The market continued
its sideways move yesterday and banged-up against 1335 resistance for
most of the session. Over the past four sessions the market has been
stuck in a four point range and trading on less than average
volume.
Activity picked up a little more yesterday, but by the end of
the day volume was still below normal levels. Although yesterday was a
huge day in the forex market, and the dollar was murdered. Most of the
dollar's demise can be attributed to the euro, which soared yesterday
ahead of this morning's ECB rate announcement.
It was widely believed that the European Central Bank would
raise rates (this is opposite of what Ben Bernanke recommended) to fight
overwhelming inflation. Indeed, the ECB raised rates by 0.25% to 1.25%
from a record low of one percent.
The ECB is in a similar spot to the U.S. where inflation due
to rising commodity price needs to be weighted carefully against weak
parts of the economy, for example Spain or Greece, and Louisiana or
Nevada. Higher rates translate to higher financing costs, but lower rates
ignite inflation. It's a difficult trapeze act to be sure, but in my view
the ECB did the right thing this morning and Ben Bernanke is very wrong
with regard to his free money tactic.
Although the ECB raised rates, it was only by a small amount.
And rates are still near record low levels. But the fact that rates rose
for the first time in years sent a message to the market that low
interest rates are not permanent. The market clearly expected the ECB to
raise rates, and may have actually priced in a larger increase since the
euro is trading lower this morning.
So what does all this gibber jabber have to do
with trading this week – probably not much. The increase was expected, so
the market reaction should be mild as most of the increase is built into
current prices. The euro is also over heated and up against a fairly
strong level of resistance, so a short term increase from here appears
less likely. If I had to pick a direction, I would say today's
announcement will be mildly negative for commodities since the dollar
should increase slightly in the near term. Over time rate increases will
impact the stock market and our trades, but it appears unlikely to happen
today.
As I have mentioned each day this week, everyone is gearing up for
earnings season next week. Also, SPX has still yet to take out key
resistance despite four days of consolidation between 1330 and 1339. Even
though SPX has risen for the past four weeks, there is currently a large
amount of indecision. And I am not ruling out a blow-off top next week
where stocks gap higher after Alcoa AA and fall dramatically
after IBM IBM.
TradeMaster went long one new position yesterday in Red Hat
RHT playing a bounce off $45 support. RHT broke out past $40
resistance and motored up to multiple year highs only a few sessions ago.
Shares have pulled back down to the gap up near $45 where TradeMaster
entered and I expect them to find support. The stock will move sideways
to lower if the market falls apart, but if the market continues its
sideways move, this stock should challenge new highs up and around $49.
No stop for now, but I suspect $44.50 (-1%) will hold firm, at least this
week.
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