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The Great Sovereign Bailout

Friday, May 14, 2010
Kenneth Reid

We think Phase II of the global debt crisis is underway, but the epicenter is in Europe, not lower Manhattan. Individual investors trying to track the vectors that move the market will therefore have to brush up on currency effects and global economics. In our view, currency effects push the market around day to day, whereas debt will remain a long-term structural issue until sovereign defaults start to happen.

Gold denominated in euros has been making new highs for more than a month, but it is now making new highs in dollar terms. We think this is a sign of flagging investor confidence in paper money. We are short-handed on Consensus gold plays at this time, but recommend that subscribers look into Iamgold (IAG), a former Consensus name that has high relative strength.     Full Article

Breakout possible

Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Kenneth Reid

The Dow was up another 29 points on Friday and closed above 10,500, which is bullish behavior. The Dow Transports and Utilities, along with the Russell 2000 and the Nasdaq 100 all made yearly highs. The S&P is trailing due to weakness in the financial sector.
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Thanksgiving Rally Continues

Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Kenneth Reid

It does not pay to get bearish on this market. Not yet, anyway.

The Dow was down just 14 points on Friday, which set the stage for the surprise rally on Monday morning. The dollar weakened about half a percent over the weekend. Since U.S. equities are priced in dollars, the declining greenback creates buying pressure, since shares look cheaper to overseas buyers. We think this trend is likely to continue until the Dollar Index falls to its 2008 low, about 5% lower than Monday's close.    Full Article

Looking for more Downside

Friday, November 20, 2009
Kenneth Reid

Yesterday we predicted that “One of these days we will get a 200- 300 point down day in the Dow followed in a few days by another. Headlines everywhere will talk about the Crash of 2009.” Thursday was not it.
 
Thursday started out as though it wanted to make that prediction come true, but by the end of the day, some strength came back in. That said, the market is overbought enough for more than a 1-day correction. We think another leg down to the 1072-1078 area in the S&P 500 is likely, but if it happens, we expect that zone (a gap zone) to hold, for now. We will show a chart of this support area over the weekend.    Full Article

New Market Highs

Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Kenneth Reid

 

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. 

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Full Speed Ahead

Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Kenneth Reid

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.    Full Article

Red Light Greenlight

Monday, November 2, 2009

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.    Full Article

Apple Pie in the Sky

Tuesday, October 20, 2009
Kenneth Reid

The bulls are getting giddy, which is the sentiment indicator we have been looking for as part of our topping scenario. On Monday the Dow rallied about 100 points even though it is quite overbought. In our technical section we pointed out the “speed zone” in this area months ago. We are experiencing the Speed Zone Effect now.    Full Article

In Limbo

Monday, September 28, 2009
Kenneth Reid

We had some continuation of the selling on Friday, but on declining volume. The Dow was down 46 points and is testing support at the August high. As we noted on Friday, however, a slightly deeper pullback would be normal at this stage of the game (see chart below). We also wrote, “We would not get overly bearish at this point.”

After all, markets don’t move in a straight line, they inhale and exhale, they zig and they zag, they advance and then they back and fill to consolidate gains and test support. So far, that normal process appears to be underway.    Full Article

Is the Fed Adding Stability?

Friday, September 25, 2009

Dow 10,000 has been a target for us at TSR since early April, when the venerable index was 3,000 points lower. The good news is that after a benign FOMC meeting on Wednesday, Mr. Dow’s average rallied strongly and came within 82 points of our intermediate-term target. Pretty good forecasting, eh?    Full Article

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