THE BIG FLIP $SPYMY BEARISH THESIS
-This rally is led by fundamentally weak companies like CVNA, ROKU, AMC, and AFRM (companies with weak valuations) which has historically indicated that these types of rallies are temporary
-Six Month Treasury Bill yields rising to 5%, last seen in 2007
- The Feds Fund Rate (Feds target interest rate) rose higher after the recent CPI data which means the Fed must raise rates more aggressively to combat inflation
-50% base point rate hike probabilities are increasing for the next meeting
-Mortage Application volume fell 7.7% last week as mortgage rates rose
-The average rate for a 30-year mortgage rose from 6.18% to 6.4% in the last two weeks
-Employment number came in over double than expected which will cause Wage inflation
-Retail sales are up 3% month over month, crushing expectations (2%), spending continues
-Restaurant Retail Sales up 7.2% in January, strongest since March 2021
-Used car prices have increased 4.1% in the month of February and it's only the 18th
-Credit Card Debt hits a record 930.6 billion, up 18.5%
-Multiple large cap Company Earnings have missed and have started layoffs
All this means that the average consumer hasn't stopped spending despite inflation and high interest rates. This will cause the Fed to continue hiking interest rates or keep interest rates higher for longer which is not sustainable for the consumer. Overall, the fundamentals and the data is showing that this rally is temporary, and we will go lower. How low we will go is not yet known for the equities market, but many analysts believe new lows are not out of the question.
$SPY
Fakerally
FB Breakout appears to be fake.FB had a huge spike after earnings . However, when one looks at the chart, this spike and the optimism seem unwarranted.
FB is still well below its long-term trend that has been in play for years. The trend was irreparably damaged in October, and the probability that FB sees a new high in the short term seems almost impossible (what will drive it?) The chart currently is so absurd that it's impossible to predict. It created a huge gap that will be filled shortly. And it seems to desperately try to remain in its previous trend, but has moved too far down, too quickly, to re-enter it.
It is also very suspicious that the reports of up to half of FB users being fake was completely ignored by the market. And it seems that FB's own estimates of fake accounts varies wildly year-to-year and is now estimated at over 100 million. www.nytimes.com
When a company reports the revenue per user, and then estimates that the number of fake accounts is over 100 million, serious questions need to be asked which currently are being ignored.
My guess is that FB knows that it's popularity is decreasing, and they faked the numbers and growth to try to buy some time (maybe through Instagram or VR or something else).
I would be very cautious here.