Wheeee, what a ride!
Finally all our very boring sitting around at 75% cash makes us feel smart as the market makes what we hope is that final blow-off bottom to re-test our lows. I already sent out an Alert to Members this morning so a lot of this is old news to them but nothing has changed since 4:30 so here’s a quick reprise – What we are mainly seeing in the futures this morning is 2 major factors that are driving the markets lower:
1) Japan, where too strong Yen (88.6), -0.1% industrial output, -1.7% exports, rising unemployment (just 5.2%) AND lower houshold spending (-0.7%) numbers sent the Nikkei down 1.25% today to 9,570. If you think about it though, pretty much all of that is a strong Yen issue because it lowers demand for the exports (making them more expensive) and then factories slow down and people get laid off and household spending drops from that PLUS the fact that it’s now cheaper for them to buy imports so they can buy the same stuff at lower prices.
So, overall, nothing people shouldn’t have expected but ugly to read about.
2) China, where the Shanghai fell 4.27% today to 2,427, which is a lot because they are a 10% limit down market on individual stocks so you can bet the selling isn’t done if the AVERAGE was down 4.27%. The Hang Seng was ugly too, falling 2.3% to 20,248. What sent China off a cliff was kind of silly. The Conference Board, which is a NY-based research firm had reported that Chinese economic indicators rose 1.7% in April – something at the time (June 15th) we thought sounded a bit high. Well, funny thing is it turns out the people at the Conference Board must have been high on something because it turns out they made a “calculation error” and the correct number was just 0.3%.
There is a third factor in play and, earlier this morning I thought it was too silly to be considered but, apparently, you can panic retail investors over pretty much anything. On Thursday, there are $547.5Bn worth of bank-loans from last year’s special liquidity program that are due to roll over and there are rumors circulating that the ECB won’t renew the facility at all. The ECB has, in fact, already promised to replace it with rolling 3-month loans at the same rate, hoping to make it annoying enough for banks to seek long-term funding…

