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Selected Articles from Spear Publications

  • Tuesday, November 17, 2009    Full Article

     

    All three major indices set new yearly highs on Monday, which the financial media regards as particularly bullish. One reason is that the S&P 500 has been lagging the pack. With ‘confirmation’ from the S&P, some market technicians are breathing a sigh of relief. Hummmm. 

    Unfortunately, we do not concur with the rationale for the enthusiasm. As the market moves higher, we are getting more cautious, not more bullish. We have two technical resistance zones in mind, one is Dow 10,500 and the other is Dow 10,800. These levels operate like the orbits of electrons around an atomic nucleus. Electrons are stable at these orbit levels and don’t spend much time in transition. Markets act the same way. If the Dow can break through the 10,500 zone, we expect it to travel to 10,800 rather quickly. Time will tell. 

     

  • Tuesday, November 10, 2009    Full Article

    Yesterday we predicted that the Dow would move very quickly through the 10,000-10,300 zone and most likely overshoot to the upside. So far, so good. Monday’s 200-point move took the Dow up 2% to 10226, its highest finish of the year and its second 200-point up day in the last three trading days. This leaves the index just 28% below its all time high.

  • Friday, November 6, 2009    Full Article

    On Thursday, a miniscule improvement in the number of persons filing claims for state unemployment benefits was enough to spark a 200-point rally in the Dow, closing the index back above 10k.

    Initial claims reflect the process of job destruction, while the rate of continuing claims represents the level of difficulty in acquiring new jobs. Compared to a year ago, initial claims have increased 9%, while continuing claims have surged 55%. On a week to week basis, however, initial claims were down about 4% and continuing claims were down about 1%.

  • Tuesday, November 3, 2009    Full Article

    On Monday, the Dow closed up 76 points, only its fourth up day in the last ten trading days. The intraday action was volatile, however, with a range greater than 200 points peak to trough.

    The volatility catalyst was a report from the Institute for Supply Management that indicated manufacturing activity grew in October at the fastest pace since April 2006. The 55.7 reading, if annualized, would imply GDP growth of 4.5%. Manufacturing activity improved worldwide, as well, suggesting that this is a synchronized global upturn. Things did not get better in Russia, however, and we think that country remains a short sale candidate. In other words, we are bullish on BIC not BRIC.
     

  • Monday, November 2, 2009    Full Article

    The stock market is in the midst of its fourth correction since July. The pullback is inciting some bearish commentators to rant against the validity of the summer rally, as though it were somehow “wrong” and is finally showing its true colors. We dispute the possibility of the market ever being “wrong” and assert that value is always in the eye of the beholder.

    David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital argues that paying attention to the ‘Big Picture’ is important when making investment decisions on individual equities. Einhorn is not particularly sanguine about the state of the U.S. financial system or its global counterparts, but the new Financial Stability Improvement Act of 2009 might cheer him up a bit. The bill would require Wall Street to take responsibility for cleaning up future messes.

    Speaking of the big picture, pullbacks have been mild this summer, but with the market now near important resistance at Dow 10,000, we recommend selling some inventory into strength and weeding the portfolio garden. Moreover, as part of the new normal, we think the educational system in the U.S. will be restructured. Apollo Group (APOL) is an educational outfit that also has problems with the SEC. We are bearish on the sector and “unprofile” the company.
      
    The Best 4 Quants Model Portfolio finished last week at -3.2% vs. the S&P's -0.7%. This week the Best 4 Quants Model Portfolio was in cash while the S&P has lost 1.9%.  Since Inception 3/14/2003 the model has a return of +259.6% vs. the S&P 500’s +27.1%. The Best 4 Quants Model has no picks this week.

    For those who do not follow the Best 4 Quants model portfolio, we offer our TSR Timing Model as general guidance on the relative safety of the current market. On 10/28/09 the timing model went from +200% to -25% invested.  Take a 12.5% position in SDS, which doubles the inverse of the S&P 500.

  • Thursday, October 29, 2009    Full Article

    There are two hybrid government/corporate bond funds issued by iShares.  The first, iShares’ Barclays Intermediate Government/Credit Bond ETF (GVI), holds a total of 223 various bonds.  The fund is 62% invested in U.S.

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