The main question, I think that we should be asking is when is the general market storm going to end (if you believe that the economy and tech sector is fundamentally sound for the long-term, and possibly not the short-term (1+ months) ).
Here's an article by *can you recognize who it is?*
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There are no zebras in this game.
Where were the refs when that seller of Chase (CMB:NYSE) kept pummeling it mercilessly with less than 25,000 shares in the last five minutes of trading? Why didn't someone call time out in IBM (IBM:NYSE) when the sellers ganged up after the company's buy order ran out at 3:30 p.m.? Where is the commissioner when the sellers in the drugs and soaps get out of hand on a sleepy summer Tuesday when the buyers go on vacation?
The answer: They are at the same place you will find them when the market goes up 100 points on no volume with no real reason other than one major institutional house was determined to put billions to work regardless of the short-term consequences.
Tuesday's action was a travesty as surely a pile-on is a travesty in pro football. But we must accept that on thin days, when some major institution is moving out of stocks and into bonds (no, I don't know who was doing it, but it was being done), that the dislocations will be monstrous.
Rather than call for an instant replay or demand fines and investigations, might I suggest that the bullish among you use days like Tuesday to pick up stocks that you have waited patiently for but had not been allowed into because aggressive buyers moved stocks up too quickly?
For instance, last week Becton Dickinson (BDX:NYSE) announced a major restructuring. It seemed exactly what the marketplace wanted and the stock took off as it should have. Now it is back to below where the restructuring took place. That, to me, says opportunity. I am making my calls today.
Or Chase. This is a stock that at times feels like it is going to the moon and can't get out of its own way. Yesterday's sloppy seller at the close knocked a couple of points off the stock with no more than 25,000 shares for sale. I stood there and bought stock. It might go down again today, but I know I got better prices than if I always waited until Chase was up five points. I did the same with Disney (DIS:NYSE). The stock had a vicious overreaction to the downside off the ABC stuff, which I think, while consequential, is not disastrous. So I started buying it. Then the stock rallied to 116 on no volume last week. Anybody who tried to buy it on Thursday and Friday was stymied by other buyers who would not let you in at decent prices. But at 111, down 5 from where the buyers would not let you in, you could have bought all you wanted yesterday.
Now, my reflections on yesterday do not mean that we can expect a turn right back up. Whatever sloppy institutional seller that was in the marketplace yesterday might come back in today. Plus, everybody who trades for a living is getting sick and tired of the morning fakeout as we try but fail to follow through on strong European buying that, in retrospect, must come from buyers excited about EMU. Because there is certainly no carry-over enthusiasm for stocks denominated in U.S. dollars!
My point: Be glad there are no zebras. If your inclination is to buy, how much better it is to buy unobstructed by other buyers than to compete for stock and end up paying dear prices. If you think, as I do, that the market is basically okay, then why not dip your toe in, even if you felt that the overnight rally should have followed through and failed? As I think we are range-bound, with the mid-8000s being the bottom of the range, I can't think of a better time to get started than when some futures sellers and a large institution coalesce to give stocks away in the closing moments of a sleepy session. |