Category Archives: oud

Crash Imminent Warning Removed By NIRP Crash Indicator

The NIRP Crash Indicator’s signal changed from its pre-crash or crash imminent Orange to its Yellow cautionary reading level on the close of the market on May 9, 2016. The signal had gone from Yellow to Orange prior to the U.S. stock market’s opening on April 28. During the eight day period that the indicator’s reading was Orange ended on May 9, 2016, the S&P 500 went from 2095.15 to 2058.69, a decline of 1.7%. The signal went to Orange from Yellow because the exchange rates of the yen versus both the euro and the US dollar had stabilized during the week ended May 6, 2016. Additionally, both the euro and the dollar appreciated by more than 1.1% versus the yen on Monday May 9, 2016. Please note: For the NIPR Crash indicator to change from the crash imminent Orange or a crash Red reading to Yellow requires that the exchange rate between the yen and dollar be stable for an extended period of time or that the dollar and euro advance significantly versus the yen. An increase in the indicator’s reading from Yellow to Orange requires a steady advance or a significant one day advance for the yen versus the dollar. The NIRP Crash Indicator was developed in February 2016, from my research on the Crash of 2008. My research revealed the metrics that could have been used to predict the Crash of 2008 and its V-shaped reversal off of the March 2009 bottom. See my Seeking Alpha “Japan’s NIRP Increases Probability of Global Market Crash” March 4, 2016 report. The metrics are now powering the indicator. Information about the NIRP Crash Indicator and the daily updating of its four signals ( Red: Full-Crash; Orange: Pre-Crash; Yellow: Caution; Green: All-Clear) is available at www.dynastywealth.com . Since inception the NIRP Crash Indicator’s signals have proven to be very reliable. Throughout the entire month of March, the signal for the NIRP Crash Indicator had remained at the cautionary Yellow and the S&P 500 experienced little volatility as compared to the extremely volatile first two months of 2016. For the month of March, the S&P 500 increased by 4%. The indicator’s reading went from Yellow to Orange after the market’s close on Friday April 1, 2016 . For the following week ended April 8, 2016, the S&P 500 experienced its most volatility since February of 2016 and closed down 1.5% for the week. The signal’s second Orange reading occurred before the market’s April 28, 2016 open. From the Thursday, April 28 open to the Friday, April 29 close, the S&P 500 declined by 1.2%. The S&P 500 (NYSEARCA: SPY ) and the Dow 30 (NYSEARCA: DIA ) ETFs closing at their lowest prices since April 12, 2016 on April 29. See also my SA post “NIRP Crash Indicator’s Sell Signals Very Reliable for April 2016″ May 3, 2016. The primary metric powering the NIRP Crash Indicator are sudden increases in volatility for exchange rates of the yen versus the dollar and other currencies. The significant appreciation in the yen versus the dollar in 2008 accurately predicted the crash of 2008, and the recent declines of the markets to multi-year lows in August of 2015 and February 2016. In my April 11, 2016 ” Yen Volatility Is Leading Indicator For Market Sell-Offs ” SA post and my video interview below entitled “Yen Volatility Causes Market Crashes”, I provide further details on the phenomenon of the yen being a leading indicator of market crashes. The rationale for the for yen volatility or its appreciating significantly versus the dollar being a leading indicator of crashes is because the Japanese yen and the U.S. dollar are the world’s two largest single country reserve currencies. For this reason, the yen is the best default safe-haven currency utilized by investors during any U.S. and global economic and market crises. When crises unfold, historically the U.S. dollar — by far the world’s most liquid and largest safe-haven currency — is susceptible to dramatic declines until the storm has passed. Savvy investors know that the U.S. is, unquestionably, considered the world’s leading economy and markets. They know that upon a crash of the U.S. stock market, the initial knee-jerk reaction would be a simultaneous crash of the U.S. dollar versus the world’s second leading single-nation currency. The yen is currently the default-hedge currency. Even though the euro, arguably, ranks with the U.S. dollar as the world’s top reserve currency, it is not the preferred hedge against the greenback. The euro is shared by 19 of the European Union’s member countries that have wide-ranging social and economic policies, and political persuasions. For this reason, and also because Japan is considered to be one of the most fiscally conservative countries on the planet, the default currency is the yen. The U.S. dollar does not experience extended crashes versus the Swiss franc and the British pound during times of crises because each of the underlying countries has economies much smaller than Japan’s. From my ongoing research coverage of the spreading negative rates and the devastating effect that they could potentially have on the global banking system, the probability is high that the major global stock indices including the S&P 500 will begin a significant decline by 2018 at the latest. My April 11, 2016 article entitled, “Negative Rates Could Send S&P 500 to 925 If Not Eliminated” , provides details about the potential mark down of the S&P 500 likely being in stages. I highly recommend you also watch my 9 minute, 34 second video interview with SCN’s Jane King entitled “Why Negative Rates could send the S&P 500 to 925”. In the video, I explain the math behind why the S&P 500’s declining to below 1000 may be the only remedy to eliminate the negative rates. The video also reveals some of my additional findings on the crash of 2008. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it. I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Tesla ‘Cousin’ SolarCity Trims 2016 View On Nevada, ITC Effect

Nevada’s net-metering decision torched Tesla Motors ( TSLA ) “cousin” SolarCity ( SCTY ) late Monday, after the No. 1 residential solar installer cut 2016 installation guidance and reported a 150-megawatt dip in expected Q1 bookings. SolarCity also reported a wider-than-expected Q1 loss and was in the red, minus items, for the 13th consecutive quarter. Revenue, however, topped the expectations of 18 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters, and SolarCity beat its own installation forecast. In after-hours trading following the earnings release, SolarCity stock crashed more than 15%, after rising 3.1% in Monday’s regular session, at 22.51. As of Monday’s close, shares are down 56% this year. For Q1, SolarCity reported $123 million in sales, up 82% vs. the year-earlier quarter, and smashing Wall Street expectations for $108.4 million. But losses per-share minus items deepened to $2.56 vs. consensus views for $2.31. Last year, SolarCity pledged to curb its annual 80% growth rate in order to turn around profits. During Q1, SolarCity installed 214 megawatts, up 40% year over year and beating its own guidance for 180 MW. For Q2, SolarCity expects 185 MW in installations, which would be down 2% vs. Q2 2015. SolarCity also guided to $2.70-$2.80 losses per share ex items, widening from $1.61 in the year-earlier quarter and missing the consensus for $2.13. For the year, SolarCity now expects 1 gigawatt to 1.1 GW in installations vs. earlier views for 1.25 GW, noting that Q1 bookings were about 150 MW lower than anticipated and are unlikely to be made this year. SolarCity said Nevada averaged about for 20 MW in quarterly installations. The company exited the state in December after Nevada regulators opted to cut net-metering payments to solar customers, which makes the economics of installing solar energy systems less attractive to users. Top rival Sunrun ( RUN ) also exited Nevada. Spooked by Nevada’s move, some potential customers have backed off booking solar installations, SolarCity said Monday. And the extension of the U.S. Investment Tax Credit (ITC), a key solar subsidy, beyond what had been a 2016 deadline — good in the long run — removed the urgency to get projects done right away. “Pending regulatory decisions in California, Massachusetts and New Hampshire (which have since been largely resolved) further delayed solar purchasing decisions,” SolarCity wrote in its earnings release. Tesla CEO Elon Musk is chairman of SolarCity, whose CEO is his cousin, Lyndon Rive. The two companies have a battery-technology partnership.

After Hours: SolarCity, Gap Crash, Stamps.com, MaxLinear Rise

SolarCity ( SCTY ), Gap ( GPS ), Stamps.com ( STMP ) and  MaxLinear ( MXL ) were among those reporting quarterly earnings or preliminary figures after the close on Monday. SolarCity SolarCity’s per-share loss deepened to $2.56, worse than an expected loss of $2.32. GAAP revenue surged to around $123 million, topping estimates for $109.8 million. But the residential solar-energy systems installer expects a second-quarter loss that was far worse than investors expected. SolarCity cut its full-year installation forecast to 1.0-1.1 gigawatts from 1.25 gigawatts and said first-quarter bookings were weak Shares tumbled 14% in late trading after closing up 3.1% on the stock market today . The company in a Q1 review cut its full-year installation forecast to 1.0-1.1 gigawatts from 1.25 gigawatts and said first-quarter bookings were weak. The company, whose chairman is Tesla ( TSLA ) CEO Elon Musk, also said regulatory decisions, pending or resolved, hindered potential decisions on purchases. Gap Gap expects first-quarter EPS of 31 to 32 cents, below analysts’ consensus for 33 cents after saying that sales fell 6% to $3.44 billion, well below Wall Street’s $3.54 billion target. April same-store sales fell 7%. The struggling apparel retail also said it’s evaluating its Banana Republic and Old Navy chains, mainly outside the U.S. Gap shares plunged 11% in extended trading after closing up 0.7% at 21.81. Gap will report full Q1 results on May 19. Stamps.com Stamps.com earned $1.72 a share in its Q1, up 139% vs. a year earlier. Revenue rose 86% to $81.8 million. Wall Street had expected EPS of $1.06 on revenue of $65.61 million. Stamps.com now sees full-year EPS of $6-6.50 and revenue of $310 million-$330 million. Analysts had forecast EPS $5.28 and revenue of $301.8 million. Stamps.com stock leapt 17% in late trading. Shares closed up 4.7% to 88.34, trying to break a 2-month downtrend since hitting a record high of 123.75 on May 4. MaxLinear MaxLinear ( MXL ) stock rose late Monday after the wireless chipmaker reported strong first quarter earnings growth and said it will buy the wireless infrastructure backhaul business of Broadcom ( AVGO ) for $80 million. On April 28, MaxLinear announced that it had bought assets related to Microsemi’s ( MSCC ) wireless business, which was previously part of PMC-Sierra, for $21 million plus some assumed liability. MaxLinear’s Q1 EPS minus one-time items shot up to 45 cents vs. 9 cents a share in the same quarter a year ago, beating analyst estimates by 2 cents. Revenue grew 190% to $102.7 million, edging views for $102.2 million, partly on strong early ramp sale of its high-speed optical interconnect products. MaxLinear shares rose 3% late.