Under the surface, this stock market is slowly ‘rotting away’

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Some crazy lucky person is $1.6 billion richer this morning, but chances are slim it’s you, unfortunately.

Here’s some Mega Millions perspective from Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid: “To put this mind-boggling sum in some context…the Bloomberg global equity index lost $637 billion in market cap yesterday (Tuesday). So we’ll need a few lottery winners to fill the gap at the moment.”

And that gap could get bigger, with the mood on Wall Street a bit wobbly. On that gloomy note, our call of the day, from Wolf Richter of the Wolf Street blog, warns investors not to be fooled by the “hunky-dory” surface of this market as the rot is setting in.

Sure, the S&P 500 has gained 6.7% over the past 52 weeks, the Nasdaq has logged a 12.7% rise over the same period and the Dow has risen 7.5%. But Richter’s blog is strewn with evidence that the market is in serious trouble. Those signs include the fact that 353 stocks on the S&P 500 are down 10% from 52-week highs and 179 have lost at least 20%.

Overall, stocks would be sunk by a more substantial amount, if it weren’t for some heavyweight tech performers like Apple














AAPL, +0.94%












 and Microsoft (reporting later Wednesday), whose 52-week losses are in the mere single digits, he notes. And those performances have helped soften the blow of other big tech losses, such as the 21% drop for shares of Netflix














NFLX, +1.10%












 over the same period.

And then there is the bruising that smaller-capitalization stocks, which brushed off that bigger market selloff in early February, have endured recently, says Richter. The Russell 2000 index














RUT, -0.84%












 is down 12% since Aug. 31, he notes.



“These are the hallmarks of a market that is rotting ‘gradually,’ as the Fed would say, at every corner underneath the covers—the covers being a few large stocks, such as Apple, that have held up reasonably well. But they can no longer cover the rotting process,” says Richter.

But let’s leave things on a less dire note, with insight from Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial Network, who says the short, sharp pullbacks that have been hitting stocks aren’t too dissimilar to what was seen in early 2018, early 2016 and 2011.

He admits that the risks are piling up that investor confidence will probably crack and take this market down “significantly”, with headwinds such as looming Fed hikes looming, a housing market that is rolling over and growth and trade-war worries festering.

But investors should always remember that the market tends to recover in “reasonably short order, says McMillan. Like that crash in 2016, for example, of which he says: “Almost no one remembers that crash today. Why? Over time, it didn’t matter, which is exactly the point.”

It is worth noting that this time, market downturns also are occurring against the backdrop of a Federal Reserve that is on a determined path toward raising interest rates. So, this time investors are wading through some uncharted waters.

The market

Volatility is in play with Dow














YMZ8, +0.05%












S&P 500














ESZ8, -0.21%












 and Nasdaq














NQZ8, -0.15%












 whipping around after Tuesday’s volatile session that saw the S&P














SPX, -0.55%












log its fifth-straight loss. The Dow














DJIA, -0.50%












 lost ground for that session, while the Nasdaq














COMP, -0.42%












 squeaked past with a gain.

Check out the Market Snapshot column for the latest action.

China stocks














SHCOMP, +0.33%












 managed a positive session, but the steam came out of those moves by the close. Europe














SXXP, +0.87%












 is xxx

Read: Here are the early signs China’s stock-market woes are starting to infect the rest of the world

Gold














US:GCU8












and Brent crude














LCOZ8, +0.17%












 are slipping. The dollar is fired up














DXY, +0.47%












 against the pound














GBPUSD, -0.5546%












 as PM Theresa May gets ready for a big cabinet meeting, amid near-mutiny over her Brexit plan. The loonie














USDCAD, -0.0153%












 could be active ahead of a Bank of Canada meeting.

The chart

Speaking of Apple, Michael Kramer, founder of Mott Capital Management, has been tracking some “highly unusual” activity for those shares lately, noting “serious money” being through at defending a certain level. Here’s that chart of the day:

Mott Capitol


“Every time the stock falls it never goes below the $215 price. If you look at the chart you can see there have been several times now the price has fallen but it never goes below 215. Even on days when the market is down a lot,” says Kramer, in emailed comments.

His “gut” tells him that it is one big buyer of Apple, and not the company, given earning are due soon. “Whoever is buying the stock is taking a stand with conviction. Guys this is Apple. This a $1 trillion market cap company. We are talking about serious money here,” he says on the blog.

The buzz

Boeing














BA, -1.67%












Boston Scientific














BSX, -1.61%












UPS














UPS, -1.21%












AT&T














T, +1.07%












 and Tupperware














TUP, +2.05%












 are some of the names rolling out with reports, with Tesla














TSLA, +12.72%












Microsoft














MSFT, -1.40%












Ford














F, +2.14%












Whirlpool














WHR, +3.19%












Visa














V, -1.08%












 and AMD














AMD, +0.24%












 expected after the close.

Read: Legendary short Tesla seller goes long

Earnings previews: Biogen, AMD, Intel, Amazon, Whirlpool, Ford

Texas Instruments














TXN, +0.53%












is down after reporting the first slowdown in demand since 2015, and some are talking about a “death cross” for the sector. Note, Europe chip makers haven’t been so chipper either.

Trump came out swinging against Fed hikes in a WSJ interview late Tuesday, saying Chairman Jerome Powell “almost looks like he’s happy raising interest rates,” and he might just be regretting that nomination.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is expected to give his first public address since the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi at his country’s consulate in Istanbul three weeks ago, the handling of which POTUS referred to as “the worst coverup in history.” He’ll speak at the widely shunned Future Investment Initiative summit in Riyadh.

The economy

Markit manufacturing and services PMI data are due after the market open, followed by new home sales and later on, the Fed’s Beige Book.

Random reads

Latest victim of U.S.-China trade tensions: Baseball caps

So far, a ticket in South Carolina matches winning numbers for the $1.6 billion Mega Millions jackpot

Russian football fans injured as escalator in Rome goes haywire

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Source : MTV