Monday, September 26, 2011

1,000 POINTS OF DARK!:

Talk about mood swings! The last 2 weeks have seen intraday swings of nearly 1,000 DJIA points, mostly on European news - today's big upswing is due to more great news from them - LEVERAGE of CMBSs to solve the debt problem - why didn't we think of that before?
While most sentiment indicators are stuck in "eyes in the headlights" of the Sept.-Oct. period, equity mutual funds have seen losses of $75B the past 6 months - a good contrarian sign. Exceptions include week-to-week swings on the McClellan Oscillator, from plus 47 to minus 42 -pretty much my entire bounded range, now indicating (today's) market rise - at least short term; i.e. end-of-quarter. Although new highs to new lows are 1:12 on both the NYSE and NASD, up-down stocks (A/D) swung from  plus 1318(net) to minus 2431.
Bull/bear surveys remain inverted (Bullish FOR the market), with the AAII 25 vs. 40; and insider selling is down to 10:1, hardly climactic. My recently followed indicator - Commitment of Traders- finally show small traders net short for the past 4 weeks, although large traders have been short for months (smart money).
As seen below, my matrix of indicators has resurfaced after I was sabotaged by googledocs; thanks much to the able help of my expert tech person in Florida. If anyone wants very reasonable and experienced (30+ years, including NASA) online help, please contact him at :gort3ster@gmail.com. I guarantee he is much less than the recent quote I got elsewhere at $125/hour.

Here is the matrix:


MktSentiment Last WeekPrev. Week 5 Yr HI 5 Yr LOW
DJIA:1077111509140936626
Nasdaq:2483262228611114
S&P 500:113612161561683
CBOE Eq. put/call: 736996-10/0846-1/03
VIX:4131908.8
McClellan Osc:(42)47108(123)
McClellan Sum:(335)(205)1568(1514)
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InvestorsIntel.Bull:
37.635.56322.21
InvestorsIntel.Bear:
39.840.954.416
AAII Bull:
25.330.5n/an/a
AAII Bear:
48.041.3n/an/a
US Equity-1 week lagn/a(2.7B)
Money Market Flows(11.8B)(16.4B)

Baltic Dry Index:1907183811700663
Bullish %:
3551892
Insider Corporate Sellers:10:110:1235:12.4:1

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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Monday, September 19, 2011

CONVENTIONAL STUPIDITY:

As everyone knows by now, unemployment is at record high levels, especially for young people, and getting a job right out of college is very difficult - and the financial sector is even worse. Barron's magazine reports that a survey was done on Harvard MBAs over the past 20 years: when 30% head for Wall St. after graduation, the market invariably tanks - when only 10% do so, the market rallies. Despite today's job outlook, the percentage is 37!

Last week's 5 up days was likely a countertrend rally; from July's high, the SPX has dropped (leg A) into a Flag formation (upward trend channel, showing a possible H&S top within a greater H&S top) - if leg C down equals leg A, we can see the market drop to below 1000 by 2012 (also a Pt.& Fig. target). The global economy and political standoffs indicate this scenario.

Sentiment Indicators, however (thanks to last week's rally) seem benign: the CBOE put/call ratio is down to 69; the VIX at 31. The reliable McClellan Oscillator jumped from a minus 34 to a plus 47, indicating a short selloff (today). On the positive front, the Investors Intelligence Bull/Bear ratio has joined the AAII one in being inverted, which is contrarily Bullish; and the Commitment of Traders shows the small trader finally getting Bearish on Sept.2, possibly late to the party.

Despite the weekly rally, New Lows bested New Highs 5:1 in the NYSE and NASD, not a broad rally. CEO Insider trading is still low on the selling side, and money flew out of MMFs, but not into stocks.

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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Monday, September 12, 2011

GREECE - A CAR CRASH IN SLOW MOTION:

As Europe brings down the western global economies, the U.S. stock market continues to flirt with a Bear market - something that has happened no more than 2 times per decade since 1900 and no less than 1. Last week showed rather tame indicators, thanks to the up-down nature of the Holiday week. The CBOE put/call ratio did rise to 75 from 67; and the VIX from 33 to 38. The McClellan Oscillator is -34, which is good to see if you are Bullish. Also, the AAII sentiment inverted again to 30 Bulls/40 Bears -a good sign. Money continues to flow into MMFs (probably from Europe, which doesn't trust its own paper), but not into equities.

My Google docs. seems to have contracted a bug and will not let me reproduce the template this issue. As a bonus, however, my www.ditmcalls.blogspot.com blog outlines a fairly safe way to play Uncle Ben's new Twist strategy for a 9% annualized return.

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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Monday, September 5, 2011

LABOR PAINS:

Despite last Friday's huge selloff, the weekly sentiment numbers actually moderated off their worse levels from the weeks before; however, as of this Labor Day, futures are looking grim behind Europe's increasing debt problems, with the DJIA futures at the triple zero 11,000, down 240. The recent rally, per Barron's Trader, was on OTC type stocks, not a great sign of institutional longterm investing.
This continues to be a great buying opportunity of quality, dividend-paying stocks - at least until (for me) the S&P500 breaks and stays below 1100 (it is now 1173, heading lower). That is 2010 Support.
Major changes in the Sentiment Indicators were a big upmove in the Bullish %, and the AAII Bull/Bear REverting itself from inverted recently - a sign of complacency from last Tuesday's release.


MktSentiment Last WeekPrev. Week 5 Yr HI 5 Yr LOW
DJIA:1124011284140936626
Nasdaq:2480247928611114
S&P 500:117311761561683
CBOE Eq. put/call: 677296-10/0846-1/03
VIX:33.935.6908.8
McClellan Osc:10(1)108(123)
McClellan Sum:(290)(627)1568(1514)
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InvestorsIntel.Bull:
40.940.96322.21
InvestorsIntel.Bear:
36.633.354.416
AAII Bull:
38.636.4n/an/a
AAII Bear:
32.341.0n/an/a
US Equity-1 week lagn/a(2.6B)
  
Money Market Flows8B(2.1B)

Baltic Dry Index:1682158211700663
Bullish %:
5227892
Insider Corporate Sellers:9:14:1235:12.4:1

With record numbers of dollars coming out of Money Market Funds, mostly into the crowded trade of short term bonds, anyone who has a minimal knowledge of covered call options and/or an interest in hedging stock market exposure might want to check out: brentleonard.com for an alternative strategy that is low-risk as well as highly rewarding. For those of you wanting more details and actual trading results, a new book is available for $14.95 at Amazon.com: Zero (IN)Tolerance


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