by Phoenix Capital Research
At this point, the market is beyond overextended.
Last week was options expiration (Wall Street’s favorite time to
shred options traders). And thanks to Ben Bernanke’s promise to keep the
money printers running (“none of what we’ve said implies tighter policy
any time soon”) traders shot for 1,700 on the S&P 500 last week.
What’s truly worrisome is that stocks are rallying higher and higher
while economic fundamentals get worse and worse. GDP estimates for the
second quarter have been reduced to 1% or even lower. Goldman Sachs has
growth at 0.8%. Barclay’s sees 0.5%. And Morgan Stanley sees us hitting
0.3% growth.
These are truly horrible forecasts coming after the brutal
downward revision for the first quarter (from 2.4% to 1.8%). And when
you consider that growth is slowing like this while the Fed is
running QE 3 and QE 4, then it becomes quite clear that the Fed is fast
running out of out of evidence that QE accomplishes much of anything.
The signs of this are already showing up in corporate results. IBM,
Intel, eBay, Google, Microsoft, Philip Morris, Blackberry have all
missed revenue estimates. Corporate profits can be manipulated in a
variety of ways. Revenues on the other hand cannot be fudged. Either
money comes in the door or it doesn’t. The fact that so many firms are
missing revenues estimates does not bode well for the market.
And against this backdrop of slowing growth and weaker corporate
returns, inflation is once again rearing its head. Crude oil just hit a
16-month high. Home prices are soaring across the US with year over year
increases over 30% (the highest on record) in some metropolitan areas.
Costs for food are up with beef rising 4%, steak rising 11%, and so on.
In short, the sheer number of negative factors facing stocks today is
enormous. And in this environment of slowing growth and falling
corporate results, stocks are at all time highs.
This will all end very badly.
This is not doom and gloom. This is a fact. The Fed has created an even bigger bubble than the 2007 one.
The time to prepare for this is not once the collapse begins, but
NOW, while stocks are still rallying. Stocks take their time moving up,
but when they crash it happens VERY quickly.
For more market insights and commentary, visit us at:
www.gainspainscapital.com
Best Regards
Graham Summers
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