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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

Sunday, September 21, 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 the lower volume on the Friday surge non-confirming the 2%+ set-up advance delivered on Thursday. Still, the bulls have a shot at turning this very important confirming indicator positive if they can engineer a 2%+ high volume follow-through advance sometime next week. The leadership profile did turn positive on Friday, with 443 stocks making new 52 week highs versus 283 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 33.6, continuing the up-spike in fear. The primary Elliott wave count suggests the wave 3 of 3 meltdown run remains underway, with the current rally pop 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:

What can we say about the action this week other than to say "WOW!" The big question is what does all the violent ups and downs mean? Let's split the answer to that question into two parts, with the first looking at how stock market bottoms are formed (AKA the bull case,) with the second part focusing on what we're seeing now in relation to how bear markets usually unfold as bull hopes meet reality of imploding fundamentals (AKA the bear case.)

Bull case: Bears end after a capitulation that causes a huge spike up in fear as measured by the VIX as everything gets way oversold in a clear show of panic, followed by a vicious rebound, all following prolonged cash-infusion actions from the FED. Clearly all of those landed this week. The number of stocks making new highs have also eclipsed the number of stocks making new lows. So the bottom is in? Perhaps, perhaps not.

Bear case: The AK indicator remains negative, as does the 4% rule, and the accumulation profile (due to the lack of volume on Friday's big advance.) Breakdown/pullback are the hallmarks of bear market, with both often landing in vicious camp, which we clearly saw this week. Thus the technicals overall say the bull push has so far failed to deliver what is needed to turn a bear into a bull. The internal wave count suggested the NASDAQ was due a big recovery bounce before the next leg of the bear lands for real, and we certainly saw that Thursday and Friday. Is the repeat of the RTC bailout plan a game-changer? Maybe - at least in the short term - but probably not longer term. If the investment world loses a couple of trillion dollars, and the US government buys back some of that busted debt, does that mean the now very scared investment world sitting on the edge of catastrophe will go back to business as usual once the debt problem has been shifted from under Peter's cup to under Paul's? Or will the investment companies who have experienced the horror that 30 times leverage can deliver take that money simply to get rid of the busted crap so their balance sheets are more like 15 times leveraged? If so, the investment world is still not healed despite today's promises of massive cash infusions, as no one will be lending money to anyone in large amounts even after the busted debt has been taken off the balance sheet. Thus government money simply goes into the financial black-hole of disappearing money, and Wall Street is still closed for business, and still in need of huge inflows, as 15 times leverage is still a HUGE problem. Indeed, the current action from the FED and Treasury ensures that the investment banks have to put a price on all this busted debt, which means they can no longer hide behind their lies of how things really are. Which means the government has put a date to the day of reckoning where we get to see who has enough money to survive and who doesn't.

Our take: We simply cannot believe Wall Street, businesses, consumers, or investors, are going to take on debt like they have in the past to party-on like its 1999, nor for the US government to print money to drop from helicopters to fill consumers wallets. Thus the system should remain wounded, and the over-leveraged weak still on their way to bankruptcy. Worse, the economy is not even in recession yet. Wait until losses start to pile up from side of the equation. Wait until consumers loses their jobs as unemployment rises. There are only two ways out of this mess: put money in real people's wallets so that they can buy houses, and cars, and everything else - AKA reignite the party - or else let prices collapse as the weak get taken out so the rest of us can buy good assets cheap to go on to be winners on the rebound. The deleveraging process will ensure Wall Street remains wounded, and the fast-approaching recession will ensure that things get even darker going forward.

In short, we've seen nothing yet, and capital preservation remains the key.

Kevin Wilde, Chief Trading Strategist, AlphaKing.com

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

Friday, September 12, 2008

Stock Market in Crash Position

Trader Talk

The short term momentum oscillators remain negative, confirming the bearish stance of the AlphaKing Trading indicator. The accumulation/distribution profile remains negative, confirmed with a bearish leadership profile, with Friday's close yielding 61 stocks making new 52 week highs versus 367 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 29.3, showing yet another up-spike in fear. The primary Elliott wave count suggests the wave 3 of 3 meltdown run has begun. Waves 3s are the territory of stock market crashes 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:

The technical action this week was flat-out horrible. The fundamental news was equally horrid, with Lehman Brothers and AIG both looking like they better get some hard cash soon or else face a bankruptcy filing. Hurricane Ike looks like a summer shower compared to this financial tsunami. The FED meet on Tuesday, but what can they do that they haven't already done or tried? There's not much to add this ghastly set-up, except to reiterate our belief that preservation of capital is an absolute must at this critical, treacherous, juncture.

Kevin Wilde, Chief Trading Strategist, AlphaKing.com

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

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Bear Growls, Lehman Looms

Trader Talk

The major stock indexes took it on the chin once again as important support of the 50 day MAs were breached. Volume was once again heavy.

Officially, the NASDAQ fell 2.6% on 2.6 billion shares, while the Dow Industrials dropped 2.4% on NYSE volume of 7.3 billion shares. The leadership profile remains negative, with 103 stocks making new highs versus 575 stocks making new lows.

The short term momentum oscillators remain negative, confirming the bearish stance of the AlphaKing Trading Indicator. We have new trades below.

The technical evidence continues to mount that the next leg of the bear market is underway. Since this one should be an Elliott Wave 3 of 3, we should expect the crash set-up pattern to unfold over the next couple of weeks. The financial sector remains the primary problem for the markets as they simply cannot attract money into their businesses to cover ever-increasing losses in their leveraged debt speculations gone wrong. No money to counter big losses means bankruptcy. Lehman appears to be the next to go, to follow on from Fannie, Freddie, and Bear Stearns.

Many more should follow, with any domino follow-through effect that accelerates providing the fundamental back-drop of a bona-fide stock market crash that the Elliott Wave count says now is in play. The volatility this year has brutal to both bulls and the bears, though we've seen nothing yet, when matched against what is fast heading our way.

Kevin Wilde, Chief Trading Strategist AlphaKing.com.

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

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Jury Out on Bull / Bear Battle

Trader Talk

The major stock indexes traded back and forth the unchanged level today, with a mixed close run on higher volume. Officially, the NASDAQ fell 0.7% on 2.2 billion shares, while the Dow Industrials rose 0.1% on NYSE volume of 5.1 billion shares. The leadership profile remains negative, with 100 stocks making new highs versus 218 stocks making new lows.

The short term momentum oscillators remain negative, non-confirming the bullish stance of the AlphaKing Trading Indicator. We have no new trades at this time.

The technical set-up remains the same, with both the S&P500 and Dow Industrials challenging and bouncing off their 50 day moving averages today. The bull/bear battle to dictate the trend for the remainder of the year is held hostage to the current back and forth along those MAs. Commodities continue to collapse, and we reiterate our warning from earlier in the year that these cyclically sensitive groups should be avoided at all cost on the long side. If the bear returns from here all stocks should collapse, including commodity stocks. If the bull continues to run then money should move out of the lagging commodity stocks and into sure growth prospects such as pharmaceutical type of stocks. We do believe the bears will see a big win before the year is out, though we continue to see one more blast-off rally to the 200 day MAs before the end comes for real.

Kevin Wilde, Chief Trading Strategist AlphaKing.com.

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