Sunday, October 3, 2010

Market view


The recession ended 14 months ago? Tell that to over 20 million people who cannot find work. We got a spike from the stimulus, but it's over. They fixed nothing. GDP went up nearly 4% and now it's tracing back to 1%. Yet the market has tacked on 5000 points.

Europe is still a mess. Japan is done....literally. China owns the world (and bulls rally on that?????).

Do you bulls not see what is happening? You rally on 'not so dire' reports....then you rally more on dire reports because the 'dire' report will force the fed to screw our children more (print money they will have to pay for).

Imagine the pain of all the bears in 1986/1987 as the market went up 70%......then, the ones who stuck to their convictions were rewarded within a matter of days. Same set up here, only one could argue the fundamentals are much worse today. We're up 80+ percent since the bottom....depite the fact that nothing was fixed, just bandaged.....we kicked the can down the road, now we're coming up to the can again....with a whole lot less resources than the first time we kicked it.

Then there was the tech rally in 1998/1999....bears ... how 3000 PE ratios could not last and the market would fall....as we saw, all of the 1998/1999 tech rally was wiped out in a matter of months.

The DOW is within 10% of all time highs.....with unemployment soaring uncontrollably (but sometimes 'not so dire')...15m+ homes in foreclosure, GDP growing less then 2% and the likes of AMD, INTC and many other tech stocks warning, national debt and spending at all time highs, states and local governments considering bankruptcy, Europe printing billions to keep their continent from collapsing....and we're approching all time highs.....

Really?

I'll keep my shorts, and I'll be rewarded....This latest 8 week, no volume, POMO rally will be gone in a matter of a week.....just wait and see.

If your a bull, you're not paying attention, at all.

A great read if you have more time http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/the-biggest-disconnect-of-all-time-40273

If you dont have time go to bottom conclusion
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The Biggest Disconnect of All Time



I’m seeing one of the biggest disconnects of all time — between the underlying U.S. economy and the performance of the stock market. Just consider what we’ve learned about the economic fundamentals in the past several days …

• Consumer confidence plunged in September — to 48.5 from 53.2 in August. That was far below the 53 reading economists were expecting, and the worst in seven months.

• The Richmond Fed’s manufacturing index plunged from 11 in August to NEGATIVE 2 in September. Economists were looking for a reading of 6. That was the worst since January. The report followed a dismal Dallas Fed reading from a day prior. That region’s index tanked to -17.7 from -13.5 in August.

• The housing market? Yeah, it still stinks. New home sales flat-lined at 288,000 in August, the second-worst month in U.S. history. Home prices fell to their lowest level since December 2003. Builder confidence held at the lowest level since early 2009. Existing home sales bounced a bit, but they recouped less than a third of their 27 percent July swan dive.

In other words, things aren’t getting better in the real world. They’re getting worse! But on Wall Street it’s party time. Investors are essentially the most bullish they’ve ever been. And it looks like September 2010 could be the best for stocks of any September in seven decades.

What’s going on?

Promise of Free Money Distorting Markets …

Once upon a time not so long ago, asset class performance closely tracked the underlying fundamentals. If oil supplies rose, oil prices fell. If income, jobs, production, and corporate profits gained, so did stocks. If the economy improved, bond prices fell and interest rates rose. You get the picture.

But these days, it’s a different story …

Stocks, bonds, commodities, and other assets are trading in virtual lock step thanks to the Fed’s most dramatic intervention and interference in the markets of all time. All it takes is a whisper of “quantitative easing” and stocks take off, bonds take off, commodities take off, and the dollar implodes.

Housing is the one sector the Fed has not been able to revive.
Housing is the one sector the Fed has not been able to revive.

About the only asset class that’s NOT responding to all this free money talk is the one asset the Fed probably wants to respond the most — housing.

The latest S&P Case-Shiller report showed that home prices resumed their deterioration in July, falling 0.1 percent. Prices are down 3.6 percent since the Fed rolled out QE1 in November 2008 and 28 percent since the peak of the market four years ago.

Stated another way, the fundamentals haven’t mattered lately. Stocks are reacting to the prospect of the Fed debasing our currency. That debasement is driving up asset values, as well as contra-dollar investments and the price of almost everything we consume.

A few examples:

  • Gold has surged almost $300 an ounce from its February low,
  • Copper has jumped 188 percent from its recent low,
  • Corn has exploded 58 percent,
  • Wheat has climbed 65 percent,
  • And sugar has risen 90 percent.

… But the Disconnect Simply Cannot Last

Stock market bulls would have you believe this will last to infinity and beyond. “Don’t fight the Fed,” they say.

I have a different take. “Fighting the Fed” may sting a bit in the SHORT TERM. But it has been an incredibly successful strategy over the LONGER TERM.

For instance …

You could’ve “fought the Fed” by shorting the heck out of housing and mortgage stocks even as Fed officials told you the problems in those sectors were “contained.” Doing so would have made you a fortune!

You could’ve “fought the Fed” by selling stocks into every single interest rate cut between 2008 and 2009. The Fed first lowered interest rates from 5.25 percent in September 2007. The Dow traded at 13,820 then. It proceeded to plunge to 6,470 over the ensuing couple of years.

I'd be a seller now, not a buyer.
I’d be a seller now, not a buyer.

And you could’ve “fought the Fed” back in 2000, when Alan Greenspan was singing the praises of the technology revolution even as the Nasdaq was about to crash.

The list of Fed policy failures and economic forecasting blunders goes on and on and on.

So to answer the question I’ve been hearing lately, no, I wouldn’t be buying stocks willy nilly because of the Fed. I’d be selling into the rally, and positioning for downside gains in vulnerable sectors using options and inverse ETFs.

And unless and until the real economy takes a turn for the better, the Fed’s QE2 program should ultimately fail to levitate stocks over the longer term."


Conclusion: Again only thing I can say is SHORT these markets, fundamentals are telling the longer term move in markets and fundamentals are horrible. Charts also indicating a crash comming or a BIG move down, and that is what I am expecting. I know I have been short for the last 2 weeks, but markets literally havent moved up a lot, just choppy since 1120-1150 around this area. Suddendly we could EASY loose all the gains in just a few days, and thats what I am looking for. My SPX target remains on 942 SPX in this month - October. I do also believe that this crisis could lead to another major war setting up. If you know the root reasons for World war 1 and 2, a world war 3 could come. But I'm not predicting any war , but just telling you that there is a good chance for it, some kind of chaos... take a look recent week with Europe- Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Greece.....


Holding all my TZA.



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