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.
Strategies & Market Trends : Technical analysis for shorts & longs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Clint E. who wrote (34460)9/25/2001 2:43:50 PM
From: shasta23  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 68581
 
>>i don't know about you but i don't give a damn about stocks anymore. i don't care what happens a week from now or a month from now. at some point, they will turn up. that's all i know.<<

Interesting since i seem to just get back in again and last weeks buys (still marginally under water due to VRTS) were my first trades since the beginning of april.

I still hope that we will see 1600 on the comp on this bounce.

Otherwise hoping for Peace and justice and not a full fledged war nobody can win. That's all i can say and i know that i'm in a minority in the country. Don't even want to think about what can happen when the polarization leads to a coup d'etat in Pakistan giving the Taliban access to Pakistan's nukes.

Otherwise would like to prefer the market just drawing a line and wait until moving averages can catch up. In the 60min time frame we have broken above the 20EMA and it should now form support. Target to upside for me is dow 8900-9k or so.

Take care



To: Clint E. who wrote (34460)9/27/2001 4:10:10 AM
From: Clint E.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 68581
 
Facing October,,Commentary: Could it really get worse?

marketwatch.com

By David Callaway, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 12:10 AM ET Sept. 27, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS.MW) - Given the horror of the terrorist attacks, the plunge in our already struggling economy and the worst week for the stock market in almost 70 years, it's heartening to think that with the passing of September the worst is behind us.

Until you realize October comes next.

The month that gave us the stock market crashes of 1929 and 1987, along with several other memorable market plunges, begins next week with investors staring at the worst third quarter earnings period in a decade, a litany of new profit warnings and mass layoffs from companies whose businesses were broadsided by the attacks.

On top of that, the mutual fund industry heads into the final month of its fiscal year - when fund managers typically sell to get rid of their dogs and spruce up their portfolios - with performance numbers that stagger the imagination.

Of almost 4,000 equity funds tracked by fund researcher Lipper, only 194 are in positive territory year to date, according to our third quarter fund report, which will be published this weekend.

Of the losing funds, over 3,300 are down more than 10 percent, 2,400 of them are down more than 20 percent, and 1,100 are down more than 30 percent.

Does this sound like the right time to buy?

No. But it's a bad time to sell, too.

When markets turn, they turn quickly. Yes, it will be months or even a couple of years before the economy can rebound to a point where we think it's strong again. And investors who are waiting to buy are wise to wait until they see signs of a solid rally.

Those who sell now, however, or panic as the market continues to slide, risk missing out on the rebound, which could easily take us back to pre-Sept. 11 levels in a very short timeframe.

In April, after the Dow Jones average ($INDU: news, chart, profile) had hit a low of 9,100 and the Nasdaq ($COMPQ: news, chart, profile) about 1,600, I called the bottom of this bear market.

Investor sentiment was about as low as it could go, I figured, and the series of Fed rate cuts that began in January - including two surprise cuts - were about to kick in. I was wrong.

Even after covering the 1987 stock market crash and the dismal recession of the early 1990s, I did not expect the level of depression among employees and investors could ever sink any lower. But it did, all summer long, layoff by painful layoff.

Then the terrorists hit, and we all learned that there are deeper fears out there, even bleaker outlooks to be considered. A perfect storm of political, economic and market uncertainties came together to hammer the world's stock markets last week.

Without the attacks, I don't think we would have come down as low as we have, with the Dow almost hitting 8,000 last week and the Nasdaq falling below 1,400.

But with them, the game has changed. Untold amounts of business have been lost since the attacks and the economic impact is only starting to be felt.

We are in the eye of the storm right now, with one more round of panic selling to go -- the traditional October fright. Don't be fooled by the latest declines. Given the financial impact of the last two weeks, stocks could go far lower.

But unlike the water torture of the last 18 months, this time the declines will be quick. So will the market recovery.

It will start with a one-or-two day rally, but will really gain steam after about a week, when the colossal amount of money lined up against this market through short-selling hedge funds starts to get squeezed. By the time small investors realize what's happening, the bottom will be long gone.

October gets a bad rap. It may be the month of great stock market crashes, but it's also the month that has stopped several bear markets in their tracks, according to the Stock Trader's Almanac. Nine bear markets snuffed out since World War II to be exact, including those in the years 1987, 1990 and 1998.

A catalyst is needed, and I'm afraid it will be a military one. The Bush administration has done a tremendous job of holding itself back while it prepares for war, keeping a cool head in the face of taunts from Osama bin Laden, the Taliban and its supporters in Kabul.

But even though this will be an indefinite battle fought on many fronts, there will be an initial strike, and it will be fierce.

And then the tide will turn.


David Callaway is executive editor of CBS.MarketWatch.com.