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Strategies & Market Trends : Range Bound & Undervalued Quality Stocks -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Esway who wrote (4567)7/12/2001 10:19:28 AM
From: HandsOn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5499
 
LUMT has an inhouse CC Today, might want to keep an eye on it. When volume hits LUMT,it moves quick.



To: Esway who wrote (4567)7/12/2001 10:40:21 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5499
 
>>well how long does this rally last...

Hi Esway, Not to be a downer but I'll say the selling will continue again next week...



To: Esway who wrote (4567)7/13/2001 9:53:58 AM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 5499
 
Was Yesterday A Bottom?
internetstockreport.com
By Paul Shread

July 13, 2001 - Yesterday was an impressive-looking rally for the major
U.S. indexes, but more evidence is needed before we can say the tide has
turned. Until then, caution is advised, particularly for the next few
days, for reasons we will get to in a moment.

But first, the one big positive. The indexes produced some
impressive-looking candlesticks yesterday, particularly on the Nasdaq,
which gapped up 60 points at the open and managed to end the day 40 points
higher than that. The white candlestick - meaning the close was higher
than the open - produced as a result was evidence of real buying pressure.
The bottom of those candlesticks - 2031 on the Nasdaq, 10,269 on the Dow,
and 1187 on the S&P 500 - are now critical support, and could be tested on
the first strong pullback.

As we noted in yesterday's Market Close, market internals, such as up/down
volume and new highs/new lows, were solid but not spectacular. Trading
volume rose only modestly from Wednesday's levels. Key indicators like
MACD and PPO have yet to turn up. Sentiment went from bearish to bullish
overnight, an indicator that a few too many investors think this rally is
for real. And all the major indexes except the Dow ended yesterday right
at resistance. So it could be just an oversold bounce until those
indicators improve.

Today could turn out to be an important day for one big reason. For the
last few weeks, the major U.S. stock indexes have been tracing out a
familiar pattern - the same pattern the market traced out before the 1929
and 1987 crashes. A hard down day today would continue that pattern, which
makes yesterday's bullish action all the more important, because it could
put a short-term floor under the market at just the right time.

The pattern developing in the Dow, S&P and Nasdaq last appeared in the
stock market in March, according to George Slezak of FuturesFax.com, who
follows the pattern as closely as anyone. It produced a sharp sell-off -
but also one heck of a rally off the April 4 low. The pattern also
appeared at the bottom of the 1929-1932 bear market, so it can produce
some major upside reversals too. It does not always have an unhappy
ending. In Slezak's words, "many get this far and fizzle at any moment."
But this point of the pattern tends to produce strong, reliable signals on
market direction, he said.

Through yesterday, the current patterns were a strong match for the 1987
and 1929 tops. The 1987 and 1929 tops had their final rallies on the
quarter moon, which was yesterday. And both indexes plunged on the 55th
day off the top, an important Fibonacci turn date. 55 days off the May 22
top will be either July 16 or 17 (Monday or Tuesday), depending on who's
doing the counting. And the 1929 and 1987 crashes both occurred within a
Puetz crash window, which this market is in until Tuesday. And July 18 is
an important cycle turn date (called a Bradley) similar in size and
strength to the one that produced the April 4 bottom (July 18 is also the
date of IBM's much-anticipated earnings report). A lot of important turns
clustering around the early part of next week could make whatever signal
the market produces over the next week a reliable one.

One argument in favor of treating the 1929/1987 pattern as more than a
passing curiosity is the high level of complacency in the market right
now. The CBOE put-call ratio plunged from .95 at its peak on Wednesday to
.34 at its low yesterday morning. That kind of one-day move - from extreme
bearish sentiment to extreme bullish sentiment - normally takes at least
several days. Yesterday's dramatic drop in the PC ratio may have just been
Microsoft-induced short-covering, but it took weeks after the April 4
bottom before the put-call ratio fell below .60. The PC ratio closed at
.51 yesterday. Also, the Investors Intelligence survey of newsletter
writers shows them bullish by 2-to-1, a level usually seen at tops. Bulls
and bears were even at the April 4 bottom. Investors' ability to ignore
massive charges against earnings from Microsoft and others and a brewing
crisis in Argentina that affects 20% of all emerging market bonds should
be at least a little worrisome.

All of which means that the real test may still lie ahead.