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Strategies & Market Trends : ahhaha's ahs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ahhaha who wrote (2341)5/22/2001 4:24:22 PM
From: Ron DiorRespond to of 24758
 
Yet here he is, stating that those orders underneath will halt a sell-off when it is the orders below which encourage the down side action. Never underestimate how stupid or uninformed the "pros" are.

That was a great catch...! Very impressive Lonestar



To: ahhaha who wrote (2341)5/23/2001 10:27:06 PM
From: YamakitaRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 24758
 
THE REALITY OF
THE RATE CUT

By JOHN CRUDELE

May 22, 2001 -- IT'S now a week since the last Federal
Reserve cut interest rates, and this would be a great time for
someone to tell you the truth.

When the Dow Jones industrial average rose an astonishing
343 points - or 3.15 percent - Wednesday, it was alternately
described in the papers as a delayed reaction to Tuesday's
half-point cut in interest rates or as a cheer for the slightly
less-than-expected jump in consumer inflation announced the
morning of the rally.

Now for the truth: It was neither of those. Those
explanations, in fact, are ridiculous.

What really happened? The market was reacting to a
little-understood, barely discernible move by the Fed
Wednesday morning to kick stocks in the butt.

Last Tuesday the Fed decided the economy was doing so
badly that interest rates needed to come down another
half-point. What probably shocked the Fed was what
happened after Tuesday's rate cut - nothing. Alan Greenspan
and his cohorts must have been really annoyed.

Then came the magic that everyone missed. Mid-morning on
Wednesday the Fed did $11 billion of what are called repos.

Here's what happens: The Fed goes to banks and takes $11
billion in government bonds off their hands and gives them
cash in return. None of this is actual money. You couldn't see
the Brinks trucks pull up. It's just a ledger entry.

But the move gives banks a lot more money to lend and to
invest.

The $11 billion figure last Wednesday was much larger than
the market had been expecting and, within minutes, the stock
and bond markets were moving higher.

Does this mean Wall Street thinks the economic trouble is
over? Not at all.

What the smart people on Wall Street took from the
experience is that the Fed is willing to do anything to get the
stock market higher. The Fed may or may not have magical
abilities. But with straight-forward rate cuts no longer having
their intended effect, Washington seems willing to
experiment.

This subtle repo action by the Fed was obviously missed by
those who like simple reasons for their rallies.

The Fed's decision to spike the market higher on Wednesday
with an infusion of liquidity into the banking system is a
controversial one. Purists would say that Greenspan and his
gang ought to leave their dirty hands off the free-trading U.S.
markets.

This is going to get me a lot of irate e-mail, but I say the Fed
needs to do anything in its power to make sure the stock
market doesn't go any lower.

And that includes intervention through the purchase of
futures contracts, and tricks like the repo-maneuver.

Even with the big drop of the last year, stock prices are still
very overvalued. And the U.S. economy is doing so poorly
right now that we simply can't take a chance of allowing
equity prices to decline any more.

Alan Greenspan did what he had to do on Wednesday, which
also happened to be one of those options-expiration weeks
where the market has a tendency to go higher, anyway.

There's one more thing you need to know. What the Fed is
doing is in direct contradiction of the way free markets are
supposed to work, probably contrary to the charter of the Fed
- and definitely very dangerous.

You probably only care about the dangerous part, so here it
is.

Stocks are still very high priced. And the impact of Fed rate
cuts is negligible.

If Greenspan's attempts to re-create the bubble fail - or even
become too transparent - the integrity of our entire monetary
system could come into question.

You might want to keep your fingers crossed that this works.



To: ahhaha who wrote (2341)5/24/2001 3:53:49 PM
From: ahhahaRead Replies (2) | Respond to of 24758
 
Jeppords has ended his political career. The Republicans won't run him, and neither will the Democrats.