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Strategies & Market Trends : MARKET INDEX TECHNICAL ANALYSIS - MITA -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J.T. who wrote (5997)1/10/2001 12:58:52 PM
From: bobby beara  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19219
 
LOL, swami of the corn

LOWRISK.COM

INVESTOR SENTIMENT REPORT

01 / 09 / 2001

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

Below are the results of our weekly "Guess the Dow" sentiment
survey. The survey was taken from 01/01 through 01/07 on the
LowRisk.com web site.

Number of participants: 408

30 day outlook:

31% bullish, 41% previous week
53% bearish, 43% previous week
16% neutral, 16% previous week

(percentages may not sum to 100 due to rounding)

The median guess for the Dow closing value on Friday, 01/12: 10,500
(it was 10,800 last week). More complete sentiment data is available
at: <http://www.lowrisk.com/sentiment.htm>.

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

After a very volatile but mixed week of trading, our sentiment
numbers grew more decidely more bearish. The bulls dropped 10%
to end at 31%, while bearish sentiment jumped from 43 to 53%.
Neutral sentiment was unchanged, holding at 16%.

It looks like we *might* be finally starting to see the kind of
bearish sentiment numbers that we would expect after more than
four months of unrelenting selling...

The more participation we get in this sentiment survey, the
better this sentiment data is, so please stop by and tell us
what you think the market is going to do:
lowrisk.com

best regards,
Jeff Walker

Disclaimer:

The financial markets are risky. Investing is risky. The
foregoing has been prepared solely for informational
purposes and is not a solicitation, or an offer to buy or
sell any security. Opinions are based on historical
research and data believed reliable, but there is no
guarantee that future results will be profitable.

Copyright (c) 2001 by Jeff Walker, Bayfield, CO.

jwalker@lowrisk.com

LowRisk.com- making sense of the market lowrisk.com
InvestorMap.com- THE investing directory investormap.com

...............................................

W a l k e r M a r k e t L e t t e r

January 9th, 2001

lowrisk.com

...............................................

It has been a bit longer than usual between editions, and I
received a number of questions about our publishing schedule (and
a few people who were worried that we stopped publishing!). Don't
worry, we aren't going anywhere. We have been publishing
continuously since summer 1996, and we have no plans to stop.

We publish twice a month...generally around the beginning
of the month and around mid month. This is the "beginning of the
month" issue, and it is admittedly a bit later than usual. There
are a variety of reasons it is a bit later, including the
holiday's and a round of colds in our office. Looking at the
calendar, I imagine that our mid month issue will also be a bit
later than usual.

As always, if you find this newsletter to be of value, please
forward it to your friends and associates...subscription
instructions are included at the end of the newsletter.

// -- MODEL UPDATE -- //

Lowrisk Market Allocation Model signal strength = 12 (on a scale
of 0-20, with 20 being the most bullish)
***
Disaster Avoidance Strategy - 100% stocks as of 12/06/00
Graduated Strategy - 75% stocks, 25% money markets as of 01/05/2001
Timing Strategy - 100% money markets, 0% stocks as of 11/2/99
SuperBear Strategy - 100% money markets as of 12/14/98
***

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

Well so far the new year for the stock market has looked a lot
like the old year...and it has featured lots of breathtaking
volatility. Tuesday was the quietest trading day of the year and
we still had a range from high to low of almost 3% on the Nasdaq
Composite. Of course, that pales in comparison to the 14% range
we had last week when the Fed cut rates unexpectedly. Of course,
most of us have become a little numbed by all this volatility.

What is really amazing, is that for all this furious market
action, the market has not moved very much from where it closed
out 2000. After Tuesday's close, the SP500 is up a bit less than
5 points for the year, the Dow is down 214 points, and the Nasdaq
Composite is 33 points higher. That tells us the market is
not only volatile, but it is also very choppy.

In a lot of ways, this choppiness should not be too
surprising...this is a very polarized market. We can see this
polarization on a few fronts. The one that has just been hitting
us in the face for a while is investor sentiment. On one hand,
the sentiment numbers have stayed surprisingly bullish in the
face of a market that has just kept going down since early
September, while on the other hand there also appears to be a
large number of investors who are very bearish.

The sentiment is polarized between two camps...the bears that
sold out of the market quite a while ago and expect the market to
keep going down, and the bulls that are still in the market and
are convinced that the current levels are a screaming bargain and
the market is about to rally. This leaves us with a bunch of
bears who are not about to buy, and a bunch of bulls who are
already invested and have no funds to buy with. Of course, this
is a gross simplification, but I think it is accurate to a large
degree.

Another place where the market is polarized is in the market
internals. As I write this, about half of our internal indicators
are obscenely oversold...they are at levels that *usually* lead
to a powerful rally. But the rest of our indicators are
overbought, and at the type of levels that suggest we are closer
to a sell off! The way these indicators split up is that the
ones that are based on the up and down volume are very oversold,
and the breadth based indicators are overbought. In any case,
these mixed up internals suggest it is going to be hard for the
market to make a sustained move in either direction until the
internals sort themselves out...which means we expect the recent
choppiness in the market to continue.

On the bigger picture, the trend is still down. And this trend
has been pretty impressive in its persistence...especially on the
Nasdaq. In fact, the Nasdaq Composite has not had three
consecutive days of higher closes since 8/30/00, 8/31/00, and
9/1/00. That is a remarkable string of more than four months
without a three day rally.
Even in the most severe bear markets,
there are always strong counter-trend rallies...but we are still
waiting for one this time around. The Nasdaq has had a few brief
spurts higher...however they haven't lasted very long or been
very consistent.

In the last three weeks or so, I have written about some bullish
internals divergences both in this newsletter and in the Walker
MarketEdge. These are primarily on the breadth based indicators
that I mentioned above. They are still in place, and they have
the type of setup we look for in market bottoms. But as I
mentioned last week, we need some buying enthusiasm to start
driving the stock indexes higher. Last week's Fed rally fizzled
just like all the other "sure thing" rallies over the last four
months (take your pick: end of summer rally, October bottom,
election rally, election mess conclusion rally, Christmas rally,
January rally, Fed rally, etc.). The bottom line is there are
still some constructive things going on underneath the surface of
the market, and we would love to get really bullish here. But
until the bulls take charge and the market starts to move higher,
it is hard to get very excited about this market.

These are the times when it is really nice to have a model to
follow, and that is what we are going to do. Right now, with a
Signal Strength of 12 we are sort of in limbo. The Graduated
Strategy just moved from 50% stocks to 75% stocks, while the
Timing Strategy is completely out of stocks. It would take an
increase to 14 for the Timing Strategy to move into stocks. Given
the choppy nature of the market (and especially those polarized
market internals), the Signal Strength could really jump around
in the next couple of weeks.

Now is a good time to think about an upgrade to the Walker
MarketEdge. It will bring you all our additional issues (we
have published to our MarketEdge subscribers three times since
our last issue of the Walker Market Letter), as well as Flash
Updates when our models change (and our mutual fund picks).
Upgrading your subscription is fast, simple, and secure at:
secure10.infoboard.net

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

// -- WEB SITE UPDATE -- //

We have updated the charts comparing the Nikkei bear market
with the current Nasdaq bear market. This comparison continues
to be very striking. In addition, it compares this Nasdaq bear
market to all of the past Nasdaq bear markets. You can see them
at:

lowrisk.com

Good luck,
Jeff Walker

Copyright (c) 2001 by Jeff Walker, Bayfield, CO. This newsletter may
be forwarded, as long as you do so in its entirety.

Disclaimer:
The financial markets are risky. Investing is risky. Past
performance does not guarantee future performance. The
foregoing has been prepared solely for informational
purposes and is not a solicitation, or an offer to buy or
sell any security. Opinions are based on historical
research and data believed reliable, but there is no
guarantee that future results will be profitable.