This All Star Charts PLUS Monthly Playbook breaks down the investment universe into a series of binary decisions, tactical calls and asset allocation models.
The Fed announced another 75 basis point rate hike yesterday. The upper range of the Fed Funds rate began the year at 0.25% and is now 4.00%, the highest level since early 2008. In his post-FOMC press conference, Fed Chair Powell made clear that the Fed is not finished raising rates.
Why It Matters: As the prospects of rate hikes materialized earlier this year, there were plenty of assurances that stocks do well when the Fed is raising rates. These perspectives failed to distinguish...
Yesterday we were treated to the latest interest rate hike from the Federal Reserve and a speech and Q&A with Fed Chairman Powell that apparently wasn't well received by the market as stocks slid furiously into the closing bell and continued the selloff into this morning.
Where we go from here is anyone's guess. Still, I'd like to take the opportunity to continue taking advantage of consistently elevated options premiums and put on a delta-neutral credit spread in an area of the market where I think some sideways rangebound action may be setting up into the end of the year.
This is that time again where we try to see through the fog of short-term moves and identify the long-term structure of the market. Every month, this process helps have a clear vision going into the new month. So let's dive in and look at some of these charts!
In fact, it’s already registered a slightly lower high and lower low this past month.
But we can’t call a top in the US dollar yet. While it came close to officially triggering a top last week, the lack of follow-through kept us in our seats.
With fresh monthly candles in the books, let’s review longer-term charts and reiterate key levels for ol’ King Dollar.
With fear subsiding but strength slow to emerge, downside tactical risks are rising. We reduced the equity exposure in our Tactical Opportunity portfolio and have moved more cash to the sideline.
Household equity exposure is ten percentage points below its November 2021 peak. Even with that decline, it is only now approaching its long-term average. Bond exposure remains below its long-term average and cash exposure in October moved above its long-term average for the first time since COVID.
Why It Matters: Moods are sour, but for all the talk of rampant pessimism & historic levels of bearishness, individual investors have not abandoned stocks. This is as evident in the AAII asset allocation survey as it is in the latest ETF flow data. For the amount of pessimism that is being seen elsewhere, there is relatively little cash on the sidelines. If there is an underowned and unloved asset class it is either bonds or commodities, not stocks.
In this week’s Sentiment Report we take a closer look at how investors are feeling and how that squares with what they are doing.
Dogecoin and other meme coins are seeing a boom off the back of Elon Musk's takeover of Twitter.
It isn't isolated to the Doge. A slew of meme coins have been born since Elon tweeted an image of a Shiba Inu dog wearing a Twitter t-shirt for Halloween.
It's hilarious that his tweets never fail to pump these things.