PureBytes Links
Trading Reference Links
|
Ira
back 6 month ago you said you can see over 13000,
congratulations on a great call,,!!!
where do you see short term we are going and
where longer term?
best regards
Ben
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, November 02, 2006 1:49
AM
Subject: Re: [RT] Fw: [AAQuants] 3 signs
that a stock crash is coming
I have found that it doesn't make any difference
about the fundamentals, the PE ratios, or anything else. It is all on
the chart. You can have 2 companies with the exact same fundamentals and
one can be trading at twice the price of the other. One is followed and
the other has a set of officers that doesn't talk nice to the analysts. As
long as the chart says higher that is where it is going. If the chart
says lower it will go there. The problem comes in what each trader sees
in the chart. Like a painting or a woman. It is all in the eye of
the beholder.
Good trading, Ira.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, November 01, 2006 9:46
PM
Subject: Re: [RT] Fw: [AAQuants] 3
signs that a stock crash is coming
Dunno Ben .. we can all make any case we wish with numbers but he says
nothing about PE's being in line or that earnings are fantastic and growing
or that interest rates are historically low or that the NASDAQ is still down
60% from the high. Technicals are important but no more so than
fundamentals and at least with fundamentals, the facts are the facts and not
manipulated forecasts by manipulating the numbers. The fact that there
are heavy shorts in the indices is bullish in my opinion. Still, I
appreciate all you share with this list and with all of us. You are
most generous to do so.
Bob
At 11:55 PM 11/1/2006 -0500,
you wrote:
X-Yahoo-Newman-Property:groups-email-trad Content-Type:
multipart/alternative; boundary="Boundary_(ID_/jrmDsn210rp4MbVYTFCxw)"
Sent:
Wednesday, November 01, 2006 3:41 PM Subject: [AAQuants] 3 signs
that a stock crash is coming
By Michael Brush What a great time
to own stocks.
Three major indicators with strong track records
are signaling it's time to sell stocks. Here's how they work and why
investors should worry.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
($INDU) is setting records just about every day. The S&P 500 Index
($INX) has advanced 12% in less than five months. Technology stocks
are up about 14% since midsummer.
The giddy stock bulls may be
in for a nasty surprise. They're ignoring three trusty stock-market
indicators -- with great records for predicting corrections -- that
currently are saying it's time to get out of equities. The signals are
closely watched by market technicians on the lookout for hints that
the bull run is getting tired.
One of the indicators says
stocks are simply expensive compared with other investment options
available to big money managers. Another says that mutual fund
managers have mostly exhausted the supply of dollars they have
available to put into the market. And the third says that the smartest
investors are now betting on a downturn. Together, these harbingers
paint a far different picture of the market than do the raw return
numbers.
Here's a closer look at these indicators and why you
should be cautious with stocks now.
The stock-bond trade-off
Money managers chiefly put money in two assets: stocks and bonds.
One way of deciding whether stocks are expensive is by comparing
their performance to that of bonds. If bonds lag while stocks
advance, according to some market watchers, fund managers will be
more likely to sell stocks and buy bonds.
But how do you
compare the prices of stocks to bonds? Jason Goepfert of
SentimenTrader.com looks at the performance of the largest bond
and stock indexes as they are embodied by two exchange-traded mutual
funds -- the Standard & Poor's Depositary Receipts (SPY, news,
msgs), which tracks the S&P 500 Index, and the iShares Lehman 20+
Year Treasury Bond Fund (TLT, news, msgs), which tracks 20-year
government bonds. (For data that predates the funds, he compares the
S&P 500 with the 10-year Treasury bond.)
To compare them,
Goepfert contrasts the current ratio of the SPY to the TLT with the
average ratio over the past three months. Since the ratio typically
doesn't change much in 90 days, the two values should be about the
same. Now, though, with the recent rally in stocks, there's a big gap.
The current ratio has moved up to 1.58, compared with an average of
1.5 over the past 90 days. That may not sound like much. But since the
ratio usually stays fairly constant in any 90-day period, this is a
huge move compared with what normally happens.
The difference
between the current gap and the 90-day average is at a level seen only
1% of the time. (For you statistical wonks, the indexes are now more
than three standard deviations away from the norm). "Stocks are rarely
as overvalued to bonds as they are now," says Goepfert.
In the
three months after such an extreme reading, the performance of the
S&P 500 has ranged from a loss of 8.7% to a gain of just 1.7%.
That's a bad outlook for the bulls. It gets worse: This indicator has
called two of the biggest market declines in the past decade.
It flashed red just before the big correction that started in
March 2000, signaling the end of the technology bubble. By the end of
2002, the S&P 500 had fallen more than 45%. (On the upside, this
model said buy in mid-2002, just before the start of the current
bull rally.)
On July 17, 1998, the model said sell just before
a dramatic crash that took the S&P 500 down 19% in the next month
and a half. On Aug. 31 that year, the model said buy just before a
September rally that took the market up 11% in a month.
Cash-strapped mutual funds Mutual funds are allowed to hold
cash instead of stocks or bonds. How much cash they have on hand is
often a good signal of where the market is heading. If they have a lot
of cash, it means there's still a lot of money left to go into stocks.
When cash levels are low, it means there's less money on the sidelines
to drive stocks higher. It also means that if retail investors get
scared and sell their fund shares, fund managers will have to sell
stock to meet redemptions, driving stock prices lower.
As of
the end of August, U.S. equity mutual funds had 4.4% of their assets
in cash, according to the Investment Company Institute. Goepfert
adjusts this number for how much cash they should have on hand given
the current level of interest rates. Even though interest rates are
relatively low, Goepfert figures that funds should have a 7% cash
position, according to historical trends. This means funds have 2.5%
less cash than they "should" have, given the level of short-term
interest rates. This is another historic extreme.
Since 1950,
whenever cash shortfalls hit these lows, the S&P 500 has fallen
69% of the time with an average decline of 4%. Ominously, the last two
times cash levels were this low, bad things happened to stocks. Cash
levels hit these lows in early 2000 just ahead of the last big bear
market. Cash also hit current levels in early 1981 just before a
two-year market slump.
The smart money is bearish Investors,
of course, always want to know what the "smart money" is doing. To
figure this out, Goepfert turns to the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
First, a primer on futures contracts. Traders who own
futures contracts on a stock index like the S&P 500 have purchased
the S&P 500 stocks at a price agreed upon now, for delivery at
some point in the future. Usually these contracts are settled in cash,
without delivery of the underlying stocks.
To keep track of the
futures markets, the CFTC makes brokers report client positions. The
CFTC designates the biggest traders -- those holding more than 1,000
S&P 500 futures contracts -- as "commercial" traders. They only
make the grade if they hold those futures contracts as a part of a
hedge to protect against losses in underlying investment positions.
Goepfert considers these commercial traders to be the "smart money."
(The other two categories are big speculators, who hold 1,000 or more
S&P 500 futures contracts that aren't part of a hedged position,
and small speculators, who hold less than 1,000 contracts.)
Right now, commercial traders have a $30 billion net short
position in futures on the S&P 500, the Dow Jones Industrial
Average and the Nasdaq Composite Index ($COMPX). Going short is a bet
against the market. Traders go short by borrowing securities and
selling them, hoping they will be able to replace them later at a
cheaper price after a market decline.
This is only the third
time in recent history that this short position has been so large. The
other two times were early 2001, just before the S&P 500 tumbled
38%, and November 2004, after which the market rose some more and then
corrected in early 2005.
A ray of sunshine Taken together,
these three indicators say its time to be more cautious with stocks --
but they don't mean that a sharp correction is 100% certain.
Here's just one dissenting voice: Robert Froehlich, chairman of
the investor strategy committee at DWS Scudder, the U.S. mutual fund
division of Deutsche Bank. Froehlich points out we are moving into
the seasonally bullish phase for stocks. This is the six months from
early November to the end of April, a period Froehlich calls "turkey
to tax time." Since 1950, the average return of the S&P 500 during
this phase has been 9%. The average return of the S&P 500 during
the other six months of the year was only 2.71%.
At the time of
publication, Michael Brush did not own or control any of the equities
mentioned in this portfolio.
No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free
Edition. Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.13.22/512 - Release
Date: 11/1/2006
No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked
by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.13.22/512 -
Release Date: 11/1/2006
No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free
Edition. Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.13.21/511 - Release Date:
11/1/06
No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free
Edition. Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.13.23/513 - Release Date:
11/2/2006
__._,_.___
SPONSORED LINKS
__,_._,___
|
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.13.23/513 - Release Date: 11/2/2006
|