Kass: My 'Fast Money' Recap
This blog post originally appeared on RealMoney Silver on Nov. 13 at 8:24 a.m. EST.
Kass: It's nice to back with everyone on "Fast Money," especially Princess Karen Finerman, daughter of Roland, King of the Druids.And, with the above parody on Mel Brooks' Spaceballs, we began the "Bull Market or BS" segment of CNBC's "Fast Money" last night. With the Planet Druidia in sight and with a 1% correction in the stock market yesterday, let's "prepare to fast forward" to the tape of my appearance on "Fast Money." Melissa started by asking me my reaction to my market top call on the show in late October. I started by saying that I had expected a 5% to 12% drop from the highs and the decline stopped at about 6% and then swiftly returned back and made a higher high. My view is that there is some whistling past the graveyard in today's stock market as investors have become dismissive of a number of intermediate-term challenges and are now ignoring several important short-term warning signs that seem to be rationalized away in a tide of rising world stock prices. I suggested that some of the following shorter-term warning signs will weigh on equities:
Adami: Does that mean she is a Druish Princess?
Kass: No, Guy, she really doesn't even look Druish. -- Doug Kass/Guy Adami, on CNBC's "Fast Money" last night
- Housing demand is not sustainable. Applications for new mortgages, announced Thursday morning, dropped sharply in the previous week to levels not seen in almost a decade. This decline was consistent with Toll Brothers' (TOL) conference call on Wednesday, in which the company's Chairman described demand since Labor Day as uneven. And the decision by Toll Brothers to hold its community count at 200 for the next 12 months was a sign that the nation's largest luxury homebuilder shared my trepidations that housing demand will not sustain itself when the stimulus of the mortgage tax credit is lifted and the Fed's mortgage-backed securities purchase program is abandoned in early 2010.
- U.S. rail traffic is rolling over. October rail traffic dropped by 15.3%, slightly worse than the year-over-year drop in the previous month of September.
- Consumer and small business sentiment is weakening. Not only is consumer confidence foundering but the National Federation of Independent Business Index (NFIB) of small business confidence remains at more than two standard deviations below its long-term average. John Hatzius at Goldman Sachs has done some solid work on this. In a report published Thursday morning, he expressed the view that the weak NFIB, which stands in stark contrast to other indicators such as the purchasing managers indices and real GDP (which have moved back closer to their long-term averages), could result in a meaningful revision to third-quarter 2009 GDP. His analysis confirms, to some degree, that small companies are underperforming their larger peers, most likely because of "differential access to credit."
- We are seeing some bearish technical divergences. We might have seen a double-top in the S&P 500 as there are fewer highs and the smaller-cap indices (Russell 2000 and Value Line) are diverging from the larger-cap indices. The latter phenomenon is typical of a maturing bull market.
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