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State of the Markets

Print this Report Daily State of the Markets

No Sudden Changes

June 30, 2009

by David Moenning

Daily State of the Markets 
Tuesday Morning – June 30, 2009

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Good morning. Besides the usual assortment of brokerage upgrades, some additional window dressing, the EU saying the worst is over, and the judge throwing the book at Mr. Madoff, another key to yesterday’s 1% rise in stock prices was the word out of China that there would be “no sudden changes” to the country’s currency reserves.

But in reality, there didn’t appear to be any one single driver to yesterday’s out-of-the-blue rally in the stock market. Stocks started higher in response to the positive action overseas, which was helped along by the European Commission saying that that the worst appears to be over in terms of the Eurozone economic contraction. While everybody knows by now that the U.S. recession is ending, the idea that the global downturn might be subsiding was definitely a confidence booster both home and abroad.

It also didn’t hurt that interest rates continued to ease a bit yesterday. The lack of any new supply from the Treasury and the fact that the Fed will be in there buying bonds today and tomorrow lifted some of the pressure on Treasury yields. This, of course, helps with mortgage rates, which helps the housing market, etc., etc.

There was also a fair amount chatter yesterday about the Madoff verdict. The fact that the man who purported the biggest investment scam in history had the book thrown at him seemed to send a message that white collar crime wasn’t acceptable and that maybe some investor confidence might eventually return to corner of Broad and Wall.

However, one of the biggest reasons for yesterday’s rally probably had to do with the calendar. With one of the best quarters in history coming to an end, managers want to make sure that their performance is as robust as possible. And while the practice is illegal, the fact that the SEC a little busy these days means there might just be a little window dressing going on.

Finally, with all of the talk lately about the BRIC countries moving to a new reserve currency, it was refreshing to hear the Chinese officially pronounce that they aren’t going to make any sudden changes to their holdings. While they actually have little choice in the matter due to the size of their trade imbalance with the U.S., the announcement provided a small sigh of relief to those who are worried about the ultimate fall of the U.S. as a world superpower.

Turning to the charts, yesterday’s gain gave the short-term trend a shot in the arm but the move didn’t do much of anything to change the fact that stocks continue to be stuck in a trading range. And with traders likely turning their attention very soon to the long holiday weekend, we probably shouldn’t expect this situation to change any time soon.

Turning to this morning, we don’t have any economic data to review before the bell, but we will get the Chicago Purchasing Manger’s Index at 9:45 am and the June Consumer Confidence number at 10:00 am eastern.

Running through the rest of the pre-game indicators, the major overseas markets are mostly lower. Crude futures are moving up again with the latest quote showing oil trading higher by $0.33 to $71.82. On the interest rate front, we’ve got the yield on the 10-yr trading at 3.49%, while the yield on the 3-month T-Bill is trading at 0.16%. And finally, with about 45 minutes before the bell, stock futures in the U.S. are pointing to a flat-to-lower open. The Dow futures are currently off by about 6 points; the S&P’s are down about a point, while the NASDAQ looks to be about 1 point below fair value at the moment.

Try doing something nice for someone today (for no reason at all) and until next time, “may the bulls be with you!”

David D. Moenning
Founder TopStockPortfolios.com

 

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