Wall Street obviously was thrilled with the Senate's tax package being voted in by the House at the eleventh hour. The market's extremely positive reaction was a little surprising to me since the fundamental spending/debt problems remain unaddressed by this legislation. The additional revenues will add up to about $300 billion this year. When you are generating new debt as fast as we are, that isn't even a drop in the bucket.
SPX ran up $36 to close at $1462 - wow! RUT closed at $873, up $24. These are huge gains by any measure. Trading volume also spiked upward with 3.1 billion shares of the S&P 500 stocks trading today. Trading volume on the NYSE was up 29% and volume on NASDAQ was up 37%. If you take a look at the one minute chart on SPX today, it was very unusual. Normally, there is a lot of choppiness throughout the day, but today SPX spiked up at the open and largely traded sideways until the last half hour or so, with very little volatility. Most of the one minute candlesticks were just a few cents in height. It was one of those rare one sided markets.
Economic data was mixed today, but I don't think anyone in the markets even noticed one way or the other. ISM's manufacturing index rose to 50.7 for December from the previous month's 49.5, but construction spending slowed by 0.3% in November; analysts had predicted a 0.6% increase.
The market truck ran over my Jan iron condor this morning, forcing me to close and reopen spreads on both sides. The position remains largely underwater, but hopes for a positive month are gone. Now I am fighting to minimize my losses - not a nice way to start the new year. Losses are the cost of doing business for traders. But I still haven't learned to take losses very well.
