350zCommtech's Account Talk

The intraday bottom yesterday for the DJIA was 7882 and the ending volume was 11.16 billion shares - smells like a climax of capitulation I think. If we don't hold here we may be headed for next support at 7533-7197 and that would not be helpful towards the I fund. I believe the bottom is established and now we gently build a new base or we rocket up out of here with a vengance - fundamentals did not get us here, it was all emotional fear and panic from the whimpy hedge funds having to meet margin calls thus the selling was indiscriminate and we all paid the price. I think most 401K investors will hold from this point forward - they are more informed than in past bear market lows. In the same vein it may be emotion and fear of missing the next big thing that may guide us up the next 20%. I'm prepared to play it either way - either I dog paddle at the bottom of the well a little longer or I catch the chopper rope when it comes by my way.
 
true

but you can continue to sell to the G fund after you run out of IFT.

I have 4 IFT this month so far.

I'm wondering something about that. With the whole percentage requirement, it's hard to avoid buying some stock fund shares even when moving some of one stock fund to G. Do you have to make sure every stock fund goes down in number of shares?
 
I'm wondering something about that. With the whole percentage requirement, it's hard to avoid buying some stock fund shares even when moving some of one stock fund to G. Do you have to make sure every stock fund goes down in number of shares?

You can round down to the next whole percent, or take a few, or any number of percentage points off, or lower, on the stock funds.
 
Enjoy!:)

European Leaders Vow Bank Guarantees, Bid to Stop Financial Rot

By James G. Neuger

Oct. 12 (Bloomberg) -- European leaders agreed to guarantee bank borrowing and use government money to prevent big lenders from going under, trying to stop the financial hemorrhage and stave off a recession.
At a summit chaired by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, leaders of the 15 countries using the euro offered their most detailed battle plan yet for bandaging the crippled credit markets and halting panic among investors.

``We need concrete measures, we need unity, which is what we achieved today,'' Sarkozy told a press conference at the Elysee Palace in Paris. ``None of our countries acting alone could end this crisis.''
As they improvised a response to the banking calamity that started on Wall Street, Europe's leaders sought to go beyond pledges made by the Group of Seven and to deflect criticism that they are taking scattershot country-by-country steps without a credible joint strategy.

The key measures announced today are: a pledge to guarantee new bank debt issuance until the end of 2009; permission for governments to shore up banks by buying preferred shares; and a commitment to recapitalize any ``systemically'' critical banks in distress.

France, Germany, Italy and other countries will announce national measures tomorrow, Sarkozy said.
``I don't even want to imagine what might happen'' if the markets react negatively, Klaus-Peter Mueller, head of the German banking association, said earlier today in Washington before the blueprint was unveiled. The market response may be something ``we haven't seen at any stage in our lifetimes.''
A communique gave no indication of how much governments are willing to spend or the size of bank assets deemed at risk, leaving unclear the ultimate cost to the taxpayer.
To contact the reporter on this story: James G. Neuger in Paris at jneuger@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: October 12, 2008 14:50 EDT
http://bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ake_hIeoOmBo&refer=home
 
350,

I think this should give a boost of confidence to the markets. even if for a short time. Or am I wishful thinking?
 
350,

I think this should give a boost of confidence to the markets. even if for a short time. Or am I wishful thinking?

I think this will give a boost to the markets tomorrow. We will know very soon once the currency markets stabilize. At the moment, I'm seeing some huge swings.
 
SPX closed right at the 50% Fib level of 1003.

Next resistance at 1043, followed by 1100.

IMO, real resistance is at 1200, near the 50dma.

I hope we get to 1200 by Friday so I can get out before the retest. Yes, there is going to be a retest. And it might be a lower low.


Btw, the Yen is continuing to fall after hours.:)
 
SPX closed right at the 50% Fib level of 1003.

Next resistance at 1043, followed by 1100.

IMO, real resistance is at 1200, near the 50dma.

I hope we get to 1200 by Friday so I can get out before the retest. Yes, there is going to be a retest. And it might be a lower low.


Btw, the Yen is continuing to fall after hours.:)

What a buy & sell day !!! Buy early and sell late. I unloaded it all at 3:58 PM EST. I bought in Friday and there is no way I was about to wait to hear Ben, Paulson or Bush speak tomorrow so this was bet and get. :D

Back to the TSP I wonder with this new plan how the F Fund works that might get interesting !!! I am still on me arse with the C Fund might move to a S Fund/C Fund split.:nuts:
 
Back to the TSP I wonder with this new plan how the F Fund works that might get interesting !!! I am still on me arse with the C Fund might move to a S Fund/C Fund split.:nuts:

Good thing the bond market was closed today.:D The F fund would have gotten a pounding.

This plan is good for stocks and bad for the F fund in the short term, but once the drugs wear off, the reality of a recession/depression(tapped out consumers, lower earnings, etc..) will set in.
 
Good thing the bond market was closed today.:D The F fund would have gotten a pounding.

This plan is good for stocks and bad for the F fund in the short term, but once the drugs wear off, the reality of a recession/depression(tapped out consumers, lower earnings, etc..) will set in.

I think the F Fund may have some real problems and we really have little to work with trying to figure it out now. Since we are in the World plan how would the 10 year note be valued. I can't put money in something or fund unless I know what is behind it. The FRTIB has to explain in full what system will be used to gage value. If it's the old system that doesn't hold because we are now in a World Bank therefore the 10 year note for the F Fund is changed forever and it's value. JMO !!!
 
I think the F Fund may have some real problems and we really have little to work with trying to figure it out now. Since we are in the World plan how would the 10 year note be valued. I can't put money in something or fund unless I know what is behind it. The FRTIB has to explain in full what system will be used to gage value. If it's the old system that doesn't hold because we are now in a World Bank therefore the 10 year note for the F Fund is changed forever and it's value. JMO !!!

You are absolute correct. Before the volatility, we were able to use the 10 and 30yr to calculate the F fund with ease. Now, the treasury calculation does not work and the AGG is way off on just about everyday.

It will be interesting to see the 10yr/30yr rate shoot to the moon tomorrow. With the massive world bailout, I can't see how they can keep it down.:D

Mortgage rates will rise along with the 10yr. That can't be good for the economy.
 
SPX topped at 1043(61.8%) this morning.

Libor down just a little.

Have the CBs of the world shot there last bullet? What more can they do?

The latest plan saves their friends but dilutes the share prices. Also, if dividends have to get cut, game over.
 
Iceland is melting....

Icelandic Stocks Drop 77% as Trading Resumes After 3-Day Halt

By Jakob Lindstroem

Oct. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Iceland's benchmark stock index plunged 77 percent, the biggest decline on record, as trading resumed after a three-day suspension and the nationalization of the country's largest banks.
Investors demanded a higher premium to hold Icelandic government bonds, while the price of the country's currency remained ``undetermined,'' according to TD Securities.

The global financial crises sparked the collapse this month of Kaupthing Bank hf, Glitnir Bank hf and Landsbanki Islands hf with debts equivalent to as much as 12 times the size of Iceland's economy. The three banks accounted for about 76 percent of the OMX Iceland 15 Index's value prior to the nationalization.

``We are quite far away from having it up and running in terms of anybody being able to invest, or disinvest in the Icelandic stock market,'' said Lars Christensen, a senior strategist at Danske Bank A/S in Copenhagen. ``Given that we don't have a normally functioning exchange-rate market, a fixed income market, we don't have a clearing system between the banks internally, it's hard to talk about any well-functioning stock market.''

The OMX Iceland 15 fell 2,326.22 to 678.40, the lowest since April 1996. The gauge has lost 89 percent this year, making it the worst performer among 88 equity indexes tracked by Bloomberg News. Four of the 13 other stocks in the index didn't trade, while the six that did accounted for about 8.5 percent of the measure's weighting before today.

Global Stocks Rally
Iceland's record decline came as the U.S. plan to inject $250 billion in banks helped send Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index to its biggest two-day gain on record. The regional benchmark added 3 percent today, while the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 0.7 percent.

Trading in Icelandic stocks was halted since Oct. 9 after the OMX Iceland 15 lost 30 percent in nine days as the country's financial system collapsed. Iceland started talks in Moscow today to secure an emergency loan of as much as 4 billion euros ($5.47 billion) from Russia.

There was no trading yesterday in Iceland's krona by foreign banks and the price of the currency remains ``undetermined,'' Beat Siegenthaler, chief strategist for emerging markets at TD Securities Ltd. in London, wrote in a note today.
Currency, Bonds

The currency's bid/ask spread, the price at which traders are willing to buy and sell, was 300/450 per euro on Oct. 10, according to TD Securities.
Investors demanded a yield premium of 473 basis points more than European government bonds, up from 412 basis yesterday, to hold Iceland's 1 billion euros of 3.75 percent bonds due 2011, according to BNP Paribas SA prices on Bloomberg. The bonds yield 8.19 percent.
Among the stocks that did trade today, Alfesca, a maker of salted fish products, dropped 0.95 krona, or 17 percent, to 4.5 kronur. Icelandair Group Holding hf, the country's largest carrier, retreated 0.5 krona, or 3.2 percent, to 15 kronur. Marel hf, an Icelandic meat-processing company, lost 0.6 krona, or 0.8 percent, to 71.1 kronur.

`Need Capital'
The country should seek aid from the International Monetary Fund and later apply for European Union membership and adopt the euro, Foreign Minister Ingibjorg Solrun Gisladottir wrote in Morgunbladid on Oct. 13.

``There's not that much left to trade,'' said Ross Porter, a Norway-based portfolio manager at Skagen ASA, which manages $10 billion. ``They will need capital.''
The OMX Nordic Exchange said in a release late yesterday that it set the prices of the three nationalized banks to zero in the index after ``not being able to receive valuations from market participants.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Jakob Lindstroem in Stockholm at jlindstroem@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: October 14, 2008 12:06 EDT http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601084&sid=a6_D.jvgUmFA&refer=stocks
 
Hi 350Z-

If Denninger's "Market Ticker" website isn't on your reading list, it should be. Yes, he's very opinionated and somewhat extreme- he's also been very right lately. He's got archives available that are also enlightening.

An excerpt from Monday-

"So the die was cast and Paulson and Bernanke's refusal to endorse this step in the G7 meeting Friday was literally rammed down their throat.
Now, however, we have a new problem.
You see, if there are defaults, they now flow straight through to sovereign balance sheets. The IMF is now stating that there are three nations that are insolvent now, and there will be more. You can bet on it.
Amazingly, The United States is not anywhere in the worst shape here. While we certainly have our problems those over in Europe are much greater, but they're also distributed - not every nation over there is in an equal amount of trouble."

Regards-
 
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