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Friday, May 21, 2010

Daily Insight: Jobless Claims, Philly Fed and For All the Wrong Reasons

As everyone knows, U.S. stocks got hit hard yesterday, extending the latest losing streak to three sessions but the weakness has really been in play for three weeks, hitting a crescendo since the so-called “flash crash” two weeks back. Yesterday’s open to close decline was actually larger than the May 6 (flash-crash day) move.

Stocks looked ready to stage a comeback on a couple of occasions yesterday, a rally late in the morning session and then again about mid-way into afternoon trading. But a late-session slide, which coincided with news that the Senate came up with the 60 votes necessary to end cloture and clear the way for passage of financial regulation legislation -- which they ultimately passed last night, slammed the market back down to close at the intraday low. The Senate version will have to be reconciled with a House plan passed in December. After that it gets signed.

To no surprise, financials led the market slide. Industrials, energy and basic materials (all the most cyclical industries that are having trouble now that the state of the global economy are in doubt again) weren’t far behind. Telecom, consumer staples and utility shares were the relative winners, but even these were off by roughly 3%.

The broad market – as measured by the S&P 500 -- is now off its recent high by 12%, a decline of more than 10% is considered a correction, as markets follow the Shanghai Composite lower. The Shanghai exchange is down 18% since April 15 and 25% off its near-term peak. The trend of Shanghai leading has been in place since late 2008. I’m not saying this trend is in place for the long term, but it’s tough to ignore for now. As China continues to rein in its stimulus, which has provided a kick to the entire Asian region, commodity-rich economies and technology & certain industrial firms, the market may continue to pull back from the risk trade. Of course, concerns over Europe and the drag those economies will have on global growth are also part of the problem. But Shanghai has been quite the indicator.

Click here to read the full Daily Insight.

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com

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