Monthly Archives: January 2015

Gappy

I have gone mostly sidelines with the seasonal stock market bounce stuff, but also am not short a single thing. With that disclosed, here is a gappy view of the SPY. Does yesterday’s gap up on some Fed guy’s jawbone seem particularly healthy?  One would think that gap has a good chance of filling, just…

Another BS BLS Report

This never grows old. The BLS and the MSM are touting the phenomenal job gains over the last two months. They love to shout the figures from their one survey, while ignoring the data from the more comprehensive household survey. So here is what they are screaming from the mountaintops: November New Jobs – 353,000…

5 Things To Ponder: What This Way Cometh

Well, it has been an interesting start to a New Year.  As I penned yesterday: “Since the end of the Federal Reserve’s latest QE program, market volatility has picked up markedly. Since October, as QE came to its final bond buying conclusion, the drain of liquidity begin to financial market activity. As shown in the chart…

Bed Bath & Beyond Q3 Sales Miss, Ups FY14 Earnings View

Shares of the home-furnishing retailer Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. (BBBY – Analyst Report) fell 3.5% in yesterday’s after-hour trading session, owing to lower-than-expected sales results for third-quarter fiscal 2014. Bed Bath & Beyond’s third-quarter earnings of $1.19 per share were in line with the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.19 per share and within the company’s guidance range of…

MSM Rationalizes Stock Market Reversal

Never mind that the US increased employment by 252,000 in December and unemployment sagged to 5.6%.  The stock market moves to its own beat and doesn’t care much about the particulars in the ‘Jobs’ report or the media’s interpretations of its details. US Stocks Decline as Wage Data Overshadows Job Gains The market only cares…

The Economy Is Great (But It’s Not)

CNBC spoke with Chicago Fed President Charles Evans this morning about the Federal Reserve’s schedule for raising interest rates above zero percent. While Evans confirmed the official narrative that the United States economy is getting better and better, he still doesn’t think the Fed will raise rates until 2016. Even the CNBC anchors seem to be…