The Fed raised rates by 25 bps. The decision was unanimous. The terminal rate projection is unchanged at 5.1%.
The FOMC statement modifies guidance: “The committee anticipates that some additional policy firming may be appropriate.”
My first tweet @marketminute this morning before the market opened:
@marketminute: I feel pretty certain Powell goes 25. Announces theyre willing to keep raising at that rate as jobs strong, economy ok & banks arent in a credit crisis. However, as data dependent, they could change course accordingly. $SPY remains in a trading range. Until next fracture appears
And then there’s $sugar looking like it’s about to continue the rally higher. Food prices will remain elevated. And the Fed remains stuck between the damage done but the root of inflation far from fixed.”
My tweeted response after the FOMC?
@marketminute: 5% yields create more stress to labor market.
Does nothing for rising food prices and global inflation.
Silver is outperforming gold.
Sounds like Stagflation
The daily chart of silver shows the price rising further away from the 50-daily moving average in blue. The Leadership indicator shows that Silver is beginning to outperform gold. That, in and of itself, is highly inflationary.
The initial response in the indices was to buy, as investors only hear “pivot”.
Powell: “Intermeeting data on jobs and inflation came in stronger than expected. We considered pause, but the hike was supported by strong consensus.”
You hear pivot? I hear considered–quite different. Which is why it is not only important to watch how silver performs relative to gold, but also how bonds perform relative to the S&P 500.
Long bonds are outperforming the S&P 500. The Daily from March 12th covers this potential in detail. That is typically recessionary.
So, if you add up rising gold, silver, cocoa, sugar, copper, steel, and maybe oil prices, along with long bonds showing yields might have topped and, then add that the bonds are doing better than the market (SPY)—that equals Stagflation.
But the real issue is we have not seen the full impact of the Fed and CBs losing control. And the dollar is weak.
A perfect storm?
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Mish in the Media
Mish sits down with Kristen on Cheddar TV’s closing bell to talk what Gold is saying and more.
Mish and Dave Keller of StockCharts look at longer term charts and discuss action plans on the Thursday, March 17 edition of StockCharts TV’s The Final Bar.
Mish covers current market conditions strengths and weaknesses in this appearance on CMC Markets.
Mish sees opportunity in Vietnam, is trading SPX as a range, and likes semiconductors, as she explains to Dale Pinkert on ForexAnalytix’s F.A.C.E. webinar.
Mish and Nicole discuss specific stock recommendations and Fed expectations on TD Ameritrade.
Coming Up:
March 24th: Opening Bell with BNN Bloomberg
March 30th: Your Daily Five, StockCharts TV
March 31st: Festival of Learning Real Vision “Portfolio Doctor”
April 24-26: Mish at The Money Show in Las Vegas
May 2-5: StockCharts TV Market Outlook
ETF Summary
- S&P 500 (SPY): 400 pierced for a minute, now back to resistance; 390 pivotal.
- Russell 2000 (IWM): 170-180 range now.
- Dow (DIA): Could not hold the move over324, the 200-DMA.
- Nasdaq (QQQ): 328 is the 23-month MA resistance, now a bit overbought on the indicators.
- Regional Banks (KRE): 44 support, 50 resistance.
- Semiconductors (SMH): Will watch for a key reversal to the mean w/ 250 support.
- Transportation (IYT): Holding the 200-WMA 219, but has to clear the 200-DMA at 224.
- Biotechnology (IBB): 127.50 resistance.
- Retail (XRT): 60 big support and 64 big resistance.
Mish Schneider
MarketGauge.com
Director of Trading Research and Education