Money talks, so the old expression goes. And in this market, cash has let word out that it still matters. A lot of investors of all stripes have taken heed, fleeing equities for the relative safe have and warm feeling of cold greenbacks.
Those forced to be invested, such as mutual, hedge and pension funds, don't have it so easy. They are forced to hang in and suffer with the rest of the suckers. Some even buy more, throwing caution to the wind along with the rest of their money.
The Fed is in a tough spot. Many are calling on Ben Bernanke to lower interest rates in an effort to free up capital markets and give the US indices a little bit of a boost. They won't do it and shouldn't. The malaise of this market was occasioned by easy credit; cutting rates would be like giving an addict more crack.
Today's package of misery was brought to investors by more credit-related issues, as potential losses at Countrywide Financial Corp. and trouble financing deals at KKR Financial Holdings sent more shock waves through the financial community. For those already in cash, the scene is almost hilarious, watching brokers, bankers and financiers squirm and fidget over their lost dough. Many of them are deserving of the afflictions, having bought into a housing bubble that sent everything, including stocks, over the rainbow.
Dow 12,861.47 -167.45; NASDAQ 2,458.83 -40.29; S&P 500 1,406.70 -19.84; NYSE Composite 9,089.04 -165.23
The Dow traded below 13,000 for the first time since April 25 and is likely to stay there for a long time, barring some kind of dead cat bounce or jolt from the various central banks that have been funneling money into stocks for the better part of the last two weeks. The Fed snuck in another $7 billion today. It did no good and one gets the feeling that the banks are on the verge of throwing in the towel... which would be wise.
Our own scorecard for the Dow shows 8 sessions in positive territory and 12 on the minus side since the all-time peak at 14,000.41 on July 19. That's over 1100 points lost in less than a month - about 8%.
Declining issues took it to advancers by better than a 3-1 margin. New lows totaled 707. There were only 46 new highs. Every single indicator points to more losses ahead.
I've asked colleagues to find bright spots. None of them have been able to, though I've come up with two: shorts and option puts players are making a fortune, and this will end, eventually. Stocks go up and down. They went up for more than four years running. A couple of years of downward trajectory is only fitting.
Maybe there's a third positive: charts (and fundamentals) still matter. The indices broke through 200-day moving averages and the Dow, in particular, is about to cross over its 50-day MA.
Oil was up another 95 cents to $73.33. Oddly enough, gold was unchanged, while silver actually lost 19 cents to $12.56. When the lid comes off the metals, look out. They will serve notice that calamity is finally upon the fiat money, fractional-reserve banking system.
Blog Archive
-
►
2011
(2135)
- October (60)
- August (110)
- July (446)
- June (377)
- May (580)
- April (282)
- March (134)
- February (120)
- January (26)
-
►
2010
(261)
- December (24)
- November (21)
- October (22)
- September (23)
- August (21)
- July (20)
- June (23)
- May (22)
- April (20)
- March (24)
- February (20)
- January (21)
-
►
2009
(254)
- December (22)
- November (25)
- October (21)
- September (19)
- August (17)
- July (19)
- June (22)
- May (20)
- April (21)
- March (22)
- February (23)
- January (23)
-
►
2008
(533)
- December (22)
- November (18)
- October (22)
- September (26)
- August (21)
- July (24)
- June (21)
- May (50)
- April (22)
- March (98)
- February (187)
- January (22)
Labels
Forex Trading
Forex Indicators
Forex
Forex Candlestick Chart Patterns
gold
silver
Economy
Finance and Investment
oil
Ben Bernanke
Business Opportunities
Custom Indicators
Bank of America
RSI
Goldman Sachs
Relative Strength Index
Moving Average
non-farm payroll
Forex Analysis
JP Morgan Chase
BAC
banks
Greece
foreclosures
Bollinger Bands
GDP
Plunge Protection Team
Google
Nasdaq
Obama
President Obama
interest rates
employment
housing
JPM
MACD
Moving Average Convergence Divergence
Real Estate
retail sales
Bernanke
INTC
Insurance
Intel
Treasury
European Union
Ireland
inflation
jobs
oil futures
Forex Education
GM
Linear Regression Channel
Mortgage
Pivot Support Resistance
Stock to buy
Stocks Alerts
existing home sales
Dow Jones
Durable Orders
General Motors
Oil Gas
eBay
mortgage defaults
Forex News
IBM
TA analysis
bonds
cash
central banks
earnings
liquidity
recession
Biggest Losers
Biggest Gainers
John Boehner
Market Future
Market Updates
housing starts
Exxon-Mobil
ISM
Internet Marketing
Loan
Penny Stock
Bailout
Big Oil
Fannie Mae
Freddie Mac
Great Depression
JNJ
Microsoft
US stocks
bank failures
budget
credit cards
median home prices
mortgages
Ben Bernake
Caterpillar
Earning date
George Orwell
Santa Claus Rally
Technology
bank regulations
bull market
penny stocks
stock market
Barack Obama
Berkshire Hathaway
Black Friday
Cerberus
Facebook
Fool's Gold
Money Talk
Mortgage news
Nikkei
Secured loans
bargain stocks
foreign currencies trading
forex market trading
free credit report
graduate loans
investment
mortgage payments
real estate tools
retest
retirement
No comments:
Post a Comment