Archive for the ‘Market Report’ Category

January 14, 2014 – Prices Recover Most of Friday’s Losses

Wednesday, January 15th, 2014

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The week opened with the market moving higher after giving up more than one percent in the previous session. Nevertheless, the size of today’s gains occur more frequently during bear markets.  The diagram shows that the proportion of closes with changes this large account for about 13 percent of all  days during the last two bear markets.  The  frequency during bull markets ranges between five  and eight percent.

As for the following day, losses out number gains in bear as well as bull markets, with prices moving higher only one of every three days.

 

DJIA                     .71 percent

NASDAQ           1.69 percent

S&P500             1.08 percent

 

 

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January 13, 2014 — Market Drop Deeper Than One Percent

Monday, January 13th, 2014

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With all three averages losing more than one percent today, the market experienced its worst day since October. And there is more bad news – the DJIA posted its fourth loss in a row.  Further, looking ahead to tomorrow, the record shows prices declining more often than they recovered on the following day. Our diagram plots these facts, distinguishing between the current and the previous two bull markets.

The frequency of the  DJIA, the NASDAQ, and the S&P500 each losing more than one percent is far greater when prices trend down.  This happened 20 and 25 percent of the time in the last two bear markets; the comparable rate ranges from 6 to 9 percent during bull markets.

DJIA            -1.09 percent

NASDAQ      -1.47 percent

S&P500       -1.26 percent

 

 

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January 10, 2014 — NASDAQ Races Ahead

Sunday, January 12th, 2014

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Our focus on the NASDAQ continues.

The NASDAQ index is now valued at 329 percent of its low on March 9, 2009, a substantial advantage over the DJIA gain of 253 percent.  The S&P500 also lags the NASDAQ - and at 273 percent of its bear market low – it’s performance is only slightly better than the DJIA.

Note that most of the NASDAQ’s superior performance is recent, with its relative gains accelerating in 2012 and 2013.

As a point of interest, note that today’s pattern is unique.  It is the first time since 1950 that the market closed with two up days in a row for the S&P500, combined with the one day gain of the NASDAQ and the third down day in a row by the DJIA,

 

 

DJIA         -.05 percent

NASDAQ   .44 percent

S&P500     .23 percent

 

 

 

 

 

January 9, 2013 – Rare Pattern

Thursday, January 9th, 2014

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The S&P500 moved higher after yesterday’s loss, while the NASDAQ fell after yesterday’s uptick and the DJIA declined for the second day in a row.  This combination occurred just twice since early 1996 – some 4,527 trading days ago.

Today’s diagram reveals these earlier closes happening while there was a pause in the market’s flow, and that shortly thereafter that prices continued their move without changing direction.

 

DJIA                -.11 percent

NASDAQ        -.23 percent

S&P500           .03  percent

 

 

 

 

 

January 8, 2014 — NASDAQ’s Gains Beat the Market

Thursday, January 9th, 2014

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With The NASDAQ continuing to outperform the general market, we compare its performance to the S&P500.  Our diagram plotting the ratio of NASDAQ to S&P500 prices reveals its recent acceleration. It is now at its highest level since the dot-com surge that preceded the 2000 market top. Indeed the NASDAQ has led this market’s increases from its 2009 low.

 

DJIA               -.41 percent

NASDAQ          .30  percent

S&P500         -.02  percent

 

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January 6, 2014 — Slow January Typical

Wednesday, January 8th, 2014

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The NASDAQ and the S&P500 declined for the third straight trading day, posting losses for  every day in  the new year.  Generally, January trades in narrow bands.   Consider the record since the 2009 low point: price changes, as measured by the S&P500 averaged just .10 percent during the first month of the year.  The comparable numbers for the 1997/2000 expansion is .13 percent, and just .04 percent in the 2003/2007 bull market

The comparable bear market numbers are -.01 percent for the 2000/2003 decline, but a much deeper loss of  -.35 percent in the 2007/2009 decline.

Today’s diagram shows the divergence of daily price changes for the entire month of January. It summarizing these rates for expansions and declines.  It reveals that bull markets experience a much narrower band of daily changes than bear markets.   

In bad times, they ranged from losses as deep as  -5.3 percent to gains as high of plus 5.0 percent;  while the comparable changes were -3.8 percent and plus 4.4 percent in bull markets.

Accordingly, the persistence of small daily changes in January is consistent with expectations of further price advaces.

 

 

 

DJIA               -.27 percent

NASDAQ       -.44 percent

S&P500         -.25  percent

 

December 23, 2013 – Strong Market is Stronger for the NASDAQ

Monday, December 23rd, 2013

 

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The NASDAQ continues to soar as it added more than one percent for the third day in a row.  Today’s diagram reveals just how much the NASDAQ has grown relative to the overall market appreciation as measured by the S&P500.  It is well beyond twice the value of the S&P500 – though it remains far below the 3.6 ratio of the market collapse in 2000.

Yet given many other facets of recent days, a cautious attitude may be the preferred mode as this bull market goes higher and higher.  Today’s close comes some 1,206 trading days since the last market bottom in 2009.  That is far greater than the last expansion, which lasted 1,153 days before prices collapsed.

Then there is the rising interest rate on the Ten Year Treasuries.  It has added 8.5 percent since the end of November, causing its yield to rise from 2.7 percent to today’s 2.9 percent. At the same time, the S&P500 added 1.4 percent.  While this pattern may be a short term market dislocation, it nevertheless bears scrutiny because in the long run, interest rates and asset values move in opposite directions.

Nevertheless, the market continues to register new highs, as it did once more today.

DJIA             .45 percent

NASDAQ     1.08 percent

S&P500        .53  percent

 

 

 

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December 20, 2013 — DJIA Closes Higher for Third Day

Sunday, December 22nd, 2013

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Though the Dow’s recent up day record is better than the NASDAQ and the S&P500, its advance is substantially less than those two averages.  Further, the pattern of three consecutive gains for the DJIA combined with just one up day for the NASDAQ and the S&P500 is quite rare.  Only 11 occurred over the last five price cycles, since early 1996.  While four of these came during the 2000/2003 decline, and today’s is the first for this bull market, they averaged  .28 percent of the time in the two previous expansions.

Our diagram plots these closes; it fails to reveal any consistency with respect to turning points.  Yet the outlook for Monday is favorable; in the past prices moved higher on nine days, and declined only once.

DJIA             .26 percent

NASDAQ     1.15 percent

S&P500        .48 percent

 

 

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December 19, 2013 – Small Reaction Follows Surge

Friday, December 20th, 2013

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SADJ DAILY VOLATILITY BY CYC

 

Today’s decline following yesterday’s surge is quite small compared to the S&P500′s mean change when prices, on the next day, move in the opposite direction of the previous close.  These daily changes averaged near one percent in this bull market. That is far greater than today’s S&P500 decline of -.06 percent.

The diagram shows that bull market price variations, when the S&P500 changes direction,  are far smaller than those occurring when prices are trending down.

 

DJIA             .07 percent

NASDAQ      -.29 percent

S&P500       -.06 percent

 

 

 

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December 18, 2013 – Market Soars as Fed Ends Uncertainty

Thursday, December 19th, 2013

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The Fed’s decision to unveil its buying policy – to cut its bond purchases every month until it falls to zero by the end of next year- sent prices to new highs.  The surge surely is contrary to fundamentals –because the Fed’s stepping back   means higher interest rates, and those in turn will lead to reduce the price of all assets.

Nevertheless, this policy shift played well with investors for two reasons.  First, it eliminated uncertainty.  The question of when and how much the Fed will cut back on its purchases had dominated financial commentaries for too long.  Now with that ambiguity removed, the uncertainty resolved, buy, sell and hold decisions will depend only on personal and business fundamentals.

The second, even more telling result is its dampening of inflationary expectations.  Whether correct or not, there are many who believe the Fed’s buying activity results in higher commodity prices.  Now with the Fed’s turn around, the resulting boost in confidence supports expectations of higher security prices.

Yet today’s surge signals caution, for gains this large accompany market declines more often than occur in bull markets.  The diagram shows these large gain days clustering at market bottoms.  Indeed, they account for 6.7 percent and 10.7 percent of all closes during the last two bear markets.  In contrast, this proportion falls to 3.9 percent in the current expansion.  Further, today’s combination is only the third this year, though there were 20 in 2009.  That number has declined in each of the following years.  There were 12 in 2010, 7 in 2011, and just 2 last year.  All told, these early happenings account for nearly a third of the 38 large gain days in the current bull markets.

DJIA             1.84 percent

NASDAQ     1.15 percent

S&P500       1.66 percent

 

 

c max moszer