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The Silent Scream Of Crashing Stocks – Dave Kranzler

Wednesday, November 11, 2015 12:34
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forward brick wallTND Guest Contributor: Dave Kranzler

The Dow/S&P 500 indices are currently more overvalued relative to underlying fundamentals than at any time in the history of the U.S. stock market.  This especially true if you weed out the non-cash net income “adjustments” companies are now allowed to pile into their GAAP income statements in order to puff up their earnings per share facade.

Really, it’s not pathetic or absurd, it’s outright childish.  And the stock promoters and Wall Street “experts” who claim the stock market represents good value now are either tragically mentally disabled or insidiously corrupt.  Likely more of the latter than the former (Jim Cramer, Steve Liesman, anyone on Fox Business or Bloomberg News etc).

I guess the tipping point for me was this idiotic article that appeared today on Marketwatch:  Why 100% of your investments portfolio should be in stocks.  If there were ever something ringing the bell at the top of a market, it has to be that article.

Per this Zerohedge post, there’s just eight stocks which are keeping the S&P 500 being negative this year:   Amazon, Google, Facebook, Home Depot, O’Reilly, Netflix, Nike and Starbucks.   These are the stocks in which momentum-chasing hedge funds have highly concentrated holdings.

I know from watching AMZN everyday closely over the last six months that whenever both AMZN and the stock market open up red, when Amazon goes green the rest of the stock market follows.  Yesterday (November 10) was a perfect example of this.  In other words, AMZN plus the other 7 stocks listed above are being used to keep the stock market propped up.

But beneath the surface of the S&P 500/Dow, dozens of stocks are crashing.  Here’s four high-profile examples, but there are many others

CLICK TO ENLARGE

CLICK TO ENLARGE

The underlying stock market “internals” are indicative of a stock market that is infected with a terminal disease: over 44% of all stocks are down at least 10% YTD; only 32% are positive for the year; another 77% are either flat or down more than 10%; the Dow Jones Transports index is down 10% YTD; utilities down 3.5%; the Russell 2000 down 2.5%; biotechs are down 18% since late August.  The list goes on.

The truth is that the U.S. economy, along with the entire global economy, has stalled out and is now quickly contracting.   The last five years of stock market gains, and any measurable economic activity, have been fueled exclusively by money printing and an extreme amount of debt issuance.  But the law of diminishing returns is engulfing the ability of the Central Banks to continue pumping out debt in order to create the mirage of prosperity.

It’s become clear that the Central Banks, at this point in time, are unwilling to let the stock markets engage in unrestrained price-discovery.   Every time the S&P 500 “sniffs” a close below the 50 day moving average the Fed ignites a rally:

CLICK TO ENLARGE

CLICK TO ENLARGE

But you can also see from graph above (yellow line at the bottom) that the MACD overbought/oversold indicator is by far more stretched out to the “overbought” side of boat than at any time since QE began. It’s also more overbought than it was at the peak of the tech bubble in early 2000.

The stock market is thus extremely overvalued and extremely overbought.  Both attributes have been engineered by a Federal Reserve which refuses to let the stock market make any meaningful corrective move to the downside.  The question everyone should be contemplating is:  “for what reason is the Fed not letting the stock market naturally fall?”

Be careful thinking about the answer to that question – which is largely rhetorical for most of you reading this post – because once you “see” the truth, you can’t “un-see” it…

# # # #

About Dave Kranzler:

Aspen1-dave I spent many years working in various analytic jobs and trading on Wall Street. For nine of those years, I traded junk bonds for Bankers Trust. I have an MBA from the University of Chicago, with a concentration in accounting and finance. My goal is to help people understand and analyze what is really going on in our financial system and economy. You can follow my work and contact me via my website Investment Research Dynamics.  Occasionally, I publish on Seeking Alpha too. As a co-founder and principal of Golden Returns Capital, LLC Mr. Kranzler co-manages the Precious Metals Opportunity Fund, a metals and mining stock investment fund.

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