Wednesday, May 9, 2012

2012 - has the echo of deja vu from 2011 and 2010.....



http://www.zerohedge.com/news/11th-consecutive-outflow-us-equity-mutual-funds-pulls-cash-levels-record-lows

11th Consecutive Outflow From US Equity Mutual Funds Pulls Cash Levels To Record Lows

Tyler Durden's picture




We are unsure what is more notable in this week's most recent fund flow update: that in the week ended May 2, investors pulled out another whopping $6.6 billion out of domestic equity mutual funds, the 11th consecutive, and a total of $42 billion in 2012 (compared to $10 billion over the same period in 2011), or that as the chart below shows, the two identical S&P overlay arrows (identical in their length and angle) demonstrate just how comparable the effect of QE2 and Operation Twist, or QE3, have been. the two arrows also demonstrate without a doubt, that, as Goldman admitted last month, the "flow" effect at the long-end of the curve (thank you Chubby Checker) is what it was all about, which means that sterilized QE is bunk, and all that matters is of the Fed to be actively monetizing something, anything, in order for stocks to go higher. Regardless, the only question left now is not whether the same drift back lower by 200 S&P point that stocks experienced after the end of QE2 will happen, but when and how rapidly it will take place, just in time for QE4 (NOT Operation Twist-er) to be announced in June. And finally, for those wondering how it is possible that every month US investors can pull cash out of mutual funds without them running out of cash, we say: observe the distinct pattern in Chart 2, which shows that as of March mutual funds held a record low 3.3% in liquid assets on their books.
Weekly fund flows:
And mutual fund cash:

and.....

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/market-has-longest-losing-streak-10-months

Market Has Longest Losing Streak In 10 Months

Tyler Durden's picture




For the first time since last July, right before the market's grand plan collapse, the Dow has fallen for 6 days-in-a-row.We could of course have just copy/pasted yesterday's end-of-day as today was a case of deja deja vu all over again as we sold off hard overnight (basically top-ticking right before the US day-session close), made new overnight lows, then managed a miraculous rally into and across the European close only to stall once again as the dip-buying algos enabled bigger blocks to dump into momentum retail players. The European close hour saw your standard 4-sigma swing (low to high) in ES (S&P 500 e-mini futures) but gave half of it back it its typical VWAP reversion as for three days in a row we have dipped and tested the S&P's 50DMA and rallied on lower volume (though ended the day with the 3rd highest volume of the year). The USD rallied further with the EUR ending around 1.2950 (though off its lows of the day) but once again commodities (which sold off pretty hard overnight) managed to crawl their way back higher(closing rather interestingly at the same levels at which they opened the European day-session). VIX ended above 20% (its highest close in a month) and its flattest term structure in five months. Treasuries ended the day marginally changed (-1bps 10Y, +1bps 3Y) but ended well off their low yields of the day. High yield credit was a major underperformer - ending below yesterday's lows (as was IG credit) - bearishly diverging from equities again.
Six down days in a row for the Dow - is history set to echo/repeat?

S&P 500 e-mini futures (ES) sold off to new lows, rallied (green arrow) over 4 sigma across VWAP (dark red line) back to this week's high resistance and then faded (once again) to drop back perfectly to VWAP - red arrow - (AGAIN!)...
Longer-term patterns are starting to look very similar - today was the 3rd highest ES volume of the year and volume is rising as this sell-off picks up pace - just like it did last summer...
It's Deja Vu All Over Again... (this is ES relative to VWAP over the last few days)...
and in commodity-land - deja vu also and the dip was bought (green U's) - what is interesting today is the basically unch move from midnight (Europe's open) to the US close (orange arrows). Once again WTI was all the rage and how great it was for consumers - we note that oil is now only -2% on the week - not exactly the kind of wallet-helping move so many think it is...
Credit markets were not happy - taking their lead from Europe - HY and IG underperformed and ended below yesterday's lows - very different from equities...
Just for interest's sake we took a look at realized vols for equity and bond total returns over the past few years. Obviously bonds are 'less' volatile, as is the volatility of that volatility - which perhaps fits with Einhorn's recent insight that the Bernanke Put is not under stocks but under Treasuries and merely manifests itself more obviously in stocks. What we noted is the decoupling and re-coupling of equity and treasury over times and the current re-convergence as equity vol rises (which reminds us that VIX managed to get above 21.5% earlier today around its 100DMA closing around 20% and shifting its term-structure in a bear-flattener to the flattest in five months)...

We spent a lot of time recently discussing European banks (notice how generally well-behaved European equity and credit markets have been  - lower pane) but US banks have been hit relatively hard (in the credit markets) and yet US financial equities remain stubbornly unable to give up that last bit of Bove-hope (upper pane)...
and finally - trying to make sense of the movements across all asset classes was tough (with some leaking higher in yield in Treasuries this afternoon - even as stocks limped back to VWAP) but overall - risk-assets were not as exuberant post-Europe again as stocks and by the close, stocks had reverted back to risk-asset (CONTEXT) reality...
Once again - as a reminder - Europe will open tonight - that is all as it reminds us of the following clip...


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