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For about an hour on Monday morning, it felt like the #growthslowing theme was back. Germany was tanking. Shanghai had been creamed. And at 9:45 am the bears launched an attack on the S&P 500. Bam, the low for the day was gone. And five minutes later, Friday's intraday low had been taken out. In short, the bears were "feeling it" and the bulls appeared to be on the run.

At issue was the fact that China's export numbers had stunk up the joint. Instead of a 7.5 percent increase over year-ago levels, the totals for February wound up falling 18.1 percent. China's Shanghai Composite dove 2.86 percent in response and the CSI 300 Index dropped to its lowest level in five years. Ouch.

European bourses were also not happy places to be on Monday morning because the continent's economic fate is closely tied to China's growth. And with Europe's economy just starting to find its long-lost mojo, #growthslowing in China would NOT be good news for investors in the Eurozone.

Blame it on the...

But as has been the case lately, traders quickly got over the data as they simply blamed it on the weather. Oops, that's the wrong excuse - my bad. Here we go... Regarding the China data, it was talk of distortions from China's Lunar New Year holiday and what was referred to as "heavy over-invoicing" in the year-ago period that was blamed for the overly weak data.

Whether or not the headline-reading algos were trained to buy when seeing the words "heavy" and "over-invoicing" in the same sentence remains to be seen. But, just about the time things started looking ugly at the corner of Broad and Wall, the buy algos started running in Mahway, New Jersey.

Geopolitical Tensions

The bears also appeared to have geopolitical tensions (don't you just love that term?) in Ukraine/Crimea on their side. There had been no improvement over the weekend after Russia signaled on Friday it was prepared to annex Ukraine. The latest press reports were focused on further Russian incursions, as Russian forces were said to control 11 border guard posts across Crimea.

This whole "annexation" thing hasn't been sitting well with the West as President Obama had taken to the microphones on Friday and Secretary of State Kerry was busy setting up meetings in the Kremlin. Then on Sunday, Germany’s Angela Merkel told Russian President Vladimir Putin that the Moscow-backed referendum in Crimea was illegal and violated Ukraine’s constitution.

So, anyone paying attention to the goings on in Russia, Ukraine, and Crimea couldn't be blamed for being a bit fidgety on Monday. It appears that Mr. Putin is intent on doing whatever he pleases, regardless of the verbiage coming from points west.

However, traders refused to bite on this mess again on Monday. Perhaps crisis-fatigue can be blamed as just about everyone in the game has probably had their fill of crises by now. But it was interesting to note that the algos weren't able to ignite anything to the downside yesterday.

A Boeing 777 Goes Missing

Then there was talk of terrorism in response to reports that a Malaysian jetliner and the 239 people on board had gone missing without a trace. The facts that (a) there was no distress signal from the pilots and (b) the weather was clear left many scratching their heads and wondering about foul play.

But again, the bears weren't able to capitalize. Sure, the Dow finished down 34 points. And yes there were some moves in things like the industrial metals that weren't pretty. For example, iron ore and copper names were hit hard as Cliffs Natural Resources (NYSE: CLF) fell 3.8 percent, Southern Copper (NASDAQ: SCCO) was off 3.5 percent and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (NYSE: FCX) gave up 2.5 percent. Global mining plays also lagged as the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners (NASDAQ: GDXJ) dropped 2.6 percent.

Bottom Line: Bears Go Home Empty Handed

While the market's focus can and often does shift in the blink of an eye, it appears that the bears missed yet another opportunity on Monday. They had arguments for #growthslowing, geopolitical tensions, and the word terrorism flashing on television screens yesterday. And yet our furry friends went home largely empty handed.

As the saying kinda goes, a market that can't go down on bad news isn't in trouble. So, while stocks are overbought, the bull is getting old, the sentiment indicators are trying hard to get people's attention, and a pullback to test the latest breakout would certainly be logical in here somewhere, it appears that this bull isn't quite dead yet.

Positions in stocks mentioned: SPY


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