Visit us at our new home!

For new daily content, visit us at our new blog: http://www.acrinv.com/blog/

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Daily Insight: Small Business Optimism, Consumer Confidence and The Killer Crossover

U.S. stocks were unable to build upon Monday’s powerful snap-back as concerns that the Chinese will further tighten lending requirements weighed on the basic materials and energy sectors and doubts began to surface over the effectiveness of Europe’s bailout plan.

Commodity-related (basic materials and energy) have been a play on both massive monetary easing and Chinese stimulus, and now that one seems to be going by the wayside these sectors were yesterday’s worst-performers. Of the 10 major sectors, utility and consumer discretionary shares were the only groups up on the day.

The $38 billion 3-yr auction went very well as buyers stormed in. The bid-to-cover (measure of demand) came in at a near-record of 3.27, and all for 1.41%.

The Chinese stock market is worth watching as it has been a leading indicator for the direction of the S&P 500 over the past two years (only exception being a six-week period last summer). That market is now officially in bear market territory again as the Shanghai Exchange is down 20% from its most recent peak.

So the Shanghai has had two cyclical bull markets (in a secular bear) over the past 18 months – the rallies incited by the government’s very aggressive stimulus package, and the reversals on the talk of and now actual reining in of that policy. The Shanghai had plunged 72% from October 2007 peak to the November 2008 trough. Currently, the index remains 56% below its record high. We’re watching the folly of the most aggressive Keynesian experiment in history and insaniac monetary policy.
Click here to read the full Daily Insight.

Brent Vondera, Senior Analyst
www.acrinv.com

No comments: