Foreign Weakness And A Strong Dollar
Stocks have done very little in the "prove it to me" department in recent
sessions. Monday's focus was on slower growth, allowing the string of up and
down equity sessions to spill into the new week. From Bloomberg:
U.S. stocks fell, sending the Standard & Poor's 500 Index below its
200-day moving average after a rout wiped $1.5 trillion from global equities
last week. Brent crude dropped to the lowest level in almost four years,
while the dollar weakened and gold climbed.
The Most Important Chart On Wall Street
While the S&P 500 is more widely followed, we can gain some insight by
looking at the broader New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Composite Index. Regardless
of whether or not the broad NYSE Composite Index can hold above 10,301, we
will learn something one way or another about the market's evolving tolerance
for risk. The arrows in the chart below show levels that have acted as support
and resistance since 2006. The two blue lines intersect near 10,301. As long
as 10,301 holds, the odds of a rally taking place will be higher. If 10,301
fails to attract support from buyers, then the bullish push higher in early
2014 could be classified as a "failed breakout", which would increase the odds
of bad things happening in the weeks ahead. The NYSE Composite closed at 10,172
Monday. The weekly close will provide more information (Friday at 4 pm ET).
Higher Risk Until Proven Otherwise
How much risk is in the current market? You can decide after reviewing this
week's stock market video, which covers large caps (SPY), small caps (IWM),
the VIX (VXX), bonds (TLT), the Dow (DIA), and the NASDAQ (QQQ).
Dollar Down, Bonds Up
Recent economic data and comments from policymakers gave bonds a boost Monday,
while the U.S. Dollar (UUP) weakened. From Bloomberg:
The U.S. dollar fell against a basket of major currencies on Monday on
persisting concerns about global economic growth and worries that the Federal
Reserve may delay its first interest rate hike. Concerns over the health
of overseas economies continued in the wake of last week's weak German
economic data and the International Monetary Fund's cut to its global growth
forecast. Meanwhile, Fed officials said on Saturday that a slowdown in
the global economy could hamper a tightening of U.S. monetary policy.
Investment Implications - The Weight Of The Evidence
The "prove it to me" market keeps blowing through areas of possible support.
In Monday's session, several more levels were taken out (see below). Consequently,
we reduced our already small stake in stocks (SPY) further Monday, and added
to the cash and bond (IEF) side of the ledger.