It's been a wild ride this week in the QQQQ's as the job lose data did not 
deter traders from driving the market higher.

And lest we forget the Fed Reserve and Treasury's hand in  the market hanging 
up here and not falling. Next week will

be interesting due to the FOMC.

http://www.freetradingvideos.com/vlog/default.asp?category=1  
 


 


From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: {GS} Re: THE GREAT RELIEF RALLY ROLLS ON
Date: Wed, 5 Aug 2009 20:40:01 -0500



The $BANK today finally has shown a little weakness. The open is 1731.24 and 
the high of the day is 1741.39...not very high. The low of the day however is 
1718.35. The closing candle is a doji. We can't conclusively determine based on 
today's price action that the markets are moving lower ( pullback) as 
confirmation is needed over the next few trading sessions..but we can say that 
weakness in the market is becoming more apparent. Fib retracement 0.0% 
(1749.20) did not get breached today.
 
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$BANK&p=D&yr=0&mn=5&dy=0&id=p81005821520&a=143335942&listNum=1
 
http://www.freetradingvideos.com/vlog/default.asp?category=1
 


Date: Tue, 4 Aug 2009 11:27:08 +0530
Subject: {GS} THE GREAT RELIEF RALLY ROLLS ON
From: [email protected]


August 3, 2009
THE GREAT RELIEF RALLY ROLLS ONThe financial gods were kind again to the major 
asset classes in July. Everything was up, and mostly with strong gains. 
As our table below shows, it was hard to lose money last month, a.k.a. a 
refreshing change from the recent past. Of course, if you were sitting mostly 
in cash, there was little to celebrate with a virtual zero to the month's total 
return for 3-month T-bills. Inflation-linked Treasuries didn't do much better, 
but everything else did.

Emerging market stocks were the big winner, closely followed by REITs, foreign 
developed market and U.S. equities. Risk, in other words, paid off quite 
handsomely in July. With such widespread gains of more than modest means, our 
Global Market Index—a passively allocated mix of the major asset classes—also 
posted a strong total return of 5.5% last month.



In fact, the capital and commodity markets have been rallying since March. 
Granted, the performance in June was mixed and unimpressive, but generally 
speaking otherwise the returns have been positive for much of the past five 
months. The question now is whether the rally was/is 1) a reaction to the 
realization that the darkest fears of last year and early 2009 were 
exaggerated; or 2) an expectation that a meaningful economic rebound is 
imminent. 
If the answer is 2, and the crowd believes strong economic growth is near, a 
bit of an attitude adjustment may be in order. Meanwhile, for those who are 
still buying in recognition that the global economy will survive, albeit in 
somewhat hobbled form, it's not clear that the trade has further to run on that 
reasoning alone. It is, to be blunt, a bit late in the day for rationalizing 
higher prices solely on the basis of #2 above.
U.S. stocks, for instance, are thought by some to be at fair value vs. the 
relative bargain pricing that prevailed early this year. And that's the 
optimistic view. Indeed, economist Andrew Smithers estimates that U.S. equities 
are 20% overvalued, The Economist reported last week.
As we've been discussing for some time, including here and here, our view is 
that the gap between the technical end of the recession and the arrival of a 
robust economic rebound will be unusually long this time around. Does the crowd 
agree? It's hard to say exactly, although we're erring on the side of caution 
by holding a bit more cash than we otherwise might be if this was a "normal" 
business cycle. 
Yes, the rally this year is warranted, but it's getting harder to argue for 
rising asset prices without a commensurate change in the macroeconomic 
fortunes. That will come eventually, but as Friday's GDP report for Q2 
suggests, it's going to take time, perhaps more time than the crowd currently 
realizes.


-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"

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