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Strategies & Market Trends : Angels of Alchemy -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Whiteboy who wrote (23635)12/19/2000 8:57:01 PM
From: noneed  Respond to of 24256
 
i infer that IBD sees more downside potential. from tomorrow's paper:

investors.com

The Big Picture
Wednesday, December 20, 2000

Stocks Stumble Badly
Despite Fed's Move
Investor's Business Daily

A budding advance grew into an ugly sell-off Tuesday after the Fed’s meeting produced no early Christmas present.

The government’s chief monetary arm switched to an easing bias on interest rates. Wall Street expected that. What it may really have wanted was an immediate rate cut, but that didn’t come. Instead, policy-makers painted a grim economic picture.

In November, the Fed fretted about the tight labor market and rising inflation risks. Those concerns were absent in Tuesday’s statement. "The drag on demand and profits from rising energy costs, as well as eroding consumer confidence, reports of substantial shortfalls in sales and earnings and stress in some segments of the financial markets suggest that economic growth may be slowing further," it said.

The major market averages were working on gains of 1% to 1.7% when the Fed’s statement hit the news wires at 2:16 p.m. Eastern time. Stocks stumbled briefly, rallied for about 15 minutes, then nose-dived toward the lows of the day.

The Nasdaq bore the brunt of the day’s damage, shedding 4.3%. It had been up as much as 2.7% intraday. The sell-off sent the index to a 16-month low and wiped out of all the gains from the rally that began Dec. 1.

The S&P 500, chock-full of big tech firms, slid 1.3% to hit a 52-week closing low. As noted Monday, the blue chip gauge has enjoyed support at the 1300 level over the past nine weeks. The Dow fell 0.6%. Cyclicals rallied to blunt the index’s decline.

Volume climbed more than 10% on both exchanges, a signal that institutions aren’t finished selling.

Anyone who has tried to guess the market’s bottom over the past seven months can tell you it’s a futile exercise. Rallies in late October and November came on tame volume and failed to prop the Nasdaq above its May lows. Investors have used every rally over the past three months as an opportunity to sell stocks.

The Nasdaq’s steep sell-off has certainly burned off much of the excessive gains seen from October last year to its March peak. But has it gone far enough? Among the components of the Nasdaq 100, 64 stocks still have a price-earnings ratio higher than 27, the average P-E of an S&P 500 stock. Another 18, including names such as Exodus Communications, Ariba and Abgenix, have no earnings.

Networkers, telecom gear, software and Internets all posted heavy declines. Ciena dropped 23 3/16, or 24%, to 73 3/16 and pierced its 200-day moving average on double average trade. The optical switch maker plans to buy Cyras Systems for $2.6 billion in stock. Brocade Communications lost 11% and Siebel Systems 19%, both on heavy trade.

Retailers also took a beating. Five retail subgroups, including department stores and retail-wholesale food, each fell 3% or more. Green Mountain Coffee, which blasted out of a base in October, tumbled 14 11/16, or 31%, to 32, its third straight decline in accelerating volume.

Dollar Tree Stores joined the earnings warning casualty list, plunging 15 15/16, or 44%, to 20 7/16 on huge volume. The retailer warned that fourth-quarter earnings would be 59-62 cents a share, below Wall Street’s 70-cent estimate.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

© Investor's Business Daily, Inc. 2000. All Rights Reserved.
Reproduction or redistribution is prohibited.
For reprints, call Scoop Media Services (800) 767-3263 ext. 305.



To: Whiteboy who wrote (23635)12/19/2000 9:52:37 PM
From: Smart_Money  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24256
 
Stocks are "hot potato" last one holding gets burnt. Who knows what tomorrow brings. I remember the analyst bullcrap ratio's comment "Market capitalization to money in circulation ratio" How about NEED giving FDRY a downgrade "hold" Dec 11 and then a upgrade "buy" Dec 19 "today" target 41. How about Bush "man of the year" I believe Bezo "Bozo" got it last year and look at him today (very bullish amazon article if I might add) also did't Hitler get TIME "Man of the Year" once. So.. I can't answer about tomorrow.



To: Whiteboy who wrote (23635)12/20/2000 4:11:06 AM
From: SirRealist  Respond to of 24256
 
Who was it that said stocks only go UP? A shortist, no doubt. I think Kevin may have called it.... Wednesday bottom and Thursday gapper. I doubt we'll get any warnings the day before Christmas or the week after.

Logic would suggest it's no time for bottom fish while tax loss selling continues ... and maybe Friday 12/29 will suck.

I kinda expect one more bottom the second week of January, because if memory serves me, there's only a few bigs that week and I think they're mostly semis and YHOO.... none of which inspires.

And optical unlocks are gonna start weighing heavy in the next 35 days.... as will that slew of IPOs that occurred in July.

I dunno about capitulation. The best I can chart it says look for CSCO at 37 and NASDy at 2422, so the latter doesn't seem capitulatory.... more of a surprise reversal point as most TA points to 2350.

Wherever December's bottom is, I suspect we'll find it today though.