S&P 500 Futures July Month End: Buy $800 Million
chart 08-01-2016
chart 08-01-2016

Friday’s trade was a good example of traders taking time off. Crude oil sold off and rallied. The S&P initially sold off a little and then started to take out the buy stops above 2168.00 to 2171.75. The S&P futures (ESU16:CME), the DOW futures (YMU16:CBT), and the Nasdaq futures (NQU16:CME) all closed nearly unchanged. At the end of July the S&P closed up 3.6%, the DOW closed up 2.8% and the Nasdaq futures closed up 7.5%.

The second quarter GDP came in lower than expected at 1.2%, weaker than the expected 2.6%, and consumer spending came in stronger than expected. Business spending came in weaker than expected which will probably push the feds potential rate hikes out past September and possible not until 2017. Crude oil sold off below my level at $41.00, down to $40.57 a barrel, but rallied all the way up to $41.67 before settling at $41.56 for the month. NYMEX crude oil futures were down a whopping 14%, but is still up 12.3% in 2016.

Almost two months ago when crude was trading $50.00 to $51.00 I said the next $4.00 to $6.00 move would be down. When the futures started trading $44.00, I said they would see support at the $43 to $41.00 level, and that I expect some type of bounce. The sell off again renewed fears of drilling oversupplies. The BOJ said in its latest policy statement that it was planning to buy more ETF’s. The YEN fell -2.6% while the U.S. stock market has seen a sharp rebound.

The disappointing GDP shows that economic growth and cautious business spending is hampering the economic recovery. Economic growth is now tracking at a 1% rate in 2016—the weakest start to a year since 2011. Many economists think the weak business environment is a ‘lingering growth restraint,’ and according to a Thomson Reuters survey of analysts, f companies in the S&P 500 are likely to report the fourth straight quarter of declining profits, down 3.7% from second-quarter 2015. Revenues are expected to decline 1.2%.

underwhelming growth
underwhelming growth

So who do we believe?The public has been taught that when the stock market is good, so must be everything else. So do we believe the Dow Jones and S&P that are trading at new all-time contract highs. Do we believe the Nasdaq Composite, which is trading at the highest it’s been since the 1999-2000 tech bubble, or do we believe in the weak growth and lower earning expectations? If you are an old school trader that looks at the big economic indicators as stock market drivers it just doesn’t make sense. Some of the hottest high end housing markets are starting to cool, but in West Palm Beach, Florida sales are still going strong.