When The Stock Pig Tops

 Flying Pig

Filed under the category ‘smartest group of subscribers in the world’, I got an email from NFTRH subscriber Joe F. last week as I was mechanically managing the gold market in my somewhat downplayed, unexciting way.

For a writer of many words over many years, I can sometimes grunt out the most basic of responses.

The Pig of course, is the US stock market (and many associated global stock markets as well). Said Pig has slopped and slopped some more and most recently has actually begun to fly during its bull phase coming out of last summer’s ‘don’t-be-short’ signal at the depths of the Brexit reaction.

The Pig seems to have everything going for it: a business-friendly president with forthcoming corporate tax cuts and a heady mix of business deregulation and infrastructure initiatives. But the thing is, the stock market did just a little bullying under the business-unfriendly, regulation-happy previous administration as well.

The S&P 500's yellow shaded area represents a massive recovery and extension courtesy of unprecedented Obama-era monetary policy under the direction of the “Hero”, Ben Bernanke. Trump’s presidency is represented thus far by one little monthly candle, which itself is the product of something that was already in the market according to the NFTRH target, projected last July.

S&P 500

Sure, deregulation is good for stocks, which are after all, equity in corporations. Tax cuts as well. As for the roads, bridges, towers and walls to come, that's fiscal (as opposed to Obama-era monetary) stimulus and it could have positive and/or negative effects, depending on the inflation situation at the time these initiatives kick in.

But the main point is that it’s already been baked into the cake. I can say that because I had a target and I am sticking to it. Others can grouse about or cheer the market depending on their bias, but with all the Elliott Waves, Fibonacci levels, momentum indicators and trend lines technical analysts routinely baffle people with, wouldn’t it be funny if it really were as simple as measuring a distance between a high and a low and adding that figure to the high, then sticking to your discipline over the better part of the year it took for the market to get within spitting distance of said measurement?

In The Mirror: Gold And Counter-Cyclicals

Early in the precious-metals bear market, I talke about gold being “in the mirror” to the risk-on party that was instigated by balls-out monetary policy. How could it not be? The party has been all about debt, leverage and momentum. Gold carries no debt, is leveraged to nothing and really just sits there, with everything else in motion around it. That is what insurance does too. It is paid for and tucked away with a level of comfort, but with the hope that you won’t need it.

As for price, it has ticked a new short-term high on its 2017 recovery. There is much work to do, technically, for gold. But that casino patron (price-related) stuff can be left for NFTRH updates or a future article. The point is that gold is a counter-balance and as a monetary insurance policy, it will go where it needs to go when things fall apart (or generally speaking, “when the Pig tops”).

Gold

Other counter-cyclicals are simply plays, much like the stock market. Treasury bonds came to be hated by virtually everyone by the end of 2016 (due to the perception of Trumpmania’s coming fiscally stimulated inflation) after being loved by virtually everyone last summer (amid the global NIRP hysteria). So naturally, I took a position against a host of stock market long positions (which I’ve been selling one by one in a very routine profit-taking regimen) as the public became hysterically over bearish of bonds and the Commercial Hedgers became wildly net long.

Here is the Public Optimism graphic (courtesy of Sentimentrader, w/ my markups) from a January 5 post showing the contrary setup for this counter-cyclical tool.

Stock-Market Sentiment

The Utilities and Consumer Staples also offer varying degrees of safety relative to the risk-on trade in broad stocks. Here’s the daily chart of the Utes SPDR fund (NYSE:XLU). We have been noting the Utes’ similarity in price performance to long-term Treasury bonds, and I added it to the portfolio a couple of weeks ago based on a) it’s counter-cyclical portfolio balancing nature, b) its dividend payments and c) it’s cool technical pattern (now being expressed upward).

Utilities Select Sector SPDR

Bottom Line

There is a lot of noise in the market with Trump’s tax cuts and robo tweeting about everything from contentious political issues to the stock market’s status under his stewardship. This is but the most recent and one of his more muted chest thumps.

The stock market seems to be playing Trump and it is playing anyone who believes that things will make sense in a linear fashion like Trump = good for business = good for the stock market. It’s much like what happened to anyone who believed Obama = bad for business = bad for the stock market.

These are the financial markets folks. They're not linear and they do not present logically in real time. For one example, check out Tom McClellan’s post about crude oil’s 10 year staggered forecast for the US stock market. For another, look no further than the long-term ‘presidential risk’ chart we’ve been pounding lately, most recently in a post that also included some bearish presidential cycle data.

The Dow By President

The Bottom, Bottom Line

Check your bias and assumptions at the door and have a plan for the counter-cyclical activity that will crop up either sooner or later, either above or below the 2410 target for the S&P 500. Either at our “by March/April” time frame or sometime later. Have balance and perspective (two boring words in a hopped-up casino environment, I know).

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