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The Coronavirus And The Markets

Published 02/03/2020, 02:27 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

This new coronavirus has now surpassed the impact of SARS in 2002, with more than 360 dead and 17,000 infected. I hear underground rumblings that the number of infections is closer to 90,000. Wuhan, the town of origin, is completely shut down, as is the case with significant parts of 12 other cities.

This has been and will continue to affect China’s economy and its Asian trading partners.

China’s stock market had been on holiday since January 23. The Shanghai Composite opened down 9% Monday morning and closed down 7.7%. This was despite $174 billion in reverse repo injections that raised the net balance sheet by $22 billion. But that balance sheet would have fallen by $152 billion, which is tightening, if China’s central bank had not injected that much. And that is on top of the U.S., at $404 billion injections since mid-September.

U.S. stocks had their big fall on Friday, down 600 points on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, but bounced Monday morning up 200 points to open. We are holding and China is folding.

Ralph Acampora, called the “grandfather of technical analysis,” sees this likely turning into a 10%+ correction and possibly the beginning of a major crash, more like what I am looking for. But I don’t see that yet unless this crisis really accelerates.

The recent Fed injections are bigger than the strongest at its peak QE – and this gives an excuse for even more – and in China, as well. The antibiotics for every ill is “print more money!”

Here’s my best new indicator. I just chart the surge in the Fed balance sheet since the repo crisis in mid-September on a 3-week lag for stocks and the correlation is very close.

Here I show the Nasdaq, which is rising the fastest, but the correlation is very similar with the broader S&P 500.

Nasdaq Composite

This chart shows that stocks would be due for a minor correction, which we have seen thus far, of 4% for the Nasdaq.

This indicator gives us a nice three-week lead and it says that as long as this correction can stay more in this 4% to 6% range, it would not be a sign of a deeper crash. The Dow starts to get in trouble down 7% below 27,300; the S&P 500 at about 3,000, down 10% and the Nasdaq at about 8,300, down 12%.

I will be monitoring the Fed balance sheet every week, as it is updated on Thursday after the close. The demand for repo injections has abated for now. But last week’s T-bill purchases – good, old-fashioned QE – were $22 billion, or about $90 billion a month, and their declared intentions have been for about $80 billion a month plus repos when needed. If that continues, as I expect, stocks should be exploding up until the bubble blows between late May and the election, by my best calculations in the last two weeks.

I’ll keep you updated on this virus and these new injections that are just proving that the Fed can’t taper without the system blowing up – we’re hooked on “the crack.”

This repo crisis is not a short-term problem that will go away. And this virus may or may not be. It likely will get worse before it gets better, but it won’t affect the U.S. nearly as much as it’ll affect China and Asia, as the markets have thus far shown.

Latest comments

Any day now there will be a 10% correction at the minimum. This artificially induced uptrend is 100 miles past irrational exuberance. Enough is enough. If the market can’t go up on its own on fundamentals earnings and technicals then so be it that’s life. Markets go up and they go down. They just don’t go up every day every week every month without any corrections. That’s called an irrational bull. A realistic ball, understands that this is just a bubble waiting to burst. And we are months past needing that to happen. To get the market back to a healthy position. Not just fake QE induced rally. It’s really a shame and embarrassment to the stock market and those that play along thinking that the market levels are well deserved.
Hey Harry, where can you be followed in social media?
lol
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