Dow Jones
11100.54
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11:03 am PDT, July 12, 2008
NASDAQ
2239.08
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S & P 500
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Russell 2000
674.95
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VOLUME 08 : ISSUE 62
Five
Hints That Friday Was a Market Bottom
We've
been searching for a short-term, trade-worthy market bottom since early
June. I think we finally found it on Friday.
OK,
first of all, there are never any guarantees or absolutes, but I
truly think we saw the market make a hard landing - or bottom -
at the end of this past week. This is strictly my opinion, though at least
I've supported mine with five reasons below.
By
the same token, you don't need me to tell you the market can throw you
a curve ball. I never get married to an opinion for that very reason.
Now
with proper disclaimers in place, see if you agree with any or all of my
rationalizations. One more thought....any one of these five reasons may
be telling by themselves, but I believe the combination of all five
is where their real value is.
Doji
I'm
not a huge candlestick analysis fan. I appreciate it, and can understand
the value; I've just not found it to be consistently helpful. That said,
when one of the candlestick 'biggies' slaps me in the face, I'm not going
to ignore it.
Friday's
'bar' (the open, high, low, and close) for the S&P 500 as well as the
NASDAQ could arguably be considered a 'doji'. A doji is a bar where
the opening and the closing level are about the same, and also both right
in the middle of the day's trading range. The taller the range, the better.
The
premise is that such days indicate equilibrium has been met ....equilibrium
between the buyers and sellers. Since we've been in 'sell' mode for
the last month, we can presume an equilibrium now means the interested
and willing buyers are now greater in number than the interested and willing
sellers.
It's
not as crazy as it sounds, particularly when you get a doji day on the
same day you're getting the other four hints, like....
CBOE
Volatility Index (VIX)
I've
mentioned about a half dozen times I'd like to see the VIX shoot up to
30 or 35 to indicate a massive amount of fear - the kind associated with
a capitulation. At this point though, I think I'm going to concede. Friday's
high of 29.44 was a pretty good peak, and more importantly, we saw
the VIX roll back to a close of 27.49. That's peak-esque....and maybe all
the market is capable of giving us right now.
New
Lows
I've
also been talking about this one quite a bit lately. One of the surprisingly
powerful tools I've come across to spot bottoms is unusually high readings
of the NYSE's 'new low' level. I think the concept's philosophy can
be best described as 'darkest before down' - when a whoooole lotta'
stocks are hitting new lows, a rebound is likely to be brewing.
My
line in the sand had been 764 new lows for NYSE-listed equities. That was
the number we saw back in mid-March when the market started moving higher.
Well
folks, on Friday we saw 869 new NYSE lows. As you look back over the last
twelve months, that's pretty much in line with readings we saw with the
four previous major bottoms.
Volume
Some
traders say follow the volume. I tend to agree as long as volume is steady
and nominal. When volume spikes, however, I'm more inclined to view
it as a pivot. Historically, the higher the volume on the capitulation
day, the stronger and longer the reversal is.
Check
out Friday's volume for the major index ETFs (DIA, QQQ, SPY, and IWM).
It certainly wasn't out of control for any of them, but it was at the highest
levels we've seen since - you guessed it - March's bottom. For that
matter, the last several rebounds seem to have been jump-started with a
volume surge.
Fannie,
Freddie, and Indy
Say
what you want about why Fannie
Mae (NYSE: FNM) and Freddie
Mac (NYSE: FRM) shouldn't be in the shape they're in; I'll probably
agree with you. These two stocks have been pounded lately, and deserved
it.
Both
also closed in the red yesterday, but did you see what happened after
the bearish gap at the open? Folks, both stocks went up, closing
much higher then their opening prices! The only way for that to happen
is if somebody is buying what everybody else started out selling.
It
begs the questions who was buying it, and why were they buying
it?
You
could argue it was the dumb money thinking they were undervalued, but I
don't see that happening in light of everything. I think this was institutional
money flowing in, based on the volume. If things are so bad there, why
do so many pros want in?
And
IndyMac? Geez, what a mess. Hope none of you were/are customers. Even so,
the damage has already been done - I don't see how it has anywhere to go
but up from here.
Bottom
Line
Was
it a great bottom? No, meaning it wasn't the market at its worst. The
VIX peak wasn't enormous, and new lows weren't at epic proportions.
And,
even though the IndyMac debacle hit the fan, I still suspect there are
a few more lingering unknowns like that on the horizon. Once that pot gets
stirred again, the next bout of selling could kick in.
As
such, I'm not looking for a monster rally from here. I am looking for a
decent one though...much more than a couple of days worth. I still
contend the ultimate bottom is yet to come; one more good blow-out should
do it. And yes, the VIX, new low levels, and volume will still be my clues....as
they always have been.
In
the meantime, I'm tip-toeing into longs.
Be
sure to check out the blog; I'm pretty much giving day-by-day commentary
on all this stuff.
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