Where is the Dow & others heading in 2005?

Oil figures on Weds could take a very important role this week because they could be more reliable than lasts weeks numbers
"Major and independent refiners were in crisis management , and filing accurate paperwork on the moving target of storage and production was quite possibly an appropriate afterthought,"
 
Hi joeMcnicholl,
Many people find trading stressful, let`s face it losing money is a stressful occupation. Stressed people are in no mood to "lighten up ". A little interjection of humour helps. There is a very funny parody on Brokers on the www.DowDecoded.com webpage. It`s priceless - enjoy. You will need Windows Media Player. Staying with the subject of your article, in the short timeframe trade , everything you need to know about a stock is already reflected in the price, however for longer timeframe trades, you then need to pay closer attention to Fundamentals , volume is a very important indicator when judgeing the strength of the market and whether confidence is building or waning.Volume would be one of the first things I look for after the underlying trend.
 
Market Movement

Hi Joe, thank you for this post it is spot on !
lagging Indicators do not help the public investor cope with the market cycles, and each Index has a cycle size / amount of points movement that is different to the other Index cycles.
I have found that with study you can see this size / amount and so see the next possible move up or down .
Charts do work ! if you put in the work ! and your Indicator is not lagging !
Thanks again for your post
Best Regards :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:




joeMcnicholl said:
good evening

The unskilled eye can see a certain number of definable highs and lows, peaks and valleys, troughs and crests - the markets will move through what should be some what predictable (what fudgestain calls gyrations.) These movements are called cycles or waves. While the markets have historically given us significant returns, the ride from one day to the next is never without some bumps.

Despite our desire to think that the public investors have a hand in market direction, their participation (as a percentage to overall ownership) is the equivalent to an umbrella in a hurricane. The institutional accounts, arbitrage firms, mutual funds and hedge funds are the real driving force behind our markets. These institutions' objective is simple: they need to outperform the indices . To do that effectively, they rely on highly-sophisticated algorithms to determine overbought and oversold conditions in the market place.

Unfortunately, by the time the individual investor perceives the buying "rally", the tide has already begun to shift. When perceiving the rally, individual investors will react to it, but, in doing so, they are "unconsciously" already starting the secondary rally, into which those big institutions are already unloading. We've all heard the slogan "buy low, sell high", but without the proper tools, guidance and advice on your side, this principle - while fundamental in concept - is virtually impossible to execute.

Understanding and evaluating overbought/oversold conditions can be a life-saver to any trader,stay alert to the overall movements of the markets not hour by hour or day to day, but in a larger picture.While overall trends will dictate an increasing or decreasing market, there will be substantial opportunities to capitalize on the wave-like movements that occur in the markets.You can then postion your self intraday if one is a day trader to trade with the trend and look for set ups

joe
 
The technical analyst guru on Sunday's Bloomberg is forecasting the S&P will be about 1270 in 2/3 weeks time.

We shall see
:-0
 
kriesau said:
The PPI and trade/budget deficits tomorrow should be significant although they will predate the consequences of Katerina.

Interesting perspective in todays LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-ferguson12sep12,0,1916794.story?track=tothtml

I like this quote in particular ;)


'Yet this may be one of those Wile E. Coyote moments, when the coyote keeps running for several seconds after overshooting the edge of a cliff. For what is propelling the economy forward continues to be the extraordinary profligacy of the average American household..'
 
Watching the DAX today (as I mentioned in earlier post), so far done a pop and drop around that 5000 level, and now gone neg
 
'As the energy industry attempts to restart its damaged platforms, pumps and pipelines in the Gulf of Mexico, efforts are being hampered by damage to the coastal facilities that serve as the staging area for offshore operations, The Wall Street Journal reports. The Louisiana coast is home to a huge concentration of service companies that bore the brunt of Hurricane Katrina's landfall late last month. The assessment of offshore facilities is still a work in progress, but industry officials said it will take considerably longer to recover from Katrina than it did a year ago after Hurricane Ivan, which skirted the eastern edge of the Gulf energy fields. Nearly half of oil and natural-gas production in the Gulf remains idled, according to the federal Minerals Management Service, as service companies struggle to right themselves and help their customers assess and repair damage. The Coast Guard reports 52 platforms were sunk by Katrina, compared with only seven by Ivan.'
 
Market Movement
Hi Joe, thank you for this post it is spot on !

If you liked it you can read the rest of the article on Investopedia from where is was cut and pasted. :)

http://www.investopedia.com/articles/03/060903.asp

Anyway, some charts, in no particular order and with nothing approaching useful interpretation from yours truly, but perhaps food for thought.

Rising wedges (bearish pattern) on the dailies, rising targets of 10950-11000 Dow / 1260 SPX / 2220 Comp

Options expiry could be an important Fib timing date, on oil and indices.

Rising wedges on the hourly SPX/Naz.

Some tempting shorter term targets on the Dow thanks to an upsloping channel.

Rally losing breadth steam.

Can the Utilities break THIS resistance for longer than a couple of weeks? (Note that the Transports have NOT been confirming the moves in INDU / UTIL recently).

---

An index high on next Friday and I'll buy some December DIA puts.

A rally that takes out the resistance line around 10720 will suck in a lot of bulls. It would be typical if it then ran up another 100 points or so to the top of "my" channel, only to plummet when the last has bought. We'll see...
 

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The market is sucking in a lot of bulls because it appears that it is invincible and can take anything thrown at it.
 
kriesau said:
Oil still slipping back - now $63.65


and oil falling further, hmm wonder what the excuse will be if the market falls..

'market went down despite the drop in price of oil because of fears lack of demand with slowing economic growth'

on the other hand, if it goes up

'market went up because of the drop in price of oil on optimism of improving economic growth with the fall in price'

:rolleyes:
 
Resistance at 10700 still proving a powerful ceiling to break through.
Oil now at $63.30
 
very quiet today so far.obviously everyone waiting for the news tomorrow, will 10700 prove as stubborn as before? or will we sail through on up to 10800 on a tide of bullish euphoria? anyway im starting to think we may see a new yearly high before the big move down,i just hope we get a clear signal before it does :confused:
 
Joules MM1 said:
How hard were US (mid/small caps) equities held back or made to go down?
sorry Joules... can't see any attachments? was that intended.. or is it just turned into Ashes :D
 
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