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Friday, March 26, 2010

Daily Insight: Bernanke shifts market, jobless claims

U.S. stocks rebounded yesterday morning as traders returned to dabble in some riskier assets after a 24-hour respite. The DJ Industrial Average got within 44 point of 11000 and the S&P 500 looked ready to gear up to tackle the pre-Lehman collapse level of 1250 as it moved past the 1175 mark at one point. But the rally was rejected after lunch and the major indices went into freefall in the final hour of trading to completely erase the earlier gains.

Fed Chairman Bernanke, during Congressional testimony officially intended to explain the eventual exit strategy, made it abundantly clear that this discussion in no way signals the Fed is ready to pull back on their extraordinary level of accommodation. In fact, he explicitly stated that the economy continues to require the support of a record low fed funds rate. These statements follow comments from other Fed officials on Monday that also suggested the Fed will remain on hold. Monetary tightening is a ways away and that’s ecstasy to stock traders.

However, that morning rally evaporated as people apparently read Bernanke’s text and noticed a little comment touching on actual sales of mortgage-backed securities when the Fed does begin to withdraw stimulus. What? Actual MBS sales, instead of just letting them pay down? Now, such action would really be a ways down the road, as doing so anytime in the near future would obliterate the housing market – and Bernanke was there to talk about an exit strategy so it shouldn’t be surprising that he brough this topic up. But just as traders find ecstatic delight in ZIRP, they view even the mention of asset sales by the central bank as anathema and this was probably behind the late-session pullback.

The third ugly Treasury auction in a row, this one being the issuance of $32 billion in seven-year notes, may have also played a role in the market’s reversal.

Click here to read the full Daily Insight

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst

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