Week-In-Review: Bullish Pixie Dust Shows Up… Once Again

May 2016 returnsSloppy Week On Wall Street

Stocks snapped a three week losing streak and rallied after another volatile week on Wall Street. On Monday, stocks rallied 200 points only to give it back and fall 200 points on Tuesday. The market was up and down on Wednesday before falling hard early Thursday morning and breaking key levels of support. Then, the bulls showed up and stocks closed near their highs on Thursday and gapped up on Friday. If that wasn’t enough for you, each day big money piled into one or two sectors which defined the day. On Monday it was the biotechs, Tuesday the transports, Wednesday the financials, Thursday the market was down, and the semiconductors led the market higher on Friday. Welcome to my world, Don’t you just love this market. After all was said and done- the S&P 500 and Dow are trading near their respective 50 DMA lines (resistance) and the 150-200 DMA lines are now important support. If the 50 DMA line becomes resistance the market could easily roll over and fall from here. We also want to note that Steel stocks ($SLX) which led on the way up in Jan/Feb have plunged over the past three weeks – and could lead the market lower if other areas start falling. Without another wave of selling, the market looks like it wants to bounce from here. 
Monday-Wednesday’s Action:
Stocks rallied nicely on Monday as investors showed up and defended key levels of support (50 DMA line) for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and several other important sectors. Overnight, China said industrial production, retail sales and investment data all missed estimates. China also said that measures of money creation and credit growth also came in below estimates. Separately, in his quarterly filings, Warren Buffet said he bought $1 billion of Apple (average price $102) in Q1 2015.
Stocks ended lower on Tuesday as investors continue to digest the latest round of economic and earnings data. On the economic front, the consumer price index (CPI) rose to 0.4%, beating estimates for 0.3%. That was the highest increase since 2013 and was the first real sign that inflation may be increasing. If inflation accelerates from here, that may put pressure on the Fed to raise rates at some distant point in the future. A separate report showed that housing starts picked up at a moderate pace in April and rose to 1.172M, beating estimates for 1.135M. Meanwhile, earnings failed to impress as Home Depot (HD) fell after reporting Q1 results.
On Wednesday, stocks were higher but closed near the lows of the day after the Fed released the minutes of its latest meeting. The minutes showed the Fed would entertain a potential June rate hike of economic conditions improved. The USD rallied hard on the news and a slew of commodities fell. Financial stocks were bid higher all day after the bulls showed up and defended the 50 day moving average.
Thursday & Friday’s Action:
On Thursday, stocks opened lower after the latest round of economic and earnings data was released. Before the open, Wal-Mart ($WMT) beat by 10 cents but that came after the retail giant lowered guidance several times in the past year. Economic data was mixed, jobless claims fell by 16k, to 278, missing estimates for 275k. The Philly Fed Survey fell to negative -1.8, missing estimates for a reading of positive 3. The reading was deeper into negative territory and a big miss. Stocks rallied on Friday as big money rotated into the semiconductor stocks. 
Market Outlook: Sideways
The market is trying to bounce from here as the bulls show up and do their best to defend near term support. It looks like what we saw in November and December before the big sell off in January-February. Economic and earnings data remains less than stellar but all that matters now- is the easy money from global central banks. As always, keep your losses small and never argue with the tape.

Similar Posts

  • Stocks Rally On A Slew Of Economic Data

    Market Outlook- Market In A Confirmed Uptrend:
    The last week of June’s strong action suggests the market is back in a confirmed rally. As our longstanding clients/readers know, we like to filter out the noise and focus on what matters most: market action. That said, the action remains bullish until the major averages and leading stocks violate their respective 50 DMA lines. Until then, the market deserves the bullish benefit of the doubt. Barring some unforeseen event, investors will likely be focusing on the jobs market this week and then turn their attention to Q2 earnings. If you are looking for specific help navigating this market, please contact us for more information.
    Stock Market Research?
    Global Macro Research?
    Want To Follow Trends?
    Learn How We Can Help You!

  • Late Dollar Decline Lifts Stocks

    Around 2pm EST the greenback started to fall and U.S. stocks started to rally. Apple Inc. (AAPL) vaulted +$7.66, or +4.18%, and closed above its 50 DMA line on above average volume. Apple has been a strong leader since the March lows and the fact that it quickly repaired the damage is a bullish sign for this rally. A new crop of high ranked stocks are currently working on new bases (Read:10 Stocks on My Watchlist 12.09.09) as the major averages continue consolidating their recent gains above their respective 50 DMA lines. It was encouraging to see the benchmark S&P 500 bounce off support (shown above) for the fourth time in the past few weeks. To be clear, the bulls deserve the bullish benefit of the doubt until the major averages close below their respective 50 DMA lines. At this point, they are acting well and appear to want to move higher.

  • Worst Thanksgiving Week Since The Great Depression!

    Friday, November 25, 2011 Stock Market Commentary: Risk assets fell during the shortened holiday week as the situation in Europe continues to deteriorate and the latest economic data suggests the global economy may be slowing. This was the worst Thanksgiving week for stocks since 1932! For the week, the standout loser was the small-cap Russell 2000…

  • Holding Pattern Continues As Market Awaits New Year

    Before Thursday’s open, the Labor Department said weekly jobless claims fell to the lowest level since July 2008 which was a healthy sign for the ailing jobs market. Last week, jobless claims fell by -34,000 to 388,000, lower than the median forecast of 415,000 according to Bloomberg News. After the open, the Chicago PMI topped estimates and rose to 68.6 which bodes well for the ongoing economic recovery. At 10 AM EST, the National Association of Realtors (NAR) said their pending home sales index topped estimates and rose +3.5% to 92.2 from a downwardly revised 89.1 in October. Pending home sales indicate pending contracts that have yet to be closed. The market barely budged on the news which reiterates our thesis that the major averages are in a tight holding pattern until 2011. However, the recent 4-month rally in the major averages suggests the economy will continue to improve in the first half of 2011 and, barring some unforeseen event, the risk of a double dip recession is temporarily off the table. Normally, the stock market serves as a leading indicator and a great discounting mechanism for the economy.