SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mark Fowler who wrote (40280)7/19/2001 11:15:47 AM
From: Stoctrash  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
Mark, it just don't wanna crack ...just a painful zig zag lower given the bulls "hope" with every spike rally.

btw...where are da Bulls today...SOX SUX 600, they should be throwing stones about now?



To: Mark Fowler who wrote (40280)7/19/2001 12:21:17 PM
From: Luce Wildebeest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
Gosh this thread is quiet!

By Paul Shread (mailto:pshread@internet.com)

July 19, 2001 - The economy's lousy, corporate earnings are terrible, and
the most aggressive rate cuts by the Federal Reserve since 1929-1930 have
failed to help.

Looks like it's time to buy stocks.

At least that's what investors plan to do this morning, with the index
futures all above fair value, and in the short-term, they're probably
right. This market has taken about all the shots we could imagine and is
still standing. There's an old saying among traders: That which does not
go up eventually goes down. In a bear market, the opposite may very well
be the case: that which does not go down eventually goes up.

But a big cautionary note is in order: bullish sentiment is at very
dangerous levels here. The Investors Intelligence survey of newsletter
writers reportedly came in yesterday with one of its giddiest readings of
the last decade. That kind of sentiment - bullish by more than 2-to-1 -
normally occurs at market tops, yet bullish sentiment has actually grown
throughout this two-month correction, which means the correction has done
nothing to work off excessively bullish sentiment. And the commercial
traders - the so-called smart money - remain bearish on this market, still
short the big index futures. A market move that begins with giddiness and
the lack of participation from the smart money does not seem like a
promising place to put long-term money to work. Stranger things have
happened, but not by much.

On the other hand, the one thing about the rally off the April lows that
has had Elliott wavers scratching their heads is the lack of a "C" wave,
or second leg up, that even a bear market rally should have (see chart
below). A strong rally with these sentiment readings could produce that
"C" rally.

The good news, if it can be called that, is that the U.S. dollar finally
tanked yesterday. This is good news for all the companies that have been
claiming that currency translation issues have been hurting profits (the
latest was IBM last night). A weaker dollar could also help the CRB
commodity price index, which rolled over hard this weak after a promising
breakout last week, and remains in deflationary mode. The weaker dollar
was likely a reaction to Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's suggestion
yesterday that more rate cuts are likely in order.

Nokia's (NYSE:NOK) better-than-expected earnings (after warning last
month) and prediction of a fourth-quarter rebound is also helping
sentiment this morning, as is Dell's (NASDAQ:DELL) reaffirmation of its
guidance. But yesterday's action in the major indexes formed a bearish
candlestick of questionable reliability called a hanging man; a negative
close today could confirm that pattern. And the indexes are beginning this
rally from overbought levels, which could limit upside to a couple of
strong up days.

Perhaps, as Greenspan said in his surprisingly negative testimony
yesterday, there are "signs that the bottom is beginning to structure
itself." If the economy can overcome near-record debt and overinvestment,
falling personal wealth and a rapid slowdown that has been among the
steepest in the postwar economy, then the Fed chairman deserves his
reputation.