coolhand's Account Talk

Coolhand,

I believe you are right. There is great resistance above, and the risk is greater now. The markets need a breather!

P.S. Uptrend also has good thinking and fine T.A., and he clearly understands a risky trade that he is considering for today... Food for Thought.
 
SS still on a sell, but the roller coaster may not be over.

Fed outlook downgraded today.

Banks getting hit with credit card legislation.

Not surprised by the Fed minutes. Bout time they got a little more real. Makes me wonder though, if they are still holding back.
 
Market Running in Place
Last Update: 21-May-09 08:49 ET

http://www.briefing.com/GeneralCont...me=Investor&ArticleId=NS20090521085004PageOne

With the Memorial Day weekend rapidly approaching, we're reluctant to read too much into the market's trading behavior since holidays tend to produce some capricious activity. Entering Thursday's trading, the market is up 2.3% for the week due entirely to a 3.0% gain on Monday that was pared with modest losses on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Notably, the market hasn't registered back-to-back gains since the May 1 and May 4 trading sessions. Despite Monday's big gain, the market has been flat since Cinco de Mayo.

The overall result since May 5 fits with our view that trading conditions will be choppy and that the market is apt to stay range-bound as participants assess the incoming economic data to determine if the spring rally was just a profitable flash in the pan or the start of something even bigger.

The early bias ahead of the initial claims report tilted slightly negative as news Standard & Poor's cut its outlook for the U.K.'s sovereign debt ratings to negative from stable due to concerns about the country's rising debt burden relative to GDP helped establish a cautious tone.

The initial claims report didn't help change the tone either.

Initial claims for the week ending May 16 totaled 631K (consensus 625K), which was down from an upwardly revised reading of 643K (from 637K) in the prior week. The latest claims figure dropped the 4-week moving average to 628,500 from 632,000 and supports the argument that the pace of layoffs has slowed.

The bigger issue, however, is that the pace of hiring isn't picking up. Continuing claims jumped by 75K to a record 6.662 million, which brought the 4-week moving average for this series to 6.48 million from 6.35 million.

The trend in continuing claims is worrisome on a number of levels, but the most important factor in terms of the economy is that it continues to be an impediment for a pickup in consumer spending and a recovery in the housing market.

Separately, this report covered the period in which the establishment survey for the May employment report was conducted and the level of claims indicates we will see another material decline in nonfarm payrolls for May.

The Leading Indicators report for April (consensus +0.8%) is due at 10:00 ET, as is the Philadelphia Fed Index (consensus -18.0). Treasury Secretary Geithner will begin testimony at the same time before the House Financial Services Subcommittee.

As of this posting, the futures market is indicating the S&P will start the day with a loss of about 1.0%.
 
ch

The 7 sentinels signal should be ok to use with the Nas, SPX or DJI, correct? I would guess the Russell, as well. I mention this because the signals look to be split among Nas and NYSE, which I assume is the SPX and DJI stocks.

thx
 
The bigger issue, however, is that the pace of hiring isn't picking up. Continuing claims jumped by 75K to a record 6.662 million, which brought the 4-week moving average for this series to 6.48 million from 6.35 million.

The trend in continuing claims is worrisome on a number of levels, but the most important factor in terms of the economy is that it continues to be an impediment for a pickup in consumer spending and a recovery in the housing market.

If companies are strapped for cash, can't borrow easily, and fewer sales, then workforce is not needed. Perhaps when the dollar falls further, exports will pick up, especially in tech. Looks bleak for the next year or so.
 
If companies are strapped for cash, can't borrow easily, and fewer sales, then workforce is not needed. Perhaps when the dollar falls further, exports will pick up, especially in tech. Looks bleak for the next year or so.

That was the part that caught my attention too. They can talk this economy up all they want, but there are some real tough issues that need to be addressed first, and that will take time. Perhaps a lot of time.

Of course having a socialist centered administration trying to the fix a capitalist system isn't going to help either.

I won't even begin to address the fed. :rolleyes:
 
ch

The 7 sentinels signal should be ok to use with the Nas, SPX or DJI, correct? I would guess the Russell, as well. I mention this because the signals look to be split among Nas and NYSE, which I assume is the SPX and DJI stocks.

thx

I look at the SS as an overall market indicator, mainly because of its intermediate term nature. It will generally give you market direction across the board.
 
Does this mean it had drifted away from the 1st sell signal back into a buy?

No.

It means all seven signals are back to sell again. We will not get a buy until all seven give a buy simultaneoulely.

After a sell occurs, some of the signals may give a buy, but the system remains on a sell regardless.
 
The pressure just keeps building...


Early retirement claims increase dramatically

Instead of working longer as the economy worsens, more Americans are calling it quits before age 66. The ramifications could be profound for the retirees, families, government and social institutions.

By Mike Dorning
May 24, 2009

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-retirement24-2009may24,0,885521.story

Reporting from Washington -- Instead of seeing older workers staying on the job longer as the economy has worsened, the Social Security system is reporting a major surge in early retirement claims that could have implications for the financial security of millions of baby boomers.

Since the current federal fiscal year began Oct. 1, claims have been running 25% ahead of last year, compared with the 15% increase that had been projected as the post-World War II generation reaches eligibility for early retirement, according to Stephen C. Goss, chief actuary for the Social Security Administration.

Many of the additional retirements are probably laid-off workers who are claiming Social Security early, despite reduced benefits, because they are under immediate financial pressure, Goss and other analysts believe.

The numbers upend expectations that older Americans who sustained financial losses in the recession would work longer to rebuild their nest eggs. In a December poll sponsored by CareerBuilder, 60% of workers older than 60 said they planned to postpone retirement.

Goss said it remained unclear whether the uptick in retirements would accelerate or abate in the months ahead. But another wave of older workers may opt for early retirement when they exhaust unemployment benefits late this year or early in 2010, he noted.

The ramifications of the trend are profound for the new retirees, their families, the government and other social institutions that may be called upon to help support them.

On top of savings ravaged by the stock market decline and the loss of home equity, many retirees now must make do with Social Security benefits reduced by as much as 25% if they retire at age 62 instead of 66.

"When the recession ends and the economy bounces back, there may be a band of people for whom things will never be the same again. They'll still be paying the price for 10, 20, 30 years down the road," said Cristina Martin Firvida, director of economic security for AARP, the nation's largest membership organization for people 50 and older.

For Herman Hilton, 66, of Jacksonville, Fla., a lean 6-foot-2 electrician with a bushy gray beard, the decision to lay down his pliers and screwdriver was born of frustration.

For at least the last 10 years, as he wired new buildings, he was looking toward retiring as soon as he hit 66 and qualified for full benefits. And last fall, like millions of other older workers, Hilton put his "golden years" plan on hold when his 401(k) lost more than a third of its value.

Then last month, his life took another unwelcome turn: Hilton's foreman pulled him aside to tell him that he was being laid off. For several weeks, Hilton collected unemployment insurance. But he soon decided to call it quits and file for Social Security.

"I can live on what I have," Hilton said. "But it's not what I planned on. I won't have the comfort factor of as much of a safety cushion."

That cushion is important. As Americans live longer, the elderly are increasingly at risk of outlasting their financial assets. That's a serious problem for them and their families, who are often called upon to provide assistance.

Because benefits are reduced for people who retire early, the surge in retirements should not have any long-term effect on the solvency of the Social Security system, although it will probably add to the near-term budget deficits confronting the Obama administration, Social Security's Goss said.

The full consequences of retirement decisions made in hard times will become apparent when people who retired early begin to exhaust their savings.

"As they get into their 70s and 80s, it will be increasingly inadequate," said Alicia H. Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

The most severe effect will probably fall on the unemployed widows of workers who retire early, Munnell said. Survivors' benefits also take a deeper cut when people retire early -- reduced as much as 30% for retirement at 62. Because women tend to live longer than men, that leaves them more vulnerable to running out of money as expenses for assisted living and other costs rise in advanced old age.

Significant numbers of workers have long chosen to retire early. In 2007, the most recent year for which statistics are available, 42% of men and 48% of women began collecting Social Security retirement benefits at age 62, the first year of eligibility.

The current recession, the worst since the Depression, is striking when older workers are by historical standards unusually vulnerable. Though older workers in previous recessions were less likely than their younger counterparts to be laid off, that advantage has eroded in recent years, said Munnell, who analyzed more than two decades of Labor Department data on layoffs.

Fewer workers are now protected by union contracts that require newer employees to be laid off first. And older workers now typically have less of a seniority advantage in a workforce that more frequently switches jobs.

Once they lose their jobs, older workers have a harder time finding new ones. On average, it takes laid-off workers 55 and older nearly a month longer than their younger counterparts to find new employment, and the gulf has been growing recently, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Goss said it was theoretically possible that people who claimed retirement benefits during the recession would resume working once the economy improves.

Yet experience suggests that retired workers are unlikely to return to work in large numbers, particularly not to full-time jobs that would allow them to make up their earnings losses while they were out of the workforce, said Paul N. Van de Water, a former senior policy official at the Social Security Administration and now a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington think tank.

"It's partly a question of intent," Van de Water said. "It's partly a question of your skills not being kept up to date."
 
(See attachment for chart)

Today's chart illustrates how a plunge in earnings has impacted the current valuation of the stock market as measured by the price to earnings ratio (PE ratio). Generally speaking, when the PE ratio is high, stocks are considered to be expensive. When the PE ratio is low, stocks are considered to be inexpensive. From 1936 into the late 1980s, the PE ratio tended to peak in the low 20s (red line) and trough somewhere around seven (green line). The price investors were willing to pay for a dollar of earnings increased during the dot-com boom (late 1990s) and the dot-com bust (early 2000s). As a result of the current plunge in earnings and the recent 2.5 month stock market rally, the PE ratio has spiked to the low 120s – a record high.
 
Thanks for the article coolhand.

Interesting historical perspective. They put us at about the 1938 point of the Great Depression and use the dot-com bubble to cover the worst 5-6 years from 1929 though. They essentially are using the .com bubble as the low. In essence they are being extremely opimistic imo.

To me it looks more like the mid 1930 to mid 1931 period.
http://stockcharts.com/charts/historical/djia19201940.html

I don't believe the bottom is in.

Take care
 
Thanks for the article coolhand.

Interesting historical perspective. They put us at about the 1938 point of the Great Depression and use the dot-com bubble to cover the worst 5-6 years from 1929 though. They essentially are using the .com bubble as the low. In essence they are being extremely opimistic imo.

To me it looks more like the mid 1930 to mid 1931 period.
http://stockcharts.com/charts/historical/djia19201940.html

I don't believe the bottom is in.

Take care

I agree,

I don't necessarily agree with everything I post, but I do find other perspectives interesting. The low is not in as far as I'm concerned. Too many issues still unresolved.
 
Gang crime...... THE NEXT BIG THING

Califoria to release low level prisoner due to buget short fall Yea))))


Approximately 1 million gang members belonging to more than 20,000 gangs were criminally active within all 50 states and the District of Columbia as of September 2008.

According to NDTS data, 58 percent of state and local law enforcement agencies reported that criminal gangs were active in their jurisdictions in 2008 compared with 45 percent of state and local agencies in 2004.


Criminal gangs commit as much as 80 percent of the crime in many communities, according to law enforcement officials throughout the nation. Typical gang-related crimes include alien smuggling, armed robbery, assault, auto theft, drug trafficking, extortion, fraud, home invasions, identity theft, murder, and weapons trafficking


Go here to see more http://www.usdoj.gov/ndic/pubs32/32146/preface.htm#Scope
 
Gang crime...... THE NEXT BIG THING

Califoria to release low level prisoner due to buget short fall Yea))))


Approximately 1 million gang members belonging to more than 20,000 gangs were criminally active within all 50 states and the District of Columbia as of September 2008.

According to NDTS data, 58 percent of state and local law enforcement agencies reported that criminal gangs were active in their jurisdictions in 2008 compared with 45 percent of state and local agencies in 2004.


Criminal gangs commit as much as 80 percent of the crime in many communities, according to law enforcement officials throughout the nation. Typical gang-related crimes include alien smuggling, armed robbery, assault, auto theft, drug trafficking, extortion, fraud, home invasions, identity theft, murder, and weapons trafficking


Go here to see more http://www.usdoj.gov/ndic/pubs32/32146/preface.htm#Scope

I am so glad I left California several years ago. Over the years I received numerous briefs on gang activity by law enforcement and I remember them saying there were something like 115 known gangs in the San Diego area, 5 of which were considered hard core.

In the Linda Vista area where I lived, we weren't too far from a Vietnamese community and the police responded many times to gun fire in that area. They had their own gang problem.

American's finest city...looks good on TV, but until you live there...:rolleyes:
 
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