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The Mole is the man in the know. Unlike most of the Paddy Power traders he doesn't spread bet for a living. Instead he works for a well-known Dublin institution where he heads a desk that regularly trades over €100 million a day.

The Mole says he mainly trades currencies but, as the markets are so closely related, he keeps a close eye on stocks and Oil too.
Equities Drift Lower In A Quiet Market
By The Mole on 18 December 2008 at 10:01

It’s gone all eerily quiet in a fatigued and illiquid market as we approach end year. The Dow Jones fell 1.12% last night in another low volume day. Stocks continue to fret in the wake of the Madoff debacle. Morgan Stanley missed their earnings expectations badly yesterday and GE has even given up giving earnings guidance.

Today’s Market Moving Stories

  • Incoming US President Obama said he will nominate Daniel Tarullo to an open seat on the Federal Reserve Board.
  • The UK Deputy Governor of the Bank of England said they may take rates all the way to zilch. He also mentions the new buzzword “quantitative easing” but says that this of course would have to be approved by the Treasury.
  • The UK Chancellor is set to announce another multi-billion pound package next month, aimed at getting the banks to restart lending to businesses of all sizes. Past loan schemes along these lines have covered up to 80% of the risk on each loan. But this generates further risks to the taxpayer in the event that a worsening economic outlook leads to an increase in default rates and crystallises some of the Government’s contingent liabilities.
  • ECB arch hawk Axel Weber said that rates may be allowed dip below 2% (the historic post 9/11 low) as their forecasts for economic growth may be trimmed further. Their staff forecasts, though only three weeks old, look like fantasy island stuff.
  • There is some talk that the ECB may announce a cut in the rate on interest that they pay banks who lodge monies with them. They want to encourage banks to lend and get that pesky V in the old MV = nominal GDP going again. So far everything else they’ve tried has merely resulted in more hoarding.
  • Chrysler has announced that it is to shut all 30 of its plants from tomorrow for one month. The two desperados, GM and Chrysler, have restarted merger talks. One is reminded of the old adage that two wrongs don’t make a right. In related news President Bush (yes that cretin is sadly still in office) said that he’ll decide on emergency loans to automakers “relatively soon”! There’s no urgency or course.
  • One can only surmise that the game is up for the majority of hedge funds and they will be faced with massive redemption calls at any given month end until they are more or less extinct in the form we knew them. This will lead to more seemingly illogical short selling.
  • Its refreshing to see that falling demand of oil still trumps the OPEC cry babies. Despite cutting production by 2.2m barrels per day, US Crude fell by 8%! Yes despite the merchants of doom predicting that we were on they way back to a three figure handle per barrel, the price actually is hovering around $40 barrel. Dire news for Putin and those simply insufferable Iranians but some Xmas cheer at the pumps for consumers and another disinflationary input.
  • Ireland is back in focus due to the weakness of sterling which is putting huge stress on already hard pressed retailers as Xmas shoppers flock across the border.

Dollar Freefall
EURUSD’s uninterrupted climb back to 1.45 in jig time is just one example of the general inertia prevailing. The potential for a bit of a run on the US Dollar is beginning to worry investors, particularly those overseas. A twin deficit of 10-12% of GDP historically has spelt curtains for any currency. That said the reserve status of the Dollar has been called into question before, only for it to rebound sharply.

There isn’t much “easy money to be made”. As correlations break down, sure bets like a “weak Dollar = higher commodity prices” that had worked a treat thus far this year are now losers.

Data Today
The main focus of the European morning will be the key German IFO business survey sentiment at 09.00. This is closely watched by even the ivory tower dwellers of the ECB and is on a 6 month losing streak. A further fall in the index to 84 is expected by the markets. A super weak number may put a January rate cut back on the table.

UK-wise, we have the random walk that is the retail sales number (i.e. it is very difficult to predict) at 09.30 with the street looking for a –0.6% read.

Stateside we have the weekly jobless claims (-558k expected) at 13.30; leading indicators (-0.4%) at 15.00; Philly Fed (-40.5) at 15.00 and the weekly natural gas inventories. The Fed’s Fisher will also give a speech.

Equities and Earnings

  • Today sees earnings from FedEx, Pier 1, Rite Aid, Oracle, Palm and Research In Motion. For a daily list, check out the new Trader Report.
  • Nike beats expectations last night after the bell on strong overseas sales.
  • Apple’s share price is under the kosh on renewed concerns about Steve Jobs health.
  • French supermarket giant Carrefour has put out a profit warning.
  • Mining giant Rio Tinto have had their credit rating cut by Moody’s due to the debt burden from their Alcan acquisition.
  • Merger talks between BA and Aussie airline Quantas have been called off.

And Finally… Fred Thompson On The Bailouts
Remember irony is not something your mother used to do for you.

Disclosures = None

4 Responses to “Equities Drift Lower In A Quiet Market”

  1. The Mole Says:

    Huge move in USD /JPY! Talk of intervention? Probably just the BoJ “checking prices” in a VERY illiquid market.

    British peso is also getting killed today at 0.95 verus Euro, a new record low.

  2. The Mole Says:

    I missed this earlier from http://dshort.com/ Have a good look at the charts. Afraid you’ll hav to either copy and paste the URLs into your browser or else go to the home page and scroll down until you get to the article. But they are brillant.

    From dshort.com:
    The Mega-Bear Quartet

    Some commentators have speculated that the current bear market could match the ferocity of the Dow following the Crash of 1929, the post-1989 Nikkei 225, or the NASDAQ after the Tech Bubble. As this comparison (http://dshort.com/charts/bears/mega-bear-quartet-large.gif) shows, it’s far too soon to know. But the S&P 500 is off to a frightening start.

    To see the mega-bear comparison more clearly, here’s musical analogy (http://dshort.com/charts/mega-bear-comparisons.html?mega-bear-duet) that allows you to view the similarities incrementally. Use the blue links to add the parts.

    Over the past few decades, equity markets in the U.S. have had an extended bull run (http://dshort.com/charts/SP-Composite-since-1871-nominal-with-trendline.gif). Despite the mini-crash in 1987 and the 2000-2002 tech meltdown, many investors have grown complacent about market risk. These charts remind us that bear markets can last a long time. And it’s not necessary to go back to the Great Depression for an example.

  3. Justsome1 Says:

    What does that mean when you say BOJ just “checking prices”

  4. The Mole Says:

    It’s a bizarre ritual that Central Banks go through. Yes they have Reuters and Bloomberg screens in their offices but as a kind of yellow card to the markets. They get on the phone and call a few commercial banks and ask what the current USD / JPY FX cross rate is knowing full well that this info will get into the wider market about 10 seconds later. It’s a kinda formal warning that you are on your final warning before we get the big stick of intervention out and actually buy USD / JPY (as they know this is VERY unlikely to work without help from the Fed, BoE, ECB & SNB who kinda have more pressing engagements at the moment). Unilateral intervention is like King Canute trying to roll back the waves.

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