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Strategies & Market Trends : Buy and Sell Signals, and Other Market Perspectives -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: robert b furman who wrote (70003)3/31/2015 11:04:29 PM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218300
 
Yes, I think so, too... the market already rallied off the low made earlier this evening, but if that low is violated on the close tomorrow, then we're looking at a market that will likely go hard south for a while...

GZ



To: robert b furman who wrote (70003)4/1/2015 7:10:59 AM
From: GROUND ZERO™  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218300
 
Here's one explanation for last night's market decline...

S&P 500 futures were down by as much as 1.3% at about 9 p.m. ET.

"Selling increased after the contract slid below its average price over the past 100 days, with volume more than twice the five-day average for this time of the day," Bloomberg reported.

Analysts were left scratching their heads.

The move happened as China's official manufacturing PMI report was released. The headline index unexpectedly climbed to 50.1 in March from 49.9 in February. Anything above 50 signals expansion, so this wasn't terrible news.

(UBS)"I can't point my fingers to anything that would have triggered this," AMP Capital Investors' Nader Naeimi told Bloomberg. "I guess that's how big corrections often start."

That latter part is scary. And it isn't just fear-mongering.

Check out the chart to the right from UBS' Julian Emanuel. As you can see, big crashes don't just happen. They're wild processes with big swings.

"The manic market movement — sharp plunges and even sharper surges — is not unlike the movement seen prior to major market tops in 2007 and 2000," Emanuel wrote in January.

Futures have recovered most of those earlier losses, so it doesn't look as if Wednesday's regular trading session will start too deep in the red.

While not everyone is predicting a major downturn, most stock market gurus warn that more volatility is coming.

finance.yahoo.com
GZ