Morning Bid with David Gaffen

Now What?

September 18, 2015

The Fed has a lot of supporters among those who believe it wasn’t time to raise rates. Most primary dealers moved their expectations on a rate increase prior to the Fed meeting, the fed funds market was clearly signaling a very low chance of a rate increase, and plenty of commentators, domestic and international, expressed concern about the Fed moving rates at a time when it just wasn’t prudent to do so.

Fed Outlook: Bet on Chaos, and All Else a Toss-Up

September 17, 2015

With great power comes great responsibility, as a wise comic-book character once said. And so the Federal Reserve’s decision this afternoon bears the weight of re-establishing credibility in its ability to shift policy in more than one direction, communicate to markets its thinking, and yet – if it raises rates – to soothe investors concerned that several more rate increases are in the offing. (The Fed has repeatedly said this isn’t the case, but who knows how markets interpret things sometimes.)

The Frowning of a Lifetime

September 16, 2015

With corrective action that has been seen in the last several months (and yes, this correction should accurately be dated to May), it’s good to try to start somewhere when it comes to optimism. Jason Goepfert of Sentimentrader.com points out that total pink sheet activity as a percentage of the Nasdaq volume has dropped to levels not seen since the aftermath of the dot-com blowup.

Jobs, the Fed and Random Number Generation

September 3, 2015

Heading into payroll day, the more popular betting surrounds the Federal Reserve, and with it a discussion of whether a particular number or set of numbers will be strong enough or weak enough to move the central bank to boost rates in a couple of weeks.

Janet Kick a Hole In the Sky

July 29, 2015

The July meeting was never meant to be much of a thing with the Federal Reserve, and that’s exactly how it’s worked out. The Fed seems like it is still targeting a modest increase in rates in September, with – as many strategists have already noted – the real action to come later on down the road, as Janet Yellen and others have argued that the first move isn’t the one to really worry about.

Still about China

July 28, 2015

The broad effects of the selloff in Shanghai are beginning to spread. Notably, during the U.S. session on Monday was when China’s regulatory authority said the state would continue to support the equity market, the ultimate in treating a symptom rather than a problem. Whatever happens to the equity market, a steady diet of share-buying by the state isn’t likely to be able to stem the losses.

Price-to-Blecch Ratio

July 22, 2015

This seems like a day best fit for Mad Magazine-style descriptions of what we’re about to see in the equity market. Suffice to say that in the past, the weak trend evinced in the quarterly stats for earnings growth were often restored to some sort of level people could live with once Apple figures were released.

A Fistful of Apples

July 21, 2015

The big Megillah of the market is out after the close, so naturally there will be a ton of scrutiny – and a ton of trading – surrounding Apple after the consumer electronics giant reports results and gives people an idea of how its signature iPhone and newcomer iWatch products are doing.

Little Blue

July 20, 2015

IBM, long-time stalwart of the Dow industrials, reports quarterly results after the close, the first of several major technology bellwethers to release its earnings figures. The stock has been a laggard compared with the benchmark S&P 500 over the last year or so, with the S&P’s greater-than-10-percent return easily dwarfing the losses from IBM in that time.

Google, Interrupted

July 16, 2015

The next bellwether on the earnings docket is Google, with the hope that it should exceed expectations, but the stock has been in a steadily declining pattern of lower highs and lower lows since it hit its peak in early 2014.