THE FINAL NUMBERS - HIT IT ON THE HEAD
NEWS: Another choppy day on Wall Street that included a major economic number
and a presser from our president-elect ended on the highs. The Dow finished with
a gain of 248 points or 2.9%, but was down 4% for the week. The S&P 500 also
dropped 4% on the week, but was up 26 points or 2.9% today. The NASDAQ lagged a
bit, gaining 2.4% or 38 points.
THE BOTTOMLINE: I do not like to toot my own horn, but yesterday I
highlighted the massive sell-off in front of the employment number this morning
and how Wall Street was baking in a worse than expected number. My fears about
the Obama speech were also brought to light. In the end the number employment
number was below estimates and the market rallied. Also as soon as Obama began
speaking the Dow fell from up 200 points to up only 75 points. Thankfully he
stopped by before the closing bell rang because as soon as he finished, the
market began rallying again and up to the highs of the session.
The fact the market rallied on very poor economic numbers coupled with a
strong last hour of trading is one reason to smile this weekend. The 4% loss
over the week is no reason to frown, but we should be ready to act. Keep in mind
that last week was the best the markets had experienced in 34 years with the
S&P 500 rallying 14%. Giving back 4% the following week is not all that bad
in my mind as long as we hold the lows of Thursday. The bottoming process is
about to head into its fifth week and what I require is that the lows continue
to be held and volume does not spike on down days. So far so good and I will
keep you up to speed throughout the coming weeks.
For more on PFG’s Portfolio Management services please call 1-877-ETF-PENN.
THE PFG COVERED CALL STRATEGY - UPDATE!!
NEWS: As I mentioned yesterday, we have put together a video explaining the
PFG Covered Call Strategy for readers that are interested. I suggest you take
15-minutes of you day and watch it because it may open up your mind to an
entirely new strategy for this volatile market.
NEWS: Today I spent my early morning hours researching the correlation
between the Unemployment number and the action of the stock market during a
recession. I was somewhat pleased with the results.
THE BOTTOMLINE: The research involved looking back at the last five US
recessions dating back to the early 1970’s. Three of the five recessions saw the
unemployment rate continue to rise even after the recession was officially over.
This is why the number is often referred to as a lagging economic indicator.
Today’s reading of 6.5% unemployment is the highest since the 1990’s, but well
below the 10.8% reading in November 1982. I do believe we will see the reading
rise to the mid-7% level before we top out, however the market will likely be
well off the lows by the time this occurs.
During all five recessions the stock market (S&P 500) bottomed months
before the worst unemployment reading was released. When the worst news hits the
news wires the S&P 500 was up on average 30% from the lows over the last
five years. For example if the unemployment rate decides to climb another 1% and
peaks early next year, there is a good chance the stock market would have
already bottomed months earlier. Possibly October 2008? Sure, why not.
I am not suggesting everyone run out and begin buying, however the point I am
trying to convey is that once investors receive the “all clear” flag to get back
into the market it is too late. When the news is at the trough, the stock market
has already begun the new bull market and when the news begins to improve stocks
are even further from the bottom. Therefore, as an investor I do not suggest you
attempt to pick a bottom, but at the same time do not cash in all your chips -
leave some on the table.