Saturday, January 24, 2009

Signs of improvement

While the bad news has been relentless these past few weeks, there have been signs that a recovery is just around the corner. Numerous correlational indicators have improved markedly since New Years, even in the face of the weakness in equities these past two weeks. These indicators include:

A huge decline in the A2/P2 spreads in 2009 (Calculated Risk) indicating that credit is beginning to flow again;

An increase in M3 Money Supply, indicating that the Fed's efforts to reinflate are getting traction;

An increase in 10 year Treasury yields, indicating an increase in risk appetite;

Bullish moves in silver and crude, silver in particular has been tightly correlated to SPX;

A weekly drop in the cash holdings of money market mutual funds, which might indicate that cash on the sidelines is coming back into the markets;

Continued improvement in the BDI, suggesting that global trade is starting to recover;

And strength in Markit's ABX and CMBX indices, again measures that are correlated to SPX.

All this is bullish for equities, although some indicators are becoming overbought (like TRIN from Matt Trivisonno)

No comments:

Post a Comment