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To: Les H who wrote (70)4/29/2001 7:33:24 PM
From: ajtj99  Respond to of 29599
 
Les, I believe the low occurred on March 22nd, and the high will be soon, possibly as soon as Wednesday or Thursday. I've been pretty surprised at the near-term strength in the market so far.

Futures up about 13-points so far, but it's early. The G7 meeting went without a hitch, and that's positive for the markets.



To: Les H who wrote (70)4/30/2001 9:23:18 AM
From: Les H  Respond to of 29599
 
MARKET EARNINGS

As we near completion of the 1Q01 reporting season, there seems to be no meaningful change in the patterns in negative pre-announcements and downward revisions in earnings estimates.

The most ominous trends continue to be the level of 2Q01 negative pre-announcements and the rate of downward revisions in 4Q01 earnings estimates for the technology and basic materials sectors.

The most favorable trend continues to be the limited number of negative pre-announcements and minimal downward estimate revisions in the consumer cyclical sector. Also favorable was the 1Q01 return to more normal patterns in earnings surprises, from the below normal patterns in 4Q01.

With 81% of the S&P500 having reported, earnings are only down 5.2% from the strong 1Q00 quarter. However, as the major April ending quarter companies report that number will move to a deeper loss. Wal-Mart is expected to be only a penny above year-ago earnings, Home Depot and Dell Computers are expected to be down modestly, and Cisco Systems, Hewlett-Packard, and Applied Materials are expected to be down substantially. The estimate for 1Q01, using the actual results for the 81% and estimates for the remaining 29%, is a decline of 7.0%.

Given that the remaining companies will likely slightly beat the estimates, and baring any major surprise from one of the aforementioned tech companies, the final number will probably be a decline of about 6% from 1Q00 earnings. That is partly because the actual results are coming in on average 3.4% above the estimates at the time each reported. While that is in line with the average of the last seven years, it is better than the 0.9% in 4Q00.

The number of companies beating (57%), matching (28%), and falling short of (15%) estimates (at the time each company reported) provide little cheer. The number beating is in line with the seven year average. Somewhat fewer companies are matching rather than falling short, but that is only because there was a record number of warnings for 1Q01, so some of the falling short was taken care of by earlier warnings.

The real 1Q01 measure is that expectations at the beginning of the quarter was that earnings would be up 5.3%, yet final results are zeroing in on a decline of 6% to 7%.

Most worrisome for earnings in the remaining quarters for this year is the level of negative pre-announcements for 2Q01. Since 1 April, there have been 242 warnings for 2Q01. At the equivalent point (27 Jan) in 1Q01, there were 127 warnings for 1Q01. That means the pace of 2Q01 warnings is almost double that of the record setting 1Q01.

The concern raised by these warnings is not their impact on 2Q01 estimates, but their impact on analysts’ revising their 3Q01 and 4Q01, and whether warnings will be at a similar pace for those two quarters.

The technology sector also set a new record for warnings in 1Q01, but by a much wider margin than did warnings for all companies. Tech warnings beat the prior record set in 4Q00 by 71%, while the overall universe beat the prior record by only 24%. Despite this surge of tech warnings for 1Q01, the tech sector warnings for 2Q01 are 91% above the 1Q01 record setting pace.

Meanwhile, tech sector earnings for the remaining three quarters of this year continue in free fall. Since the beginning of April, the expected S&P500 tech sector year-over-year earnings growth has fallen from a 35% decline to a 50% decline for 2Q01, a 23% decline to a 37% decline for 3Q01, and a 1% gain to a 12% decline for 4Q01. Estimate reductions for the economically sensitive basic materials sector (papers, metals, chemicals) are also in free fall for all three remaining quarters.

We continue to believe that the critical earnings data to monitor is whether there is any change in the warnings and revision patterns for the consumer cyclical sector and for the technology sector. One indicates if the consumer is continuing to spend and will pull the economy out of the doldrums, while the other indicates if the slow capital spending will pull the rest of the economy into a recession.

At present, there are no signs of a change in the patterns in either sector. Stay tuned.

Obviously, the market will be dependent on the outcome of this battle between consumer spending holding up and capital spending continuing slow. But in any event the market does not look cheap. The inverse of the 10 year bond yield of 5.19% implies a fair market P/E of 19.3. The current P/E is 22.3, implying the market is about 16% overvalued if the analysts’ current projections for the next four quarters hold.

Given the risk that the E in the P/E might be significantly reduced, a 16% premium does not make the market seem enticing at current levels.

www1.firstcall.com



To: Les H who wrote (70)5/1/2001 1:00:19 AM
From: John Madarasz  Respond to of 29599
 
Stockmarket Cycles update for Monday, April 30th.

On our update of April 18th, we mentioned the overbought oversold filter that we use for our S&P trading system. On that day, the filter had reached a reading that was the second-highest of the past eight months on the S&P 500 cash index. The highest readings occurred on January 30th and 31 of this year. We pointed out that those dates were the closing and intra-day highs of the year, respectively, for the S&P 500 cash index. Today, those benchmark overbought readings were approached once again. In examining the past history of the indicator, we have found that if such overbought levels are reached twice within a relatively short period of time such as now and April 18th, the second overbought reading tends to lead to a more dramatic decline. That is the current configuration on the S&P 500.

Today, the McClellan oscillator closed at +135.9, a minor change from Friday's reading of + 138.3. The implication is that a big move could occur from current levels, and we have revealed to you before that both the McClellans and Kennedy Gammage suggest that the big move is more likely to come in the direction of the minor change. In this case the minor change was in a negative direction.

Today's TRIN readings were:10 day, 0.95-Open 10, 0.88-New 10, 0.715. As you can see from those numbers, the New 10 TRIN remains in very overbought territory. Any move from this point on above 0.80 on the New 10 TRIN would generate the fourth sell signal within the last three-four weeks from that indicator.

Mutual fund switchers- Rydex switchers are 100% in the Ursa Fund, Fidelity Select switchers are 100% in Select American Gold. All mutual fund switchers should call the telephone update each market day after 3:20 p.m. Eastern time and call each market evening.

stockmarketcycles.com