Crash Continues

08/09/11

Stocks plummeted yesterday as the crash continues. The damage has been so bad that chances are high for a large snap-back rally, but rolling the dice in this market obviously comes with high risk.

It wasn't pretty for the TSP funds. The C-fund lost 6.65% yesterday, the S-fund dropped 8.56%, the I-fund fell 6.72%, and the F-fund (bonds) gained 0.44% as investors looked for a place to put money.

The S&P 500 is
already down to 1120, which was the lower end of the target of the Head and Shoulders pattern. Volume was the highest all year and it is starting to smell like capitulation out there, particularly if the large losses in the overnight futures carry over into this morning's trading.

080911a.gif

Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk


I have compared this breakdown to sell-off in 2008 as the TARP and debt ceiling votes in congress brought out similar results. But if you have been around the markets for a while, you may remember the summer of 1998 when the S&P 500 dropped 21% from mid-July through the end of August.

080911b.gif

Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk

I remember it well because at the time we were only allowed 1 transfer each month in our TSP accounts, and it had to be done by the 15th of the prior month to be effective on the first of the following month. On July 15th the market was flying high, and if you decided to buy into the C-fund, the only stock fund in the TSP at the time, it put you in the C-fund on August 1 and you were stuck there for the entire month.

080911c.gif

Chart provided courtesy of www.decisionpoint.com, analysis by TSP Talk


The good part was that you would have missed the late July sell-off, but like I said, you were stuck in the C-fund for all of August, which saw a loss of 14.47%. If you were scared out of the market in August and made a move to sell on August 15, to be out of the C-fund in September, you missed a big rally. Those were the days, and that is why I remember it so well.

Anyway, the losses have been brutal so far this summer but history tells us that this type of action will eventually turn into a big snap-back rally, although those rallies don't always last. Take a look at what happened during similar situations in the past...

From our friends at SentimenTrader.com:
"This table shows the only other times in modern history (since 1950) that the S&P sunk at least 5% in one day to a six-month low, after having lost at least 5% during the prior week. Note that every time, the index rebounded strongly during the next several sessions.

080911e.gif

Chart provided courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

"The month following most of these were also better for the bulls than bears, but volatility was extremely high, and after the short-term rebound, we saw prices violate the panic low at some point."

So, a 5% to 15% rally is not out of the question in the near-term, and I would not be surprised if it started some time today or tomorrow. Fear is high enough to see this kind of reaction.

Update: It is now about 2:30 AM ET and after being down about 300-points earlier, the Dow futures are now positive. With Tuesday being an FOMC meeting, it may be like this all day - ups and downs with rumors flying.

Thanks for reading! We'll see you back here tomorrow.

Tom Crowley


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Thanks Tom for the trip down memory lane, it's good to remember how far we've come since those cave-man like days. Love the stats!
 
Good stuff, Tom. Thanks. I imagine the past couple days, if compiled into a single candle, would be considered a "shock" day, which I remember you talking about last year where we'll meander in this range for 1 to 3 months before breaking to the upside. That is how I'm going to play it. Sell my trapped longs somewhere between 1200-1250 (hard to say exactly where the top of the "shock" range is) then short like mad as we hopefully retest the bottom. Then go long again. I bet we'll retest the highs before the year is over, which would again provide a great selling opportunity.
 
I agree, J-Trader - 1250 is a possibility, but it probably has to be sold so we may not have the luxury of waiting that long. Then another test of the low, like we saw in 1998 above. Then potentially new highs. It's crazy but very possible.

This (1998) is the the kind of action that gave me the idea of doing a TSP site. How confusing would something like '98 be to the average federal worker? Of course it wasn't until 2003 that we could make any meaningful transactions in our account so that is what finally got me started to create the site. Now we have exposed many people to the wackiness of the market. :)
 
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