US - Market Direction 01 (May 08 - Jul 08)

Re: End of Day US Market Summary - Ongoing

Postby LenaHuat » Thu May 22, 2008 6:43 pm

Retrieved Stephen Green's remarks here :arrow:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/05/12/bcnhsbc112.xml

HSBC predicts US recession as emerging markets lift profits
By Philip Aldrick, Banking Editor
Last Updated: 12:59am BST 13/05/2008

HSBC has warned that US house prices will not stop falling until next year in a gloomy outlook that was also downbeat on both the UK and global economies.

The world's third largest bank has revised its forecast for the US and now predicts a recession this year, piling pressure on a global economy already facing the threat of inflation.


Chairman Stephen Green said it was "increasingly likely that the US will enter a recession in 2008, the length and depth of which is uncertain", which comes as "the major economic risks facing the global economy now include inflation, particularly from rises in food and energy prices".

Chief executive Michael Geoghegan added: "It's 2009 that we're looking at as when the US housing market bottoms out."

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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby blid2def » Thu May 22, 2008 7:09 pm

Source: http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/sto ... -76933.cfm

Key Sector Risk for the $SPX
By Kevin Haggerty | TradingMarkets.com | May 20, 2008

[... some day-trading stuff pruned ...]

NYSE volume was only 1.14 billion shares yesterday, but "they" still managed to close the $SPX and $INDU green because of a little bump in the market-on-close (MOC) session from 3:40-4:00PM. The rising price and declining volume scenario won't hold up much longer without a significant correction, and the way this rally has continued to advance, it seems as if the PPT (Plunge Protection Team) is doing its best to prevent one as Treasury Secretary H. Paulson continues to jaw bone the economy, despite the negative derivative meltdown and housing deflation news, not to mention rising crude oil and food prices.

The Energy and Materials sectors have carried the $SPX this year, and there was an interesting article on Bloomberg news yesterday about the energy earnings relative to the S&P 500 total earnings. It said that "without the $70 billion in oil producer profits from Exxon, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips, that the rest of the S&P 500 profits are -26% and -30.2% in the last two quarters. Energy companies make up about 50% of the income growth in the S&P 500 for the first three months of 2008", and that is not a positive for a sustained advance.

Both the energy and materials sectors are very extended, so any reversal in these sectors will put immediate pressure on the $SPX. I included the one year STDV charts for both the XLE (energy), and XLB (materials), and you can see that they are both out to their +2.0 STDV levels, and a reversal is the highest probability as volatility will revert to the mean. At the same time, the $SPX made a 1440.24 intraday high yesterday, versus the 1454 .618RT to 1576 bull market high from 1257, so you couldn't have more of a red alert for a near term reversal.

The next commentary will be Friday 5/23/08. The regular commentary days are Tuesday and Thursday, unless there is a travel problem, but I will give you a heads up if there is a change.

Check out Kevin's strategies and more in the 1st Hour Reversals Module, Sequence Trading Module, Trading With The Generals 2004 and the 1-2-3 Trading Module.

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From 1990 to 1997, Kevin Haggerty served as Senior Vice President for Equity Trading at Fidelity Capital Markets, Boston, a division of Fidelity Investments. He was responsible for all U.S. institutional Listed,OTC and Option trading in addition to all major Exchange Floor Executions. Mr. Haggerty is a co-founder of Tradingmarkets.com and is the founder of http://www.KevinHaggerty.com.
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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby kennynah » Thu May 22, 2008 7:20 pm

fidelity speaks...i pay attention...

however, oil trending up can always continue...who knows when it will correct...

i had a disllusion of 132pbl resistance only to see it surging to 135pbl... and although W has pointed out that with every new high, a correction will occur, that correction may not be deep.

for the die hard punter...one can PUT 1 contract on a oil related counter, with a tight stop loss trigger and if that hits, close off automatically, then re-establish another PUT 2 contracts, and then 4 contracts....etc...

but this means one has to have very deep pockets and be willing to assume the risks... although, when oil eventually reverses, it will tank like a ton of brick....perhaps justifying such risky trades...although i would say it is not very savvy a technique...

patience and with a hawk's eye for reversal signal may be a better approach here...
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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby winston » Thu May 22, 2008 8:21 pm

kennynah wrote:1) if someone naked short (with no durex protection), better dont caught if that counter gets an overnight offer and next day price jump sky high... then it's hong kong situation...

2) frankly, i dont believe in shorting stocks...i prefer to buy Puts instead...limited risk and just as bountiful potential rewards


Hi k,

1) If one is to short a counter, it should preferably be a fundamentally poor company with bad prospects. This way, it would reduce the risk of an overnight offer.

2) As you know, Puts are available only on bigger companies. These bigger companies are fundamentally ok and are normally the ones that could receive an overnight offer.

Therefore, I think that it is still better to short a stock whenever possible ( but only a fundamentally poor company with bad prospects ).

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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby kennynah » Thu May 22, 2008 10:35 pm

Re: End of Day US Market Summary - Ongoing
by kennynah on Thu 22 May, 2008 9:11 pm

i now have some more info on the sell down on 21may (wed)... this is a subscription based report that i receive daily..so, i share with you guys here...they are very accurate in their TAs and their facts on "accumulation", "distribution" and their info on institution sponsorship and bailouts.. such reports help me solidify my views...and checks any of my over-enthused opinion sometimes.

hope this info helps your trades

*****************

Turnover surged higher across the board, clearly indicating the presence of institutional selling. Total volume in the NYSE increased 13%, while volume in the Nasdaq ticked 9% above the previous day's level. The sharp losses on firmly higher volume caused both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to register another negative "distribution day." Further, yesterday was the first day since April 1 that volume in the NYSE exceeded its 50-day average level. Unfortunately, it's quite bearish that the first volume spike in nearly two months also corresponded with such heavy declines in the S&P and Dow. Market internals were ugly. In both exchanges, declining volume trounced advancing volume by a margin of approximately 5 to 1.

In yesterday(tues 20may)) morning's Market Plot, we said of the previous day's higher volume losses in the NYSE that, "Since it was the fifth such day of institutional selling in recent weeks, traders should now be cautious on the long side of the S&P and Dow. A healthy market can withstand a few days of selling by mutual funds and hedge funds over a four-week period, but the presence of more than four "distribution days" often spells an end to a streak of bullish momentum." Tuesday's(20may) fifth day of institutional selling undoubtedly had a role in convincingly tipping the balance of power to the bears yesterday, causing stocks to suffer another "distribution day." Most indicators will occasionally give false signals, but volume is one indicator that never lies. We pay close attention to the market's price to volume relationship every day because changes in volume patterns are always the hallmark of institutional trading activity that moves the market from day-to-day. Mutual funds, hedge funds, and the like can hide their intentions in many ways, but their footprints are always left behind in the volume bars.

Yesterday's(wed 21may) weakness caused substantial technical damage on the daily charts of the major indices. The S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and Dow Jones Industrial Average each sliced through their 20-day exponential moving averages. More notably, both the S&P and Dow firmly broke below support of their intermediate-term uptrend lines from their March lows -- the Dow had already done so on Tuesday. Showing a bit of relative strength, the Nasdaq still clings to support of its two-month uptrend line. Of these three broad-based indexes, the Dow is now clearly looking the worst
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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby HengHeng » Fri May 23, 2008 3:03 am

if scare use straddle or strangle ... give abit of premium ... if chiong either way also win
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Re: End of Day US Market Summary - Ongoing

Postby kennynah » Fri May 23, 2008 4:04 am

and this is how it came to end for 22may08 (thurs trading)

SP500 up 3 points @ 1,394
DOW up 24 points @ 12,625
Nazdaq up 16 points @2,464 (what an omnimous number)


Crude hit an intraday high of 135.09 but retreated to end ~130.50 ..... hmmmm.... a sharp retreat indeed

Gold (jun) hit a low of 917 (from a high of 932)


the oil theme that had been the bane to the major indexes for the last few sessions, today became the reason for a rebound of the US indexes.

does this mean, we have seen the bear returning back to its cage? lets view some technicals at the US Market Direction thread...
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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby kennynah » Fri May 23, 2008 4:52 am

since DOW has been the worst performing index, in terms of poor TA exhibited. let's review how DOW looks like at the end of 22 May 08 (thurs) trades...

you will notice some technical support at play here..

a) DOW is supported exactly by the MA50....
b) DOW is also being supported by a fibo retracement


BUT, if you scrutinize the candlestick, you will notice the evidence of selling pressure... Volume was light at abt 215mil transactions.

A combination of light volume and a small gain, cannot be interpreted as being bullish. At best, today's +ve result could simply be a technical rebound from the 2 preceding days of heavy selling.
In addition, Oil whilst made yet another historical high of >135pbl, didnt hold onto its gains and in fact ended in losing grounds; ending at about 130.50 This helped lift equities some what.


technically, u will see that a "hammer" candle formed tonight. some may content that this is a reversal pattern, suggesting it is a turning up of sorts. However, we must remember that for a candlestick "hammer" to be an effective reversal trigger, there must first be an extended bearish trend. Clearly, we are very early in any bearish cycle, if we are indeed in one. hence, this "hammer" formed tonight, cannot be a useful trigger yet.

Remember that next Monday is a US and UK public holiday and most people should be exiting their trades come tomorrow. Probably, most would have squared their positons today.


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Next, about Oil....which i will use Oil Service Holdrs Trust (OIH) as a proxy to crude's price.

You will again see a few technicals at play here...

a) On recent days of rising prices... Volume DECREASED...it signals a drying up of buying interests... or at least, the sponsors are no where to be seen...

b) On a down day on 21May (Wed), the Volume surged UP....


Both of these observation point to the possibility of a topping of OIH..... incidentally, almost all Oil related counters, including HES, MEE, APA, etc ...all ended in red today...

Image



does this mean that should Oil begin to recede in pricing that equities will begin rallying again ??? who can really say for sure...

Inflation is only one reason for the recent weakness in the equities indexes...other economic reasons cited are poor housing prices and still tight credit situation. high unemployment and a weak dollar.

but i like to keep this chart discussion strictly on TA alone...

in summary, the Oil chart looks toppish....and the DOW chart looks weak to the downside bias, given the clear distributions in the last 4 weeks.
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NYSE Trading Lowest Since 2001 While U.S. Volume Rises

Postby blid2def » Fri May 23, 2008 4:22 pm

Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... refer=home

NYSE Trading Falls to Lowest Since 2001 While U.S. Volume Rises

By Jeff Kearns and Edgar Ortega

May 22 (Bloomberg) -- Trading on the New York Stock Exchange fell 26 percent this quarter to the lowest since 2001 as alternative venues captured market share and the total volume of U.S. equities climbed.

The shares changing hands each day on the 216-year-old exchange fell to an average 1.27 billion in the second quarter from 1.57 billion a year ago, according to NYSE data compiled by Bloomberg. Total trading rose 19 percent from a year ago to an average of 6.84 billion shares a day, as companies such as Bats Trading Inc. and Direct Edge ECN LLC won more of the business, Bloomberg data show.

The NYSE's share of the total value traded slipped to 52 percent in the first three months from more than 70 percent in 1990, according to data from the World Federation of Exchanges. Analysts who depend on volume to help forecast the market's direction are losing one of their tools.

``Technicians should be losing sleep over this,'' said Ralph Acampora, the 40-year Wall Street veteran who helped pioneer technical analysis. ``I can't be as trusting of my indicator, because I don't have all the data.''

Bats, the third-largest equity market, took business from the NYSE and Nasdaq Stock Market since it started in January 2006. Kansas City, Missouri-based Bats matched about 8.9 percent of total U.S. shares in April, up from 3.5 percent a year earlier.

Trading, Volatility

Direct Edge, which is based in Jersey City, New Jersey, has matched 4.1 percent of the shares traded this month, up from 1.2 percent a year ago, spokesman Rafi Reguer said.

Trading in U.S. markets rose with stock volatility as investors took advantage of wider price swings. The NYSE's move to lift restrictions in March 2007 on automation increased volume by making it easier for brokerages that accommodate rapid-fire strategies.

The new venues make it more difficult for technical analysts, who use exchange data to measure demand for stocks. A rally in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index without an increase in volume may fade, analysts say. Last year's rebound in the S&P 500 during September came with the lowest volume in four months. The benchmark peaked in Oct. 10, and fell 11 percent since then.

``More volume means there's more money and support, more demand and momentum,'' said Acampora, the director of technical studies at the New York Institute of Finance. ``You need money to push stocks up.''

Unreliable Tool

Analysts can no longer count the NYSE or Nasdaq trades to gauge volume. Trading on the NYSE, a unit of NYSE Euronext, the world's largest owner of stock exchanges, fell to 1.05 billion shares on May 12, the lowest this year. The average over the last 30 days dropped to 1.26 billion shares, the fewest since October 2004. The 30-day average on the Nasdaq, owned by Nasdaq OMX Group Inc., declined to 834 million shares on March 14, the lowest since October 2004.

U.S. stock trading on every exchange rose 24 percent in April from a year earlier to an average 6.8 billion shares a day. The average reached a record 8.92 billion in January.

``At one point, you were able to focus on the volume on the NYSE or Nasdaq,'' said Ryan Primmer, the Stamford, Connecticut- based head of U.S. equities trading at UBS AG, the brokerage that handles the most shares in the U.S. ``Now it's only a slice of the picture. You need to look across all venues to understand the whole picture because no exchange is the dominant trader.''

The NYSE has overhauled its technology to execute trades faster, cut transaction costs and introduced new ways for investors to handle block trades as way to lure back business.

`Reverse the Trend'

``We are doing everything we can think of to try to reverse the trend,'' NYSE Euronext Chief Executive Officer Duncan Niederauer said May 15 at the annual shareholder meeting. ``The bottom line is that it's very easy to get started and compete with us. The barriers to entry for someone to get a license and compete with us are lower than they have ever been.''

The S&P 500 rallied 9.5 percent since March 10, boosted by the Federal Reserve's support for the bailout of Bear Stearns Cos. and the steepest interest-rate cuts in two decades. Average NYSE volume during the advance was 1.41 billion shares a day, 9.5 percent below the same period last year. Total volume on all exchanges rose 32 percent to an average of 7.27 billion a day during the period compared with 2007.

Dan Wantrobski, senior technical analyst for Fox-Pitt Kelton Cochran Caronia Waller in New York, says investors have reason to be concerned about the S&P 500's rally from March because total volume slipped since the index was falling in January.

``Volume was expanding on the way down and it's contracting on the way up,'' Wantrobski said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Kearns in New York at [email protected]; Edgar Ortega in New York at [email protected].
Last Updated: May 23, 2008 00:02 EDT
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Re: US - Market Direction

Postby kennynah » Fri May 23, 2008 11:53 pm

fellas.....

breaking news...


sp500....breaking down 1380 (key support)....let's see how this ends tonight...
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