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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2672)7/19/2002 5:11:56 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
MBIA -- another LTCM...??

Message 17763095

<<...Abstract: MBIA is the LTCM that is about to set off the powderkeg of a global financial market we have. They are effectively sporting a "debt" to equity ratio in the triple digits, and apparently occupy a blind spot in the financial regulatory picture. They insure over $400B par value of bonds, and $720B total value, on - get this - a mere $4B equity! All it would take is one major bankruptcy of an insured party, and they're under. The ramifications of an MBI bankruptcy are non-obvious, but enormous. Instantly, the triple-A financial rating of $440B par value of bonds vanishes. Hundreds of billions of dollars in debt is exposed as the junk that it is, which results in the forced liquidation of a huge portion of that by parties that are not permitted or are not comfortable holding junk. You think the billions lost on Worldcom bonds was bad? You ain't seen nuttin' yet. Instant junk bond chaos. Liquidity vaporized. No more asset-backed securities market. All it would take is one $4B knock - and it may have already happened in WCOM...>>



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2672)7/19/2002 6:00:14 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
McMillan Market Commentary

Thursday, July 18, 2002

optionstrategist.com <---accompanying charts

Stock Market

This market has quickly become the most ferocious of bear markets.
Rallies during bear markets are always sharp, short-lived affairs. But
they are becoming shorter and shorter. On July 5th, in a half day of
trading, the market jumped 320 points. Last Monday afternoon, it
rallied nearly 400 points in an hour and a half. But in both bases, the
bear came out stronger than ever -- slamming the market to new lows.
All potentially bullish setups have been undone. There had been a
chance that the September lows might hold, and the bullish 'W'
formation could occur. That is no longer a possibility as the market
has smashed through on the downside. This means that a whole new
bottoming process will have to eventually be constructed.

Our four main technical indicators are price, market breadth,
volatility, and put-call ratios. They have served well to keep one from
buying into this market. The first three have warned that, while the
market is oversold, it is not ready to be bought. Only the put-call
ratios have issued (false) buy signals, but we have correctly cautioned
against using only one of the indicators as a reason to buy. Let's
review their status now.

Price action has been terrible. Each potential support area has
been violated and quickly becomes a resistance area. $OEX (Figure 1)
now has resistance in the 470-480 area. One cannot even consider
buying the market for more than a day trade until $OEX can break out
above these levels.

Market breadth has been poor, as well. About the only positive thing
about market breadth readings is that they aren't as bad as they were
last September.

So, neither price nor market breadth has even come close to
generating a buy signal. Market sentiment, however, hasn't been as
clearly bearish, as option traders have tried (incorrectly) to jump in too
early on the long side.

Implied volatility continues to rise, and that, too, is bearish. As
long as volatility trends higher, it is bad news for stock prices. The
CBOE's Volatility index ($VIX) has moved sporadically higher, but
hasn't really approached the levels of last year. In addition to
watching $VIX, we also keep our eyes on a composite volatility index
constructed by combining the implied volatilities of the individual
stocks that make up the $OEX Index. This chart is shown in Figure 2.
It is clearly moving strongly higher. It won't give a buy signal until it
peaks and begins to fall. One facet of this chart is potentially more
bullish than the $VIX Index: it has nearly reached the levels of last
September. If it should exceed those levels, which seems likely, that
would at least show that option traders have reached levels of panic
greater than last September.

Finally, there are the equity-only put-call ratios (Figures 3 and 4).
These gave buy signals a couple of weeks ago, and those buy signals
remain in force. Clearly, such buy signals have been premature and
incorrect. That's why we require price confirmation of any signal
received from a sentiment indicator -- because sentiment can
sometimes be misleading. Perhaps these equity-only buy signals will
yet prove to be correct -- just premature.

In summary, the same advice that we've been espousing for several
weeks continues to hold: while the market is deeply oversold (and thus
subject to spawning sharp, short-lived rallies), there won't be any
intermediate-term bullish signal until $OEX (and other major indices)
can close above resistance. For $OEX, that would be a rise above the
470-480 level. At the current time, that seems like a formidable task.
In fact, even when the buy signal eventually does occur, there will
have to a retest. I say that because of the severity of the oversold
condition at the current time. Thus, we won't be in any rush to pile in
on the long side. Rather, we'll continue to tighten stops and take
partial profits on shorts.

One last comment. Today is expiration day. Expect arbitrage
selling because there are a large number of in-the-money puts (in terms
of open interest) and virtually no in-the-money calls.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2672)7/19/2002 6:30:46 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Dollar dragged down by U.S. stock market plunge

Friday July 19, 6:13 pm Eastern Time

NEW YORK (AP) -- The equity market once again took center stage in currency markets Friday, as another down day on Wall Street dragged the dollar lower against all its major counterparts.

The stock market was pummeled by a mix of poor earnings reports from the likes of Microsoft and Sun Microsystems, news of a Food and Drug Administration probe into Dow component Johnson & Johnson and word that the Justice Department is investigating DaimlerChrysler for alleged price-fixing at Mercedes dealerships in the New York area.

"It's an equity market call from here, and there's very little evidence of an equity market rally anytime soon," Thomas Molloy, currency trader at Bank Leumi, said of the current weakness in the dollar.

But he added that, despite dipping to its lowest level in 30 months versus the euro early Friday during the global session, "I must say that the dollar has proved relatively resilient today" given the carnage among equities.

On the economic front during the morning trading session, an unexpected widening of the U.S. trade gap in May to record levels produced a knee-jerk reaction in the dollar that initially sent it lower.

Against the yen, the dollar also found some support after dipping as low as 115.56 yen.

The dollar continues to find buyers in the 115 yen region, stemming from anticipation that the Japanese government could intervene soon to weaken the yen.

In late New York trading, the dollar was quoted at 115.77 yen, down from 116.68 yen late Thursday.

In late New York trading, the euro was quoted at $1.0137, up from $1.0095 late Thursday.

The dollar was quoted at 1.4417 Swiss francs, down from 1.4510, and 1.5432 Canadian dollars, down from 1.5441. The British pound rose to $1.5783 from $1.5714.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2672)7/19/2002 8:04:45 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 89467
 
Message 17765666



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2672)7/19/2002 8:15:36 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Will There Be Difficulty Finding A Bottom...??

Message 17765609



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (2672)7/19/2002 11:37:47 PM
From: Dnorman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
Hi Jim, I have a question about when things get to the end of the stock game. How does one protect their assets that will still be in brokerage accounts? I have had some nice profits from my QQQ puts so far but if everyone goes broke what good is it?

CD