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With Fed QE Now On Hold, Stocks Bounce Miraculously

S&P 500 ES Futures Chart

Daily Fed QE April 22 – Not Enough

Yesterday the Fed bought $15 billion in Treasury paper from the Primar Dealers, paying for them by depositing newly imagined money into the dealers bank/trading accounts at the Fed. That’s just what the Fed said it would do each day this week. It’s down from $30 billion a day last week and $75 billion a day a couple weeks ago.

The Fed will buy another $15 billion today. Sounds like plenty right? Well get this. The US Treasury is selling $65 billion in new T-bills today and $91 billion tomorrow? How is the market going to absorb that pile of shit with only $15 billion a day from the Fed?

There used to be enough to absorb the pounding of daily gargantuan Treasury paper issuance, but $15 billion a day is way short of enough. We saw the results in the stock market yesterday. Something has to be liquidated to raise the money to pay for all that nice shiny new Treasury debt toilet paper that everybody wants but nobody can pay for.

So what to they do? Borrow to buy it, or sell something else. Either way, not good.

Of course, the Fed is also buying MBS. This week they’ve scheduled MBS purchases of $9-10 billion per day. Yesterday they did only $7.75 billion. Why did they cut? Who knows? More than enough was offered.

Regardless, $9 billion is a drop in the bucket compared to what the market must absorb from the Treasury day in and day out while it raises funds to fight the Econovirus2020.

Also, the MBS don’t settle same or next day like the Treasuries do however. The paper sold this week won’t settle until next month. There are no MBS settlements scheduled from now until May 13. The dealers will have to wait for that cash.

But yesterday they had the benefit of $48 billion in settlements of previous forward purchase contracts. And still, the stock market tanked. Treasuries did ok though, despite the market needing to absorb $98 billion in newly issued T-bills yesterday. Repo, anyone?

This is critical stuff. For a couple weeks, the Fed had created an illusion of working markets by pumping in enough cash to absorb all the Treasury paper with cash left over to buy other stuff. No longer.

I cover these issues in depth twice a week or so at Liquidity Trader, with a nice chart to show you what’s happening, and what’s coming next, at a glance. Here’s the last episode of that soap opera. Subscribe today with a 90 day risk free trial. 

 

Stock Market Trading Setup for Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Lately, every time the market has sold off, it has bounced back. The overnight session was a case in point. This is classic bull market action until proven otherwise. But here, we’re only concerned with today.

S&P Futures Daily Chart 

Yesterday’s post.

The futures have been trading in a between 2718 and 2776 overnight and in the pre market. That’s up 39 at 2769  at 7:15 AM in New York.

This appears to set up a new uptrend channel at a slightly lower angle than the previous meltup channel from the March low. The bottom of that channel is at 2718 today. That’s also a level support level.

That level level has had 4 successful daily tests. An old friend of ours who was one of the smartest traders I ever knew would say, the more often support is tested, the weaker it becomes.

I think they may be pressing their luck here.

S&P 500 ES Futures Chart

Rate of Change tuned to an 8 week cycle has edged to the sell side. MACD tuned to the same cycle looks toppy.

Sell signals come typically on the first hard down day of a new down phase. It didn’t happen yesterday. What up wit dat? OK, so today should be it. Otherwise the market is in trending mode. Not good for bears. 

If this is still a bear market, we’re getting to the point that that needs to be proven by a real downturn. 

Again, this is for the perspective of one day only. The purpose of these reports is not to divine the longer term. If you want longer horizons, join me at Liquidity Trader.

Hourly ES S&P 500 Futures Chart

The 5 day cycle bottomed overnight. The rally has powered back to the top of an hourly trend channel. As of 8 AM in New York, the top of that channel will be around 2768. That line is dropping at roughly 2 points per hour.

A breakout would first target 2788, then 2800 if they clear 2788. If 2768 holds and they start down from here, look for the first support around 2752. If that fails, then we’d be looking at 2718.

Hourly indicators tuned to a 5 day cycle frequency are solidly bullish here at 7:30 AM ET. But the key is the trendline at 2768. The cycle and momentum indicators say that that should be cleared. If it isn’t and the market rolls over in the early going, that would be very bearish. So 2768 is the action fulcrum to watch.

ES Futures Hourly Chart

Reminder- I’m only talking patterns for a day here. This is not the big picture. If you want that story, you must subscribe. Risk free trial and all.

S&P Cash Index Hourly Chart 

The red bar at the far right shows where the futures traded overnight. It’s between 2718 and 2776. The futures suggest a cash open around 2775.

Resistance is suggested at that level on the cash. If cleared, they have wide open spaces to around 2825-30.

Support is suggested at 2718. That’s not likely to be threatened. But on the off chance that it’s broken later today, the market should be thin down to around 2665.

S&P 500 Hourly Chart

Join me on the Capitalstool.com message board today and I will update you there occasionally during the day. Feel free to join the “fun.”

“And that’s the way it is, Wednesday, April 22, 2020.” 

From coronavirus locked-in Zagreb, Croatia, good morning!  

Where have you gone Walter Cronkite? Our nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

Meanwhile, here are the latest reports from Liquidity Trader. 

Trust But Verify Gold

Gold has pulled back after breaking out of its trend channel. That’s usually a sign of a top. Now what?

Subscribers, click here to download report.

Try Lee Adler’s Gold Trader risk free for 90 days!  

 

The Illusion of a Stock Market

Short term cycles are due for tops and little pullbacks at least. If it doesn’t happen, it would be another sign that the long term cycles are back in up phases. But are these cycles, or just the manifestation of the power of the Fed to create the illusion of a market?

How do you trade it? With one eye on the ground and the other to the sky. Walk this way.

Technical Trader subscribers, click here to download the report.

Not a subscriber? Try Lee Adler’s Technical Trader risk free for 90 days!  

What Happens When Fed Makes Moral Hazard Permanent and Structural

The Fed’s massive bailout of Primary Dealers and its alphabet soup loan programs for all other big financial players, have now made moral hazard permanent and structural. Why worry about risk when you know that the Fed will always take you off the hook when the shit hits the fan?

How can we know how this will play out? How can we know if these loans can ever be repaid? Will they be repaid through inflation, perhaps hyperinflation? Or will the borrowers simply default if the markets and economy recover too slowly?

Then who will be on the hook for the Fed’s guarantees when the Fed must assume the losses? Who pays? Taxpayers? Depositors? Everyone, again through massive inflation?

Of course, there’s always a chance that everything turns out just fine. The world returns to normal in a few months. The economy bounces back, and all the trillions lent by the Fed gets repaid timely, with no financial price to be paid.

We don’t know, but there will be telltale signs in the weeks ahead that will give us a heads up.

Subscribers, click here to download the report

Not a subscriber yet?

90 Days Risk Free If You Join Now!

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Expecting The Worst and Getting It

We expected the worst, and we’ve gotten it. But that does not mean that things will get better. The revenue trends had been strong. Now they’re awful, and spending is unimaginable. How can this be sustained? In this report, I’ll show you the data, and discuss how to handle what’s to come.

Subscribers, click here to download the report.

Get this report and access to past reports.  Read Lee Adler’s Liquidity Trader risk free for 90 days!

 

 

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