If you are long the broad US stockmarket - PREPARE TO
GET BURIED
By Clive Maund
Fundamentally the rally in the broad stockmarket
from early in March is viewed as being the result of a combination of media
hype, wishful thinking and short covering, but there may be more to it than that
- it would appear that a sizeable proportion of the TARP (Troubled Asset Relief
Program) funds not thus far deployed have been used to drive up the stockmarkets in order to create a positive environment for
the banks to issue secondary shares and thus raise equity. While this is
perfectly understandable, it also means that once the banks have finished
selling this stock to the public, or the market is simply exhausted by being
soaked in this way, it is likely to go into reverse in a big way.
Technically, the rally in the broad stockmarket looks to be over and there are several
important reasons to conclude that this is the case. On the 1-year chart for
the S&P500 index we can see that despite the impressive gains, all the
market has managed to do is rally from an extremely oversold position to
approach its falling 200-day moving average, and so there is no reason thus far
to consider that it is anything other than a typical bearmarket
rally, albeit a big one. The rally stalled out a couple of weeks ago in the
important zone of resistance shown and the index has since been retreating
beneath the 200-day moving average, and late last week it started to break down
from the uptrend in force from mid-March, a bearish development.

On the
6-month chart we can examine recent action in more detail. On this chart we can
see that the breakdown from the uptrend occurred on Thursday, although thus far
the break is not big enough to be conclusive, so we could yet see a short-term
rally back towards the 920 area, especially as the fast stochastic (not shown)
has dropped back to provide the leeway for such a move. However, the trendline
break still has bearish implications that are definitely amplified by the
growing preponderance of downside volume over the past couple of weeks, as
shown by the red volume bars at the bottom of the chart, which has led to the
first significant drop in the On-balance Volume line since the uptrend started,
another negative sign. In addition a bearish "shooting star" candlestick
appeared on Wednesday, when the market attempted to the challenge the early May
highs and failed, dropping back to close near the day's low. A top area appears
to be forming between the rising 50-day and falling 200-day moving averages,
which are rapidly converging. This top area is bounded by the resistance shown
and a support level which has become evident in the 880 area, breakdown below
which would likely trigger a steep decline.

The
abnormal and surreal nature of the recent rally is made starkly clear by the
small charts below, prepared by www.chartoftheday.com. Both of these charts go
way back to the 1930's and the first of them shows the extraordinary collapse
in earnings of the S&P500 companies. The second of them shows that the
resulting overall P/E ratio has risen into the stratosphere. These charts are
most interesting as they demonstrate that earnings no longer matter to
investors - all it takes to make the market go up these days is hope, TV
commentators talking the market up - and a big dollop of TARP money. This is
what is commonly known as a disconnect from reality. One thing is for sure -
you don't want to be around when the market suddenly realizes that Barack Obama
is not going to be able to wave a magic wand and make everything right, even with
the benefit of creating trillions of dollars out of thin air to bid everything
up. All this manufactured money had better create a recovery soon or the market
is likely to implode. However, recovery is unlikely for, as we know, the banks
are jealously hoarding their government granted largesse, and even if they made
the funds available to the wider world, companies and individuals are so lamed
by debt and fearful that they are in no mood to borrow, no matter how low the
interest rate. So let's put 2 and 2 together - the stockmarket rallies hugely
to discount recovery, but the recovery never materialises. Well, what a shame -
it's an awful long way down from here.


Some
market observers have been making comments in the recent past to the effect
that leveraged ETFs are a scam designed to sluice money from retail investors
into the pockets of professionals. While we would concur with this it shouldn't
really be surprising, as to the extent that they are a scam they are simply
following the rich tradition of many Wall St financial instruments, and
compared to sub-prime mortgages, for example, they are a "mom and
pop" operation as many European banks and financial institutions still
smarting from immense losses will attest. This is not to say that you can't make
good money out of them at times - in the same way that an experienced gambler
may enter a casino in Las Vegas with a fair chance of coming out richer, but
knowing that whatever his fortunes, the house will always win. Right now there
are some bear ETFs which have been driven down almost to zero by the big market
rally that look set to do really well if the market heads south soon as
expected, even taking into account the eroding time value of option elements
comprising them and the suspected tendency of the management of these funds to
use them as ATMs.
On
www.clivemaund.com we will be looking very soon at the associated effect on the
dollar and the Treasury market of a reversal in the broad market and also at
the likely impact of all this on prices of Precious Metals and oil and on
resource stocks. We called the big rally
in copper back in February before it began, and called the big rally in
oil almost at its inception, and then more
recently for copper to enter a trading range and oil to continue higher, which is what happened, and finally called the
latest rally in gold and silver , although they were expected to perform better
than they have on the recent dollar weakness. A big issue that we will address
soon is whether gold and silver can break out shortly to new highs or whether
they will get caught up in another downwave of deleveraging.
www.clivemaund.com