Sunday, August 12, 2007
Bearish Newsletters/blogs
Signs of a Bottom. Analysis by leavitt brothers
http://www.screencast.com/users/LeavittBrothers/folders/Default/media/9f90634b-cab7-4077-878b-e3fbe67a9f84
Expect a Very SLOPPY MOVE HIGHER NEXT WEEK.
Friday, August 10, 2007
Thursday, August 9, 2007
Leavitt Brothers' View on Liquidity and Today's Market.
What is liquidity?
It relates to the ease and speed required to turn an asset into cash. Most stocks are highly liquid – with a quick call to your broker or the click of a mouse, you can convert a stock into cash. A car is less liquid. It may take a few weeks or longer to convert to cash. A house – for the most part – is even less liquid. Under normal market conditions, it could take a couple months to convert a house to cash. In today’s very illiquid housing market, it’s taking many months and often longer than a year.
How does liquidity work?
Here’s an example. Let’s say a bank has $1 million. It divides the money by 4 and lends it to 4 home buyers. The bank then takes those 4 mortgages, bundles them together and sells them to convert them to cash. It then takes this new cash and repeats the process. The bank lends to individuals, small business, large business etc. The lending of money is the engine that drives the economy.
Here’s where things go bad. If those home owners default on their mortgage payments, the banks will have a problem selling the mortgages, and if they can’t convert the mortgages to cash, they'll have nothing to lend out. With no cash to lend out, the economy drastically slows down because everything is built on debt.
If people can’t borrow money to buy homes or aspiring entrepreneurs borrow money to start business or large businesses borrow money to fuel growth or hedge funds borrow money (margin) to invest, the entire economic system grinds to a halt.
What I’m saying is extreme. Money can always be borrowed…at a price. Interest rates are the “cost of borrowing,” and as the cost goes up, less borrowing takes place.
Why are these hedge funds going under or at least halting redemptions? Because they’re the ones that bought those bundles of mortgages from the banks. Those bundles are like junk bonds. The paying higher rates but the owner has to assume more risk. Those funds simply went too far. Instead of allocating a small percentage of their fund to risky subprime mortgages, they went overboard and took on too much exposure. Defaults mean they’re not being paid, and it’s not like they can turn around and sell them to another sucker.
Funds going under means nothing to me. It’s their own damn fault. But if banks can’t loan money or can only loan money at high rates (i.e. liquidity is drying up), our economic engine will drastically slow down, and its ripple effect will be felt everywhere.
That’s why the Fed needs to lower rates. That’s why Cramer went ballistic in the youtube video. The Fed needs to lower rates to grease the economic engine.
Beautiful Day for the Bears.
Wednesday, August 8, 2007
Tuesday, August 7, 2007
Don't Blink
Monday, August 6, 2007
Zanger talks about Years Ending in '7'
One of the most impressive stock market cycles in 20th century is known as "Year 7 Pattern" which is that years ending in "7" have historically reached the top of a bull market and then quickly started selling off, which marked the beginning of deep correction or a bear cycle. Here are the historical stats.
1917 ==> -40.1% |
1927 ==> -10.2% |
1937 ==> -49.1% |
1947 ==> -24.0% |
1957 ==> -19.4% |
1967 ==> -25.2% |
1977 ==> -26.9% |
1987 ==> -35.1% |
1997 ==> -13.2% |
The average of these sell offs is 27% and so far this market is down about 8%.
For those of you have never heard of Zanger. Check him out at chartpattern.com. He's one of the best traders around.
Sunday, August 5, 2007
Market Analysis and Setups for the New Week
I am seeing some positive divergences taking shape on the 60 min charts. So that tells me that either downside will be very limited on Monday or we might open lower but close higher by the day's end. If we close poorly on monday then this mrkts isn't even responding to what has been extremely reliable indicators i have been using successfully for 4 years now. It will be a volatile session, there' no doubt about that right now.
Holy Grail.
Here's an attachment that explains in full detail.
http://www.lbrgroup.com/images///raschke_pt2_0304.pdf
This is by far one of the most consistent patterns i trade but it works best during strongly trending markets/stocks. Up or Down. Choppy and sideways mrkts/stocks will give many false signals.
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Think About This
I read this paragraph every day before i start my trading day. It's not the quantity of the trading that you do. My best trading days have by far been the days where i traded the least but these are the days where i made 1-3 trades and made a very good profit and just walked away. I know what kind of trade i like to look for and when i find it I jump on it without hesitation b/c it has worked for me many times before and feel confident in the outcome?
So, ask yourself, do you feel confident in the outcome? If not, don't take the trade!
CAll Me the Crippled Trader.
Friday, August 3, 2007
Broke My Thumb Playing Soccer :-(
Wednesday, August 1, 2007
Late Day Rally Spots the Bottom
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Market Obversations From My Experience
The biggest market moves are made in the first 1/2 hour of trading and the last hour of trading. That's b/c that's when the big money is squaring off their positions. That's why they tend to be the most exciting times of the day. I would avoid a ton of small shitty useless losses if i only traded during those two key times. That's when the pros are trading very actively, trends get stronger, breakouts/breakdowns are more meaningful, volume spikes etc etc. All other times during the trading session is just account churning, commissions to my brokers, boredom, frustration and usually small losses that add up over time.