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Market Update - 12:00 Noon - Slow Motion Moves
Posted: July 18, 2008 at 12:42 pm by Chuck
The market opened like a soccer match. First this way, then back up the field the other way, and wait, back again the other way. Makes me want to grab some popcorn and just watch from the side linesĀ
Not much is happening… Resistance on the S&P 500 charts I highlighted in last nights posts are holding at this time. The weakness from the technology sector has put the brakes on the bear market rally, for now anyway.
The gains in the financial sector are too fast and have gone way too far. We look at this as some really great shorting opportunities coming up. I am simply amazed at the chatter coming from the media again. Any sign, no matter how slight it is they turn it into “this is the bottom” and start opening the champagne bottles to celebrate. Good grief! The economy is facing some of the most difficult challenges it has had to bear for many many decades. And it is not just one problem either. It is multiple issues all at once:
- The worst housing market decline since the Great depression
- Credit markets in deplorable condition
- Credit availability to average consumers has been restricted and tightened, or eliminated altogether.
- People have even been resorting to selling their cars to raise cash, but the used car market is in bad shape as well as resell prices have fallen drastically because their is no market for older cars that use more gas. Trade in values have fallen off a cliff.
- Cost of living has continued to climb which was already on top of a consumer having to use their homes as a “cash advance” machine to help pay their bills.
- Banks and Financial institutions got way over leveraged and greedy in the mortgage market by creating all sorts of ways to bundle up mortgages and trading them like they were baseball cards at a collectors convention. And suddenly their are no more conventions and no where for the cards to be sold. No demand = dropping prices. Residential and commercial mortgages should NEVER have been allowed to be turned into a twisted and distorted investment vehicle that banks and others could buy and sell in the markets. The system needs to go back to the traditional system of a bank issuing a mortgage and holding that mortgage, period. No more of this exotic asset backed securities crap.
- Health care costs are still rising
- Over the past 10 years the amount of money the average person has been able to save has declined steadily and is currently a negative savings rate.
But the banks and financial institutions saw an opportunity where there was loose Government regulation and they ran with it. Let’s hope someone wakes up and says “no more”. Time for the system to stop using the credit and homes of the average person as a means to leverage from and find more ways to make even more money from it. The interest that a bank earns on a mortgage should be all that is needed, but that was not good enough for them. They had to package them up and sell them for more profit. And then those were packaged once again and turned in other asset backed securities, and on and on.
With the housing market implosion all of these ’special’ securities that have been tied to mortgages are unwinding at a faster and faster pace. And much of it is STILL hidden away on the banks level 3 financial statements. This level 3 method of accounting for assets is the skeleton in the closet, they know what it is, but they don’t want the investment community to see what it is for it would destroy the financial statements of the companies if they had to bring those assets and put them on the books and mark them to current market prices.
It has to stop… level 3 accounting must be abolished. The only way FULL trust and confidence can ever be restored in the financial community is to have full and fair reporting. And the games of Wall Street with regard to the short sellers is just so idiotic and amounts to nothing more then Washington, D.C.’s attempt to “control” the free markets.
Ok, I’ll get off my soap box now. Over the weekend I’ll have some individual stocks for you to watch forĀ potential trades.
Keep the comments coming Rebels! We love hearing from you. We know there are many many more of you out there reading but have not chimed in, don’t be shy! We are all here together as one big Rebel family…




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Looking forward to your weekend potential trade ideas. I’ve been debating all morning whether to make a small play in DUG. Looking for a dip back toward $33.
Excellent essay on Fannie Mae and the desperate problems facing the financial system and the general economy by Mike Whitney over at Counterpunch.
http://www.counterpunch.org/whitney07182008.html
RCG - Over the weekend I’ll post some charts on oil. I would stay away from DUG today. Oil has already fallen quite a bit over the past week and it may be setting up for another run upwards. The time to enter DUG is when a resistance level is reached.
Looking at USO we are actually at a support region currently so the risk to reward profile for going short on oil is not good at this moment. Wait for a better ’setup’ to present itself.
Chuck
Good post. The sad part is that your recommendations will never happen. Let the games continue!
Thanks for the advice Chuck. I’ll wait on it.
Bob
Thanks Chuck.
Still don’t don’t see that of good deals on SUV”s. (need a better one for camping)
I am going again next week.
Not many safe trades, or scalps available, and just watching it, is making me crosseyed.
Thanks again for the great articles and views of the market. I got out of my ag stocks and can’t believe how high they are now - (POT, AGU, MOS, CF, MON). I see corn prices will go up still and ags maybe with them but at this point they are too high for me. Do you think they will drop quite a bit when the market drops? THanks again for all your daily articles - they keep me sane! James