Articles

11.30.09

Last Thursday, Dubai’s quasi-default on a $3.5 billion bond sent shockwaves through the global credit markets. The Dow fell 154 points, with all 30 components down. Only four stocks in the S&P 500 were green on the day. As we noted on Friday morning, however, holiday trading can be exceptionally volatile.
 
The government of Dubai stated that its state-controlled holding company, Dubai World, does not have a financial guarantee from the government and therefore its creditors must deal with the issue. To draw a parallel, this would be like Washington disowning the debt of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

11.24.09

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11.24.09

It does not pay to get bearish on this market. Not yet, anyway.

The Dow was down just 14 points on Friday, which set the stage for the surprise rally on Monday morning. The dollar weakened about half a percent over the weekend. Since U.S. equities are priced in dollars, the declining greenback creates buying pressure, since shares look cheaper to overseas buyers. We think this trend is likely to continue until the Dollar Index falls to its 2008 low, about 5% lower than Monday's close.

11.24.09

Today's Chart  indicates there is considerable resistance for the Dow in this area due to a cluster of Fibonacci projections and the downtrend line from the October 2007 high. This technical resistance would be expected to act like a brick wall, preventing a further advance in the Dow.

11.24.09

There is considerable resistance for the Dow in this area due to a cluster of Fibonacci projections and the downtrend line from the October 2007 high. This technical resistance would be expected to act like a brick wall, preventing a further advance in the Dow.
 

11.20.09

Becoming one of the best online stock traders began when Independent Investor was founded in 1995 at a kitchen table in West Hartford, Connecticut by Gregory Spear. Mr. Spear had begun to test different investing systems and, in doing so, had invented a revolutionary, yet inherently simple process that worked amazingly well. This system, which he called "Consensus," uncovered stock picks agreed upon by the best performing independent (non-Wall Street) stock analysts and money managers.

11.20.09

Individuals or firms trading equity (stock) on the stock markets as their principal capacity are called stock traders. Stock traders usually try to profit from short-term price volatility with trades lasting anywhere from several seconds to several weeks. The stock trader is usually a professional.

11.17.09

All three major indices set new yearly highs on Monday, which the financial media regards as particularly bullish. One reason is that the S&P 500 has been lagging the pack. With ‘confirmation’ from the S&P, some market technicians are breathing a sigh of relief. Hummmm.

11.12.09

On Wednesday the Dow tagged 10,341 intraday, which satisfies the primary target level (10,300) that we predicted many months ago. This is an attractive place to take profits. Although an immediate overshoot to Dow 10,500 is possible, a near term correction is more likely. Thus, we are tightening stops.

11.11.09

Yesterday, the Dow closed up for the 5th day in a row, but just barely. Basically, Tuesday was a consolidation day. Lately, such pauses have punctuated a series of strong advances.

News flow was also downbeat yesterday. Various Fed officials noted the weak employment picture and the increasing prospects for a jobless recovery. Dennis Lockhart, president of the Atlanta Fed, warned that non-performing commercial real estate loans will be affecting smaller banks. Consequently, these troubled banks will not be making loans to small businesses, thereby crimping the recovery. If you are a small business person you know this is already the case.

11.11.09

On Tuesday the market consolidated its gains, which is a normal pattern. We are looking for a rally to 10,500.

11.10.09

On Monday the Dow moved into the ‘speed zone’ as expected. We are looking for a rally to 10,500.

11.09.09

On Friday the market consolidated the gains from Thursday. It is now poised at the edge of a speed zone that could produce a quick rally to 10,500 or more.

11.06.09

On Thursday, the market decided it preferred the upside direction. This morning, a worse than expected jobs report is depressing index futures, but we think the market will get over it and make new highs for the year shortly.

11.03.09

On Monday, the Dow closed up 76 points, only its fourth up day in the last ten trading days. The intraday action was volatile, however, with a range greater than 200 points peak to trough.

The volatility catalyst was a report from the Institute for Supply Management that indicated manufacturing activity grew in October at the fastest pace since April 2006. The 55.7 reading, if annualized, would imply GDP growth of 4.5%. Manufacturing activity improved worldwide, as well, suggesting that this is a synchronized global upturn. Things did not get better in Russia, however, and we think that country remains a short sale candidate. In other words, we are bullish on BIC not BRIC.

11.03.09

The vast majority of stocks correlate with the direction of the major indices. (+) or (-) signifies a change in status today.

Short-term Market Direction: S&P 500: Down.

11.02.09

The education sector has been viewed as a safe, defensive play in recessionary times. After all, people who are laid off need to get retrained. There is also a long-term demographic trend that has favored education. Total enrollment in degree-granting higher education institutions is projected to grow by about 1-2% a year for the next decade according to the U.S. Department of Education.

11.02.09

The SPY tested the gap zone #3 last Wednesday at the 1040 level, then bounced strongly on Thursday, as expected. Friday it resumed the downtrend, which we also predicted, and closed below the 1040 gap. The next target is now a bit below the 200-day moving average at roughly 985 in the S&P 500.

11.02.09

The stock market is in the midst of its fourth correction since July. The pullback is inciting some bearish commentators to rant against the validity of the summer rally, as though it were somehow “wrong” and is finally showing its true colors. We dispute the possibility of the market ever being “wrong” and assert that value is always in the eye of the beholder.

David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital argues that paying attention to the ‘Big Picture’ is important when making investment decisions on individual equities. Einhorn is not particularly sanguine about the state of the U.S. financial system or its global counterparts, but the new Financial Stability Improvement Act of 2009 might cheer him up a bit. The bill would require Wall Street to take responsibility for cleaning up future messes.

10.29.09

There are three ways to willingly become a creditor of the U.S. government; buy Treasury Bills, buy Treasury Notes, or buy Treasury Bonds.  Treasury Bills, often referred to as T-Bills, are U.S. government debt issued for less than one year.  They are issued at a discount to par, so interest is paid when the principal investment is returned. Treasury Notes are government debt issued with a maturity of 1-10 years and pay interest semi-annually. Treasury Bonds, sometimes called T-Bonds, are U.S. government debt issued with a maturity date of more than 10 years.   T-Bonds also pay interest semi-annually.

10.29.09

There are two hybrid government/corporate bond funds issued by iShares.  The first, iShares’ Barclays Intermediate Government/Credit Bond ETF (GVI), holds a total of 223 various bonds.  The fund is 62% invested in U.S. Treasury Notes and bonds issued by government agencies, 14% invested in Industrials, and 12% invested in Financial Institutions.  Of the non-government securities, GVI holds bonds in such companies as Bank of America, Cisco, and Pfizer.  Over half of the notes/bonds were issued with a maturity of 1-5 years.  The fund charges an expense ratio of 0.20% and trades just under 27,000 shares on average.

10.29.09

During periods of extended market weakness, small caps tend to fare worse than large caps because they have less institutional sponsorship.  We can see this by comparing two ETFs, Direxion’s 3X Small Caps Bull (TNA) and Direxion’s 3X Large Cap Bull (BGU).  With the Dow down 1.21% on Wednesday, Direxion’s small cap ETF lost 9.74%, while the large cap ETF lost 6.09%.  That’s more than a 3.5 point  difference and means small caps lost about 60% more than large caps.  Volume was above average for both funds, with TNA trading 60% more shares than normal and BGU trading 25% more shares than normal.

10.29.09

In Q3 South Korea’s economy grew at the fastest pace in seven years. GDP increased 2.9% and may exceed 5% growth in Q4 due to the improvement in business conditions in China. Capital investment in factories in Korea shot up 8.9% in the third quarter. Accordingly, the South Korean central bank may soon become the second bank in the G20 to raise interest rates.