It’s All Good: The Market Enters The Giddy Stage

 | Nov 17, 2013 03:46AM ET

Has the market crossed the Rubicon again? In early May of this year, right about the time the stock market usually lies down for a while and takes its usual breather from the April rally, two back-to-back events poured gasoline on the rally’s fire. First, European Central Bank chairman Mario Draghi cut interest rates. The next day, an April jobs report came out that was not only above consensus (not by much, really), but more importantly completely wrong-footed a market expecting a swing in the other direction after a weak ADP payroll report had come out two days earlier.

Traders are creatures of habit. They expect markets to behave a certain way, and when they don’t, there is often an explosive move as everyone tries to position for the new trend. If the market starts to go down when it’s supposed to go up, it can start a bout of panic selling. The same is true in reverse, which happens more often – after all, stock markets have an inherently upward bias.

The stock market took off like a rocket with that May counter-move. People were talking about prices going parabolic until Fed chairman Ben Bernanke stepped in a few weeks later and ended the party by broaching the possibility that the police might be coming – or in other words, the Fed might start tapering soon.

We may now be repeating that move. Though the previous week was essentially sideways, ordinarily the markets would be taking another post-earnings season breather right now. The fact that they are not, partly inspired by Fed chair nominee Janet Yellen’s vagueness about ever wanting to end quantitative easing, has gotten the market euphoric. We are back in the all-news-is-good-news mode again. Either the news keeps the Fed in the game, or the economy is really getting better after all. Most of all, the trend is your friend.

There is no shortage of signs that we have entered the giddy stage. The website Minyanville listed some of them: record prices at art auctions, the all-is-for-the-best syndrome, hugely optimistic investor sentiment readings. Margin debt at an all-time record, the price-to-sales ratio on the S&P the highest it’s been since the tech bubble, the value of the Wilshire 5000 index is apparently more than GDP.

In the very short term, that is, the next week or so, the markets are apt to either go sideways or move up for a day or two at most before retreating. They are close to becoming too overbought over every time horizon. That doesn’t mean that prices have to retreat, but professional traders do watch technicals and are ready to step aside. The fear of selling, though, which helped fuel last week, could allow the most rabid bulls to take control for a time.

Over the short term period that makes up the remaining six and a half weeks of 2013, many are eying a stampede as one possibility, a phenomenon of running like crazy because everyone else is. Two of the shibboleths passed around the faithful even now are that there is some untold number of managers chasing performance, and that the calendar favors the last six weeks of the year: December is historically the second-best month of the year. Ergo, markets must keep going up.

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That is also the perfect setup for a painful reversal, but the latter would need some kind of catalyst. The fact that runaway buying has ended disastrously the last dozen years does not stop people from believing that they can get it right this time – as Caesar himself is said to have remarked, men are quick to believe that which they wish is true. There are potential triggers for selling – Europe, China, Iran, electronic trading flaws, a concentration of data points that are simply too weak – but whether any of them will metastasize into a problem isn’t knowable at the moment.

One thing is knowable – we are building a bubble, whatever Janet Yellen may think or say. Like every Fed or Treasury chieftain, she’s constrained from saying anything sensational – it would be irresponsible for such a personage to go up to Capitol Hill and start with an imitation of Cassandra. That said, she doesn’t appear to give off any indication that she’s concerned about the possibility. She rather sounds just like Ben Bernanke saying, “the sub-prime mortgage problem appears to be contained” (which he said not once, but over and over).

Yet we are constructing a bubble. If we don’t get into a decently long period of consolidation in the very near future, the market is going to disappear into one of those brain-destroying vortex moves upwards – the notorious “blow-off top” – that ends in a crash. Right now, the odds are starting to favor the latter, though not before we get a pullback. Shorter term, everyone is so convinced that the market can’t do anything but go up that one would think it is surely about to go down, even if not very far or for very long. But this year even a few days is treated like some strange anomaly. Caveat emptor.

The Economic Beat

The economic data was largely in the opposite direction of the market this week, beginning with the small business confidence index. It fell about 2.5 points, rather large for this particular index, with some negative employment readings. It was followed by the Chicago Fed’s national activity index, which printed a positive reading of 0.14 but has the three-month moving average negative for the seventh month in a row. That’s quite a streak.

Weekly claims remain elevated at 339,000 (since the previous week was revised up a hefty 5,000, this was proclaimed in news services as “claims fall again”), and international trade data continue to paint a picture of weakening global trade. Import-export prices took a dip and now stand at (-2.0%) and (-2.1%) respectively over the last twelve months. This is weak data.

The New York Fed reported a contraction in its monthly manufacturing activity reading of (-2.2), lower than estimates and greeted by the market as another positive for continued quantitative easing. A little later, industrial production was revealed to have fallen (-0.1%) in October, and that was greeted as another positive for continued quantitative easing, especially with capacity utilization declining a couple of ticks. The year-on-year rate rose from 3.1% to 3.3%, and that was greeted as signaling an improving economy.

The chart below reveals that year-on-year production has indeed rebounded the last couple of months. The question is whether this in another lower peak, followed by another dip to a lower low. It’s difficult to say of course, and the current data is probably benefiting to some extent from 2012′s fourth quarter slowdown in the face of the impending budget-tax-sequester trifecta.