The news keeps on coming, folks.  Manafort, tariffs, hurricanes, and Kavanaugh are a few of the stories that sit atop the market’s strong shoulders. These headlines brought out the doomsayers.

Nobel Prize winner Robert Shiller said that he is not predicting a major calamity, but rather a much lower level of returns, in the 2.6 percent annual range. David Tepper, hedge fund billionaire, stated that the bull market is in the late innings.

Yet, the market cares more about tax cuts, corporate buybacks, low unemployment numbers and Trump’s legacy for now.

Last Thursday we called the market a whang-doodle, meaning the next direction is anybody’s call.

By the end of the week, even with the ominous headlines, Transportation (IYT) made another new all-time high.

Semiconductors (SMH) went back into an unconfirmed bullish phase.

The Russell 2000 (IWM) cleared the fast MA it struggled to rise above earlier in the week.

With the market kneeling on the bullish podium, just how much weight can it bear?

With close eyes on the US dollar (UUP) and interest rates, UUP rallied back into an unconfirmed bullish phase. The TLT (20+Year T-Bonds), fell, hence rates rose.

That might be the first heavy body on the market’s shoulders. How long can the market bear higher rates? The price movement of the TLTs since the beginning of this year is more of consolidation than a full-blown breakdown. A full breakdown will happen if TLTs break under 116.That’s when cheap money gets substantially more expensive.

The strong US dollar helps Americans, but hurts exported goods, emerging markets and commodity prices. Standing atop the dollar and the rising rates is what Shiller referred to. With corporate profits rising, thanks to the tax cuts, Shiller is looking at longer-term market valuation relative to future price to the earnings ratio (Shiller CAPE). That relationship is frothy.

Warren Buffett looks at market valuation through what is called the Buffett Indicator. Basically, he divides the total market cap of all US stocks by the current GDP. Right now, the indicator is at all-time highs. This is not necessarily a sell-signal. However, it does add to the weight on the market’s shoulders. After all, how much further can corporate profits rise given the overheated economy?

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