But Our Bankers Aren’t Oligarchs

DOW + 87 = 16448
SPX + 6 = 1869
NAS – 1 = 4074
10 YR YLD + .01 = 2.67%
OIL – .03 = 100.57
GOLD – 7.50 = 1297.30
SILV – .16 = 19.67

This should be an interesting week. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee, the FOMC, will meet to determine monetary policy; a statement will be issued Wednesday. On Friday, we’ll have the monthly jobs report.

The market is jittery. The Dow fell 140 points on Friday, rose 139 on Monday morning, and gave it all back Monday afternoon, then recovered at little at the close. Investors are worried about the Ukraine crisis, the Fed’s tapering, peak earnings, high PEs, low GDP, inflation, deflation, and of course, their own shadows.

So far, the stock market has merely been sluggish to start the year; no big crash, no big gains. Last week, the big 3 indices were down a little, while the indices are in negative territory year to date, that could change with one good week of trading. After doubling or tripling since 2009, stocks aren’t cheap any more. Companies, meanwhile, are finding it harder to keep raising earnings in a period of soft economic growth. This makes investors more cautious, but because speculative excess still hasn’t reached the extremes of past bubbles, and because the Federal Reserve is determined to sustain the recovery, there is less fear of a big decline. The Fed has started slowly rolling back its quantitative easing, gradually ending the unprecedented bond-buying program that dumped more than $1 trillion into financial markets. Investors are trying to figure out how well corporate earnings will grow with less Fed aid.

A big complication is that many companies are reaching the limit of their ability to boost profits by cutting costs. More companies now need to focus on building revenues, which means higher costs for investment, hiring and wages. The days may be ending when Wall Street will reward companies for holding down wages and doing little investing; the focus is shifting to sustainable earnings.

Margin debt, a measure of the use of borrowed money to invest, is at a record high in dollar terms. But as a percentage of market value, it is 2.6%, still between the 2008 low of 2.3% and the 2007 high of 2.8%. Still, the markets haven’t yet shown enough excess to warrant a crash, and so people are still buying the dips; probably because they haven’t yet figured out where else they can go.

Money managers are turning on stocks that have delivered the best returns during the bull market: small caps. Large speculators such as hedge funds are betting $2.8 billion this month that the Russell 2000 Index will fall. That’s the most since 2012 and the highest versus average levels since 2004.

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