QOTD = Quote of the Day
Whoever becomes the leader in this sphere [A.I.] will become the ruler of the world – Vladimir Putin
QOTD = Quote of the Day
Whoever becomes the leader in this sphere [A.I.] will become the ruler of the world – Vladimir Putin


QOTD = Quote of the Day
“No one will ever be paid more than Ruth” – Ed Barrow, NY Yankee GM after signing the Babe to a 2-year $160K contract ($2.4 million in 2019 dollars), circa March 1930



Summary
The Dow theory on stock price movement is a form of technical analysis that includes some aspects of sector rotation. The theory was derived from 255 Wall Street Journal editorials written by Charles H. Dow (1851–1902), journalist, founder and first editor of The Wall Street Journal and co-founder of Dow Jones and Company. Following Dow’s death, William Peter Hamilton, Robert Rhea and E. George Schaefer organized and collectively represented Dow theory, based on Dow’s editorials. Dow himself never used the term Dow theory nor presented it as a trading system. – Wikipedia
We constantly monitor the Dow Transports Index and its relative performance as a signal of future equity price action. There is a growing concern that the Trannies have been underperforming other indices, including its father, the Dow Jones Industrials, since Valentine’s Day.
The concerns are reinforced by the signals the deterioration in the TRP sent in 2018 just before last year’s three major corrections. The table and chart below should not be viewed in isolation from one another but as compliments.


January 2018 Correction
The relative performance of the Transports or the TRP (Transport/Industrials) peaked 10 trading days before the Dow’s high on January 26th, declining by more 5 percent before the Dow and stock market rolled over and experiencing a historic spike in volatility.
Only three times since 1950 has intraday volatility jumped so high as measured by a modified version of the Average True Range: 1) September 1955 after an extraordinarily period of calm the S&P500 tanked on September 26th when markets opened after President Eisenhower’s heart attack on the 8th hole of Cherry Hills Country Club over the weekend. The market quickly recovered; 2) January 1962 when the “Kennedy slide” began to accelerate; and 3) the October 1987 stock market crash. – GMM, February 11th
The first correction of 2018, close-to-close in the Dow Industrials, was 11.58 percent.
End September 2018 Correction
After spending most of the year recovering and making new all-time highs into the end of Q3, the Dow and stock market rolled over again with the Dow peaking on October 3rd, 18 trading days after the relative performance of the Transports (TRP) topped out on September 10th. The TRP fell over 5 percent while the Dow was making a new high, similar relative price action to the January correction.
We maintain the bear market that began at the end of Q3 2018 was rooted in the breakout of long-term interest rates.
We warned that long-term interest rates were about to spike, which they did breaking out to 3.26 percent causing the fourth quarter collapse in stocks. The one thing that Mr. Market really fears, in our opinion and inference from the price action, is a spike in long-term interest rates. – GMM, February 26th
The Dow fell 9.48 percent before rallying into the December crash.
December 2018 Crash
The Dow and the overall stock market partially recovered into December but had trouble breaking through stiff price resistance, particularly the 2800 S&P level.
Once again, the relative performance of the Transports sent a signal of future price weakness. The TRP peaked 7 trading days before the Dow topped out falling — albeit much less than the year’s prior two corrections – almost 1.6 percent before the market rolled over hard and fast.
The Dow eventually fell 15.62 percent in a very short timeframe causing the Market Socialists, led by Mr. President, Mr. Cramer, Mr. Market, and the many clowns paraded on CNBC, to put tremendous pressure on the Fed to rescue the market from itself. That is begging the government to effectively nationalize the stock market losses.
Yeah, yeah, the Fed was too tight with an almost zero percent real fed funds rates. Right.
Chairman Powell and the Fed eventually caved. Nothing new but “they’re not even pretending anymore.”
…Nixon alternately bullied and cajoled and threatened and rewarded his hand-picked Federal Reserve Chair, Arthur Burns, to do the right thing and keep the money spigot open … wide open. Complaints about too much liquidity sloshing around were “bullshit”, and so what if they were running the economy hot? Good lord, man, imagine who would take over the White House in 1972 if he were defeated! Imagine the insane fiscal spending policies that those Democrats would push on the country if he lost!
Donald Trump has EXACTLY the same problem.
Donald Trump has found EXACTLY the same solution.
Jay Powell is the Arthur Burns of our day.
The only difference is that Nixon did all of his bullying and cajoling and threatening and rewarding in private, and Burns wouldn’t dream of saying out loud what Powell is shouting about the “important signal” of financial market “volatility” on monetary policy decisions.
They’re not even pretending anymore. — Ben Hunt, Epsilon Theory
All is well now with the markets, or is it?
Transports Rolling Over Again
The data in the above chart illustrate the Transports are rolling over once again. The TRP index peaked on Valentine’s Day, is now down 3.60 percent with the Transports Index down 2.99 percent from its February 22nd high. The Dow has yet to roll over as the administration continues to dangle the prospects of a “good” China trade deal in front of the markets.
Upshot
We don’t know if the stock market is about to roll or the TRP is sending a false positive signal but investors should always sit up when the Trannies lag. Heeding the signal last year could have made traders lots of money. We are certain some did.
The Transports fell 0.8 percent today with a flattish Dow.
Keep it on your radar, folks.

Click here to view video
Passing on a note (email) we just received from a Global Macro Monitor (GMM) reader, who is vacationing on the beach in Mexico. By the way, he is not a free rider. He made a nice contribution to GMM (see donate widget on the right side of our website), which has paid for itself in multiples, including today’s trade.
I made some good scratch on your advice. Bought SPY at 277. Thanks. Your politics is all off, Trump is a shoe in, but your investing instincts are pure gold — KD on the beach in Mexico, March 4th
See our advice he is referring to right here.
We are pretty much out of the day trading business but today’s sell-off at the open was a gift, and worth 20 S&P points. After 20 plus years of trading on Wall Street, hedge funds, and our own — everything from Russian Eurobonds to Korean equities to natural gas futures — we know gifts when we see them.
If history is any guide, given the historical start to the year, the S&P should finish March at or around 2850-ish.
We say this with great trepidation as we don’t like: the market; valuations; the fundamentals; debt levels; the geopolitics; the domestic politics; the Fed and government/POTUS manipulation of the markets, and, especially the faux wealth and asset-driven economy.
Nevertheless, we are a better seller into strength, always hold our strong convictions weakly as we recognize we could be wrong (go figure), that markets like to go up and do go up on average, and we try not to (but not always) fight the tape.
Always looking for opportune times to get shorty. Not yet.
Mar.04 — Peter Tchir, head of macro strategy at Academy Securities, and Bloomberg’s Molly Smith discuss the impact of corporate debt on bond ratings and equity markets. They speak with Bloomberg’s Jonathan Ferro on “Bloomberg Markets: The Open.” – Bloomberg Markets & Finance

Click here to view the video
This looks like a short-term overreach by profit takers in the S&P. Buying some at 2771-ish with a stop at 20-day – i.e, 2760 cash — for a quick scalp for the day. A small headline about pushback in China on trade deal but think we close higher than our entry. #HateDayTrading

March 3, 1857 – France and the United Kingdom declare war on China
Opium Wars, two armed conflicts in China in the mid-19th century between the forces of Western countries and of the Qing dynasty, which ruled China from 1644 to 1911/12. The first Opium War (1839–42) was fought between China and Britain, and the second Opium War (1856–60), also known as the Arrow War or the Anglo-French War in China, was fought by Britain and France against China. In each case the foreign powers were victorious and gained commercial privileges and legal and territorial concessions in China. The conflicts marked the start of the era of unequal treaties and other inroads on Qing sovereignty that helped weaken and ultimately topple the dynasty in favour of republican China in the early 20th century.
The Second Opium War
In the mid-1850s, while the Qing government was embroiled in trying to quell the Taiping Rebellion(1850–64), the British, seeking to extend their trading rights in China, found an excuse to renew hostilities. In early October 1856 some Chinese officials boarded the British-registered ship Arrowwhile it was docked in Canton, arrested several Chinese crew members (who were later released), and allegedly lowered the British flag. Later that month a British warship sailed up the Pearl River estuary and began bombarding Canton, and there were skirmishes between British and Chinese troops. Trading ceased as a stalemate ensued. In December Chinese in Canton burned foreign factories (trading warehouses) there, and tensions escalated.
The French decided to join the British military expedition, using as their excuse the murder of a French missionary in the interior of China in early 1856. After delays in assembling the forces in China (British troops that were en route were first diverted to India to help quell the Indian Mutiny), the allies began military operations in late 1857. They quickly captured Canton, deposed the city’s intransigent governor, and installed a more-compliant official. In May 1858 allied troops in British warships reached Tianjin (Tientsin) and forced the Chinese into negotiations. The treaties of Tianjin, signed in June 1858, provided residence in Beijing for foreign envoys, the opening of several new ports to Western trade and residence, the right of foreign travel in the interior of China, and freedom of movement for Christian missionaries. In further negotiations in Shanghai later in the year, the importation of opium was legalized. – Encyclopedia Britanica