Tuesday, January 17, 2012

January 17, 2012 Dow analysis

I have been asked where do I stand since my last post, since I hadn't written anything for 10 days here. Well, the reason I haven't posted was because nothing has really changed for me to comment on. So what I have done is to put a 1 year chart up of the Dow and you can see we still have not broken above this line to have a breakout. We get closer but no real conviction. Here's the chart below:

If and when we do have a clearer picture of where we might be headed I will post something to that effect. But we could be in this never land for a while as Europe tries to straighten itself out from their Sovereign debt crisis. Greece is on the brink of succumbing to default any time now.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Market comments for the coming week of Christmas

Oh I hate to be so repetitive. As I said in my last post on Dec. 5th, "I thought it was time to post on the stock market again." The main points to make this week are that all Indexes are now below their 200 day Moving average line, shown faintly with the yellow lines on each chart below. My opinion continues that this shows the tendency is still to remain below the 200 day Moving Averages in the intermediate timeframe. While there was "hope" the Eurozone had "solved" its crisis we all know better now, don't we. Unfortunately it will take a stock market crash or a sovereign debt meltdown causing a market crash before Europe is forced to come to terms with its problems. Here are the updated charts of our major indexes.



Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Sunday, December 04, 2011

Market comments for the coming week of Dec. 5th.

I thought it was time to post on the stock market again. The main points to make this week are that all Indexes, except the Dow, are still below their 200 day Moving average line, shown faintly with the yellow lines on each chart below. The second point is that while the Dow remains above the downward sloping red line, the Russell has remained below it the most. The Dow is most likely the most manipulated Index and the Russell the least. My opinion is that this shows the tendency is still to remain below these red lines in the intermediate timeframe.




This week will have its important announcements. The biggest news item will be the European meeting, scheduled on Dec. 8th and 9th, of Finance ministers to discuss resolving the Sovereign debt issues of Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal and others. This will be the most important meeting of the last year as it is the first since the coordinated Central Bank intervention to lower the rates banks pay to increase reserves. The Central Banks took this action because there was an immediate concern of a large bank failure in Europe. Our markets will react to what happens there, not here.

Labels: , , , , , , , , ,

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Merkel and Sarkozy clash

There is a fight going on between Merkel of Germany and Sarkozy of France over whether to allow the ECB to, in essence, print more money like we have done here. Sarkozy would like it to get out of the Euro sovereign debt crisis and Merkel would not like that solution. Here's a picture below of the two of them. Which do you see winning the argument strictly based upon body language.

To read the article which goes with the above picture, click here.

Labels: , , , ,

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Market comments for Sept. 29, 2011: Still in a tight range!

Initial Jobless Claims dropped this week to 391K, which was lower than expected. This data gave the market a boost in premarket. Also reported this morning was a revised GDP number for Q2. The final number reported GDP grew at 1.3%. Both pieces of data were better news than expected and traders are hoping to time the bottom of the market as many are venturing in the past few days. This stems form "hope" the EU has a plan for solving the sovereign debt problem for Greece and that their strategy will be a template for Italy should it be necessary. It's the same action Bernanke is taking, print more money.

A good friend of mine dropped me an email early this morning with an article from ZeroHedge worth reading. Here is the link. The article discusses Fed Chairman Bernanke's speech last night and his concerns about stemming deflation it seems at all costs. This is worth the read. The article is titled, "Goodbye Operation Twist, Hello QE X+1" and was written by Tyler Durden very early this morning.

Now that we recently retested Dow 11,000 and it held, even tough we went below 11,000 for a couple of days, it looks as though we are going to retest Dow 11,500 again for the 3rd time in several months. We seem to be more volatile lately, but we are still holding this tight range of between 11,000 and 11,500. Traders love the daily volatility, but long term investors don't and are looking for a guide to market direction.

UPDATE: 6:00am PST
Germany's lower House of Parliament has approved the expansion of the bailout fund needed for the sovereign debt crisis. Read the news by clicking here.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

Technorati Profile