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


To: BWAC who wrote (4780)9/26/2001 8:03:44 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5499
 
A Pattern Begins To Emerge
internetstockreport.com

September 25, 2001 - The good news is that the stock market's action over
the last couple of days has made it easier to identify a technical
structure after last week's free fall.

The bad news is that there appears to be more downside ahead for the
market when the current rally is completed.

But even therein lies some good news: whatever bottom comes as a result of
the next leg down has the potential to be a significant one.

We're watching two things here: Elliott waves and a chart pattern called a
bear flag.

First, a little background on Elliot wave theory. There are two basic
moves under Elliot theory: a five-wave "impulsive" move, or main trend;
and a three-wave "corrective" move, or correction against that trend.
There are other variations that aren't necessary for our purposes here.

And now onto a chart of the Dow since its May 22 peak (see below). The
wave down from the May peak to early July was Wave 1 in a potential 5-wave
move. The flat trading range until late August was Wave 2, or a correction
against the main trend. And then came Wave 3; in Elliott terms, the third
wave is the most powerful. Within that Wave 3, we can identify 3 completed
smaller waves, labeled a-b-c. That makes the current wave a corrective
wave d, with a wave e down yet to come to complete Wave 3 before we get a
Wave 4 rally. Hope that's not too hard to follow.

That's one technical reason that the sell-off since the Dow broke 10,000
has been so powerful - in short, it was a 3 of 3, the third move of the
third wave, the most powerful in Elliott terms.

Now onto what's been forming off the market's bottom on Friday morning. As
we said in last night's Market Close, the Dow and S&P 500 appear to be
forming bear flags off those lows (see charts below). A flag is a
correction against the trend in a fast-moving market, and these patterns
so far appear to fit that definition. Those bear flags give the market
downside potential equal to that of the previous move ("c"), which was
about 2000 points down in the Dow. Under Elliott terms, that projected "e"
wave can't be bigger than the "c" wave, so a 2000-point move would likely
be the maximum if those patterns break down. They could potentially break
to the upside, which would be very bullish, but with several chances to do
so that have already failed, the odds of that breakout occurring are
diminishing.

Those bear flags could continue for a while longer, perhaps into cycle
turns on October 2-3, and continue to climb higher, but another leg down
appears to be in the cards, particularly if volume on this rally continues
to diminish.

But the good news is that the next leg down could be the last for a while;
a strong 6-week rally to complete a larger Wave 4 would be likely at that
point. And for some stocks and indexes, this next leg down, the end of
Wave 3, could potentially be a significant bottom, with the eventual Wave
5 consisting of a retest or minor new lows.

But that's getting into the much bigger picture. In the short-term,
another leg down seems to be the likely bet, and it should produce a good
buying opportunity.

A bit of stock market history is probably in order here. Major bear
markets of 40% or greater have tended to occur about every 20 years
throughout U.S. stock market history. It's been 27 years since we
completed the last one. It would be well within the historical norm to
have another one, and there are enough negatives in place for that to
occur here. The volume of foreign money leaving U.S. markets alone could
be enough to trigger that.

And don't forget that last week was the worst week for the stock market
since 1933. In the intervening 68 years, there has been one crash (1987),
two panics (1939 and 1946), and two bear markets of about 50% (1937 and
1973-1974), and none of them produced a week that bad. That's not an
insignificant fact.

But even in the very worst bear markets - the 75%-89% Great Bears in 1857
and 1929 - the market rallied 50% after falling 45%-48%, and other major
bear markets have tended to do the same. The next leg down has the
potential to produce that kind of buying opportunity.

Will it be The Bottom? We don't need to know that. We'll just keep an eye
on the charts to see what forms.

This too shall pass, as they say, and an economic recovery by the middle
of next year is probably more likely than not. But until the signs are
clear, it's probably wise to learn something about what was once the
number one rule of investors: Preservation of capital.