DOW + 14 = 16,921
SPX + 2 = 1959
NAS – 3 = 4359
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.62%
OIL + .48 = 106.07
GOLD + 42.80 = 1321.30
SILV + .86 = 20.86
Taking a look at economic data, weekly claims for jobless benefits fell 6,000 to 312,000; the labor market still has plenty of slack but still shows signs of modest improvement. The Philly Fed manufacturing index was up to its highest reading since last September. And the Conference Board’s index of leading economic indicators rose 0.5% to 101.7 in May.
President Obama said today that the United States would deploy up to 300 military advisers to Iraq to help its Iraqi government forces fend off Sunni militants. Obama emphasized again that he would not send combat troops to Iraq, although there seems to be a fine line between combat troops and advisers; he said the United States would help the Iraqis “take the fight†to the militants, who he said pose a threat to Iraq’s stability and to American interests, because Iraq could become a sanctuary for terrorists who could strike the United States or its allies.
Secretary of State John Kerry will go to Europe and the Middle East this weekend to build support among Iraq’s Arab neighbors for a multisectarian government in Baghdad.
Markets were in negative territory most of the day, nothing big, then we recovered near the end of the session, nothing big; the S&P 500 hit its 21st record high close of the year. This market is just slowly scratching and clawing its way higher, and that’s a good thing. When the markets go on a sharp move higher, sometimes called a parabolic run, it usually ends with a nasty fall. For now, the markets are moving higher but staying within the channels of standard deviation.
There are plenty of geopolitical hotspots, and a boatload of economic uncertainty, but the US equity markets are as constant as you could want. The past 44 consecutive sessions of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index have fluctuated upward or downward by less than 1 percent. To put that streak in context, the S&P 500 hasn’t seen this little movement since 1995, when the index didn’t change by a full percentage point for 95 days. All the while, stocks have been steadily ticking up. The S&P 500 is up 6% year-to-date.
There always seems to be a crisis somewhere and maybe investors and Wall Street traders are just crisis weary, even if it is a little dangerous to wait for the next hotspot to implode. Ukraine hasn’t resulted in disaster, at least not for the US. We’ve been dealing with a mess in Iraq for more than 10 years, so there’s no reason to freak out now. The full impact of recent world events is still unclear, so just keep trading. Compared with past conflicts in the Middle East, America has reduced its dependence on oil in the region and thus may not be feeling the effects of the current crisis as strongly.