Investors 411 Blog

by Barr Jozwicki
February 10, 2009

Market Update – Is The Sky Falling

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Bailout/Stimulus, Obama, Politics, Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Trends, Politics & Economics

Index Percentage % Volume
Dow -0.12% down
NASDQ -0.01% down
S&P500 +0.15% up
Russell2000 -0.59% down

Banks – Is the Sky Falling?

Answer – No, but its being held up by smoke and mirror

The simple truth is, if you were to value the assets vs. the liabilities of most major banks and many smaller banks you would find that they do NOT have the collateral to back their loans.  Plane and simple – If the government (your tax dollars) paid the market price for troubled assets now these financials would go bankrupt . No assets would be left. If this happened, the whole banking sector would probably meltdown in panic. What’s more – as the unemployment figures grow this problem is going to increase.

Tim Geithner , like Paulson before him is going to take a shot at blowing the smoke and moving the mirrors today at 11:00AM EST.  The question is can he keep the banking/financial sector afloat long enough for the economy to turn positive and some of over leveraged positions become more solvent.

The ultimate answer or last line of defense to this problem that nobody wants to even take about is NATIONALIZATION .

The Bottom Line –  there is a massive shift in wealth from those who created this problem (they made truckloads of $) plus those who own the banks/financials, and you the American taxpayer who is bailing out banks to prevent an economic collapse. MAD? – smoke should be coming out your ears. The co director for The Center for Economic Research, Dean Baker makes the case Nationalization or Welfare

Obama on Stimulus

Lost count last night of the times Elkhart Indiana (middle class America) was mentioned is Obama’s stimulus speech  You can read or watch videos of the Obama’s speech at CNN – Paraphrasing his money quote – "It s only government that can break this cycle of recession."

Early review- NYT – unfortunately concludes "Odds are…even an $800 billion stimulus package will fall short of what’s needed to combat today’s downturn, and that more will be needed later. When the Obama administration asks for more, it will need to be able to make a compelling case that the first round was the best it could possibly be. It’s certainly not there yet."

#1 Progessive Voice in American Media

He’s quoted by everyone from Pelozi to Limbaugh – Nobel prize winning, NYT columnist Paul Krugman . His latest editorial "The Destructive Center"

What’s Pork?

A Bridge to Nowhere, Compensation for Filipino WW 2 Vets as part of the stimulus plan are certainly pork. But as one of you suggested does a "water park" wanted by a governor as part of the stimulus program constitute pork? Thanks for this and all your emails .

First a water Park like Disney World or a baseball park creates jobs to build the facility. Both workers and suppliers benefit. Once built it continues to create jobs for workers and revenue for products it sells (food, souvenirs, etc) It also generates tax revenue for the state.  So is a Water Park pork?   I’d certainly prefer money going to education bridges etc., but a ready to go water park in the right location (not Alaska) could create jobs jobs jobs and increased tax revenue for states.

Stocks

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Technicals

US stock markets held onto last weeks gains. Technically, this is a positive sign .

Troubled GE shot up like a rocket reversing most of last weeks losses.  Another positive.

Both volume and how markets react to news (our primary indicators) still show a rally building .

Secondary Indicators

Both Treasury Bonds and LIBOR have moved in a bullish direction over the last few months. The Baltic Dry Sea Index that measures the flow of goods between countries, is on fire +48% over the last 4 days and another +10% on Monday. = Big Time Short term bullish signal.

Fundamentals

Today we learn what Tres. Secretary Timothy Geithner and what he plans to do with the second 1/2 of the TARP money. (see yesterday’s comments) Can’t over emphasize the impact the importance of this plan to both financial stocks and world markets.

Dr. Doom and the Black Swan – These two guys predicted the current financial crisis. Their comments "Even if we play our cards right…it will take at least 12 months to get out of this recession." That’s the good news. For the bad news read full article on Roubini and Taleb

Short Term Outlook/Strategy

Technically signs of a rally building are about as strong as they get. Fundamentally, the stimulus package has passed the Senate and that’s a whole lot of money about to juice US economy. However, what Geithner says about allocating the the TARP money is key to any short term rally.

Oppenheimer analyst Meredith Whitney, a financial bear,  is on a winning streak and therefore the analyst that has Wall Street’s ear. If she goes thumbs down on Geithner so will the markets according to CNBC’s Jim Cramer

Bottom Line – Still no long term light at the end of the tunnel, but technical signs for the rally to continue exist.

Long Term Outlook = BEARS RULE

  • On a 1 to 5 scale Bears Rule is at the bottom.
  • This section rarely change s
  • Changed are bolded and in plum or crossed out

Technicals - Best read of the tea leaves – 2009 Markets range bound between Dow 7449 (last year’s low) and 9654 (November 08 high )

Fundamentals – Problem in financial sector is far far far far far bigger than fist imagined. Impact of mess is going to take years to resolve.

Asset Allocation

15% to 30%+ Stocks (Depends on your level of risk) Buy/nibble the dips below 8,000 – the bigger the better.  -

Recommended Sectors

  • 5%+ US Index ETF’s UWM (Exchange Traded Fund does @ 2x what Russell 2000 does ) & QLD (does 2X what NASDQ does)
  • 5%+ Emerging Markets FXI (China ETF) & EWZ (Brazil ETF)
  • 5%+ Alternative energy GEX (alternative energy fund)
  • 5%+ Gold GLD (ETF for gold)

Chief Strategy -

Buy the dips. Use the Dow as a barometer for all of the above sectors except GLD. This is NOT your fathers buy and hold market. Under 8 years of Bush the Dow went from 11,000 to 8,000 and left a whole dung heap of economic problems.

Protect your gains – After rallies you can protect your long positions by using ETF’s that short the market. Two ETF’s that short major indexes (@ 2x the loss). These indexes go down you make money. The closer markets get to 9000 the more you think about shorting. Until the long term outlook changes this hedging strategy will remain.  Note – long positions/ETF’s  NASDQ & Russell, short positions/ETF’s S&P & Dow

  • SDS – Ultra short S&P 500
  • DXD – Ultra short Dow

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

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January 14, 2009

Market Update – FDR & Bill Crosby

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

FDR and Stimulus

President Herbert Hover eighty years ago offered no stimulus or loans to a crumbling economy. As a consequence bank after bank failed Unemployment rose above 25 % and by the time Roosevelt (FDR) took over in 1932 we were already in the Great Depression . But, FDR made progress and consequently Americans overwhelmingly re elected him to office in 36. By 1937 he had through a massive government stimulus program reversed the growing unemployment figure and reduced it to under 15 %.

Unfortunately FDR, tried to balance the budget too early in 1937 and the recovery slowed. Again Americans showed overwhelming confidence in FDR and reelected him in 1940. American’s vote again confirmed confidence in his stimulus program. WW2 was in itself one big government stimulus program as was the post WW 2 GI bills and other economic measures. We emerged from all this government stimulus far stronger.

Basic economics teaches you to stimulate faltering economies and when times are good you don’t stimulate, but lower deficits. Many ultra right wing zealots are now trying to re write FDR’s historic economic actions and leadership. These are the same voices that believed "free markets" need no regulations, and lead us into the current crisis.

Undoubtedly, the government has done a poor job in transparency and accountability in the current stimulus and loans packages. However, we have not had the cascading loss of banks and insurance companies (AIG) that would have led to other industries collapsing throughout the world. This is NOT a plea for blanket bailouts. Poorly managed companies have to be allowed to fail. But it does clearly show government stimulating and regulating a faltering economy works.

Bill Cosby and Education

Bill Cosby last Sunday on Face the Nation came up with some interesting statistics on why we should be offering more funding for inner city schools. It costs us $41,000 a year to incarcerate a prisoner and only $8,000 educate a child. You pay now or pay later. Add to this that incarcerated prisoners and welfare moms pay no taxes vs someone who enters the work force and pays taxes.

Funding education should be a priority. (more later)

Stocks.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Headline – Citigroup, AA & Retail #’s -Bad news.

Index % Change Volume

Dow -0.30% up
NASDQ +0.50% up
S&P500 +0.18% up
Russell2000 +1.06% –

italics = same comments as yesterday.

US Market & Foreign Markets

Technicals – Major US markets "churned" yesterday. That’s the term Wall Street uses for high volume days where the market went nowhere.

XLF is the financial sector ETF Chart here. As the chart shows financials rose +1.37% yesterday after loosing over -5% the day before. While any gain is positive, a +1.37 gain is not enough to put the bulls back in charge. Financials used to be the largest sector of the market and may no longer hold that distinction. But they are certainly capable of leading all major indexes lower.

The major indexes are at their major support levels (just above or below). Volume is starting to pick up. This is never a good sign as we start to move lower. Foreign markets are following the US lead.

AA is the symbol for Alcoa Aluminum, the first Dow company to report. It went down again another 5% in massive volume yesterday. Early indications are negative earnings and outlook are not built into markets and investors are beginning to realize there is going to be no second half recovery. (Bad news for stocks)

Chart of the benchmark S&P 500

Chart of the Russell 2000

Chart of the NASDQ

Chart of the Dow

FundamentalsWhat’s happened is the Bush administration has asked congress for the second 1/2 of the poorly administered bank/financials (and auto) bailout/loans. The Obama administration will oversee the use of these funds. This has spooked stocks – especially financials. CitiGroup, the mother of all banks, broke support levels and fell 17% in huge volume. City has already twice received bailout funds. Citi is in the too big to fail category and its failure would mean a run on suspect banks worldwide. Citi did recover +5% in reduced volume yesterday. Problem – Citigroup is up to its neck in credit default swaps.

The bottom lineJust the knowledge that the government thinks the bank/financial needs more financial help is enough to make worried investors panic and sell. This time the Panic is a bit more orderly, but with no transparency and no accountability its pretty hard to invest in a financial stock. You know they’re in trouble, especially Citigroup, but who knows which ones will go belly up and what criteria the government is using to hand out loans.

Obama Rally = HOPE A whole bunch of stimulus that has already been thrown at stocks, plus the composition of Obama’s economic team & his proposed stimulus package.

Earnings season begins this week. However, Citigroup remains the stock to watch.

Retail sales numbers out this AM are far worse than expected.

Treasury Secretary Geitner, who Wall Street likes, nomination is in trouble.

Forecasting Future Trends

The following is a group of indexes that are all interrelated and strongly influence how stocks moves. At different times one index may be more influential than the other.

LIBOR – LIBOR is the rate banks charge each other. It price has fallen from 3.4% three months ago to about 1.08% (good news for stocks)

LIBOR chart (3 month)

Treasuries – T Bills yields show how fearful investors are. The lower the rate the more the fear. Short term yields – 3 month rose to +0.07% and longer term treasuries were basically flat. 10 year fell to 2.29% (low yields show fearfull investors flooding to Treasuries instead of stocks – Bad news for stocks)

Treasury Bonds chart

Baltic Dry Index – Measures flow of goods between countries. Yesterday it rose another 2+% yesterday. Almost 85% drop since June. (short term good news a 2, 4, 6, 2, & 2% gains in last 5 days)

BDI chart

We’ve seen a short term pop in international trade to go along with a solid bullish move in inter bank lending rates. Both are bullish signs. However, Panic still rules the credit markets. Prices of major banks are have again started to go south. Looks like at some time another chunk of bailout $ is going to be needed to fix banks in the future. Bush yesterday announced he’s going for the second chunk of bailout/loan money.

Short Term Outlook/Strategy

Reading the Tea Leaves-

PANIC STILL RULES the credit markets

Strategy – Shorting rallies to protect gains is working. (see below) Until we some light at the end of the recession tunnel VOLATILITY continues to be the most predictable major stock market trend. Obama rally (stimulus package) is holding up equities right now.

There are some positives out there but -

Add a falling financial sector, AA news, & now the miserable retail #’s = the Dow 8500 support and other major index support level will NOT hold.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Long Term Outlook – BEARS RULE

Changes to Bottom Line Section Bolded .

Technicals – Series of Lower Lows and Lower Highs = Bears Rule. Obama/stimulus rally phase 2 is underway. Technical Range for 2009 – 7449 (low) and 9654.- This is a wild guess. Any sustained move above Dow 9650 is bullish.

Fundamentals – Financial transparency problem is far far far far far far far far far bigger than anyone thought. It’s looks like the recession will last through 2009 – perhaps longer Hopes of a more competent Obama administration have rallied stocks.

Asset Allocation/Recommended Sectors (long term)

50% to 90% Cash – Long Term Investors (up to 15 to 25+% stocks – only buy big dips) Wait for the next big dip to add 5 to 10%
Be Cautious and PROTECT YOUR MONEY (use ETF’s that short major indexes) when stocks have a big rally

*5+% US Index Funds
UWM (ETF that does 2x what Russell 2000 does) & QLD (ETF that does 2X the NASDQ ) DDM (ETF that does 2X the Dow ) SSO (ETF does 2X the S&P 500)

*5%+ Emerging Markets
EWZ (Brazil) should out perform other emerging markets in a rally and under perform in a fall – highest risk and dependent on oil prices
FXI (China ETF) should outperform USA

*5%+ Alternative Energy
GEX(Alternative energy ETF) Obama administration will focus on this area

*5+% Gold
GLD is the ETF for gold-

Chief Strategy – Buy the DIPS of trending sector – This is not your father’s buy and hold market – over the 8 Bush years the Dow has gone from 11,000 to 9000 and huge uncertainty clouds the future.

The major trend now is volatility.

Traders who have a strong tolerance for risk jump in on dips and invest more. Sell and/or go short into major rallies. Long term Investors who can tolerate risk and are 100% in cash nibble just a little on big dips. (5% on each big dip) Do not buy into rallies.

Shorting – Three ETF that short 2x what the major indexes do.

TWM – ultra short Russell 2000
QID – ultra short NASDQ
SDS – ultra short S&P 500

As Always Do Your Own Research Before Investing

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January 13, 2009

Market Update – Stimulus

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Stimulus Package

Cutting taxes for Business – You cut taxes for business and what do they do? CEO and Board members get raises, dividends get increased, corporate jets get bought, stocks get bought back, esoteric derivatives get bought, or a lavish weekend party at a spa/resort/penthouse are held. OK some of the money may go for research and development or worker’s salaries, but obviously there is not much bang for the buck or accountability in cutting taxes for businesses.

The Obama stimulus plan plans to give tax cuts to those businesses that hire new workers. However, would not this money be better spent by creating demand for a product. By creating demand business would grow and new workers would be hired. This benefits both consumer and business.

Cutting Your Taxes – Sounds good and the impact is almost immediate. Bush did give us a tax cut and it did keep GDP positive for one quarter – but had no longer lasting impact and GDP for the 4th quarter is going to be something around -4.00%.

What happens to the (especially working middle class) tax cut. Some of it is used to pay down debt and some of it is saved. Commendable behavior, but that does not stimulate the economy and therefore it does not have a big bang for the buck. It’s better than cutting business taxes because it helps middle class consumers who spend on business products. The middle class spends and the economy grows.

Creating Jobs/infrastructure – Government creating private jobs through infrastructure projects. This has the biggest bang for the buck. Take building a bridge or a school. You create a job that turns an individual into a tax payer instead of a welfare recipient. What you build increases demand for businesses products – they grow. Example all the different contractor and materials that are needed to build a bridge/school are also helped. Once you have the bridge/school it benefits the individuals who use them. Example helps the flow of goods – bridge or provides a better educational environment – schools.

The problem with this is that infrastructure projects take time to get started. Red tape bureaucracy & politics get in the way. What Obama is proposing will not really have an impact till 2010.

Green Jobs – Right now hundreds of billions of dollars each year goes to petro dictators who we have become dependent on. This is an added benefit to infrastructure jobs – the money will be staying here. Of course pollution problems and global warming problems will decrease. This puts infrastructure green jobs at the top of the list.

Economist Peter Morici (see yesterday’s updates) and others have done work on how stimulus impacts markets. For more on Morici LINK

Nobel prize winning economist Paul Krugman offered his formula for stimulus yesterday LINK

Another $350 Billion

Bush has asked for another $350 billion – The Obama administration will spend this $. More on this below in "Fundamentals" section.

Stocks.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Headline – $350 Billion

Index % Change Volume

Dow -1.46% up
NASDQ -2.09% down
S&P500 -2.26% up
Russell2000 -2.60% –

italics = same comments as yesterday.

US Market & Foreign Markets

Technicals – Major US markets fell and volume especially in the financial sector rose.

XLF is the financial sector ETF Chart here . As the chart shows financials fell -5.26% yesterday in increased volume and clearly broke through support levels (11.33 see chart) XLF closed at 10.95. Financials used to be the largest sector of the market and may no longer hold that distinction. But they are certainly capable of leading all major indexes lower.

The major indexes are at their major support levels (just above or below). Volume is starting to pick up. This is never a good sign as we start to move lower. Foreign markets are following the US lead.

Chart of the benchmark S&P 500

Chart of the Russell 2000

Chart of the NASDQ

Chart of the Dow

Fundamentals – What’s happened is the Bush administration has asked congress for the second 1/2 of the poorly administered bank/financials (and auto) bailout/loans. The Obama administration will oversee the use of these funds. This has spooked stocks – especially financials. CitiGroup, the mother of all banks, broke support levels and fell 17% in huge volume. City has already twice received bailout funds. Citi is in the too big to fail category and its failure would mean a run on suspect banks worldwide.

The bottom line – Just the knowledge that the government thinks the bank/financial needs more financial help is enough to make worried investors panic and sell. This time the Panic is a bit more orderly, but with no transparency and no accountability its pretty hard to invest in a financial stock. You know they’re in trouble, especially Citigroup, but who knows which ones will go belly up and what criteria the government is using to hand out loans.

Some of these financial and other institutions have to be allowed to fail. They have to fix the accountability, transparency problems that the first bailout/loan package contained. Lot’s more on this later.

Institutions that are too big to fail need more government oversight – Ben Bernanke just said something like this AM at London School of Economics. Also expects more job losses in at least 1st 1/4 of 09 and turning this around will take time.

Obama Rally = HOPE A whole bunch of stimulus that has already been thrown at stocks, plus the composition of Obama’s economic team & his proposed stimulus package.

Earnings season begins this week.

Forecasting Future Trends

The following is a group of indexes that are all interrelated and strongly influence how stocks moves. At different times one index may be more influential than the other.

LIBOR – LIBOR is the rate banks charge each other. It price has fallen from 3.4% three months ago to about 1.16% (good news for stocks)

LIBOR chart (3 month)

Treasuries – T Bills yields show how fearful investors are. The lower the rate the more the fear. Short term yields – 3 month flat at 0.02% and longer term treasuries all fell. 10 year fell to 2.30% (low yields show fearfull investors flooding to Treasuries instead of stocks – Bad news for stocks)

Treasury Bonds chart

Baltic Dry Index – Measures flow of goods between countries. Yesterday it rose 2+% yesterday. Almost 85% drop since June. (short term good news a 2, 4, 6, & 2% gains in last 4 days)

BDI chart

We’ve seen a short term pop in international trade to go along with a solid bullish move in inter bank lending rates. Both are bullish signs. However, Panic still rules the credit markets. Prices of major banks are have again started to go south. Looks like at some time another chunk of bailout $ is going to be needed to fix banks in the future. Bush yesterday announced he’s going for the second chunk of bailout/loan money.

Short Term Outlook/Strategy

Reading the Tea Leaves-

PANIC STILL RULES the credit markets
Without credit (treasury bills/bonds) and goods (BDI) flowing, a long term stock rally is unlikely.

Strategy – Shorting rallies to protect gains is working. (see below) Until we some light at the end of the recession tunnel VOLATILITY continues to be the most predictable major stock market trend. Obama rally (stimulus package) is holding up equities right now.

We’ve seen a short term pop in international trade (BDI) to go along with a solid bullish move in inter bank lending rates (LIBOR) Both are bullish signs

Panic still rules the credit markets. Prices of major banks are have again started to go south. Looks like at some time another chunk of bailout $ is going to be needed to fix banks in the future . BINGO – Bush/Obama asked for the second half of the $750 billion bailout package.

Add a falling financial sector to the mix and the Dow 8500 support level will probably NOT hold.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Long Term Outlook – BEARS RULE

Changes to Bottom Line Section Bolded

Technicals – Series of Lower Lows and Lower Highs = Bears Rule. Obama/stimulus rally phase 2 is underway. Technical Range for 2009 – 7449 (low) and 9654.- This is a wild guess. Any sustained move above Dow 9650 is bullish.

Fundamentals – Financial transparency problem is far far far far far far far far far bigger than anyone thought. It’s looks like the recession will last through 2009 – perhaps longer Hopes of a more competent Obama administration have rallied stocks.

Asset Allocation/Recommended Sectors (long term)

50% to 90% Cash – Long Term Investors (up to 15 to 25+% stocks – only buy big dips) Wait for the next big dip to add 5 to 10%
Be Cautious and PROTECT YOUR MONEY (use ETF’s that short major indexes) when stocks have a big rally

*5+% US Index Funds
UWM (ETF that does 2x what Russell 2000 does) & QLD (ETF that does 2X the NASDQ ) DDM (ETF that does 2X the Dow ) SSO (ETF does 2X the S&P 500)

*5%+ Emerging Markets
EWZ (Brazil) should out perform other emerging markets in a rally and under perform in a fall – highest risk and dependent on oil prices
FXI (China ETF) should outperform USA

*5%+ Alternative Energy
GEX(Alternative energy ETF) Obama administration will focus on this area

*5+% Gold
GLD is the ETF for gold-

Chief Strategy – Buy the DIPS of trending sector – This is not your father’s buy and hold market – over the 8 Bush years the Dow has gone from 11,000 to 9000 and huge uncertainty clouds the future.

The major trend now is volatility.

Traders who have a strong tolerance for risk jump in on dips and invest more. Sell and/or go short into major rallies. Long term Investors who can tolerate risk and are 100% in cash nibble just a little on big dips. (5% on each big dip) Do not buy into rallies.

Shorting – Three ETF that short 2x what the major indexes do.

TWM – ultra short Russell 2000
QID – ultra short NASDQ
SDS – ultra short S&P 500

As Always Do Your Own Research Before Investing

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January 9, 2009

Market Update – Jobs Report

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Jobs Jobs Jobs

The Jobs report comes out at 8:30 EST this AM. Right now there seems to be no end in sight for job losses MSNBC story .  Jobs are central to how fast and how deep the recession progresses. Current unemployment stands at 6.7% and consensus figures have this rate rising to 8% by years end. Layoffs are going to grow. Its one thing to know this and another to live through it. -525,000 jobs and 7% rate are the expected numbers

Waiting for announcement… and the number is -524,000 and unemployment rate at 7.2% – a huge 0.5% increase in just one month. Last two months revised down add to the +0.5 increase. Total job loss for 2008 was 2.6 million.

Bad, but could have been worse. Probably will not negatively impact stocks because the private ADP report earlier this week was much worse. (see previous Updates) Major question – will this 524k number get revised downward at the next report. Sure looks like we will reach 8% sooner rather than later.

Imagine This

What if Bush plan to tie social security to the stock market had passed? How much worse off we’d all be now – especially seniors.

23 Electric Cars of the Future

Treehugger.com has a photo and well referenced presentation of 23 electric cars. You can skim through the presentation or follow some of their links – LINK

Project Better Place

This Israeli company just keeps growing. Better Place has introduced an entire electric car system and its partners include Renault, Nissan and A123 Systems. They are launching systems in Israel, Denmark, Australia and Hawaii. A123 has applied for $1.84 billion in loans to build its lithium ion battery plant in the USA.

Good Economic News

Everywhere you turn you get the bad news – Let’s focus on some positives.

#1 Oil prices have fallen from $140 to $40 a barrel
#2 Mortgage rates are now at or near all time lows (30 year fixed – 5.01% and 15 year down near 4.70%)
#3 We have the mother of all stimulus plans about to be launched.
#4 An administration that is less likely to waste $ in Iraq and pork spending.

Stocks.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Headline – Job’s Report

Index % Change Volume

Dow -0.32% down
NASDQ +1.12% down
S&P500 +0.34% down
Russell2000 +0.91% –

italics = same comments as yesterday.

US Market & Foreign Markets

Technicals – Major US markets were mixed yesterday as volume fell. Markets did well despite Wal Mart and Intel coming out with negative news. The Dow is at 8742 almost exactly midway between its consolidation range – 8500 to 9000.

Bottom Line – The jobs news is going to impact markets at 8:40 this AM (see above). However yesterday US markets held up pretty well despite some bad economic news.

Chart of the benchmark S&P 500

Chart of the Russell 2000

Chart of the NASDQ

Chart of the Dow

Fundamentals – See above editorial. ADP numbers take investors by surprise. 8% unemployment seemed built into stocks, but the rapidness of the decline has caught everyone with their pants down.

Obama Rally = HOPE A whole bunch of stimulus that has already been thrown at stocks, plus the composition of Obama’s economic team & his proposed stimulus package.
Earnings season begins in a week.

Forecasting Future Trends

The following is a group of indexes that are all interrelated and strongly influence how stocks moves. At different times one index may be more influential than the other.

LIBOR – LIBOR is the rate banks charge each other. It price has fallen from 3.4% three months ago to about 1.40% (good news for stocks)

LIBOR chart (3 month)

Treasuries – T Bills yields show how fearful investors are. The lower the rate the more the fear. Short term yields – 3 month fell to 0.04% and longer term 10 year fell to 2.44% (low yields show fearfull investors flooding to Treasuries instead of stocks)

Treasury Bonds chart

Baltic Dry Index – Measures flow of goods between countries. Yesterday it rose 4% yesterday. Almost 90% drop since June.

BDI chart

Strategy and Recommended Sectors (Listed below)

Buy the dips.

US Indexes (ETF’s) – Buy the ETF that go long when there is a 5 to 10% drop in the Dow and short of sell them when prices rise. Volatility is he recognizable trend and shorter term traders shout
use it.

Emerging Markets – China (FXI) technically is the best play. China is economically better off than the USA – Better growth and less debt. Brazil (EWZ) Solid economy – tied to oil and alternative energy (sugar cain ethanol). If/when the US recovers Brazil will outperform, but right now more volatile than US stocks.

Alternative energy – (GEX &PBW) These two market baskets of alternative energy stocks should outperform because of Obama’s economic stimulus plan.

Gold – (GLD) Technically still in a negative pattern, but fundamentally countries are devaluing their currencies and printing money. This should keep gold prices high. If gold can break out of its trading pattern is could explode higher.

Short Term Outlook

Reading the Tea Leaves-

PANIC STILL RULES the credit markets and trade markets
Without credit (treasury bills/bonds) and goods (BDI) flowing, a long term stock rally is unlikely.

Strategy – Shorting rallies to protect gains is working. (see below) Until we some light at the end of the recession tunnel VOLATILITY continues to be the most predictable major stock market trend. Obama rally (stimulus package) is holding up equities right now.

Best guess – We should again challenge 9000 next week.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Long Term Outlook – BEARS RULE

Changes to Bottom Line Section Bolded

Technicals – Series of Lower Lows and Lower Highs = Bears Rule. Obama/stimulus rally phase 2 is underway. Technical Range for 2009 – 7449 (low) and 9654.- This is a wild guess. Any sustained move above Dow 9650 is bullish.

Fundamentals – Financial transparency problem is far far far far far far far far far bigger than anyone thought. It’s looks like the recession will last through 2009 – perhaps longer Hopes of a more competent Obama administration have rallied stocks.

Asset Allocation/Recommended Sectors (long term)

50% to 90% Cash – Long Term Investors (up to 15 to 25+% stocks – only buy big dips) Wait for the next big dip to add 5 to 10%
Be Cautious and PROTECT YOUR MONEY (use ETF’s that short major indexes) when stocks have a big rally

*5%+ Emerging Markets
EWZ (Brazil) should out perform other emerging markets in a rally and under perform in a fall – highest risk and dependent on oil prices
FXI (China ETF) should outperform USA

*5%+ Alternative Energy
GEX(Alternative energy ETF) Obama administration will focus on this area

*5+% Gold
GLD is the ETF for gold-

Chief Strategy – Buy the DIPS of trending sector – This is not your father’s buy and hold market – over the 8 Bush years the Dow has gone from 11,000 to 9000 and huge uncertainty clouds the future.

The major trend now is volatility.

Traders who have a strong tolerance for risk jump in on dips and invest more. Sell and/or go short into major rallies. Long term Investors who can tolerate risk and are 100% in cash nibble just a little on big dips. (5% on each big dip) Do not buy into rallies.

Shorting – Three ETF that short 2x what the major indexes do.

TWM – ultra short Russell 2000
QID – ultra short NASDQ
SDS – ultra short S&P 500

As Always Do Your Own Research Before Investing

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January 8, 2009

Market Update – Jobs Jobs Jobs

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

On Friday the government’s employment numbers for last month will be published. ADP National Employment numbers (a private group) yesterday released a figure of 693,000 jobs lost in December. This is way up from the 500,000+ jobs lost in November. There was a huge jump in the number of lost service sector jobs. After US markets closed Monster’s Online job’s Index echoed the ADP estimates. CNBC (financial channel) story on job loss figures.

8% job loss seems to be the figure economists are projecting for the future. The frightening aspect of the ADP #s are how fast the job loss is growing.

Jobs are perhaps the most crucial component of the whole financial mess. One significant result – The bigger the job loss the less the ability to pay mortgages = more defaults = lower home prices.

Economic Outlook 2009 and beyond

The Financial Times today has an editorial by Nouriel Roubini, the economist who definitively and accurately predicted the whole financial meltdown titled "Warning: More Doom Ahead "

The last 1/2 of this editorial clearly sets out the enormity of the problem and outlines the credit bubbles that have yet to burst. Roubini does end on a relatively positive note.

"Thanks to the radical actions of the G-7 and others, the risk of a total systemic financial meltdown has been reduced. But unfortunately, the worst is not behind us. This will be a painful year. Only very aggressive, coordinated, and effective action by policymakers will ensure that 2010 will not be even worse than 2009 is likely to be."

Tomorrow

Will go over recommended ETF positions instead of focusing on credit and trade market flows (BDI & Treasury bonds)

Stocks.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Headline – Jobs Jobs Jobs

Index % Change Volume

Dow -2.72% up
NASDQ -3.23% down
S&P500 -3.00% down
Russell2000 -3.42% –

italics = same comments as yesterday.

US Market & Foreign Markets

Technicals – Just when technical factors seemed to be on the brink of another upside move some sobering fundamental numbers on JOBS spoil the party. Technically volume was not a forecasting factor in the significant price drop. Volume figures were mixed and a bit below average.

Bottom LineIf we can hold onto gains this week, another leg higher is very possible. Next major resistance level is around Dow 9650. See charts.

Chart of the benchmark S&P 500

Chart of the Russell 2000

Chart of the NASDQ

Chart of the Dow

Fundamentals – See above editorial. ADP numbers take investors by surprise. 8% unemployment seemed built into stocks, but the rapidness of the decline has caught everyone with their pants down.

Obama Rally = HOPE A whole bunch of stimulus that has already been thrown at stocks, plus the composition of Obama’s economic team & his proposed stimulus package.
Earnings season begins in a week.

Three Month Treasury Bill & LIBOR

Credit markets are the dog and the Stock Markets are the tail. Without credit the tail won’t wag.

Real progress is being made . LIBOR continues to fall 3.4% two months ago to about 1.40% LIBOR rates have fallen significantly and leveled off inthe last few days. LIBOR is the rate banks charge each other, not businesses. Some credit cards, loans and mortgages are tied to LIBOR so this is good news. Some credit cards & mortgage rates are tied to Fed prime rate.

LIBOR chart (3 month)

Treasury Bonds

The 3 month T Bill fell to 0.07% Shorter term yields fell. Longer term rose yields rose. The 30 year T bond rate is just above 3%. .
Fearful investors are putting their money in Treasury bonds for 3 months to 30 years, they are NOT investing in stocks. Investors are willing to pay an unbelievably low 2.47% for a ten year treasury bond.

Yields keep falling = Continued deterioration of credit market. Low Yields = There is simply NO confidence in the credit markets PANIC STILL RULES

Baltic Dry Index

The Baltic Dry Index is a forward looking indicator that measures pre production materials that are shipped around the world. For better definition see LINK
Bloomberg data and chart LINK (If the link does not work Google – bloomberg baltic dry index) Set range indicator to one month and you will see this chart.

BDI rose yesterday (+almost 2%) to 789 We have had a significant rally off the lows of @660 three weeks ago week.

Long term picture The BDI had seen an almost 90% loss since June. It seems, a least for a week international trade has picked up but has again begun to slowly fall. These shipping figures confirm world wide recession.

Short Term Outlook

Reading the Tea Leaves-

PANIC STILL RULES the credit markets and trade markets

Without credit (treasury bills/bonds) and goods (BDI) flowing, a long term stock rally is unlikely.

Strategy - Volatility rules and a 6+% move higher in the Dow is a big move in a week. Personally, will start adding some SHORT positions to protect the gains of last week. The higher we go the more short positions.

Shorting rallies to protect gains is working. Until we some light at the end of the recession tunnel VOLATILITY continues to be the most predictable major stock market trend.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Long Term Outlook – BEARS RULE

Changes to Bottom Line Section Bolded

Technicals – Series of Lower Lows and Lower Highs = Bears Rule. Obama/stimulus rally phase 2 is underway. Technical Range for 2009 – 7449 (low) and 9654.- This is a wild guess. Any sustained move above Dow 9650 is bullish.

Fundamentals – Financial transparency problem is far far far far far far far far far bigger than anyone thought. It’s looks like the recession will last through 2009 – perhaps longer Hopes of a more competent Obama administration have rallied stocks.

Asset Allocation/Recommended Sectors (long term)

50% to 90% Cash – Long Term Investors (up to 15 to 25+% stocks – only buy big dips) Wait for the next big dip to add 5 to 10%
Be Cautious and PROTECT YOUR MONEY (use ETF’s that short major indexes) when stocks have a big rally

*5+% US Index Funds
UWM (ETF that does 2x what Russell 2000 does) & QLD (ETF that does 2X the NASDQ ) DDM (ETF that does 2X the Dow ) SSO (ETF does 2X the S&P 500)

*5%+ Emerging+3 Markets
EWZ (Brazil) should out perform other emerging markets in a rally and under perform in a fall – highest risk and dependent on oil prices
FXI (China ETF) should outperform USA

*5%+ Alternative Energy
GEX(Alternative energy ETF) Obama administration will focus on this area

*5+% Gold
GLD is the ETF for gold-

Chief Strategy – Buy the DIPS of trending sector – This is not your father’s buy and hold market – over the 8 Bush years the Dow has gone from 11,000 to 9000 and huge uncertainty clouds the future.

The major trend now is volatility.

Traders who have a strong tolerance for risk jump in on dips and invest more. Sell and/or go short into major rallies. Long term Investors who can tolerate risk and are 100% in cash nibble just a little on big dips. (5% on each big dip) Do not buy into rallies.

Shorting – Three ETF that short 2x what the major indexes do.

TWM – ultra short Russell 2000
QID – ultra short NASDQ
SDS – ultra short S&P 500

As Always Do Your Own Research Before Investing

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December 23, 2008

Market Update – What Me Worry

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Going to London and Paris over holidays. May be able to send abbreviated Updates from Europe.

"Recession Plagued Nation Demands New Bubble to Invest In."

The above headline is from "The Onion" Sometimes humor tell the truth better than analysts. After an internet and housing bubble American’s are looking for the next Ponzi scheme.

Nobel prize winner Paul Krugman expects "were in for months, perhaps a year of economic hell ."

Paulson and Bernanke as Heroes

In the past few month Updates has spent a lot of time punching holes in the TARP bailout and other financial moves. The government loans/bailouts have been termed "Not accountable," "did not fix the lack of regulation problem," "not transparent," "arrogant" and "what looks like Paulson giving $ to cronies (banking buddies like Rubin)" While there is a clear negative side the actions taken it does not necessarily add
up to failure.

Herbert Hover failed to act. He let bank after bank go under and the end result was the Great Depression . When Lehman Brothers failed this year the almost $400 billion of bad over leveraged debt shook countries and banking systems worldwide.

Twice the entire world economic/financial stood on the brink of the abyss.

  1. The AIG bailout. The world’s largest insurance collapse would have taken down the entire insurance industry. AIG was/is overloaded with credit defaults swap obligations. – just like Lehman.
  2. The TARP financial/bank bailout and the second bailout to the world’s largest bank Citigroup. Again Citi and banks are over leveraged with obligations like credit default swaps.

Paulson and Bernanke have not fixed the problem - but they have kept the entire world’s financial system ticking . The ships been hit by an iceberg, but it is still afloat. Bernanke and Paulson do deserve some credit.

Solutions

There are many. Some of the more obvious ones

  1. We need laws to regulate financial companies, – free markets and especially Financials (credit default swaps etc.) need some structure or else they go wild.
  2. The over leveraged situation needs to get reduced.
  3. Temporarily stop building houses or find some other way to stabilize housing/foreclosure market.
  4. Stimulus – This worked for FDR until he tried to balance the budget too soon in 1937. Then he needed the a huge stimulus package (WW 2) to ultimately fix things.

"What Me Worry" Alfred E Neuman

Huge financial entities (domestic and foreign) knees are trembling with worry.

  1. Banks are not loaning money – they are probably over leveraged and need the cash just to stay in business.
  2. Big money is all hiding in Treasury Bonds. – the Yields are ridiculously low
  3. Corporate bond yields are ridiculously high – this means a whole mess of defaults should happen in the future.
  4. Check out the drop in the Baltic Dry Index (see below)
  5. We’ve entered this mess with an already huge deficit.

Hope Krugman is right and "we are in for months, perhaps a year of economic hell" and not something worse.

Stocks

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Headline – Still Consolidation
Index % Change Volume

Dow -0.69% down
NASDQ -2.04% down
S&P500 -1.83% down
Russell2000 -2.30% –

italics = same comments as yesterday.

US Market & Foreign Markets

Technicals-

This week and next have historically had light trading. Also the next three weeks have historically been positive.

The shorter term mojo is still with the bulls until stock’s close below their opening price on last Tuesday. This area just above 8500 held for three days in a row (last Friday, Mon. and Tues.) and is a short term support level – 8500

The Dow fell below 8500, but rallied to close above it at 8517 So technical support while threatened, held yesterday.

Today again will be a test of this level.

Chart of the benchmark S&P 500

Chart of the Russell 2000

Chart of the NASDQ

Chart of the Dow

Fundamentals-

Obama Rally = HOPE A whole bunch of stimulus that has already been thrown at stocks, plus the composition of Obama’ economic team & his proposed stimulus package.

Lots of down grades of companies by brokers was most cited reason stocks fell yesterday.

Here’s about a disastrous an outlook as I can find from a self described Dr Doom and Gloom .

Three Month Treasury Bill & LIBOR

Credit markets are the dog and the Stock Markets are the tail. Without credit the tail won’t wag.

Real progress is being made. LIBOR has fallen from [MISTAKE 4.8 is the European LIBOR rate high 3.4% is the US high] two months ago to about 1.46% LIBOR rates are on their second leg down and have again fallen significantly. LIBOR is the rate banks charge each other, not businesses. Some credit cards, loans and mortgages are tied to LIBOR so this is good news. Some credit cards & mortgage rates are tied to Fed prime rate.

LIBOR chart (3 month)

Treasury Bonds

The 3 month has basically flatlined at 0.01% Longer term rose yeilds rose slightly

Fearful investors are putting their money in Treasury bonds for 3 months to 30 years, they are NOT investing in stocks. Investors are willing to pay an unbelievably low 2.17% for a ten year treasury bond.

Yields keep falling = Continued deterioration of credit market. Low Yields = There is simply NO confidence in the credit markets PANIC RULES

Baltic Dry Index

The Baltic Dry Index is a forward looking indicator that measures pre production materials that are shipped around the world.

Bloomberg data and chart (If the link does not work Google – bloomberg baltic dry index) Set range indicator to one month and you will see this chart.

BDI fall more than -2% yesterday to 801. We have had a significant rally off the lows of @660 two weeks ago week, but again have started to fall. Big long term picture The BDI had seen an almost 90% loss since June. It seems, a least for a week international trade has picked up but has again begun to slowly fall. These shipping figures confirm world wide recession.

Dollar Falling

Dollar was flat yesterday.

Wild ride over the last three weeks – especially last week. Basically, the dollar has gone from a high of $88 to low of $78 and at the end of the last
two days setteled at $81. These are historically big moves for the dollar. Chart.

The dollar is falling because of the low US interest rates and it looks like the Fed will bee printing a whole lot of $ to keep the financial system liquid.

Short Term Outlook

Reading the Tea Leaves-

PANIC RULES the credit markets and its hard to see money flowing into stocks while so many potential investors are putting $ in treasuries at ridiculously low rates. Long term stock rallies simply do not have the money supply to exist as long as the credit panic continues.

Dow 8500 is the technical support level that’s closest and 9000 is the upside resistance level.

Historically the markets turn before the economy, however fundamentally its hard to see signs of any long term economic turn.

Hedges

As I’ve discussed with many of you, personally I am long (bought lots of) FXI (the China ETF) and I’m hedging it with a short position in US equities – SDS or others listed below. The higher FXI gets the more I hedge. The lower it goes the less I hedge.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Long Term Outlook – BEARS RULE

Changes to Bottom Line Section Bolded .

Technicals – Series of Lower Lows and Lower Highs = Bears Rule. Obama/stimulus rally part 2 seems to be taking hold. Look for range between 7449 and 9654 for rest of year .
Fundamentals – Financial transparency problem is far far far far far far far far far bigger than anyone thought.

It’s looks like the recession will last through 2009 – perhaps longer Hopes of a more competent Obama administration have rallied stocks.

Asset Allocation/Recommended Sectors (long term)

50% to 90% Cash – Long Term Investors (up to 15 to 25+% stocks – only buy big dips) Wait for the next big dip to add 5 to 10%

Be Cautious and PROTECT YOUR MONEY (use ETF’s that short major indexes) when stocks have a big rally

*5%+% US Index Funds

UWM (ETF that does 2x what Russell 2000 does) & QLD (ETF that does 2X the NASDQ ) DDM (ETF that does 2X the Dow ) SSO (ETF does 2X the S&P 500)

*5%+ Emerging Markets

EWZ (Brazil) should out perform other emerging markets in a rally and under
perform in a fall – highest risk and dependent on oil prices

FXI (China ETF) should outperform USA

*5%+ Alternative Energy

GEX(Alternative energy ETF) Obama administration will focus on this area

*5+% Gold

GLD is the ETF for gold-

Chief Strategy – Buy the DIPS of trending sector – This is not your fathers market – over the 8 Bush years the Dow has gone from 11,000 to 8,500 and huge uncertainty clouds the future.

The major trend now is volatility.

Traders who have a strong tolerance for risk jump in on dips and invest more. Sell and/or go short into major rallies. Long term Investors who can tolerate risk and are 100% in cash nibble just a little on big dips. (5% on each big dip) Do not buy into rallies.

Shorting – Three ETF that short 2x what the major indexes do.

TWM – ultra short Russell 2000

QID – ultra short NASDQ

SDS – ultra short S&P 500

As Always Do Your Own Research Before Investing

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December 17, 2008

Market Update – Massive Fed Cut

Author: Barr Jozwicki - Categories: Recession - Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

How we got into such a huge financial mess.

Nobel Prize winner Joe Stiglitz has a comprehensive piece on just how this economic meltdown began. He traces its roots all the way back to Alan Greenspan becoming Fed Chair. Some of the incidents he mentions have already been covered in Updates. History can repeat itself unless we do something to change it. His basic premise is what Alan Greenspan already admitted to – that free markets are not self regulating entities.

You can read about the 5 major causes that made us "Capitalist Fools ."  More on this later.

Flying Shoes

Thanks to one of you who sent in the following video. Got to admit Bush is fast and for the first time he moved to the left.

Green – An Electric Car Bailout?

We all know Detroit is in trouble, but the falling oil prices and world wide recession has meant major set backs for emerging electric car companies . Even Prius is cutting back. LINK

Peak oil is a reality. Our dependence on foreign sources for oil is another reality. So is global warming and the pollution that burning fossil fuels create. Now that prices drop in a worldwide recession so does the desire for green energy.

Stocks.

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Headline – Fed Cuts = Big Rally

Index % Change Volume

Dow +4.20% up
NASDQ +5.41% up
S&P500 +5.14% up
Russell2000 +6.69% –

italics = same comments as yesterday.

US Market & Foreign Markets

Technicals-

Therefore, both the primary (volume) and #2 factor (how markets react to news) seem to be bullish right now.

As predicted we had a rally yesterday. It was one of those big time bear market rallies (were still not out of the woods) in increased average volume. Volume up is a good sign and there was a significant increase in volume, but in total the volume for the major indexes was average. All in all a very good day , but, it sure looks like there are a whole class of investors unwilling or unable (not enough $) to invest large amounts of capital in stocks.

Dow now at 8924 with the first resistance level at 9026 and major resistance at 9654 . The Technical aspect of US equities has been very solid since the late November lows. Short term the momentum is clearly with the bulls.

Chart of the benchmark S&P 50

Chart of the Russell 2000

Chart of the NASDQ

Chart of the Dow

Fundamentals-

Obama Rally = HOPE A whole bunch of stimulus that has already been thrown at stocks, plus the composition of Obama’ economic team & his proposed stimulus package.

The auto bailout/loan is in limbo. Will Paulson and Treasury act?

Major action taken by US Fed lowering interest rates more than expected. They lowered rates 0.75% to 0.25%. That’s the lowest they’ve ever been. Great one day news for the markets, but there is little the Fed can do to lower rates any further.

Some credit cards and mortgages are tied to US Fed interest rates.

Three Month Treasury Bill & LIBOR

Credit markets are the dog and the Stock Markets are the tail. Without credit the tail won’t wag.

Real progress WAS being made. LIBOR has fallen from 4.8% two months ago to about 1.8% LIBOR rates are on their second leg down started to fall . LIBOR is the rate banks charge each other, not businesses. Some credit cards, loans and mortgages are tied to LIBOR so this is good news.

LIBOR chart (3 month)

Treasury Bonds

All the yields kept falling – relative to last year. month, week and day. The 3 month has basically flatlined at 0.01%
Fearful investors are putting their money in Treasury bonds for 3 months to 30 years, they are NOT investing in stocks.

Yields keep falling = Continued deterioration of credit market. There is simply NO confidence in the credit markets PANIC RULES

Baltic Dry Index

The Baltic Dry Index is a forward looking indicator that measures pre production materials that are shipped around the world.

Bloomberg data and chart (If the link does not work Google – bloomberg baltic dry index) Set range indicator to one month and you will see this chart.

BDI rose over +3% yesterday to 823. We have had a significant rally off the lows of @660 in the last week. The BDI had seen an over 90% loss since June. It seems, a least for a week international trade has picked up. This is very good news for bulls.

Dollar Falling and Therefore Oil Prices Rising (more later)

Short Term Outlook

Reading the Tea Leaves-

PANIC RULES the credit markets and its hard to see money flowing into stocks while so many potential investors are putting $ in treasuries at ridiculously low rates.

A Santa Clause/Obama rally seems in the works. However, announcement of an auto bankruptcy would have an immediate negative impact.

Same outlook holds Santa Clause /Obama rally is chugging along. Shorter term traders should buy the dips. Rally looks like it has enough technical juice to make it close to 9654.

All the recommended sectors are doing quite well.

FXI (China) is clearly out preforming the USA. Chart of FXI .

EWZ (Brazil) chart is not as good as China, but again outperforming USA. Chart of EWZ . Caution – Brazil s tied to rising oil prices and will under perform on the way down.

GEX (Alternative energy) chart is basically forming a base. Chart of GEX. Will rally with US equities. Broke out to new short term high yesterday This is a play that the Obama stimulus package contains a lot of green energy proposals.

GLD (Gold) weekly chart is not quite as good as major US indexes – then again gold did not fall as much as the US indexes. Gold is a play that inflation emerges at the other end of the recession. Chart of GLD .

AS ALWAYS DO YOUR RESEARCH BEFORE INVESTING

Long Term Outlook – BEARS RULE

Changes to Bottom Line Section Bolded .

Technicals – Series of Lower Lows and Lower Highs = Bears Rule. Obama/stimulus rally part 2 seems to be taking hold.
Look for range between 7449 and 9654 for rest of year.

Fundamentals – Financial transparency problem is far far far far far far far far far bigger than anyone thought.
It’s looks like the recession will last through 2009 – perhaps longer Hopes of a more competent Obama administration have rallied stocks.

Asset Allocation/Recommended Sectors (long term)

50% to 90% Cash – Long Term Investors (up to 20 to 25+% stocks – only buy big dips) Wait for the next big dip to add 5 to 10%
Be Cautious and PROTECT YOUR MONEY (use ETF’s that short major indexes) when stocks have a big rally

*5%+% US Index Funds
UWM (ETF that does 2x what Russell 2000 does) & QLD (ETF that does 2X the NASDQ ) DDM (ETF that does 2X the Dow ) SSO (ETF does 2X the S&P 500)

*5%+ Emerging Markets
EWZ (Brazil) should out perform other emerging markets in a rally and under perform in a fall – highest risk and dependent on oil prices
FXI (China ETF) should outperform USA

*5%+ Alternative Energy
GEX(Alternative energy ETF) Obama administration will focus on this area

*5+% Gold
GLD is the ETF for gold-

Chief Strategy – Buy the DIPS of trending sector – This is not your fathers market – over the 8 Bush years the Dow has gone from 11,000 to 8,500 and uncertainty clouds the future.

The major trend now is volatility.

Traders who have a strong tolerance for risk jump in on dips and invest more. Sell and/or go short into major rallies. Long term Investors who can tolerate risk and are 100% in cash nibble just a little on big dips. (5% on each big dip) Do not buy into rallies.

Shorting – Three ETF that short 2x what the major indexes do.

TWM – ultra short Russell 2000
QID – ultra short NASDQ
SDS – ultra short S&P 500

As Always Do Your Own Research Before Investing

  • Share/Save/Bookmark
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