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Strategies & Market Trends : Point and Figure Charting

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To: chartseer who wrote (14308)2/20/1999 9:19:00 AM
From: Mr.Manners   of 34816
 
Chartseer,

I know the feeling... just as the market ran up over value doesn't mean it couldn't do so this week coming ..so, maybe we see it move up even more prior to getting Greenspanked...but:

Friday February 19, 6:54 pm Eastern Time

Time for exuberant investors to smell the
flowers?

By Pierre Belec

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Spring is just around the corner, and some experts
are telling stock market investors that it's time to wake up and smell the
flowers.

They say the market is not playing by the rules as it continues to ignore
signs that stocks are over-ripe for a fall.

Stocks have gone through the roof since last summer's headspinning correction, and analysts are now raising a lot of
questions about the wisdom of this priced-for-perfection market, particularly the high-flying technology stocks.

''Even on a purely technical basis, the market looks awfully bearish,'' said Arnold Kaufman, editor of Standard &
Poor's Outlook investment advisory newsletter.

''The market sentiment is still too bullish, which is a bad sign,'' he said. ''Also, the leadership and the number of stocks
that rise versus those that fall is poor and the number of stocks that are making 52-week lows has jumped from 20 to 30
on the New York Stock Exchange to as much as 200.''

The market's ascent has indeed been spectacular.

At its peak in January, the Dow Jones industrial average was up an impressive 25 percent from its summer low, while
the technology-laced Nasdaq composite index had zoomed 75 percent.

''This huge move in a very short time has made people overly confident that the market is invincible,'' said Kaufman.
''Perhaps, this overconfidence could be the one powerful thing that will undermine the whole market.''

The flashing bear signals have prompted one veteran Wall Street guru to reduce his exposure to stocks.

The reason: The market is losing the fuel that has fed the bullishness.

''The big factor is the drying up of the money supply, which had been the backbone of the bull market since the Federal
Reserve cut interest rates last year,'' said Don Hays, chief investment strategist for Wheat First Union in Richmond, Va.

The panicky Fed, led by Chairman Alan Greenspan, rushed to slash interest rates three times late last year. The goal was
to insulate the U.S. economy from the contagion that wrecked the economies in Asia, Russia and Latin America.

The flooding of the money system did the trick, but it also created what many suspect was a speculative market bubble.
This happened because the excess supply of cash spilled over to a stock market that was already priced out of this world.

The Fed is now worried that the bubble could burst and bring down the economy.

U.S. corporate earnings are shrinking for the second consecutive year, and fewer companies will find earnings bliss in
1999 as one-third of the world remains stuck in recession.

The problem is that investors will have a tough time justifying their hopes of companies' future earnings, with the
forward-looking price/earnings ratio at a record 25.

''This has been an Alan Greenspan inspired four-month bull market,'' Hays said. ''Now the Fed is starting to drain off
some of that excess money reserve.''

Kaufman said that based on the traditional measures, the P/E ratio would normally be at half the current level.

''You have to be worried about the P/Es,'' he said.

He said that the market's strength has been built on a flimsy foundation of booming technology stocks, which have hit
home runs while the rest of the market has struck out.

''The danger is that if the technology stocks lose their leadership, then the entire market could well go into a correction,''
Kaufman said. ''This could cause a snowball effect in the economy as consumer confidence and spending, which have
been propped up by the strong market, fall apart.''

Indeed, this week Wall Street may have gotten an early warning signal that the good times may be about to end for the
techs after Dell Computer Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co. came out with good earnings, but their sales growth appeared
to be on a downward slope.

Investors took a jack hammer to Dell's stock, knocking 20 percent from the shares because its sales increased only 38
percent instead of the 50 percent that stockholders had come to expect for the last two years.

Wall Street went gunning for Dell because the stock had led the S&P index for the past three years with an eyepopping
gain of more than 4,500 percent.

Hays, meanwhile, said he doesn't trust this bull market, preferring the safety of a blend of cash, Treasury bills and
bonds.

His new allocation recommends that investors put 51.5 percent of their portfolios in stocks, down from 70 percent
previously; 38.5 percent in bonds, up from 30 percent; and 10 percent in cash, up from zero previously.

Hays said other factors have made him turn negative on stocks, including the overvaluation of the market, which he
placed at nearly 20 percent.

''Stocks have undergone corrections every time they've been overvalued by 18 percent or more,'' he said.

Also disturbingly bearish is the ratio of stocks that, on an average day, have risen and fallen. The so-called market
breadth is near the low point that was reached prior to last summer's market plunge, which wiped out some 1,800 points
from the Dow.

''This is a very unhealthy set of conditions that show that the four-month bull market was largely the result of a small
group of large-cap stocks moving up,'' Hays said.

The market sentiment index is also too high, with more than 60 percent of the investment newsletters in the bullish
camp.

''This is the highest level of bullish sentiment since August 1987,'' said Hays.

Worth recalling is that on Oct. 19, 1987, the stock market went into a freefall, with the Dow plummeting 508 points to
1,738.74.

Hays said the Dow would need to drop by some 14 percent to reach what he thinks would be ''fair'' value, which
would put the blue-chip index at the 7,900 level -- but still above last summer's low of 7,500 after the sharp correction.

(Questions or comments can be addressed to Pierre.Belec(at)Reuters.Com)


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