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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tradermike_1999 who wrote (81)10/23/2000 5:03:58 PM
From: CBurnett  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
I live in Virginia also Mike.The Northern Va sprawl littered with the internet economy. I worked until last Wednesday at a Commercial Web Hosting Facility where some of the dudes spend 150.00 to 200.000 a square foot for space.
I resigned my position last week because I see trouble on the horizon and also I was bored. LOL



To: tradermike_1999 who wrote (81)10/23/2000 9:40:42 PM
From: bobby beara  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
stockcharts.com[L,A]DALLYYMY[DF][PB21!A1!F][VC60][IUB7]

optionstrategist.com

For Thursday, October 19th, 2000

This weekly commentary (usually posted late Thursday) is part of a comprehensive weekly posting for
subscribers of The Option Strategist newsletter. Click for Testimonials.

Stock Market
All of our indicators registered extreme oversold readings this week some of them
historic. First, the equity-only put-call ratio has risen to levels not seen since 1987. This
includes both the weighted and normal ratios. The $OEX weighted put-call ratio is in the
same state. They are more oversold than at the 1998 bottom, during the Russian debit
crisis and the Long-Term Capital crisis. The S&P 500 futures option put-call ratios are
not at historic levels, but are in oversold territory. A few of the put-call ratios have
already turned to buys, including the NASDAQ-100 ($NDX) weighted and normal ratios.
Even the QQQ weighted ratio is rolling over to a buy.

The oscillator reached as low as -494 on Thursday's close. Thus, it is also very
oversold, but not close to a buy signal yet (a buy signal occurs when the oscillator
closes above -180). With Thursday's action figured in, the oscillator stands at about
-341. Thus, it probably won't give an "official" buy signal until Monday at the earliest.
Finally, the Volatility Index ($VIX) has declined sharply from its peak, and that
constitutes a buy signal.

All in all, this is unfolding about as one would expect: a deeply oversold condition,
heavy with pessimism, gives rise to a big rally out of nowhere. We expect this rally to be
of intermediate-term duration (several months), so missing the bottom by a couple of
days isn't all that significant. However, this doesn't mean a retest of the lows won't be
necessary. In 1998, especially, there was a sharp rally followed by lower lows before
the actual bottom was in place. Nevertheless, it seems that some broad market bullish
positions can be taken now, and added to when the buy signals actually fall into place.



To: tradermike_1999 who wrote (81)10/23/2000 11:41:59 PM
From: Sir Auric Goldfinger  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 74559
 
800% YTD, my arse. What a joke. How'd ya do that, maniping OTC BB crap? There are a lot of fish on the 'net, but most of the ones on SI are extinct.

Since you have not paid SI to advertise, take that lie down OR if you think you can prove it, have a big 4 auditor contact me, you lyin' sack o' sheet. How pertetic as Frank Ching would say.