Stock Market Summary for March 31st 2008
The full report later tonight…
Trading Close Of The Day
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 4:03 pm by Lisa · 2 Comments
This was a day for traders to eke out a few bucks, if they cared to ride the waves. Otherwise, stocks traded mixed on low volume. There was no news fit to print, but we’ll still go over the "unprintable news" later tonight. ISM numbers come out at 10AM ET tomorrow. They could be market moving numbers, so traders are, and will be, placing their bets ahead of that news. Selling is pretty heavy into the close, though. (Hm, still selling those rallies, are we?) I’m in a place where I don’t have a TV in my room (no, I haven’t been locked up and I’m not in rehab!) and I hear now that I missed a great Jim Cramer segment this morning. I sure hope someone puts it on You Tube.
Check back with us later!
Thornburg Mortgage
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 3:35 pm by Lisa · Leave a Comment
S&P withdraws Thornburg Mortgage’s (TMA) A-1 ABCP rating. The stock is tanking. OK, it’s was at 1.47, and right now it’s trading at 1.17. It’s still down 28% for today, so I’ll call that tanking.
And this note from the wires:
US ASSET BACKED ISSUANCE SLUMPS TO $54.6B IN Q108 V $323.3B IN Q107 - WIRE HEADLINE
- US High-yield debt sales plunge to $5.9B in Q108 v $38.4B y/y
Paulson: What Did He Know and When?
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 2:41 pm by Lisa · Leave a Comment
(US) TREASURY’S PAULSON: US HOME PRICES WERE UNSUSTAINABLE, CORRECTION WAS "NECESSARY, INEVITABLE" - CNBC INTERVIEW
- Sees favorable news on housing inventories.
- Reiterates that a strong dollar is in the interest of the US economy, and strong economic fundamentals will be reflected in the dollar
- Foreign direct investment in the US should be welcomed
Paulson says home prices were unsustainable: Did he know that before or after he helped to sell bundled mortgages to investors when he was at Goldman Sachs? C’mon, Hank, you can’t tell America you were too ignorant to understand the housing market back then, and now you are smart enough to fix what ails it.
Also, he says strong economic fundamentals will be reflected in the dollar: Then can we assume at the moment that economic fundamentals stink, as the dollar keeps getting weaker? And just exactly WHEN do you expect strong fundamentals to be reflected in the dollar, Hank? You’ve been talking about a strong dollar for a long time and yet, we still don’t see the improvement. It’s time for some action, and bless your little heart, Hank, the best action would be for you to get out of the way!
Hey, You!
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 2:25 pm by Lisa · Leave a Comment
US Treasury’s Steel says the Fed needs overall responsibility for the markets in the longer term. And here’s what FedHead Yellen is saying today:
FED’S YELLEN: HOUSING TROUBLES MAY NEED NEW INTERVENTIONS; SAYS FED COMMITTED TO TIMELY ACTION AS NEEDED
- Notes importance of getting credit to low income homes,
- Important to find new ways to blunt mortgage woes, interest rate resets not a major trigger for mortgage defaults
- Says Fed has moved to stimulate demand in face of housing downturn, tighter credit
- Notes national jump in foreclosures as ’sudden and substantial’
- Says fed is keeping a close eye on economic conditions
I read these things, and the only thing I can think of at the moment is, "HEY, YOU, GET OFF OF MY CLOUD!" (Rolling Stones) The proposal’s for bailing out financial institutions (under the guise of worrying about the economy) is making my head spin, because they are so out in left field. I’ll get it under control and give you all a real analysis later. The market’s continue their boring little wave riding into the afternoon.
Market Update
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 11:16 am by Lisa · 5 Comments
It’s a slow news day and the market is drifting within a fairly tight range. There have been some daytrade opportunities today, riding the small waves, but the volume is low and decline/advance line is about even. At this point, I’m not going to complain about having a quiet, boring day! I hope I didn’t just jinx it for the afternoon!
Mixed Chicago PMI Report
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 9:51 am by Lisa · Leave a Comment
Here are the numbers. Data is a bit mixed as new orders and employment was up, but prices paid was up too much.
MAR CHICAGO PURCHASING MANAGER’S INDEX: 48.2 V 46.0E
- sub-indices:
- Prices Paid: 83.9 v 79.4 last
- New Orders: 53.9 v 48.8last
- Employment: 44.6 v 33.5 last 02)
- Inventories: 42.0 v 46.0 last
- Supplier Deliveries: 54.9 v 39.6 last
- Production: 50.4 v 46.5 last
- Order Backlogs: 36.8 v 38.3 last
Stock Market - Pre Open Report March 31st 2008
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 9:17 am by Chuck · Leave a Comment
Little to report this morning that was not already discussed last night.
Merck (MRK) and Schering Plough (SGP) are being sold off heavily in pre market on the news we reported last night. Their cholesterol drugs have been reported as being a ‘flop’ in a study released yesterday.
Asian markets sold down last night, and European markets are weak also.
A report circulating throughout the trading pits this morning is that there is a reserve shortfall in some Dutch pension funds due to market developments. There is some early strength in ’safe haven’ bond futures and gold on this news.
Stock Market Summary - Sunday March 30th 2008 - PART 2
Posted: March 31, 2008 at 12:17 am by Chuck · Leave a Comment
There is a lot of economic data coming out this week. This may be the break in the log jam the market has been in for the past couple weeks. But all signs are still pointing towards an eventual lower market. Brief rallies, in our view, are selling opportunities at this time. This is STILL a bear market.
Monday
- 9:45 am : March Chicago Purchasing Manager Index
- 10:00 am : March National Association of Purchasing Managers Index - Milwaukee
- 12:00 pm : Fed Yellen speaks in San Francisco on the foreclosure problem
Tuesday
- 7:45 am : ICSC/UBSW Chain Store Sales data
- 8:55 am : Redbook Retail Sales data
- 10:00 am : March ISM Manufacturing Data
- 10:00 am : February construction spending
Also on Tuesday, Auto sales figures will be reported
Wednesday
- 7:00 am : MBA mortgage applications
- 8:15 am : March ADP employment data
- 9:30 am : Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before Congressional Joint Economic Committee
- 10:00 am : Senate Banking Committee hearing on Bear Stearns (BSC)
- 10:00 am : February Factory Orders
- 10:30 am : Crude oil/gasoline inventory data
Thursday
- 8:30 am : Initial jobless claims
- 10:00 am : March ISM - non-manufacturing
- 10:00 am : Senate Banking hearings on Bear Stearns (BSC)
- 10:15 am : Fed’s Mishkin speaks
- 10:30 am : Natural Gas inventory
- 7:30 pm : Fed’s Mishkin speaks in New York
- 8:00 pm : Fed’s Yellen speaks on the US economy
Friday
- 8:30 am : March non-farm unemployment data
- 2:45 pm : Fed’s Kroszner speaks at Inter-American Development Bank meeting in Miami
A lot of things happening this week. The hearings on Bear Stearns should be very interesting. Items is bold letters are items which will be potential large market moving events.
Last minute news tonight:
— Expect Merck (MRK) to get a haircut in Monday’s trading as the study of it’s Vytorin and Zetia drugs was a "flop"
— (US) THE US HUD SECRETARY TO ADDRESS THE PRESS AT 10 A.M. ON MONDAY - HUD
The Secretary of HUD (Dept of Housing and Urban Development), Alphonso Jackson, is expected to resign on Monday - Wall Street Journal
— (UK) ACCORDING TO THE PROPERTY ECONOMIST AT CAPITAL ECONOMICS, UK HOME PRICES COULD FALL BY 25% IN TWO YEARS - TELEGRAPH
—(US) THE FED IS EXAMINING THE NORDIC BANK NATIONALIZATIONS OF THE 1990S AS A POSSIBLE INTERIM SOLUTION TO THE US FINANCIAL CRISIS - TELEGRAPH
- A senior official at one of the Scandinavian central banks said that Fed strategists had stepped up contacts to learn how Norway, Sweden and Finland managed their crisis from 1991 to 1993.
- Telegraph reports that it is understood that Fed vice-chairman Don Kohn remains very concerned by the depth of the US crisis and is eyeing the Nordic approach for contingency options.
- Telegraph comments on the effectiveness of the Nordic bailout solution in reducing problems related to moral hazard.
(RebelTraders note: this has to be one of the craziest things to come out of Washington, D.C. in a long time. At least since yesterday.. LOL)
— (US) THE SEC HAS GIVEN FIRMS MORE FLEXIBILITY IN VALUING THEIR ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES - Wall Street Journal
- The new guidelines by the SEC will allow public companies to use "unobservable inputs" to value asset-backed securities, but only when actual market prices are not available.
- The companies that use "unobservable inputs" to value assets must determine if that would have a material impact on their financial results and they must include written explanations of how a firm determined the value of its asset-backed assets and liabilities, as well as how those values might change.
- The SEC added that public companies might need to provide more disclosure on risky "Level 3" assets and liabilities.
(Rebeltraders note: This has the makings of another disaster)
— BANK OF AMERICA MAY CANCEL THE SALE OF ITS EQUITIES PRIME BROKERAGE UNIT AFTER LOWER THAN ANTICIPATED BIDS - Financial Times
See you in the morning…
Stock Market Summary for Sunday - March 30th 2008
Posted: March 30, 2008 at 6:35 pm by Chuck · 6 Comments
Last week, in spite of all the media and many analysts claiming that the market had hit a ‘bottom’ , the markets continued to show ‘no confidence’ and sold down into the end of the week.
Lisa and I have been through this before. We remember all too clearly the same talk as the bear market began in 2000 with the tech bubble crash. It is amazing how some people, when put in front of a TV camera, will talk about things they have no knowledge of just to make themselves or their company look good by ‘razzle and dazzling" their way through an interview. Case in point: Dennis Neal, one of the worst journalists that has ever claimed to know anything about the stock market, said on Friday that the unemployment report last month was actually better than the month before, because it dropped from 5.0% to 4.8%. Any one watching that who did not know the facts, would believe what he said because he is on TV. Because he has to be right… right? But the facts are that the unemployment rate dropped last month, because of the increased numbers of people who exhausted their unemployment insurance. Yes, it is a strange calculation the government uses to figure unemployment rates, but the facts remain and it was even stated by the Government that the rate fell due to the increasing number of people who can’t find work and had fallen of the rolls.
So Dennis Neal of CNBC said to millions of viewers that the unemployment rate was better than the previous month. And people who do not understand the facts think he must be telling the truth and this hurts investors. There is so much bad information in the media, be it intentional or unintentional, the fact is that CNBC has turned into one of the worst financial broadcasters ever. You would think they learned their lesson from the tech bubble crash, but they appear to have ‘forgotten’ all the bad information they gave then, and are still doing it today.
But has a bottom really been established? If we use the charts and other market breadth indicators to answer that question the answer is "don’t bet on it". Saying a ‘bottom is in’ right now is purely conjecture, not factual. And for high risk gamblers the media’s talk of a bottom makes a perfect place for them to step in. But the wise investors and traders watch for confirmation signals on the charts.
Waiting for economic conditions and the charts to stabilize reduces risk on ones trading and investing. And reducing risk is what trading is all about, not gambling for that one ‘big trade’ which can just as easily wipe you out. It was asked by a reader what one of the biggest mistakes new traders and investors make. The answer to that question is that too many new traders are too easily influenced by the mainstream media. They feel that if they hear it on TV, they must be pro’s, and they must be right. And too often, they jump into trading stocks before they even understand how to read charts or economic indicators. The experienced trader will use a certain technical point on the chart to give them the best risk to reward profile. Before you enter a trade you must first know where you will exit the trade, if it does not work. That is what many new people never understand.
Before the buy button is pushed you must already know where the sell button (or stop loss) will be activated, when the trade goes against you. When we shorted the Dow Jones Industrials, we did so at a very key technical point, which was 12750. It presented us with the best possible risk to reward profile based on the trend of the chart. This gives us a clear exit point and yet allows the trade plenty of ‘working room’ in order for us to hang on through the brief rallies. Capital preservation is always priority one to a trader and investor. Many times I see traders who don’t learn that important concept and hang onto a trade or investment even when their losses continue to mount. Even long term investors have to know when the time is at hand to cut an investment loose and walk away from the table.
The old joke on Wall street is… "you know when a trade becomes a long term investment? … When it becomes a loss and they did not sell it".
Far too many long term investors lost entire life savings during the tech bubble crash in 2000, for they just kept holding on thinking they would come back one day. Unfortunately there is NEVER a guarantee that a stock, when it loses over 50% of its value, will ever come back to where it was before. More often than not, the stocks that lose the most never regain that share price ever again. And often they end up failing altogether, just as what happened during the bear market that started in 2000.
Over the past week we saw volume levels that were horribly low. This tells us that confidence is just not there and the levels of people keeping their money out of the market remains extremely high. If the majority of investors truly felt the ‘bottom was in’ then we would see that reflected in the market breadth. But it is not there.
We stand by our view that the economy could be facing one of the deepest recessions in decades and the markets could be in for a substantial bear market. But as we have all witnessed, the Federal Reserve (and the White House) have been doing everything they can to ‘prop’ up the markets by throwing money at it left and right. These are NOT cures, they are band aids for the short term. They are intended to be a ‘triage’ for the problems and hope the wounds heal on their own over time. But gangrene may be setting in from our vantage point.
With the ‘near death’ experience of many financial institutions and banks lately (and many are still near death) do we think the markets will suddenly switch to a bull market and go to new highs in the near future? Answer is no. The lack of trust in the markets is at an extreme. It will take a very long time for that money to return. Some months ago we wrote about the overall short interest, and that the last time the markets saw that level of short interest was before the Great Depression. On Friday we learned that the overall short interest has hit another record. Short interest is actually still growing and is at another all time record.
On the NYSE, the mid-month short interest report hit a level of 4.15%, which is a record high. On the S&P 500, short interest is even higher. As of mid-March, 5.4% of the float of S&P 500 listed companies were sold short. This represents an increase of 53% over the last year!”
While 4.15% and 5.4% sound like small numbers they are actually extremely high. They represent the amount of shares of all the companies and their available share float. Never has the total market short interest been this high. A contrarian trader could look at this and say that when the shorts cover, it will send the markets rising to new highs. We don’t buy it. Just as people who buy on the long side, the short holders all work in different time frames. It will take a lot of good economic news in order to shake all those shorts loose. Trading as a contrarian may be highly profitable (if your lucky), but it is also the most dangerous, in that volatility can quickly erase a substantial part of your money.
Over the weekend we have learned that Secretary Hank Paulson will announce on Monday his ideas for sweeping changes to the banking and financial market regulations. This will certainly create much debate as the reach of the Government into the ‘free markets’ will be highly scrutinized. You want to know my opinion of the Government’s actions lately (Bear Stearns, et al)? Well to quote a line from a favorite movie of mine
"You Have Meddled With the Primal Forces of Nature" (from the movie ‘Network’ 1976).
Some more later tonight….





![[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]](http://www.kitconet.com/charts/metals/gold/t24_au_en_usoz_2.gif)
![[US Dollar Index]](http://www.weblinks247.com/indexes/idx24_usd_en_2.gif)

