Last week's commentary. Today's market activity has only reenforced our belief that the markets are at or near a bottom and technologies will lead the recovery in the coming weeks.
--------------------------------------------------------------- The Select Investor Weekly Commentary October 13, 2000 ---------------------------------------------------------------
The Good News
Pfew! Now we know where the market bottom is : DOW 10,000, NASDAQ 3,000. The markets executed a classic bottom this week. This means that it is 90% certain ( in the absence of a major political crisis ) that the markets will not fall below these levels in the near future.
The Capitulation
On Wednesday and Thursday we saw the capitulation; heavy volume selling on sharply lower prices. This flushed out the short term investors and the Bears. Everyone that was inclined to sell, sold on Wednesday and Thursday.
The Recovery
So, by Friday all of the sellers had sold and there were only buyers left in the market. This led to strong buying with high volume and sharply higher prices. It is important to notice that technologies led the way up by a wide margin; most technology sectors were up from 8% to 10% on Friday, while most of the other sectors gained 2% to 4%.
The Long Term Implications
We believe that the bottom formed this week signals more than an end to the recent - 20% correction, but also the end of the - 40% correction that began in March, clearing the way for a rally back to NASDAQ 4,500 to 5,000 over the course of the next three to six months.
In March and April the NASDAQ fell from 5,000 to 3,100 as the Internet Bubble burst; most Internet stocks lost 80% to 90% of their value, while the technology blue chips held much of their value. During this last correction it was the tech blue chip valuations that were brought down to earth.
This is the classic structure of a double bottom : the first bottom is caused by the collapse of speculation in a few sectors, while the second bottom is the result of a revaluation of the broader sectors in the absence of speculation.
We do not expect the markets to shoot straight up as they did last Fall, but we expect a long, sustained recovery to begin; starting today.
The Bad News
Even in the best scenario, we expect volatility and pullbacks over the next few months.
The real risk to a sustained recovery is the possibility of a hard landing in the global economy. There is very little direct risk to the US economy but higher energy prices pose a great threat to the global economy. Energy costs are much higher in Europe and industry is less efficient ( especially in Eastern Europe ). In the third world the added drain on foreign reserves due to the need to spend US Dollars to buy oil will put significant pressure on these economies as they continue to struggle to recover from the Asia Crisis.
If Oil prices remain in the mid to high $30's the slowdown in the global economy could make the soft landing in the US economy much harder.
Russell Cox selectinvestor.com |