed advancers/decliners  (NYSE 1214/1914, NASDAQ 1599/1106) and new highs outpacing new lows (NYSE 91/55, NASDAQ 56/54).

Relative Strength:
Russia-RSX +2.56%, Social Media-SOCL +2.14%, Volatility-VXX +1.61%, Eastern Europe-ESR +1.61%, Internet Composite-FDN +1.52%, Base Metals-DBB +1.47%, Biotechnology-XBI +1.44%, Spain-EWP +0.98%, South Korea-EWY +0.75%, Netherlands-EWN +0.65%.

Relative Weakness:
Turkey-TUR -1.95%, Cotton-BAL -1.92%, Poland-EPOL -1.86%, Chile-ECH -1.85%, Indonesia-IDX -1.69%, Utilities-XLU -1.69%, South Africa-EZA -1.65%, Nuclear Energy-NLR -1.47%, Copper Miners-COPX -1.44%, 20+ Year Treasuries-TLT -1.39%.





Leaders and Laggards









Technical Updates








Briefing's Commentaries

Closing Market Summary: Q2 GDP Beats; Small Caps Rally; and Fed Tapers Again
The stock market ended the Wednesday session on a mixed note with small caps displaying relative strength. The Nasdaq Composite (+0.5%) and Russell 2000 (+0.4%) registered modest gains, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (-0.2%) and S&P 500 (+0.01%) underperformed.

Despite the mixed finish, the key indices traded higher across the board at the start of the session after the advance reading of second quarter GDP surpassed estimates (4.0% versus Briefing.com consensus 3.2%). However, the early strength was short-lived with the S&P 500 sliding into red during the opening 90 minutes of action.

One could argue that the inability to rally on a strong data point and better than expected earnings resulted from concerns about a potential fed funds rate hike taking place sooner than expected. To that point, Treasuries spent the session in a steady retreat and finished near their lows. The 10-yr note fell 26 ticks, sending its yield higher by nine basis points to 2.55%.

However, the jitters about a swift rate hike should have been partially calmed by today's policy statement from the FOMC, which was very similar to the June directive. The Fed lowered the size of monthly asset purchases to $25 billion and reiterated that participants saw continued "significant underutilization" of labor resources. Household spending was described as "rising moderately," while the housing sector continued recovering at a slow pace.

Despite the familiar undertone, there was a slight change in the portion of the statement dealing with inflation. Specifically, the directive acknowledged that "the likelihood of inflation running persistently below two percent has diminished somewhat," while the prior statements focused on the potential risks stemming from inflation running below the two-percent target.

The statement did not receive unanimous support with Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser dissenting due to his view that the guidance is time dependent and does not reflect the considerable economic progress that has been made already.

When the dust settled, five sectors posted gains, while the other five finished in the red. Cyclical groups displayed broad strength at the open, but finished the trading day on a mixed note.

Heavily-weighted consumer discretionary (+0.6%) and financial (+0.4%) sectors hovered near their flat lines into the afternoon, but surged to the top of the leaderboard shortly after the release of the FOMC statement. In the financial sector, American Express (AXP 90.91, -0.80) lost 0.9% despite reporting better than expected earnings.

Meanwhile, the discretionary space was supported by retailers, while homebuilders slumped. The SPDR S&P Retail ETF (XRT 85.07, +0.83) added 1.0%, narrowing its July loss to 2.0%. For its part, the iShares Dow Jones US Home Construction ETF (ITB 22.59, -0.17) lost 0.8% as higher interest rates weighed.

Elsewhere, the industrial sector (+0.1%) was a notable laggard during the early portion of the session, but sprung to life in the afternoon. Transport stocks fueled the move with the Dow Jones Transportation Average climbing 0.7%. CH Robinson (CHRW 68.53, +4.12) paced the rally with a 6.4% gain after beating bottom-line estimates.

Also of note, the top-weighted sector—technology (+0.3%)—received support from chipmakers as the PHLX Semiconductor Index advanced 1.0%, which gave a boost to the Nasdaq Composite.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq also benefitted from a rally among biotech names. Amgen (AMGN 130.01, +6.70) surged 5.4% following its strong earnings and guidance, while the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB 257.25, +2.47) rose 1.0%.

The outperformance of biotech helped keep the health care sector (+0.4%) in the green even as some large cap components displayed relative weakness. WellPoint (WLP 112.47, -0.08) shed 0.1% despite beating estimates, while Humana (HUM 120.34, -7.18) lost 5.6% in reaction to an in-line report.

Another countercyclical sector—utilities—ended at the bottom of the leaderboard with a loss of 1.7% that was likely due in part to the increase in Treasury yields.

Today's participation was an improvement when compared to recent sessions, but remained below average with less than 670 million shares changing hands at the NYSE.

Economic data included the weekly MBA Mortgage Index, ADP Employment Change, and the Q2 GDP report:
  • Second quarter GDP increased 4.0% in the advance release after declining an upwardly revised 2.1% (from -2.9%) in Q1 2014. The Briefing.com consensus expected GDP to increase 3.2% 
    • Real final sales, which fell 1.0% in the first quarter, rebounded and increased 2.3%. That is still well off the pace from the second half of 2013 when real final sales increased 3.0% and 3.9%, respectively, in the third and fourth quarters 
    • Simply put, all the predictions for 2014 economic growth that were based on the second half 2013 rebound proved to be faulty. Last year's gains were not sustainable 
    • Inventories added 1.66 percentage points to GDP growth in second quarter after subtracting 1.16 percentage points in Q1 2014 
  • According to the ADP National Employment Report, employment in the nonfarm private business sector rose 218K in July, while the Briefing.com consensus expected an increase of 215K 
    • The June reading was left unrevised at 281,000 
  • The weekly MBA Mortgage Index fell 2.2% to follow last week's increase of 2.4% 
Tomorrow, the July Challenger Job Cuts will be announced at 7:30 ET, while weekly initial claims (Briefing.com consensus 310K) and the Q2 Employment Cost Index (consensus 0.4%) will be released at 8:30 ET. The day's data will be topped off with the 9:45 ET release of the Chicago PMI for July (expected 61.8).
  • S&P 500 +6.6% YTD 
  • Nasdaq Composite +6.9% YTD 
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average +1.8% YTD 
  • Russell 2000 -1.5% YTD

Commodities

Closing Commodities: Crude Falls 0.6%, Drops Below $100/Barrel In Electronic Trade
  • Aug gold fell into negative territory in morning action as the dollar index strengthened after an advance GDP reading showed a 4.0% expansion during Q2 (Briefing.com consensus expected GDP to increase 3.2%). The move lower also came ahead of the latest policy statement from the FOMC released at 14:00 ET. The yellow metal slipped from its session high of $1303.00 per ounce and spent the remainder of the session trading in the red. It eventually settled with a 0.3% loss at $1294.80 per ounce. 
  • Sep silver popped to a session high of $20.67 per ounce in morning trade after trading as low as $20.48 per ounce earlier in the session. The move was short lived, however, as it quickly retreated towards the unchanged line and settled just 1 cent higher at $20.59 per ounce.
  • Sep crude oil fell for a third consecutive session despite better-than-anticipated inventory data. The energy component advanced to a session high of $101.67 per barrel when the EIA reported that crude oil inventories had a draw of 3.7 mln barrels when consensus called for a draw of 1.2-1.5.
  • However, prices quickly turned negative and trended lower for the remainder of the session, leaving crude oil to settle with a 0.6% loss at $100.27 per barrel.
  • In electronic trade, Sept crude oil just hit a new LoD of $99.57/barrel and is -1.3% at $99.63/barrel 
  • Sep natural gas traded in the red today, dipping to a session low of $3.75 per MMBtu. Unable to find buying support, it settled with a 1.0% loss at $3.78 per MMBtu.
COMEX Metals Closing Prices
  • Aug gold fell $3.40 to $1294.80/oz 
    • Gold fell into negative territory from its session high of $1303.00 in morning action as the dollar index strengthened after an advance GDP reading showed a 4.0% expansion during Q2 (Briefing.com consensus expected GDP to increase 3.2%). In addition, investors await the latest policy statement from the FOMC expected to come out at 14:00 ET. The yellow metal spent the remainder of the session trading in the red and settled with a 0.3% loss. 
  • Sep silver rose $0.01 to $20.59/oz 
    • Silver popped to a session high of $20.67 in morning pit trade after trading as low as $20.48 earlier in the session. However, it quickly retreated towards the unchanged line and eventually settled just 1 cent higher. 
  • Sep copper rose 2 cents to $3.24/lbs



  • CBOT Agriculture and Ethanol/ICE Sugar Closing Prices
    • Sep corn settled unchanged at $3.62/bushel 
    • Sep wheat rose 7 cents to $5.28/bushel
    • Aug soybeans fell 7 cents to $12.22/bushel 
    • Sep ethanol fell 4 cents to $2.04/gallon 
    • Sep sugar (#16 (U.S.)) rose 0.03 of a penny to 24.68 cents/lbs

    NYMEX Energy Closing Prices
  • Sep crude oil fell $0.64 to $100.27/barrel 
    • Crude oil fell for a third consecutive session despite better-than-anticipated inventory data. The energy component advanced to a session high of $101.67 on the EIA report that showed crude oil inventories had a draw of 3.7 mln barrels when a smaller draw of 1.2-1.5 mln barrels was expected. However, prices quickly turned negative and trended lower for the remainder of the session. Crude oil eventually settled with a 0.6% loss. 
  • Sep natural gas fell 4 cents to $3.78/MMBtu 
    • Natural gas traded in the red today, dipping to a session low of $3.75. Unable to find buying support, it settled with a 1.0% loss. 
  • Sep heating oil fell 1 cent to $2.90/gallon 
  • Sep RBOB fell 2 cents to $2.82/gallon



  • Treasuries

    Yields Surge as GDP Prints 4.0% and the Fed Tapers: 10-yr: -25/32..2.555%..USD/JPY: 102.84..EUR/USD: 1.3391
    • Treasuries were hit hard, pressured by the stronger than expected Q2 GDP-Adv. (4.0% actual v. 3.2% expected) reportClick here to see an intraday yields chart.
    • Other data saw the MBA Mortgage Index dip -2.2% and ADP Employment Change print 218K (215K expected). 
    • Maturities held small losses into this morning's release before the better than expected growth pressed the complex to its lows.
    • Steady selling would persist into this afternoon's average $29 bln 7y note auction
    • The auction drew 2.250% (WI 2.245%) and a 2.58x bid/cover. A light direct bid (15.2%) was supported by a larger than usual indirect takedown (47.3%), leaving primary dealers with 37.5% of the supply. 
    • Treasuries drifted near session lows into the FOMC rate decision, which produced another $10 bln taper to the Fed's asset purchase program
    • Notable were comments indicating "a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant underutilization of labor resources" and that "the likelihood of inflation running persistently below 2 percent has diminished somewhat." 
    • Maturities finished near their worst levels of the session following an initial post-FOMC bid. 
    • Up front, the 2y finished @ 0.559%, its highest since May 2011. The yield threatened the 0.600% level, but was unable to retake the mark.
    • In the belly, the 5y climbed +8.3bps to 1.769%. Action closed at a four-month high after probing 1.800% and flirting with its highest close of 2014. 
    • The 10y jumped +9.2bps to 2.554%. Today's selling ran the benchmark yield to a three-week high as action reclaimed the 50 dma. 
    • At the long end, the 30y added +8.8bps to 3.310%. Weakness wiped away nearly two weeks of gains, and ran the yield off a 13-month low. Resistance near 3.340% will be watched closely in the days ahead. 
    • Selling swung the curve steeper as the 2-10-yr spread widened to 199.5bps and the 5-30-yr spread expanded to 154bps.
    • Precious metals saw a mixed finish as gold slipped -$3 to $1295 and silver gained +$0.03 to $20.61. 
    • Data: Challenger Job Cuts (7:30), initial and continuing claims, Employment Cost Index (8:30), and Chicago PMI (9:45).

    On other news.... 

    FOMC Notable Statements
    • Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in June indicates that growth in economic activity rebounded in the second quarter. Labor market conditions improved, with the unemployment rate declining further. However, a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant underutilization of labor resources. Household spending appears to be rising moderately and business fixed investment is advancing, while the recovery in the housing sector remains slow. Fiscal policy is restraining economic growth, although the extent of restraint is diminishing. Inflation has moved somewhat closer to the Committee's longer-run objective. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.
    • Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic activity will expand at a moderate pace, with labor market indicators and inflation moving toward levels the Committee judges consistent with its dual mandate. The Committee sees the risks to the outlook for economic activity and the labor market as nearly balanced and judges that the likelihood of inflation running persistently below 2 percent has diminished somewhat.
    • $10 bln taper remains the same.
    • The Committee is maintaining its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency mortgage-backed securities and of rolling over maturing Treasury securities at auction.Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Janet L. Yellen, Chair; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Lael Brainard; Stanley Fischer; Richard W. Fisher; Narayana Kocherlakota; Loretta J. Mester; Jerome H. Powell; and Daniel K. Tarullo. Voting against was Charles I. Plosser who objected to the guidance indicating that it likely will be appropriate to maintain the current target range for the federal funds rate for "a considerable time after the asset purchase program ends," because such language is time dependent and does not reflect the considerable economic progress that has been made toward the Committee's goals.Statement Regarding Purchases of Treasury Securities 



    Currencies 

    Dollar Hits 10-Month High: 10-yr: -20/32..2.539%..USD/JPY: 102.79..EUR/USD: 1.3392
    • The Dollar Index remains on session highs near 81.50 after the Fed announced another $10 bln taper to its asset purchase programClick here to see a daily Dollar Index chart.
    • Today's advance has the greenback on track to close at levels last seen in September.
    • Notable excerpts from the statement include comments suggesting "a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant underutilization of labor resources" and that "inflation has moved somewhat closer to the Committee's longer-run objective."
    • EURUSD is -25 pips @ 1.3385 as trade slides to its lowest levels in nearly nine months. Selling over the course of July has wiped away roughly 300 pips while pushing trade below key 1.3500 support. Eurozone data is heavy as CPI Flash Estimate and the unemployment rate accompany French consumer spending and German retail sales and unemployment change. 
    • GBPUSD is -30 pips @ 1.6915 as sellers remain in control for a ninth time in ten sessions. Today's weakness has the pair contending with support in the 1.6900 region as action dips to levels last seen in the middle of June. The 100 dma provides further help near 1.6855. Britain's Nationwide Home Price Index is set for tomorrow.
    • USDCHF is +20 pips @ .9090 as action flirts with its best levels of 2014. An early KOF Economic Barometer miss has aided by bulls, but trade remains dictated by the euro thanks to the Swiss National Bank's EURCHF1.20 floor.
    • USDJPY is +65 pips @ 102.75 as action looks almost surely to put in a ninth straight gain. The overnight industrial production miss in Japan got the buying started with trade managing to briefly probe three and a half-month highs above 103.00 in the aftermath of the Fed decision. Japanese data is limited to average cash earnings. 
    • AUDUSD is -45 pips @ .9335 as action flirts with its lowest close since the beginning of June. Today's weakness has broken .9350 support before producing a test of the 100 dma (.9315). Australia's building approvals and import prices will cross the wires tonight. 
    • USDCAD is +40 pips @ 1.0890 as trade rallies to a one and a half-month high. A hotter than expected Raw Materials Price Index (1.1% MoM actual v. 0.6% MoM expected) print has been unable to deter the bulls as action probes resistance defended by the 100 dma. Canada's GDP is scheduled for release tomorrow.


    Next Week In View



    Economic Commentaries

    Economic Summary: Fed tapers by $10 bln as expected; Q2 GDP 4.0%, better than expected; ADP roughly in line with estimates
    Economic Data Summary:
    • Weekly MBA Mortgage Applications -2.2% vs Briefing.com consensus of ; Last Week was 2.4%
    • July ADP Employment Change 218K vs Briefing.com consensus of 215K; June was 281K
    • Q2 GDP - Advance 4.0% vs Briefing.com consensus of 3.2%; Q1- Final was revised to -2.1% from -2.9%
      • Real final sales, which fell 1.0% in the first quarter, rebounded and increased 2.3%. That is still well off the pace from the second half of 2013 when real final sales increased 3.0% and 3.9%, respectively, in the third and fourth quarters.\
      • Simply put, all the predictions for 2014 economic growth that were based on the second half 2013 rebound proved to be faulty. Last year's gains were not sustainable. 
    • Q2 Chain Deflator - Advance 2.0% vs Briefing.com consensus of 2.1%; Q1- Final was 1.3%
    Fed/Treasury Events Summary:
    • $10 bln taper to $25 bln
    • Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in June indicates that growth in economic activity rebounded in the second quarter. Labor market conditions improved, with the unemployment rate declining furtherr. However, a range of labor market indicators suggests that there remains significant underutilization of labor resources. Household spending appears to be rising moderately and business fixed investment is advancing, while the recovery in the housing sector remains slow. Fiscal policy is restraining economic growth, although the extent of restraint is diminishing. Inflation has moved somewhat closer to the Committee's longer-run objective. Longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable.
    • Consistent with its statutory mandate, the Committee seeks to foster maximum employment and price stability. The Committee expects that, with appropriate policy accommodation, economic activity will expand at a moderate pace, with labor market indicators and inflation moving toward levels the Committee judges consistent with its dual mandate. The Committee sees the risks to the outlook for economic activity and the labor market as nearly balanced and judges that the likelihood of inflation running persistently below 2 percent has diminished somewhat.
    Upcoming Economic Data:
    • July Challenger Job Cuts due out Thursday at 7:30 (Briefing.com consensus of ; June was -20.2%)
    • Weekly Initial Claims due out Thursday at 8:30 (Briefing.com consensus of 310K; Last Week was 284K)
    • Weekly Continuing Claims due out Thursday at 8:30 (Briefing.com consensus of 2.525 M ; Last Week was 2.500 M )
    • Q2 Employment Cost Index due out Thursday at 8:30 (Briefing.com consensus of 0.4%; Q1 was 0.3%)
    • July Chicago PMI due out Thursday at 9:45 (Briefing.com consensus of 61.8; June was 62.6)
    Other International Events of Interest
    • Japan's weak preliminary industrial production (-3.3% MoM actual v. -1.0% MoM expected) data prompted the Ministry of Economy to lower its industrial assessment



    Jason's Commentaries

    At the start of the market, the market had a bullish start which quickly lost it until 12pm ET, which it held flat until the FOMC statements. As expected, the FOMC tapers another $10b. Yields spiked while the market started to cover their initial shorts. After the FOMC, we're having the employment report coming out on the Friday. Utilities and Staples were the largest laggard last night. Internals were slightly mixed to the upside. However, futures were already down more than 0.6% before Thursday open. It seems that the market is likely to start of with a bearish mood. However, I believe that the market is likely to regain some losses before the employment report.








    Market Call: DOWN
    Date: 31 July 2014

    Wednesday, 30 July 2014

    29 Jul 2014 AMC - Market headed down as FOMC statement looms


    29 Jul 2014 AMC - Market headed down as FOMC statement looms
    Market Summary 



    European Markets Closing Prices
    European markets are now closed; stock markets across Europe performed as follows:
    ·         UK's FTSE: + 0.3%
    ·         Germany's DAX: + 0.6%
    ·         France's CAC: + 0.4%
    ·         Spain's IBEX: + 0.1%
    ·         Portugal's PSI: -1.4%
    ·         Italy's MIB Index: + 0.7%
    ·         Irish Ovrl Index: + 0.8%
    ·         Greece ASE General Index: -1.5%

    Before Market Opens 



    S&P futures vs fair value: +3.60. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +8.70.
    The S&P 500 futures trade four points above fair value.

    Markets in Asia ended on a mostly higher note. 
    ·         In economic data: 
    o    Japan's Retail Sales fell 0.6% year-over-year (expected -0.5%, previous -0.4%), while Household Spending dropped 3.0% year-over-year (expected -3.8%, prior -8.0%). Separately, the Unemployment Rate ticked up to 3.7% from 3.5% (consensus 3.5%) 
    o    South Korea's Current Account surplus narrowed to $6.32 billion from $7.47 billion 
    o    Australia's HIA New Home Sales rose 1.2% month-over-month (previous -4.3%) 
    ------ 
    ·         Japan's Nikkei rallied 0.6% to a six-month high. Nissan Motor gained 1.9% following its earnings beat. 
    ·         Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.9%, advancing for a sixth straight session, and finishing at levels last seen in November 2010. Property stocks saw robust gains with Sun Hung Kai Properties and Cheung Kong Holdings up 4.4% and 2.9%, respectively. 
    ·         China's Shanghai Composite added 0.2%, climbing to a seven-month high with shares rallying for the sixth session in a row. Technology shares led with China National Software adding 5.3%. 
    Major European indices trade higher across the board with Italy's MIB (+1.3%) in the lead. 
    ·         Economic data was limited: 
    o    Germany's Import Price Index ticked up 0.2% month-over-month, as expected (previous 0.0%) 
    o    Great Britain's Mortgage Approvals came in at 67,000 (expected 63,000, previous 62,000), while Mortgage Lending rose GBP2.10 billion (consensus GBP1.90 billion, previous GBP2.30 billion). Separately, Net Lending to Individuals increased GBP2.50 billion (expected GBP2.60 billion, previous GBP3.00 billion) and BoE Consumer Credit increased GBP420 million (expected GBP800 million, previous GBP720 million) 
    o    Spain's Retail Sales ticked up 0.2% year-over-year (expected 1.1%, previous 0.5%) 
    ------ 
    ·         Great Britain's FTSE is higher by 0.6% with support from GKN. The auto parts supplier has jumped 6.4% after beating earnings estimates. On the flip side, BP is lower by 1.5% after missing revenue estimates. Peer Petrofac holds a loss of 1.0%. 
    ·         Germany's DAX sports an advance of 0.8%. Financials outperform with Deutsche Boerse and Muenchener Re up 1.9% and 0.7%, respectively. 
    ·         France's CAC trades up 0.9%. Tire maker Michelin is higher by 3.3% after reporting a 13% increase in its first-half profit. Carmaker Renault holds a loss of 3.1% after disappointing with its sales figures. 
    ·         Italy's MIB outperforms with a gain of 1.3%. Banca di Milano Scarl, Banco Popolare, BMPS, and Unicredit display gains between 1.5% and 3.2%.



    U.S. Equities

    ·         Futures indicate a firm open
    ·         The DJIA and S&P 500 remain within striking distance of all-time highs while the Nasdaq holds just off its best level in more than 16 years
    ·         The VIX (12.56) contends with resistance near 13.00
    o    S&P Futures +4 @ 1977
    o    Dow Futures +45 @ 16,961
    o    Nasdaq Futures +8 @ 3968 
    Asia

    ·         Markets gained across most of Asia
    ·         Japanese data was mixed as household spending (-3.0% YoY actual v. -3.7% YoY expected) beat and retail sales (-0.6% YoY actual v. -0.4% YoY expected) missed
    ·         Australia's HIA New Home Sales climbed 1.2% MoM
    ·         Japan's Nikkei (+0.6%) rallied to a six-month high
    ·         Hong Kong's Hang Seng (+0.9%) advanced for a sixth straight session to finish at levels last seen in November 2010
    ·         China's Shanghai Composite (+0.2%) climbed to a seven-month high as shares rallied for a sixth session
    ·         Australia's ASX (+0.2%) closed at its best level in more than six years




    Market Internals




    Market Internals -Technical-
    The S&P 500 closed down 9 (-0.45%) at 1970, the Dow closed down 70 (-0.42%) at 16912, and the Nasdaq closed down 2 (-0.05%) at 4443. Action came on mixed volume (NYSE 615 mln vs. avg. of 649; NASDAQ 1960 mln vs. avg. of 1664), with mixed advancers/decliners  (NYSE 1241/1877, NASDAQ 1366/1322) and new highs outpacing new lows (NYSE 106/50, NASDAQ 71/61).

    Relative Strength: 
    Biotechnology-XBI +3.28%, Telecommunications-IYZ +3.22%, Natural Gas-UNG +1.54%, Biotechnology-IBB +1.14%, South Korea-EWY +1.09%, Hong Kong-EWH +1.01%, Heating Oil-UHN +0.92%, Japan-EPP +0.16%, Netherlands-EWN +0.06%, Indian Rupee-ICN +0.05%.

    Relative Weakness: 
    Thailand-THD -2.39%, Junior Gold Miners-GDXJ -2.34%, Poland-EPOL -2.29%, Sugar-SGG -2.14%, Base Metals-DBB -2.11%, Russia-RSX -2.05%, Greece-GREK -1.91%, Eastern Europe-ESR -1.88%, Grains-JJG -1.82%, Transportation-IYT -1.31%.






    Leaders and Laggards









    Technical Updates








    Briefing's Commentaries



    Closing Market Summary: Stocks Slip Amid Escalating Sanctions Against Russia
    The stock market ended the Tuesday session on a lower note after generally upbeat earnings took the back seat to geopolitical concerns. The S&P 500 (-0.5%) and Nasdaq Composite (-0.1%) ended on their lows, while the Russell 2000 (+0.3%) displayed relative strength.

    Once again, market participants were focused on quarterly reports in the early going, but geopolitical worries overshadowed the impact of mostly better than expected earnings. Specifically, equities retreated after it was reported that European EU officials have prepared the new set of sanctions against Russia. The imposition of new sanctions may pique concerns about a boomerang effect on the global economy, and Europe in particular, but it is worth noting that the Russian ruble and Market Vectors Russia ETF (RSX 23.85, -0.50) strengthened in reaction to the news.

    The reports of forthcoming sanctions were followed by afternoon headlines from Washington indicating the Treasury Department has added VTB, the Bank of Moscow, and Russian Agriculture Bank to the sanction list. After the news crossed the wires, the RSX and the ruble dropped to fresh lows, as did the S&P 500.

    Nine of ten sectors registered losses with the industrial space (-1.2%) spending the day at the bottom of the leaderboard. The sector was pressured by transport stocks after UPS (UPS 98.86, -3.80) reported disappointing results and guided lower. For its part, the Dow Jones Transportation Average logged its fourth consecutive loss, tumbling 1.4% with 17 of its 20 components ending in the red.

    Unlike the industrial sector, other cyclical groups fared a bit better. Financials (-0.6%) and materials (-0.7%) lagged, while consumer discretionary (-0.3%) and technology (-0.2%) displayed relative strength.

    In the discretionary sector, Honda Motor (HMC 36.02, +0.84) advanced 2.4% after reporting a slim earnings beat. The carmaker underpinned the sector, which also drew strength from retailers. The SPDR S&P Retail ETF (XRT 84.24, 0.00) ended flat.

    Elsewhere, the relative strength of the technology sector kept the broader market from sliding deeper into the red. High-beta chipmakers contributed to the outperformance with the likes of AMD (AMD 3.79, +0.06), Broadcom (BRCM 37.99, +0.27), and Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM 20.55, +0.18) adding between 0.7% and 1.6%.

    Similarly, biotech companies also rallied with the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB 254.78, +2.87) ending higher by 1.1%. Meanwhile, the health care sector settled flat.

    On the upside, only one sector finished in the green. Telecom services (+2.2%) rallied after Windstream (WIN 11.83, +1.30) was cleared by the Internal Revenue Service to spin off its assets into a publically-traded REIT. Peers AT&T (T 36.59, +0.94) and Verizon (VZ 51.97, +0.39) gained 2.6% and 0.8%, respectively on speculation they could also explore conversions into REITs.

    On the fixed income side, Treasuries ended the session with modest gains that pressured the 10-yr yield lower by two basis points to 2.46%.

    Participation was on the light side with 615 million shares changing hands at the NYSE.

    Economic data was limited to the Case-Shiller 20-city Index and the Consumer Confidence report: 
    ·         The Case-Shiller 20-city Home Price Index for May rose 9.3%, while a 10.0% increase had been expected by the Briefing.com consensus 
    o    This followed the previous month's increase of 10.8% 
    ·         The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index spiked to 90.9 in July from an upwardly revised 86.4 (from 85.2), while the Briefing.com consensus pegged the Index at 85.6
    o    Consumer confidence is now at its highest level since October 2007 
    o    The Present Situation Index increased to 88.3 from 86.3 and the Expectations Index rose to 92.7 from 86.4 
    Tomorrow, the weekly MBA Mortgage Index will be released at 7:00 ET, while the ADP Employment Change for July (Briefing.com consensus 215K) will be reported at 8:15 ET. The advance reading of Q2 GDP will be released at 8:30 ET (consensus 3.2%), while the FOMC will reveal its latest policy statement at 14:00 ET. 
    ·         S&P 500 +6.6% YTD 
    ·         Nasdaq Composite +6.4% YTD 
    ·         Dow Jones Industrial Average +2.0% YTD 
    ·         Russell 2000 -1.8% YTD







    Commodities



    Closing Commodities: Oil and gold end the day lower
    ·         Aug gold fell into negative territory after trading as high as $1310.30 per ounce in morning action as the dollar index strengthened. The yellow metal brushed a session low of $1295.50 per ounce and eventually settled with a 0.4% loss at $1298.20 per ounce. 
    ·         Sep silver also pulled back from its session high of $20.79 per ounce set in early morning pit trade and brushed a session low of $20.50 per ounce. It inched slightly higher heading into the close and settled 1 cent higher at $20.58 per ounce.
    ·         Sep crude oil extended yesterday's losses as the stronger dollar index weighed on prices. The energy component spent its entire floor session in the red, trading as low as $100.32 per barrel. Unable to gain buying support, it settled at $100.91 per barrel, or 0.8% lower. 
    ·         Sep natural gas dipped to a session low of $3.74 per MMBtu in morning action and chopped around slightly below the unchanged level. Buyers stepped in during the last hour of floor trade and took prices up as high as $3.83 per MMBtu. Natural gas settled at $3.82 per MMBtu, or 1.3% higher.



    COMEX Metals Closing Prices
      Aug gold fell $5.00 to $1298.20/oz 
    ·         Gold fell into negative territory after trading as high as $1310.30 in morning action as the dollar index strengthened. The yellow metal brushed a session low of $1295.50 and eventually settled with a 0.4% loss. 
      Sep silver rose $0.01 to $20.58/oz 
    ·         Silver also pulled back from its session high of $20.79 set in early morning pit trade and brushed a session low of $20.50. It inched slightly higher heading in the close and settled 1 cent above the unchanged line. 
      Sep copper fell 2 cents to $3.22/lbs




    CBOT Agriculture and Ethanol/ICE Sugar Closing Prices
    ·         Sep corn fell 6 cents to $3.62/bushel 
    ·         Sep wheat fell 14 cents to $5.21/bushel 
    ·         Aug soybeans fell 7 cents to $12.29/bushel 
    ·         Sep ethanol fell 1 cent to $2.08/gallon 
    ·         Sep sugar (#16 (U.S.)) rose 0.07 of a penny to 24.65 cents/lbs








    NYMEX Energy Closing Prices
      Sep crude oil fell $0.77 to $100.91/barrel 
    ·         Crude oil extended yesterday's losses as a stronger dollar index weighed on prices. The energy component spent its entire floor session in the red, trading as low as $100.32. Unable to gain buying support, it settled with a 0.8% loss. 
      Sep natural gas rose 5 cents to $3.82/MMBtu 
    ·         Natural gas dipped to a session low of $3.74 in morning action and chopped around slightly below the unchanged level. However, buyers stepped in during the last hour of floor trade and took prices up as high as $3.83, leaving natural gas to settle with a 1.3% gain. 
      Sep heating oil rose 1 cent to $2.90/gallon 
      Sep RBOB rose 1 cent to $2.86/gallon

    Treasuries




    Yields Fall as Consumer Confidence Hits Seven-Year High: 10-yr: +06/32..2.459%..USD/JPY: 102.09..EUR/USD: 1.3410
    ·         Treasuries finished near their highs, supported by today's strong 5y note auction. Click here to see an intraday yields chart.
    ·         Maturities ticked to their best levels of the day ahead of the cash open before surrendering those gains in response to the strongest consumer confidence reading (90.9 actual v. 85.6 expected, 85.2 previous) in seven years. 
    ·         Post-data selling dropped maturities back onto their respective breakeven lines ahead of the 5y auction. 
    ·         The auction drew 1.720% and a solid 2.81x bid/cover. Strong bids from both indirects (48.2%) and directs (25.9%) left primary dealers with just 25.9% of the supply. A post-auction bid developed, running maturities back near their highs into the cash close.
    ·         A solid bid dropped the 30y -4bps to 3.222%. The yield on the long bond settled at its lowest level in 13 months
    ·         The 10y fell -2.9bps to 2.462%. Today's bid produced the lowest close for the benchmark yield in two months, and puts the May closing low of 2.438% in jeopardy. 
    ·         In the belly, the 5y slipped -1.7bps to 1.686%. Many traders continue to monitor the 1.650% level as both the 50 and 100 dma aid support in the area. 
    ·         Up front, the 2y eased -0.8bps to 0.535%. Early action caused the yield to print at its highest level since May 2011.
    ·         A flatter curve persisted as the 2-10-yr spread narrowed to 192.5bps and the 5-30-yr spread tightened to 153.5bps. 
    ·         Precious metals saw a mixed session as gold fell -$4 to $1299 and silver climbed +0.06 to $20.63. 
    ·         Data: MBA Mortgage Index (7), ADP Employment Change (8:15), GDP-Adv. (8:30), and the FOMC rate decision (14). 
    ·         Auction: $29 bln 7y notes.




    On other news.... 




    Currencies 


    Dollar Sees Sixth Gain in Seven Sessions: 10-yr: +04/32..2.465%..USD/JPY: 102.13..EUR/USD: 1.3407
    ·         The Dollar Index trades on session highs near 80.20 as trade looks to put in its best close in almost six monthsClick here to see a weekly Dollar Index chart.
    ·         The rally off the early July lows near 79.80 has many turning their focus towards the key 81.40 level. 
    ·         EURUSD is -30 pips @ 1.3410 as trade drops to an eight-month low. The single currency hovered little changed into the start of U.S. trade, but has seen a leg lower on headlines indicating European leaders have agreed on further Russian sanctions. A breakdown of the 1.3400 level puts the 1.3300/1.3350 support band in play. German preliminary CPI accompanies Spanish Flash CPI and Spanish Flash GDP. 
    ·         GBPUSD is -45 pips @ 1.6940 as sellers remain in control for the ninth time in ten sessions. Today's weakness comes following the slight net lending to individuals miss, and has pushed action to its lowest level in one and a half months. Many traders are taking note of today's downside breach of the 50 dma as action fights to hold minor support near 1.6900. 
    ·         USDCHF is +30 pips @ .9070 as action flirts with its best close in seven months. The recent ‘golden cross' has many looking for further upside with .9000 acting as support. Swiss data is limited to the KOF Economic Barometer. 
    ·         USDJPY is +30 pips @ 102.15 as buyers hold control for an eighth straight session. The current rally has action testing its best levels since the beginning of July as resistance and both the 100 and 200 dma come under pressure. Japan's preliminary industrial production will cross the wires tonight.
    ·         AUDUSD is -25 pips @ .9380 as trade slips for a third time in four days. Support near .9350 is guarded by the 50 dma. 
    ·         USDCAD is +55 pips @ 1.0850 as trade climbs to its best levels since the middle of June. Today's bid has allowed the pair to reclaim the 200 dma while testing key resistance in the area. Canada's Raw Materials Price Index is due out tomorrow.



    Next Week In View




    Economic Commentaries



    Economic Summary: Consumer Confidence blows past estimates; Fed decision Wednesday at 14:00
    Economic Data Summary:
    ·         May Case Schiller 20 City Index 9.3% vs Briefing.com consensus of 10.0%; April was 10.8%
    ·         July Consumer Confidence 90.9 vs Briefing.com consensus of 85.6; June was 85.2
    o    Historically high equity prices, a reduction in gasoline costs, and improvements in labor conditions all worked in conjunction to boost confidence. However, there was some concern that confidence levels would remain stagnant because the similarly measured University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index declined slightly in its preliminary reading.
    Upcoming Economic Data:
    ·         Weekly MBA Mortgage Applications due out Wednesday at 7:00 (Briefing.com consensus of ; Last Week was 2.4%)
    ·         July ADP Employment Change due out Wednesday at 8:15 (Briefing.com consensus of 215K; June was 281K)
    ·         Q2 GDP - Advance due out Wednesday at 8:30 (Briefing.com consensus of 3.2%; Q1- Final was -2.9%)
    ·         Q2 Chain Deflator - Advance due out Wednesday at 8:30 (Briefing.com consensus of 2.1%; Q1- Final was 1.3%)
    Upcoming Fed/Treasury Events:
    ·         The Treasury will auction off new debt this week. Results of each auction will be at 13:00
    o    Wednesday: $35 bln in 5 year notes
    o    Thursday: $29 bln in 7 year note
    ·         The Fed will begin at two day policy meeting tomorrow.  Policy decision will be announced Wednesday at 14:00 (no press conference or econ projections).



    Jason's Commentaries


    It seems that the market decided to break down from their support levels and headed down last night ahead of the FOMC minutes. Industrials decided to lag again and Utilities was the second worst loser. Healthcare was the only sector that was up. The internals were all supporting the downside movements last night. However, i believe it was mostly the day traders moving the market. The other longer term traders are avoiding the market now as FOMC statements is coming. I believe the FOMC is likely to taper another $10b again to hit their year end target. Today is definitely not the day to be trading before the FOMC...







    Market Call:Abstain
    Date: 30 Jul 2014