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Strategies & Market Trends : Systems, Strategies and Resources for Trading Futures

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To: SE who wrote (3335)9/5/1998 3:45:00 PM
From: Patrick Slevin  Read Replies (1) of 44573
 
A lot of interesting observations.

<Greenspan says we are in a deflationary mode and everywhere on SI the word is all of a sudden bullish. This does not make sense. If we are in deflation, prices come down, earnings come down.>

Delation, Inflation, anything that upsets equilibrium is long/intermediate term bearish. The market may pop up because of such readings short term but the greater picture changes substantially. Economic pressures will and do lead to adverse market conditions.

<The bond professionals are 98.5% bullish>

A worthless state. The stock jockeys were in the same mode 6 weeks ago. If the S&P declines much further the bond market will come back down with it. A Japanese problem eventually will create a repatriation of Japanese moneys and rock the bond market. It seems unlikely to bond bulls but it would take very little for it to occur; a decline in the Nik would be enough. A drop in the Yen would be as well. A decline in either would force the Bank of Tokyo to fund capital and the US Bond Market is the place they can do it the easiest.

<it appears that oil is on the way up>

If I recall correctly, Oil was holding the US Stock market up Thursday/Friday. That does not last forever either. The Financials (Banks) were getting absolutely clobbered Friday. The only times the market advanced Thursday/Friday (judging from memory....recall I was just glancing at charts---I was not here most of the time) was when the Nasdaq was strong. The Techs have assumed some leadership. It's time to use them as a Primary Indicator once again, replacing the Banks as something of a Bellweather.
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