I was disappointed yesterday afternoon at the modest +1.15% gain in RYEUX, which limited the one-day gain in the portfolio to just +1.27%. However, cashing out Thursday paid off today, as jaded traders either sold or declined to buy. RYEUX closed down -2.36%! Former support levels now become resistance points, and we're likely to see better entries/reentries in October. Monday, perhaps.
Make no mistake. I am quite bullish over the next few months. But expecting (or hoping for) a correction prior to new highs.
ReplyDeleteI'm quite sore.
DeleteTraining wheels...
DeleteNo shit!!!!
DeleteWhether one agrees with QE or not, it's kind of hard to fight the 'Global Fed.'
ReplyDeleteYep, change is in the wind.
Deletehttp://www.reuters.com/article/2012/09/28/us-france-budget-idUSBRE88R0AK20120928
http://truecontrarian-sjk.blogspot.co.uk/
ReplyDelete$1780 - Gold just couldn't do it, although silver did it's part by closing over $34.48
ReplyDeletei really like some of the beaten down stocks right now. i have a good chunk of money in YRCW because i think these beaten down stocks will outperform every other stock. take a look at the charts of MCP, BTU, X, ANR, etc. don't they look like good risk-reward setups? just in looking at those charts i'm quite bullish right now. i'm reading a lot more traders saying the qe3 fueled rally is over. i think we could very well get a sustained rally in the markets.
ReplyDeleteThey just closed down another coal fired power plant this weekend in Maryland, going to redevelop the site to shopping and housing.
DeleteSorry, that closure was in Alexandria, western bank of Potomac river.
Deletehttp://blogs.ft.com/the-a-list/2012/09/20/introducing-the-reverse-volcker-moment/#axzz27zlcgPdd
ReplyDeleteHussman on US budget deficit:
ReplyDelete"Here in the U.S., the federal government is running a deficit approaching 10% of GDP despite suppressed interest costs. If addressing that deficit was just a political issue of doing the “right thing,” what would that right thing be? With total federal revenues at $2.3 trillion last year, and spending at $3.7 trillion, the gap itself represents more than half of total revenues and more than a third of total spending. That gap will not be closed even if lawmakers were to agree to an immediate repeal of the Bush tax cuts in their entirety. Assuming that all of the desired revenue actually showed up, the bump to revenues would only be about $100 billion a year - reducing the deficit by less than one-tenth. In the event of a recession (which we believe is already in progress), the increase in government debt - merely as a passive cyclical response to economic weakness – would swamp that effect even if all the tax cuts were repealed. Likewise, even in the current budget, less than $1.3 trillion represents discretionary spending that is negotiated between the President and Congress. The other spending represents mandatory outlays for Social Security, Medicare, military retirement, and so forth. Well over half of discretionary spending represents military spending. To balance the budget with spending cuts, Congress would have to wipe out discretionary spending altogether, including military outlays. Observers who believe that the fiscal cliff is simply a matter of political disagreement have vastly underestimated the depth of the challenges here."
Nice summary of the past month or so of ES market profile view:
ReplyDeleteFuturesTrader71 @FuturesTrader71
How does the auction process look? http://screencast.com/t/CywNqOXZCosU #FT71 $ES_F
Man, some stocks aren't trading at all today. Kinda scary.
ReplyDeletenot if you started buying.
DeleteNG up 15% this year. Who would have guessed in April?
GMO- http://t.co/grDg4voz
ReplyDeleteYeah, barely moved the needle. I"m pretty confident Mt Hope goes to production but financial issues (financial contract penalties) may be holding PPS back? Even if, the value is over $1B, I think.
DeleteI sold this one last time it fell under $4 and poked it's head back above and it hasn't seen $4 since. It was the confusion with MCP that helped take it to $7, I think.
I really thought it held potential...
AUMN - Okay, WTF, I guess it's wait and see where $silver is tomorrow morning and then BANG-ZOOM!
And, GMO's OBV is in the weeds, as if there's no accumulation:
Deletehttp://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=GMO&p=W&b=5&g=0&id=p18011710308
China QE? Wonder what the details are.....?!?!?
ReplyDeleteUWM - I say buy this one if it falls back under $45, preferably near it's opening price.
ReplyDeleteI was hoping though, to get it around the 200sma or lower...
This stimulus stuff doesn't seem to stick for much longer than 24 hrs anymore, perhaps it would be best to simply short every QE pop, take the gains after 48 hrs, and wait for next QE?
Yeah, the trend is up(sort of) but who knows when another financial bomb explodes in Europe or somewhere?
NOK - This one looks like a bull flag to my inexperienced eyes... $3.50 somewhere in the cards for the next couple of months?
ReplyDeleteABX - Looking through my records, I'd bought this one Jan 24 2011 for $47.98, it's still below that price. I'm pretty sure I had a gain but it wasn't much.
ReplyDeleteGMO - I bought this one at $6.05 and sold it for $6.48 around the same time....
AONE - I sold this one at $5.53
NKE - Sold this one at $78.68
YRCW - LOL, sales are nearly $5B, why can't they find a way to cut costs by $500M???
ReplyDeleteCP - that's that point, I guess. James O'Shaughnessy wrote an entire book about outperforming the market by buying stocks with very low price to sales. The rationale behind that is the excess fat can be trimmed in a business to make it a very profitable business relative to the market cap. Just take a look at stocks like PIR, SCSS, LVS, etc. when they were in the dumps.
DeleteUWM - Yep, shoulda' shorted today's russell 2000 pop with both barrels....
ReplyDeleteBOIL - Yeah, NG still kickin' it, who knew?
ReplyDeletewe knew. we just didn't know how volatile it would be along the way and how little we could stomach the volatility.
DeleteTC - Cash is $2.43, book is $11.21, and Gross Margin hovering well into bankruptcy territory at just 3%.......
ReplyDeleteHurray, the market is up! Well, sort of....
ReplyDeleteNSPH - This thing keeps retesting $3.30, brace yourselves....
ReplyDeletekeep in mind that AAPL is a huge part of the market and it's weakness is keeping things subdued in my opinion. i still believe AAPL has few near term catalysts...they had a huge boost from going to Verizon and that boost is gone. i wouldn't be surprised to see AAPL at $500 again...or lower. their earnings peaked possibly forever if not for a while. the chart is saying this too. this doesn't mean the market can't go higher...just that it will need to digest the fact that AAPL may have peaked.
ReplyDelete"i wouldn't be surprised to see AAPL at $500 again...or lower."
DeleteExcellent observation, I hadn't fully realized that possibility so soon but that might actually be happening now.
So the market might not be prepared (mentally) for AAPL downside and so it's creating confusion.
GOOG might become part of this as well, wonder how long it takes the market to make the adjustment(s)...
NSPH - LOL, well $3.30 held once again......
PAL - WTF is with this BS????
ReplyDeleteOkay, so Bernanke was talking down the market today, defending his QE decision as necessary.
ReplyDeletenew post
ReplyDeleteOK, I will post. Obama will win in Nov. It will not affect the markets much. Both parties are corrupt.
ReplyDeleteEnuf said. Same-O. I am sick of politics. At 72, I will not vote. First time ever. Per Chris Hedges "Voting is useless".