>>> US After Hours Summary: SIGM +7.2%, PANW +4.8%, BOX +3.5%, K

After Hours Summary: SIGM +7.2%, PANW +4.8%, BOX +3.5%, KKD -17.4%, MTH -8.0%, PPHM -2.5% following earnings/guidance

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings: SIGM +7.2%, DTEA +5.5%, APIC +5.2%, PANW +4.8%, BOX +3.5%, OLLI +2.3%, PAHC +0.1%

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: CNW +32.9% (to be acquired by XPO Logistics (XPO) for $47.60/share, or ~$3 bln), RDUS +3.1% (named David P. Snow as Chief Commercial Officer), AIZ +1.6% (confirmed  sale of its Employee Benefits Business to Sun Life Financial (SLF); raised quarterly dividend to $0.50/share from $0.30/share; authorized new $750 mln share repurchase program), LYV +1.1% (named Carrie Davis as Chief Communications Officer), PAH +1.1% (announced that Alent plc shareholders have approved its acquisition of the company; closure expected in late 2015 or early 2016), CSTE +1.1% (published a presentation in response to the short report from Spruce Point Capital; says report is a misleading and otherwise factually inaccurate description of Caesarstone)

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings: KKD -17.4%, MTH -8.0%, PPHM -2.5%, URBN -0.6%

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: AMID -10.3% (announced public offering of 7.5 mln common units), USAC -5.3% (announced an underwritten public offering of 4 mln common units), EWZ -5.2% (Brazil ETF lower following rating cut at S&P), LJPC -3.6% (announced an underwritten offering of common stock; size and terms not disclosed), SSE -2.1% (disclosed its Board approved a 5% reduction to the base salaries of its named executive officers), SGEN -1.9% (filed mixed securities shelf offering; co also announced a $400 mln offering of common stock), ONCE -1.4% (announced a database lock for the Phase 3 clinical trial of its lead program, SPK-RPE65, for the treatment of RPE65-mediated inherited retinal dystrophies)

>>> US Close Dow-1.45% S&P-1.39% Nasdaq-1.15% Russell-1.16%

Closing Market Summary: Stocks Settle on Lows After Surrendering Early Gains

The stock market ended Tuesday on a defensive note despite enjoying an upbeat start to the session. The S&P 500 began the day with a 15-point gain, which morphed into a 27-point loss by the close. The benchmark index surrendered 1.4% while the Nasdaq Composite (-1.2%) settled a bit ahead.

Equity indices hit their highs shortly after the opening bell with the early move fueled by strengthening risk appetite overseas. To that point, Asian markets posted solid gains with China's Shanghai Composite jumping 2.3% amid continued speculation about government involvement in the market while Japan's Nikkei soared 7.7%, registering its largest one-day gain since October 2008, after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pledged to lower the corporate tax rate by at least 3.3%.

The positive vibes carried into the European session, but the demand for equities began receding once the U.S. market opened. The S&P 500 spent the first 90 minutes of the day in a slow retreat from its high and hovered near its flat line into the early afternoon. The index then dipped into negative territory alongside Apple (AAPL 110.15, -2.16) as the largest stock by market cap slid to a session low in reaction to the company's underwhelming product refresh event. Shares of Apple settled lower by 1.9% while the broader technology sector (-1.3%) had a better showing than its leading component, ending just ahead of the market. Like Apple, most large cap components ended in the red, but Facebook (FB 90.44, +0.91) added 1.0%.

Staying in the tech sector, high-beta chipmakers struggled throughout the session, but despite today's 1.8% loss, the PHLX Semiconductor Index remains higher by 2.5% for the week. Meanwhile, another high-beta group—biotechnology—displayed relative weakness throughout the session. The iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB 344.22, -7.55) lost 2.2%, trimming this week's gain to 2.1%. On a related note, the health care sector lost 1.6%.

Moving back to the cyclical side, the energy sector (-1.9%) struggled throughout the day as renewed weakness in oil prices took its toll on the commodity-sensitive sector. The energy space is now down 0.5% for the week while crude oil tumbled 3.9% today to $44.15/bbl.

Elsewhere, Treasuries retreated overnight, hitting their lows shortly after 9:00 ET; however, a daylong rally erased that entire loss. As a result, the 10-yr note settled on its high with the benchmark yield down one basis point at 2.18%.

Today's participation was slightly stronger than yesterday as more than 905 million shares changed hands at the NYSE floor.

Economic data was limited to the MBA Mortgage Index and JOLTS:

  • The weekly MBA Mortgage Index fell 6.2% to follow last week's 11.3% spike
  • The July Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey showed an increase in openings to 5.753 million from 5.323 million

Tomorrow, weekly Initial Claims (consensus 275K) and August Import/Export Prices will be reported at 8:30 ET while the Wholesale Inventories report for July (expected 0.3%) will cross the wires at 10:00 ET.

  • Nasdaq Composite +0.4% YTD
  • Russell 2000 -4.6% YTD
  • S&P 500 -5.7% YTD
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average -8.8% YTD

(Makor) Technical Research – Euro Stoxx Index (3,302)





Sep 9, 2015 
Technical Research – Euro Stoxx Index (3,302) - going short.....

 

Technical Research – Euro Stoxx Index (3,302)
 
·Today's high was at the 50% Fibonacci retracement level of the wave iii sell off, this level stands at 3329 and while below this level a move lower is our preferred scenario.
 
·The 55dma is crossing the 200dma (death cross). This is a bearish signal which argues for a move lower as well. 
 
·The suggested Elliot wave count on the chart favors one more leg lower before possibly moving higher again. The leg lower should test the 2,789-2,890 support zone.
 
·A move above 3,329 would be slightly bullish but given the structure on the chart and till we get other
signs of reversal any rally should be used as an opportunity to either take risk off the table or establish a short position.
 
Strategy: Sell 1 unit at mkt price, target 2,890 with a stop on a close above 3,370
 
Support: 3,159, 2,973 & 2,789-2,890                  
 
Resistance: 3,329, 3,350-70 & 3,460-70

 

CLICK HERE FOR FULL REPORT

 

The market stinks, the world's crumbling, the Fed can't hike, So, buy stocks!


Stocks Rally as Traders Bet the Fed Won’t Raise Rates

If the Federal Reserve raises interest rates next week, the world will end. Thus, the Fed won’t raise rates. So buy stocks.
That’s more or less the pretzel logic that’s driving the market this week, with stock indexes rising sharply, commodity currencies soaring, and risk in general finding a bid. All this comes as more and more people come out against a Fed rate hike.
U.S. stocks are rallying sharply. The S&P 500 is up 13 points at 1983, putting it close to the highs of the late August rally, when the S&P got to 1993. If the market is really convinced that it’s sent a message to the Fed, the rally might be able to vault that previous stumbling block. The DJIA is up 132 points at 16623, and the Nasdaq Composite is up 41 points at 4852.


For the record, the effective Fed funds rate, currently, is 0.13%, according to the St. Louis Fed’s Fred database. The rate is set in a range between 0.00%-0.25%, and has been since late 2008. The market is betting heavily against an increase next week. Looking at the CME’s FedWatch page, the market’s has cut odds down to 24% that the Fed will hike next week. A month ago, that number was at 45%.
“It’s not a week for safe havens,” Societe Generale forex strategist Kit Juckes wrote.
A plethora of big names have come out against hiking rates, and more are joining. It not just policy heavyweights like the IMF’s Christine Lagarde. Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers is out with his second piece in three weeks arguing forcefully against a rate increase. Warren Buffett is urging caution. The New York Times editorial page and Martin Wolf of the Financial Times also made the case against it. Even a nominal increase next week, Mr. Wolf said, would send a clear signal to the market that monetary policy was changing direction, in favor of tighter policy, not looser. The problem, he said, is that it still isn’t clear the world is ready for that, or can handle it.
The World Banks’ chief economist, Kaushik Basu, warned the Fed against raising rates. Increasing rates right now would create “panic and turmoil” in emerging markets, along with capital flight. We’re sure there are voices out there in favor of raising rates, but they are being drowned out right now.
Now, all of these people can talk themselves blue in the face, but the bottom line is nobody outside of the Fed’s Eccles Building has any say. There are some voices inside those halls in favor of raising rates, like the Richmond Fed’s Jeffrey Lacker, who made the case last week, and the San Francisco Fed’s John Williams, who’s leaning toward a hike - so long as the economy behaves and risks dissipate.
To that last point, there is one voice outside the Fed that might have some sway: the market. The market has been saying rather noisily that the risks are not dissipating, that they are in fact increasing. The market certainly thinks that message has been heard, which is why it’s now rallying. But in making everything look so bright and green all of a sudden – even China’s batter stock market rallied – is the market undercutting its previous message? “If a higher stock market is the Fed’s implied third mandate, then are we rallying into a rate hike next week?” Lindsey Group’s Peter Boockvar asked.
Just another twist of the pretzel.

>>> Makor Chart Update...from our analyst

* Euro stoxx cash: 3329 sell zone, above that can go to 3,365. Above this can go to 3470. Short term structure positive above 3,159 and below this i think correction over.

* Dax cash: 10,600-10,800 resistance zone, above that can go to 10,980 which is ideal sell zone. Short term structure positive above 9,928.

* S&P 500 cash: 1,990-2,015 sell zone. Above that can go to 2,040 (bottom of recent range), if we take 2,040 out then 55 and 200 dma's at 2070 is resistance. Short term structure positive above 1,903-11. Below this i think we test the cycle low at 1867. Below 1867 tgt is 1820 and then 1710-30.

(ZeroHedge) "August Sucks" MIT Quant Warns New Strategies "Are Creating Volatili

"August Sucks" MIT Quant Warns New Strategies "Are Creating Volatility"


"August Sucks," concludes MIT Quant guru Andrew Lo, reflecting on the systematic-trading strategy effects on markets, and it's not going to get better any time soon. As he explains to Bloomberg, "algorithmic trading is speeding up the reaction times of these participants, so that’s the choppiness of the market.Everybody can move to the left side of the boat and the right side of the boat now within minutes as opposed to hours or days." As we have noted many time, Lo explains how "crowded trades have got to the point of alpha becoming beta," warning that volatility-targeting strategies (such as Risk-Parity) are not only "exaggerating the moves," but he cautions omniously reminiscent of the August 2007 quant crash, "I think they are creating volatility of volatility."

Question: What does this volatility look like to you? Is this another quant meltdown?


Lo: I’m not sure I’d characterize it as just a quant meltdown. I think that makes it a little bit too cut and dried. Probably there are a number of different factors, including algorithmic trading, that plays into it. We have a number of different forces that are all coming to a head. And because of the automation of markets and the electronification of trading, we’re seeing much choppier markets than we otherwise would have five or 10 years ago. But it’s many forces operating at different time scales, all coming to a head.
Question: Is systematic trading exaggerating the moves?


Lo: I think it’s doing two things. One it can be exaggerating the moves if it lines up with what the market wants to do. So if the market is looking to sell because of an impending recession, then I think we’re going to see a lot of the algorithmic trading going in the same direction. And if the time horizon matches, you will see that kind of cascade effect. At the same time, I think algorithmic trading can play the opposite role. They can dampen some of the market swings if they’re going opposite to the general trend... The one thing that is true, though, is that algorithmic trading is speeding up the reaction times of these participants, so that’s the choppiness of the market. Everybody can move to the left side of the boat and the right side of the boat now within minutes as opposed to hours or days.



Question: When you talk about exaggerating the effect, is that mostly CTAs and momentum players or is it not that simple?


Lo: I think that over the course of the last few weeks, that’s actually a pretty decent bet: That there are trend followers that are unwinding because of some underperformance and concerns about the change in direction of the market. But, for example, what happened in August 2007 was equity market neutral strategies that unwound. So I think it really varies depending on the nature of the strategies that are getting hit and the money going into and out of those strategies, and how that’s affecting market dynamics.
Question: A lot of focus has fallen on risk parity strategies. The notion that, as volatility picked up, there was a lot of deleveraging going on, especially with futures and ETFs. Does that make sense to you from what we’ve seen?


Lo: Well, it certainly looks that way. Part of the challenge of risk parity is that it ignores anything about expected returns. The idea behind risk parity is not a bad one, which is to focus on risk and to manage your portfolio so as to try to stabilize that risk. But the problem with equalizing it across all asset classes or investments is that not all investments are created equal at all points in time. So there are certain strategies that end up doing worse than others during periods of times.And if you end up equalizing your volatility across those strategies, you might end up getting hit pretty hard as some of the equity risk parity strategies got hit over the course of the last few weeks.
Question: Is risk parity looking like a crowded trade?


Lo: I think there’s definitely a case in point of the idea of alpha becoming beta. The idea that once you start popularizing a particular investment approach, and it becomes so popular, that in and of itself creates these kinds of shock waves. So for example if the strategy itself underperforms, now we have a larger number of investors that are going to be unwinding that strategy and that will create a kind of cascade effect where the strategy will underperform even more as people start to take money out of the strategy. There are a number of examples. Risk parity, of course, is the most recent. But before that trend following, before that value investing, growth investing, earnings surprise, earnings momentum, any kind of a strategy can become a crowded trade. And when it does you have to just make sure that the risk premium associated with that trade is commensurate with the potential risks of getting hit with these unwinds.
Question: Are volatility targeting strategies part of the story? Have they become so popular that they’re exaggerating the moves?


Lo: Not only are they exaggerating the moves, but I think they are creating volatility of volatility. So it’s making the market quite a bit more complicated and the dynamics now are much more different and much more difficult to manage if you’re not aware of how these dynamics play out.
Question: What about when you get a big rebound? What do you suppose that is? Is that actually value-type of investors seeing the drops and coming in, or is it just another systematic trading function?


Lo: These rebounds are a confluence of a number of phenomena.One, you’re seeing that once selling pressure declines, investors will naturally become more optimistic and will come back into the market. That’s a common phenomenon. But I think that a rather newer phenomenon is the fact that these algorithms, because they operate at such high frequencies, when the price moves beyond a certain threshold, the algorithms will kick around and flip and go the other way. It’s happening at a rate that’s faster than it’s been anytime in the past because we haven’t had the technology to be able to do that.

And finally what we’re seeing is expectations shifting more rapidly because unlike five or 10 years ago we now have very big players in the financial markets, actively trying to move markets. In particular, I’m thinking about central banks and governments that are trying to manage economies by engaging in quantitative easing or other kinds of financial market transactions. When you have a small number of very big players that are going to be trying to move markets for political or long-term economic reasons, it becomes much, much harder to understand what’s happening. So people are all sort of trigger happy when small pieces of information hit the market, they tend to start moving money very quickly and in large size.
Question: Is that type government intervention something that algos can’t anticipate? Is that sort of an Achilles heel of algo strategies?


Lo: Absolutely. That event risk is something most algorithmic trading strategies really can’t manage yet. I say "yet" because in five or 10 years maybe natural language processing and artificial intelligence will have allowed them to read the news, interpret it and make judgments the way George Soros or Warren Buffett can. But I think we’re still a few years away from that
Question: Are a lot of momentum strategies able to turn on a dime that quickly? We’ll see this intraday drop of several hundred points, then it turns on a dime…


Lo: I think that it’s hard for momentum strategies to be able to move that quickly. In fact, some of the strategies that do move that quickly end up getting whipsawed. The real challenge in operating in these markets is that risk management would have you cut risk in the face of losses. The problem is that if you cut risk too quickly and by too much, you may end up missing out on the rebound, in which case you’ve locked in your losses and you might be getting back in the market exactly at the worst time. So you’re getting hit on both ends. What this atmosphere creates is a much more complicated challenge to risk managers to figure out what is the right frequency with which they need to cut risk and put it back. And I think everybody is trying to figure out what that optimal frequency is. But until we get a sense of who’s involved in the markets and driving these frequencies, it’s going to be anybody’s guess. And as a result a lot of people are going to be surprised over the next few weeks and months.
Question: Any other observations you have from the last couple of weeks that you think people might be interested in?


Lo: Yeah. August sucks.