Saturday, 31 May 2014

Weekend update - World monthly indexes

Most world equity indexes continue their broad climb from summer 2012. With the DAX set to hit 10k, and the Dow clawing its way toward 17k, equity bulls remain in control. There remains 'moderate' chance of a multi-month wave lower later this summer/early Autumn.


Lets take our monthly look at ten of the world markets

Greece


The Greek market closed fractionally lower for May, but well above the intra-month low of 1062. There remains opportunity for another lurch higher to the big 1500 threshold, and that is a clear 20% higher.


Brazil


The Bovespa slipped -0.75% in May, but underlying MACD cycle is continuing to swing towards the bulls. The closing monthly candle is a touch bearish, but equity bears really need <45k to have any confidence in this market. Best case upside is around 60k this summer, and that is around 15% higher.


France


The CAC managed a minor gain of 0.7% for May, but it was the third monthly gain so far this year. The big 5000 threshold remains just over 10% higher, but looks somewhat unlikely until the very end of the year - and that would require an absence of any summer weakness.


Germany


The powerhouse of the EU gained a very impressive 3.5%, and is now a mere 0.6% away from attaining the giant psy' level of 10000. Based on May price action, the 10k level will be hit early next week. Upper bollinger band will be offering the 10300/400s in June.


UK


The FTSE gained almost 1%, and is now less than 2% from breaking the historic high of 6950 (of Dec'1999). Price momentum is very weak though, and MACD (green bar histogram) could turn negative in the immediate term. Price structure is also somewhat bearish, the UK market looks.. tired. First support is 6500, if that fails, then 6k.


Spain


The ugliest of the EU PIIGS, the Spanish market gained a significant 3.2% in May, and looks set for 11k.. if not 12k by July. What happens in the 11-12k zone though will be interesting. Viable downside - on a market break, would be the 10k level. If major market upset (geo political issues?), then 8k would seem to be the very best the bears could aim for.


USA


The mighty Dow climbed just 0.8% in May, and the trading range for the month was itself very narrow. A new high of 16735 was achieved, with the 17000s looking viable in mid June...if not July.

Like the UK FTSE though, price momentum continues to swing back toward neutral, and there is high opportunity for the MACD cycle to turn negative in June. If the US/world indexes do break lower this summer/early Autumn, best downside case is probably no lower than 14000.


Italy


The Italian market slipped 0.7% in May, but the closing spike-floor candle is somewhat bullish. There remains very strong resistance in the 22000s, and if this index remains stuck <22k across June/July..it could bode for a mid-term top. Primary downside would be in the 17000s, but that is 'best bear case'.


Japan


The Nikkei gained a useful 2.3% in May, but remains below the key 15k threshold..which is obvious resistance that stretches back into the 1990s. Underlying MACD cycle turned negative in May, and we have a bearish cross.

Without question, the Japanese market is one of the more bearish world markets, and this is somewhat ironic considering the continued huge monetary pump from the JCB. Best bearish case downside this summer/autumn would be the 11000/10000 zone. Sub 10k looks overly difficult, not least since the JCB will be more than content to increase QE..as necessary.


China


The China market gained 0.6% in May, but price action remains relatively muted, within a very tight trading range that is now over two years in duration. The fact the Shanghai comp' was again trading <2k this past month is not entirely bullish.


Summary

As a collective, the world equity market continues to climb. No doubt, a great reason for this rally is the continued printing from the various central banks, along with low interest rates. Certainly, parts of the world economy are growing relatively fine, but as US Q1 GDP data just recently showed, despite continued (if diminishing) QE, the US economy is currently contracting.

The ECB are understandably concerned about underlying deflationary pressures, and many now accept negative interest rate policy (NIRP) is a likely outcome. Overall, there is a risk of at least a moderate recession already underway.


Looking ahead

There are quite a few things next week.

Most notably, Wednesday - ADP jobs, Fed beige book.

Thursday will see an ECB announcement. Market is expecting at least a reduction in interest rates, although some are hoping for a QE program - I do not expect the latter. How the market deals with 'lower rates, but no QE' is difficult to say.

The week concludes with the monthly jobs data, market will probably rally on any number higher than 180/200k.

*there is sig' QE-pomo: Tue $1.5-2bn, Thurs $2-3bn
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On the sidelines for another week?

I didn't take any trades in the past week, and I'm not particularly interested in anything this coming week. I am real tired of this market, and in many ways, I could do with a few months just avoiding it entirely. As some of you might understand (if not also experiencing yourself), I'm burnt out on this.

...and maybe that itself, is an uber-contrarian sell signal,

back on Monday :)