What market bottom fishers are looking for. Note that the OSX already has experienced the kind of capitulation that has yet to occur in the overall market.
From the street.com
By Dave Kansas Editor-in-Chief
It takes no expert to understand the truth. This market isn't healthy. James J. Cramer may declare the market's rebound in the last half-hour a victory, but don't plant the flag yet.
Despite the last-minute bounce, stocks did not get off easy. Small stocks, again, took the brunt of the damage and breadth was terrible. And, as with other rebound attempts throughout the session, the final spree was very narrow. Exhausted bulls are fighting with all their might, but the much-anticipated bottom has not yet arrived.
Throughout the year I've focused on Intel (INTC:Nasdaq) and Japan. Intel, while off its lows, is still well off its record levels of earlier this year. Japan, despite the modest excitement following the recent government shake-up, is still a basket case. And patience with emerging markets is wearing thin, with Indonesia and Russia looking equally nasty.
With the Dow taking another nasty pratfall, investors are looking for a chance to buy the so-called dip. Finding a bottom is an art, and it requires many different things. Essentially it is impossible to predict the bottom, but I polled some folks to find out what sorts of things they are searching for as they watch stock prices cascade lower.
* Bottom-fishing: We're not there yet. The kind of fear associated with a bottom has yet to surface. Even in the midst of Tuesday's downdraft, GeoCities (GCTY:Nasdaq), an Internet IPO, managed to open at 33 -- well above its offering price of 17. In really nasty downturns, IPOs get shelved, delayed or canceled. Where could that mixture of fear and intensity occur? Take a look at Dec. 31 closes for the major averages. We're still a few percentage points away, but the elimination of this year's once-solid gains would inject a nifty level of terror into the market.
* Watch the bonds: Back in October 1997, the first true indication of a turn came when bonds began to sell off. In typical markets, whatever that means, bonds' rise bodes well for stocks. But bonds have taken on a different tone in the past few months -- as they did during the frenetic October 1997 selloff. Bonds have replaced gold as the haven in a storm. Nervous investors from Asia and the rest of the world have parked their assets in bonds, waiting for the right moment to re-enter the fray. When they do re-enter the fray, they will first sell bonds. Therefore the bond market needs to show real weakness before it's clear that investors are diving back into U.S. stocks. Late Tuesday, bonds sold off ahead of the late, index-focused rally.
* Corporate repurchases: Again, back in October 1997, on the Tuesday following the Monday market closure, IBM (IBM:NYSE) weighed in with a high-profile share-repurchase announcement. We have not seen that same kind of news as yet, despite the sharp drop in prices among many bellwether stocks. Keep your ear out for news from a General Electric (GE:NYSE) or a Dell (DELL:Nasdaq) or a Merck (MRK:NYSE) announcing a major share-repurchase initiative. (James J. Cramer informed me after this was published that Merck announced a $5 billion repurchase on July 28. So if they, for some reason, announced another buyback, then you'd have a very bullish indicator.)
* Japan: Reading this past week's edition of The Economist, one brief item shocked me. A Japanese diplomat was fired for saying things too kind about the U.S. concerning the Okinawa military base problems. The story indicated that Obuchi and others are not pleased with perceived U.S. bullying on the economy. If that's so, then it's difficult to see how an Obuchi-led government will make the economic changes that the U.S. and other nations are recommending. As I have mentioned before, Japan is absolutely vital to this market. The recent election there was more problematic than anyone has admitted and that spells more trouble from Japan, not less. Radical change from Japan is needed in order to shift Asian-driven negative sentiment.
* The media: More panic in the streets, and less of this calm-as-the-day-is-long type coverage. Some more front-page stuff in The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal. Problem here is that these publications blew it out last week, and they will be less inclined to do so quickly again. That means we need to get lower in the next few days so the Sunday papers and the national newsweeklies really lay the bear-market hit on us coming into next week.
* Volume: We need the eye-popping volume associated with a true bottom. At that time, buyers and sellers converge with a special ferocity that makes the exchanges quiver. We have not seen this kind of activity thus far, and given the steady increase in volume in the past 10 months, it will take probably close to a 2 billion-share day on the New York Stock Exchange to indicate a special kind of frightened bottom. At midafternoon Tuesday, with the Dow Jones industrials down 250-plus, fewer than 500 million shares had traded. That's not pell-mell activity.
* Precious metals: Another leg of fear would be a surprise move into gold. This metal has not acted as a store of value in some time, but real fear might make people return to the oldest saws they can uncover. That would mean gold.
* Fund redemptions: More news of funds getting redemption calls, coupled with a rise in money market fund assets. The money market fund asset reports come out on Thursday, and they should show some hints of movement by fund players.
* Presidential resolutions: Sad to say it, but the Clinton/Starr battle needs to move off the front page. Hard to get traction before the Aug. 17 testimony of Clinton. We may get a bottom, but accelerating through that mess -- absent some sort of pretestimony resolution of the crisis -- will be most difficult.
* Financial stocks: Right now, as James J. Cramer pointed out, stocks like Citicorp (CCI:NYSE) are in a "damned if they do, damned if they don't" position. Rates will go higher if people sell bonds to get back into stocks, and higher rates aren't great for financials. Rates will go lower if damage is so nasty that there's no place to go but bonds. In that case, Citi and other financials suffer with the rest of the market. A sharp turn upward by the group -- especially the brokerage firm stocks -- would indicate an end to that double-negative thinking.
* Another bull to the bear camp: Will Jeffrey Applegate at Lehman Brothers capitulate? How about Abby Joseph Cohen at Goldman Sachs? Too much status quo among the punditry, not enough shifting to more cautious positions. |