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CHUCKING INTO THE WEEKEND

- Moving the markets
Despite an early bounce last Monday, the major indexes bobbed and weaved throughout the week, yet, as upward momentum was fading, so did the buying appetite, and we dumped into the weekend.
This snapped the Dow’s 3-week winning streak, as inflation fears took center stage and dominated strong retail numbers along with better-than-expected earnings reports. The S&P 500 surrendered around 1%, while the Nasdaq fared worse by giving back some 1.9%.
Not helping the bullish mood was the consumer sentiment report, which showed a drop from last month, against expectations of an increase, with economists now struggling to explain how they could be that far off.
The report also pointed to increasing inflation expectations by consumers, who now believe prices will head higher by some 4.8% over the next year. Apparently, they have not accepted the Fed’s non-stop jawboning that inflation is “transitory.”
Even funnier, I just heard that one of the Fed heads announced that inflation is in a “bubble” and may be pricked and subsequently deflated. Hmm, sounds like something that might be more applicable to the stock market.
In the end, considering the recent runup in equities, the losses were moderate but broad.
Small Caps, Value and Tech all slumped with value taking the biggest hit of -1.58%. That sector, despite still being the YTD leader, has struggled over the past few weeks.
The US Dollar stayed about even, bond yields dipped slightly, none of which was conducive to holding up Gold, which tumbled -0.95% on the session but remains above its much fought-over $1,800 level.
Again, ZeroHedge pointed to weakness in this recent rally due to a lack breadth. As you can see in this S&P 500 chart, the price and breadth (a measure of the number of stocks participating in a rally) diverged around the middle of April, thereby indicating that only a small percentage of them were responsible for the push higher.
Advances based on low breadth are known to be ephemeral.
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