Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Observation

I think that we are getting to a level where everyone is comfortable with the market going higher. This obviously has me nervous as the higher we grind up because of the US$ will make it harder for businesses and consumer to fund spending as interest rate will rise.
I am looking at the housing reports and it is terrible what I am reading and the increase in the interest rates will only keep the return of the housing market even further. It is a high probability as I have said many times we will be in a recession on the housing front for years.
I think there is a good shot the administration and FED have lengthened the recession with the continued printing of money and I am expecting another shoe to drop before the fourth quarter of 2009.
Apple dropping prices is a sign of consumers feeling the crunch even for higher end products. While the market chop around here just read news and get the real stories.

MARKETJEDI

Monday, June 8, 2009

Some points to look for

920 on the S&P is the level to watch for the bears. If they can get us down to a close below 920 this week more than likely we should head down to 883 level with strong support @875.
Ont he upside 955 is the obvious number a break there should lead us to 968 then above that 1000 area.

The rally is getting thinner but inflation in prices and devaluing dollar can lead us to higher nominal stock prices so be careful

Read link

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/07/opinion/07cohanWEB.html?_r=1

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Job Numbers

Remember we have the important Job number @ 8:30 am tomorrow.

Bulls

The bulls made a very good case here today by defending the lower levels of the day. Good shot we inch higher and as I said before looks like we will make a intermediate high before the second week of July which should be an excellent shorting opportunity.
GS upped their target on Oil and oil made a mad rush to a new multi month high.
Anyone notice the commodities, Oil, Gold, silver all higher as I have been saying for months expect those to head higher as the Dollar get shaky.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Break out or Make out

Did the market break out yesterday or did it make out with the bulls just to make them happy :)
Today I think I would say break out but we broke out into heavy resistance and that makes it hard to get much traction today. I do believe we will see the 960 area this week but then I would expect some kind of meaningful decline but we been calling for that to no prevail.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Economist.com

Don't get too excited about some recent brighter economic news

IT HAS been a cheerful couple of days for those starved of bright economic news. Hopeful statistics have been trickling in from many parts of the world. On Friday May 29th revised first quarter GDP figures for America showed that the economy there had contracted slightly less than had earlier been reported. In addition durable-goods orders in the country rose by the most in 16 months. In Japan, factory output rose by 5.2% in April, the biggest monthly increase, in percentage terms, in over half a century. And in the first quarter India’s economy grew by a bullish 5.8%, compared with a year before, while South Korea’s industrial production continued to rise in April.

Even in gloomy Europe there are encouraging signs. Poland’s GDP ticked up by 0.8% in the first quarter, as did German private consumption (in the same period) and retail sales also grew, by 0.5%, in April. British consumer confidence remained steady in April, and house prices there rose both in March and May, according to one index.

For optimists, these are all signs that might point towards the beginning of the end of the “Great Recession”. Headline writers, and those who are urging stockmarkets to continue rising, will continue to talk of hopes of recovery. Yet a closer look at the detail of the latest figures suggests that hope springs eternal and will latch on to what it can—even when a more sober analysis would suggest there is a long way to go before recovery sets in.

Optimists make much of statistics that beat analysts’ expectations. But when a particular figure outdoes predictions it may be because those expectations were overly pessimistic, rather than a sign that something fundamental has changed for the better.

What, for instance, is the right reference point on the latest news on India's economy? Doomsters might fret that it has grown at the slowest quarterly pace in several years. Cheerleaders could rejoice that it has expanded slightly faster than most people had expected. Weary of negative news, the latter explanation is a tempting way to make sense of the numbers, but the gloomy view is equally valid.

Consider, too, the figures for consumer confidence in Britain. Although consumer gloom seems to have abated, the reported level of –27 is remarkably low by historical standards. If one takes into account reports that British consumers had been growing a bit more confident in recent months, the latest statistic could suggest a halt to a small rally, which is hardly something to cheer. This example highlights the difficulty of extrapolating from a single month or quarter of data, which can easily be skewed by one-off events such as a national holiday or sudden desperate measures by retailers to offload stock. Discerning whether a more sustained recovery might be under way takes, unsurprisingly, more data.

Thus pessimists, who are unconvinced that the worst is over for the world economy, have much to reinforce their dark mood. One particular concern is that the financial and credit problems at the root of the global recession have not been dealt with satisfactorily. Keiichiro Kobayashi, a Japanese economist, has looked back to Japan’s experience in the late 1990s and argues that unless the banks are fixed, a strong recovery for the world economy is impossible. Some disagree, suggesting that economic output can bounce back even before credit and financial markets are again healthy, if consumers get their wallets open. But even if this argument is compelling in some historical cases, this time it seems that household spending in many economies will remain weak because of high levels of debt.

One man who has made his name in recent years as a doom-monger, Nouriel Roubini, an economist at New York University, recently suggested that recovery from recession was far from imminent, arguing that “it's going to last another six to nine months”. It might not be surprising that he avoids a bullish prediction, but Mr Roubini goes one step further, noting that other economists are still suggesting a “doomsday” scenario, with continuing contraction for a long time to come, and thus even he could be considered as an optimist.