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Strategies & Market Trends : Stock Attack -- A Complete Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: donald sew who wrote (23739)5/29/2000 4:30:00 PM
From: Joan Osland Graffius  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42787
 
donald, Re: time for markets.

If we are now seeing the signs of the indexes going into their bear phase, why did the investors not see it sooner. The internals of the markets have been in a bear phase since April 1998. Anyone can pull up the information on our three markets sum the A/D and H/L information and act on it. Why with all this technology has it taken so long for the violence in the DOW/S&P/NAZ. I suspect there is one thing that never changes and that is human behavior.

I tend to agree with your take on Japan. The violent turn at 20,000 could be just a bear market rally in a longer bear market. Japan as we do have a lot of overpriced stocks that need to get back to fair value and below it to start a bull market again. It is going to take a long time for the Japanese to have confidence in the government and finance system again.

Joan



To: donald sew who wrote (23739)5/29/2000 5:13:00 PM
From: Dan Duchardt  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42787
 
Donald,

I visited your web site for the first time today. Appreciate the effort you and L3 have put into that. I'm sure I'll revisit often.

The bear market in the 70's lasted about 9-10 years.

I was not involved in the market in the 70s, but I certainly remember that era. When I hear about the 10 year bear market of that time, I'm inclined to pull up charts that go back that far to see the evidence. While it is true that over a 10 year period the Dow and S&P500 made no net progress, within that 10 year period there were a couple of distinct cycles. The initial decline starting in 1973 lasted somewhat less than 2 years and was followed by a sustained climb that recovered substantially before slipping again.

For the Dow, the recovery was about 90% during a year and a half period, followed by a second pull back lasting another year and a half and then almost 2 years of going nowhere before the recovery really set in in 1980. The S&P had an initial recovery less dramatic than the Dow, followed by a smaller second decline, and began a sustained climb earlier in 1978. The earlier move by the S&P appears to be due to the power of the Nasdaq, which had only one sustained move down in 1973-1974, with a couple of ugly dips in Oct78 and Mar80.

The point of all this is that I don't see a 10 year bear market, unless you happened to be a die hard buy and hold type. I see a succession of bull and bear markets that on average went nowhere, but there were periods of sustained trend during that time when a position trader could have done very well and emerged from the decade with some healthy profits. I expect there were a lot of savvy traders who did just that.

No doubt it will be wise to keep a lot of powder dry in the near term, but I see no reason to think we won't have some great opportunities along the way, even if the market averages flat for some time.

Dan



To: donald sew who wrote (23739)5/29/2000 11:50:00 PM
From: SpecialK  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 42787
 
Don,
The Dow and S&P are in correction territory. Nasdaq went too high and is now near last October, November levels.
Is there reason to think this will take years to recover?
Thanks.
Ketan



To: donald sew who wrote (23739)5/30/2000 9:23:00 AM
From: Oak Tree  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 42787
 
Well I hope you are wrong about the 25 year bear. I was hoping to retire rich, not die about the time the market recovers. ce la vie