Market Talk / July 16 - 22

Will 'Bernanke rally' hold up?
NEW YORK — Beware Fed-speak-spawned stock market rallies.
Despite being burned a few times in recent months betting on the words of Ben Bernanke, investors bid stock prices up sharply Wednesday after the Federal Reserve chief again suggested the Fed may be near the end of its interest-rate-tightening campaign. In what Wall Street dubbed the "Bernanke rally," the Dow Jones industrials soared 212 points, or nearly 2%, to 11,011. While Bernanke, in his semiannual update on monetary policy to Congress, did not say the Fed will pause or stop boosting short-term interest rates after its next meeting in August, investors traded on the belief that the Fed will soon be done. Since mid-April, there have been three instances where Wall Street pushed the Dow up about 200 points after interpreting Bernanke comments as suggestions that the Fed was close to done raising rates. Each rally faded, as the Fed pushed rates higher or hinted that it needed to keep doing so. Will this time be different? There is a camp on Wall Street that thinks Bernanke has learned from his earlier communications miscues and would not provide further hints that a pause is imminent (caveats not withstanding) if he wasn't confident the Fed would be able to live up to its implied promises.
http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/fed/2006-07-19-bernanke-rally-usat_x.htm
 
Market Update 11:00 am: Stocks continue to languish around the unchanged mark as there still isn't a strong sense of conviction on either the bullish or bearish side of the aisle. Bonds, though, have turned around amid increased speculation that the Fed will be able to pause in August and are offering some support for the rate-sensitive Financials sector. However, as only one of four sectors now trading in positive territory, the indices continue to trade in mixed fashion.
http://finance.yahoo.com/mo
 
Market Update 11:30 am: Market is still struggling to regain its footing as ongoing Bernanke Q&A fails to deliver much in the way of follow-through buying interest. Even with oil prices recently hitting fresh session lows and close to slipping below $72 per barrel, extending its four-day loss to more than 6%, the absence of leadership throughout Energy (-0.6%) only adds to uncertainty about earnings prospects and fuels some incentive to lock in recent gains.
http://finance.yahoo.com/mo
 
Tech stocks fall after weak Intel forecast
NEW YORK - U.S. technology stocks fell on Thursday, dragged down by Intel Corp., while investors remained cautious as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke delivered the second round of congressional testimony on Fed interest-rate policy. Shares of Intel, the world's largest chip maker, suffered the biggest daily percentage drop in six months, falling more than 5 percent. Intel reported lower quarterly profit late on Wednesday and forecast a sales shortfall.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060720/bs_nm/markets_stocks_dc_52
 
Soothing Words again! Where is the rally?

07/20/2006 - Updated 12:32 PM ET
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Treasurys higher on new Bernanke remarksFed chief winds up his second day of congressional testimony
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</IMG>By Leslie Wines, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Treasurys were higher Thursday, putting pressure on yields, after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke for a second day in a row made soothing comments about inflation during congressional testimony.
The central banker delighted investors on Wednesday with remarks that left open the possibility that the Fed's two-year-long string of interest-rate increases, which have pushed the fed funds rate to 5.25%, could soon come to a halt.http://markets.usatoday.com/custom/usatoday-com/html-story.asp?markets=Treasury%20Securities&guid=%7BD3BB9CC6%2D398A%2D4402%2DA330%2D259E91B03F8C%7D
 
nnuut said:
Soothing Words again! Where is the rally?
http://markets.usatoday.com/custom/...s&guid={D3BB9CC6-398A-4402-A330-259E91B03F8C}

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stocks fell Thursday as a disappointing sales outlook from Intel Corp. and weaker-than-expected manufacturing data prompted some investors to lock in prior-session gains sparked by soothing remarks on inflation from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.
Intel's sales forecast overshadowed a slew of strong earnings reports led by Apple Computer Inc., Motorola Inc and Honeywell International Inc among others.


We had a bit too much too soon yesterday," said Michael Metz, chief investment strategist at Oppenheimer & Co. "After a little reflection, Bernanke didn't say too much."
 
Fluke RALLY! Wait until 14:00ET the "minutes" from the last FED will be issued! :worried:
 
mlk_man said:
Good day to buy in if not.............
I agree. 58% bears will be buying soon.

Murphy's Law - Whenever I wait for a pullback to jump in, we don't get one. When I do jump in first, we do. :rolleyes:
 
Daily Yak

The Kingdom of TSP
Daily Edition
July 20, 2006 Closing

Yak, Doodles, Tea Leaves & The Tin Box

Kingdom Yak:
Pro-Yak...................................Buy in day!?

Con-Yak..................................Socks slipped on a chip!

Jester Yak...............................Must be the heat!

Doodles:
Socks [$SPX] Closed at..............1249.13, dn -10.68
Volume (CMF) (money flow).........-0.078, decreasing.
Averages (MACD) (trend)............-3.965, flat.
Momentum (S-STO) (signal).........43.09, increasing.
Strength (RSI) Overbought/sold....[70] 47.10 [30]

Lube (NYM) Closed at..................74.27, dn -0.50
Oil Markers................................<70= ok, 70-75= worry, >75= panic.

Tea Leaves:
Charts & Stuff............................Yellow / Yellow [doodles +2-2, Lube > 70]

Tin Box:
Position.....................................100% socks
Stops [$SPX]..............................Alert: 1267 [broken]. Trail: 1254 [broken].
 
3 minutes into the trading and it appears that the S&P has opened just above fair value and immediately moved up about a point. The S fund however, where I've been sitting for a couple of weeks, appears to have opened just below fair value and immediately dropped half a percent. After yesterday's 2% drubbing, this is getting a little old.

Dave
<><
 
Wheels said:
3 minutes into the trading and it appears that the S&P has opened just above fair value and immediately moved up about a point. The S fund however, where I've been sitting for a couple of weeks, appears to have opened just below fair value and immediately dropped half a percent. After yesterday's 2% drubbing, this is getting a little old.

Dave
<><

And in the time it took me to type that it has fallen another 3/10 of a percent. If this continues, I'll be in danger of losing my "super power account" status and I'll have to slum around with Birchtree's "power account" crowd. Unthinkable.

Dave
<><
 
Wheels,

Easy come, easy go. Snort. You'll get it all back on the next leg up which is just around the next corner.
 
Birchtree said:
Wheels,

Easy come, easy go. Snort. You'll get it all back on the next leg up which is just around the next corner.

Birchy, u perma-optimistic......only thing is it just doesn't stick around for the market....:notrust:
 
Market Update 12:00 pm: Stocks are extending Thursday's sell-off as more disappointments in tech overshadow an otherwise solid batch of earnings reports. Early futures indication had been pointing to a slightly higher open after tech bellwether Microsoft closed its fiscal year last night by beating estimates by a penny, boosting its FY07 outlook and rewarding shareholders with a $20 bln buyback. Google more than doubling Q2 profits and countering Yahoo's recent disappointment, also had many thinking that stocks were poised for a bounce in the wake of yesterday's broad-based pullback. Be that as it may, Dell warning that Q2 results will miss Wall Street's estimates, and subsequently plunging 13% to a five-year low, merely made matters worse for a Tech sector already reeling from concerns about growth prospects that continue to force analysts' to lower their estimates for the second half of the year. Not even Dow component Caterpillar posting record earnings on 41% year/year growth and raising FY06 revenue forecasts minutes later was enough to offset renewed worries about the pace of a slowdown in economic growth.
http://finance.yahoo.com/mo
 
All the BULLS must be frolicking in the sand at the beaches. Let the sellers have their time - equal advantage for all involved.
 
The infamous S fund at $16.00 appears tasty. I'm looking for a $13.60 price on the C fund for DCA. Not a bad price for a nibbler.
 
Market Update 3:00 pm: Stocks are still on the defensive as the indices continue to sport broad-based losses. Not even bonds have been able to retain early safe-have buying interest going into the weekend amid escalating unrest in the Middle East. Earlier, fed funds futures were pricing in as little as 35% chance of a hike on August 8th and are now pricing in only 45% likelihood, still significantly dismissing the possibility of more tightening.
http://finance.yahoo.com/mo
 
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