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Strategies & Market Trends : From the Trading Desk -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nemer who wrote (3518)8/27/1998 4:56:00 PM
From: steve goldman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4969
 
Thanks for the kind words Nemer! Better, I have some 'feelers' out for a few answers to your objective...hopefully we can turn something up.

Also, to be honest, much of the credit goes to the incredible traders and assistants I have working for me that leave me secure they are doing their thing properly, leaving me to head the desk. BTW...you should have stayed on the phone...we rallied from -330 to -200 while we were chatting, sold off immediately thereafter! Midas.
Thanks again for the words...
Steve@yamner.com

From our daily e-letter...Archives can be found at yamner.com
Daily E-Letter

***********************************
1. From the Trading Desk -
8/27/98 4:06:41 PM

The numbers tell the story. Down 357 on the Dow, 81 on the NASDAQ, a brutal day for the US markets, but taken in perspective, a 4.1% correction, after a few years of some significant double digit gains. You had to know the markets were going to correct somewhere in here.
As we stated over the past few weeks, this market has been getting more progressively more sour and after being unable to rally yesterday, we felt the markets were due for a fall.

Transports were down 114, a brutal day for that 2000+ indice and the Russell 2000 down 14.33. 358 advancers, 2872 decliners and 302 unchanged stocks.

For the most part, leading large caps stocks were down across the board. You can imagine the suspects.IBM down 5 1/2, PFE down 4 1/2, LLY down 3 1/8, LU down 4, DAL down 7.

Our sales in the transportation sector on DAL's record earnings several weeks back appear quite timely. The sector is off big and continues to fade. If oil prices tick up, low prices being a huge factor in recent profits for the sector, the airlines will get hammered.

Mid-cap and small-cap stocks that looked to have bottomed fell lower today, albeit most on light volume. 941 million shares on the Big Board seemed the focus for most money managers as players thinned out for the weekend ahead. No trader likes taking home positions over a long weekend where Thursday suffered a 350 point dip.

So , the question is where do we go from here? Its not an easy answer. The economy looks good and interest rates are quite low, supportive of further growth, and yet while the selling feels overdone, I wouldn't be so bold to pick a bottom just yet. We could continue to see these up 50, down 100, up 30, down 80, down 20, up 30 , down 100 days for quite sometime. A quick look at a long term chart of the Dow over the past 40 years and the appreciation over the past 5 would let you know how small this correction has been. And yet, the selling has been smooth and steady, without any panic. Panic selling will be one of the first indications of a bottom.

Nonetheless, we don't wait for bottoms. Bottoms are established until after the market moves back higher. We put some money to work. We have brought out cash position up to nearly 40% over the past few quarters and put about 25% of that 40 to work today. We bought a few large cap value plays, but focused in on some oil stocks, oil service as well as a few technology issues. At these levels,we are attracted to the risk reward ratios, the key word being risk. Stocks do go to zero.

Futures closing at their lows, not a good sign. Unless they turn around, we might see some huge mutual fund redemptions which might then lead to larger selling. I could forsee a large gap down in the morning, then some bidders and short covering bringing the markets back. If we don't get a rally, Mondays are historically ugly and we'd buy time through the weekend. If we pay up on Monday, so be it. Call it insurance. We will wait patiently with our cash, wait for some blood in the streets and then nibble.

Regards,

Steven Goldman, Esq.
Head Trader, Sales & Options Principal



To: Nemer who wrote (3518)8/29/1998 12:42:00 AM
From: Bill/WA  Respond to of 4969
 
Nemer,

Months ago, after following Steve's site here from the beginning, I switched ALL of my trading positions from Eschwab & Schwab 1 to Yamner
& never looked back (best move I ever made.

Steve helped every step of the way (esp. with the foot dragging from Schwab) getting things transferred.

Yamner has been my only experience, trading mano e mano, rather than electronically & I believe I have been thoroughly spoiled!!
Both Steve & Yi spend so much time on the phone when I call, I feel guilty. I have been involved in the service industry & never have I been as impressed as with the crew at Yamner.

Bill/WA