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Saturday, September 27, 2008

Weekly Trend & Trade Review

Trader Talk

The short term momentum oscillators remain negative, confirming the bearish stance of the AlphaKing Trading indicator. The accumulation/distribution profile remains negative, with a failure of the bulls to engineer a 2%+ follow through advance to trigger a new buy from this very important confirming indicator. The leadership profile remains negative, with 20 stocks making new 20 week highs versus 484 stocks making new 52 week lows.

The 4% rule remains bearish, while Federal Reserve policy remains bullish. The VXO volatility indicator closed the week at 39.4, continuing the up-spike in fear. The primary Elliott wave count suggests the wave 3 of 3 meltdown run remains underway, with the current sideways churn part of a minor wave 2 prior to the start of the meltdown crashing wave 3 of wave 3. If so, we remain on the cusp of a stock market crash of historical proportions.

Traditional seasonal trends have us looking for a difficult third quarter for the bulls, while the Presidential cycle remains bullish for the remainder of 2008. The Benner-Fibonacci cycle will remain bullish until 2010, though this prolonged time period may include one or more cyclical bear phases. The AlphaKing combination cycle sees a bear market slump running all the way into mid-December when the next major turn-date is slated to land.

Summary:

Once again we start the weekly summary with what we wrote to start last's update: "WOW!"

The Treasury and FED propose to prevent an absolute melt-down of the financial markets with a $700 billion mega infusion of capital to Wall Street. Congress says YES. Then voters go ape on the notion of bailing out Wall Street and idiot individuals who bought more house than they could afford, with voter resistance forcing one significant portion of Congress - House Republicans - to say NO WAY. OK, but don't the democrats control Congress? Yes. Can't they just push the vote through without the House Republicans? Yes. So why the big deal? Why the stall? If it's so important - saving the financial world from doomsday, and all that - then why not go ahead and do the vote already? Perhaps they fear a revolt in the election, with the dems appearing to use a massive tax and spend program to socialize Wall Street. Not something many candidates would want to run on in 2008.

Politics aside, both the bull and bear cases we outlined last week remain intact, with the reaction post decision from Congress this weekend on the bailout package the Big Kahuna that decides where we go next. An outright crash in the non-too-distant future is well within expectations here, even if the financial markets are to do just fine going forward from a structural sense. Bear markets precede recessions, and once they have run their course those prolonged periods of falling stock prices are followed by prolonged periods of rising prices as the new bulls takes hold. What the debate is regarding the financial system collapsing - or not - refers to a deflationary collapse and economic depression. Heck, we're only at the 20% of loss level for the stock indexes from the October 2007 peak, and 30% is more the norm in cyclical bear markets. Indeed, 1973-1975 saw a 50% bear loss without a depression. And 1987 a 50% loss without even seeing a recession, let alone a depression. With 2000-2002 experiening a 80% loss for the NASDAQ without the economy flipping into recession. So further losses here can easily land even if the bailout package gets the nod from Congress and goes on to proves itself a massive success.

If we have it wrong and the bulls have it right, then our indicators will turn positive and we'll all be heralding the Paulson plan as our savior as the new bulls unfolds and we all get to party again like its 1999. So relax, and enjoy the political spectacle this weekend, and see what the nervous nellies do with the news that is sure to land between now and the open Monday.

Kevin Wilde, Chief Trading Strategist, AlphaKing.com

For Free charts with trading signals and fundamentals ratings, visit AlphaKing

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