Archive for ‘bears’

ES Emini: Daily Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

By , 10 November, 2009, No Comment
ESZ9
For 11/10/2009

How To Use
Symbol R1 R2 Pivot S1 S2
ESZ9 1099.75 1107.75 1084.00 1076.00 1060.25

Daily Pivot-Fed Announcements-Commentary

Redbook
[Report][Bullet
8:55 AM ET

Dennis Lockhart Speaks
9:15 AM ET

Janet Yellen Speaks
10:00 AM ET

Richard Fisher Speaks
7:30 PM ET

ICSC-Goldman Store Sales

Released on 11/10/2009 7:45:00 AM For wk11/7, 2009
Prior Actual
Store Sales – W/W change 0.1 % -0.1 %
Store Sales – Y/Y 1.9 % 2.9 %

Highlights
ICSC-Goldman’s same-store retail index ended six straight weeks of gains, down 0.1 percent in the Nov. 7 week to mask a plus 2.9 percent year-on-year rate that’s the best since August last year. ICSC, which stands for the International Council of Shopping Centers, often conducts special surveys, and their latest indicates that shoppers plan to put off holiday shopping until the Friday after Thanksgiving, which the report said is now being dubbed “Bargain Friday” instead of “Black Friday,” the latter referring to the first day of retailer profitability. The report, as others, expects year-on-year rates to continue to improve as retailers lap comparisons with last year’s deep recession. Redbook will post their results at 8:55 ET.

Redbook

Released on 11/10/2009 8:55:00 AM For wk11/7, 2009
Prior Actual
Store Sales Y/Y change 0.9 % 1.7 %

Highlights
Year-on-year rates are definitely on the increase in the retail sector which is beginning to benefit from easy comparisons against last year’s deep recession. Redbook reports a plus 1.7 percent year-on-year rate in the Nov. 7 week, the best since September last year. ICSC-Goldman, issued earlier this morning, shows the best year-on-year rate since August last year. But what this means for the month-to-month comparison is uncertain. Redbook’s first take on October vs. November is very positive, showing a 4.3 percent gain but one a little weaker than the targeted 4.8 percent gain. Redbook says retailers are promoting hard trying to make each day a “Black Friday” with deep discounts and early holiday displays.

Lots of Fed Speak this afternoon as two FOMC give separate speeches this afternoon.  Perhaps the market may take some interest in these speeches, though I cannot discern that the market, at this juncture, is paying attention to anything.  Also, plenty of sales data, which should give some guidance on how the Christmas shopping season may play out.

We made new yearly highs in several of the stock index contracts yesterday. which I wrote about yesterday afternoon.  I would suspect that much of the volatility we experienced earlier in the year may return as the market thrashes about in full bull or bear market rally mode.

Steep Slowdown in Stock Trading this Summer: Will the current rally flop?

By , 26 July, 2009, 1 Comment

The number of shares traded on the major exchanges has begun to slow to a trickle, when compared with past years. It is not unusual for trading to slow in the summer. In fact, the volume and number of shares traded generally is less in the summer, as opposed to the beginning of the year. But this year the trading has been especially slow.

Top Fund Manager Goes to Cash: Are the Bears Getting the Upper Hand?

By , 13 July, 2009, No Comment

Dan Sullivan has decided to go 100% cash… and that’s bad news, since Sullivan is not just any adviser.

According to Mark Hurlburt, Sullivan’s newsletter, The Chartist is in first place for stock market timing over the last three decades among those newsletters the Hulbert Financial Digest has tracked over this period. And though his mutual-fund newsletter — The Chartist Mutual Fund Letter — hasn’t been published for all three of those decades, it also is one of the top performers over the years it has existed.

Looks like the bull rally of the last four months is running out of gas.  As a scalper, it means little to me, but I would really like to see the economy improve for the sake of our country.  There have been far to many layoffs and jobs continue to be outsourced to cheaper foreign labor as companies struggle to eek out profits, or minimize loses.

So the bull market has lost a formidable ally.

Trading the emini today….

By , 13 May, 2009, No Comment
ES6-09 Click on image for larger view

I haven’t been posting too many charts lately and today was a particularly enjoyable day to trade the ES contract. It started out down, and then bounced around for most of the day.

I made some great trades, and one boneheaded trade…but came out well on top today.

As many of you have noticed, trading has been on the unusual side lately as the market has seemed disconnected from the overall economy. We have rallied on the worst of news for the last couple of weeks, and somehow that is hard for me to fathom. Of course, trying to apply logic to this sort of market is a exercise in futility and trusting your indicators and charting is paramount. This can be very difficult when you absorb a raft of horrible economic news and everything tells you the market should head downward and it does exactly the opposite, heading upward. Bear market rally? New bull market? Gosh I could not even hazard a guess. The economic news was horrible again today as foreclosures and a plethora of other economic indicators, especially consumer spending, where disheartening.

Bulls and bears, and other nonsense

By , 5 August, 2008, No Comment
There is a tendency to believe, even among investment professionals, the once the market starts to go up the “good times” have arrived and the market is going to go up forever. Conversely, the is also a tendency to believe, even among investment professionals, that once the market starts to go down, or correct, “the sky is falling” and the market will continue fall ad infinity. Like members of a devoted political parties the “up” crowd, or “bulls” feel comfortable when the market is going up and they are in control. I think it is also important to note that since or economy is almost universally expanding because our population is increasing, which in turn causes of GDP to increase. But our markets tend to over expand, and the over expansion is followed by corresponding contraction…and this contraction is when the “sky is falling crowd.” the “bears” have their day in the sun. Many investors tend to be either bulls or bears, and strongly identify with the market either going up or the market going down.

Of course, a trader doesn’t affiliate himself with any “political investing party.” Bulls, bears….these are wonderful basketball and football teams but are of little consequence for a trader. We are happy to go long or short at the appropriate times without conscience or investing preference. Like most traders chaotic investment philosophy goes to where the money is…long or short and where the money is.

I started out as a stock and bond man….but concentrate entirely on index futures contracts now. Of course, my trainers and the media in general portrayed the futures and options markets as “voo-doo” markets and not to be taken seriously. No, I was trained to believe that the only investing occurred on the NYSE and NASDAQ. (and the NASDAQ was barely respectable back then) I did trade some TED Spreads (Treasury-Eurodollar) but nothing like the scalping style I employ now.

The reason for my conversion is much the same as the reasons other traders….we have nano-second access to any market through home computers, and as home computers have proliferated so has the number of firms that cater to home traders or small office traders. While I hate to admit it, my investing career has taken me all the way back to Quotron.

My early investing career was very much influenced by the writings of Benjamin Graham, and Graham and Dodds writings were very much the gold standard by which other authors were judged. Value investing, as was Grahams preference, along with detailed study of balance sheets and cash flow statements were the rage, along with neighborhood investment clubs. The world has certainly changed.

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