-
Font Size:
You knew it was coming.....you knew it was coming...you knew it was coming.....BAM! Yesterday it finally came. I refer, of course, to the dreaded short squeeze, which finally arrived with a bang late Wednesday. Yesterday's 2.5% rally was the largest since April Fool's Day, which set the stage for the painful short-covering rally of April and most of May.
It would appear that the market is liable for a further squeeze from here. A number of of factors that I watch are flashing red. Consider the XLF, which posted enormous volume on Tuesday while tracing out a doji-ish candlestick that often warns of turning points. The follow-up rally yesterday also occurred on high volume; it all looks a lot like capitulation selling earlier in the week.
Insofar as higher oil prices have represented a significant squeeze on consumers and non-energy corporates, yesterday also saw an equity-positive development in that space. Crude extended Tuesday's losses after yesterday's inventory data which showed both crude and product builds. What's significant about yesterday is that it represented the first time in the whole parabolic rally that a higher high has been followed by a break below a previous low. Is this a sign of a turning point and a deeper (presumably equity-positive) correction? Inquiring minds want to know.
I and others have also observed that financial blog traffic tends to spike at panic bottoms. While there hasn't been a Bear Stearns-type surge in Macro Man's visitor figures, I do think it's telling that this week has seen the three highest traffic days of the past few weeks by a healthy margin. Another sign of a panic low, perhaps?
The S&P 500 closed right at the resistance level that I have been eying...1245 on yesterday's chart, 1241 on today's. A close above would give tape-readers reason to build at least short term longs. Of course, everything could turn on a dime, based on how today's earnings announcements pan out. Thus far, the expected earnings shortfall has not materialized; this month 26 out of 34 companies (76%) have beaten expectations, slightly better than this time last quarter, when 73% of companies had beaten.
The next 24 hours will see a number of key reports, including Merrill (MER) and Google (GOOG) tonight, and Citigroup (C) before the open tomorrow. The noise quotient will be high, and it wouldn't be a total shock to see the SPX below 1200 at some point tomorrow. After all, the underlying environment remains dangerous , to say the least.
Yesterday's CPI was pretty ugly, showing the highest rate of inflation since the first Bush presidency. And while "core CPI" apologists might maintain that the inflationary phenomenon is confined to headline, but I cannot help but observe that small businesses are more determined to pass on higher prices than at any point in the past 20 years. While this willingness doesn't necessarily correspond to an ability to pass on higher prices, it certainly suggests that some of the "core inflation complacency" that I observe may be misplaced.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Hedge Fund Manager's Notebook: Blood on the Streets - Buy Russia
- Reevaluating Coal
- Interview with Jim Rogers, Part II: China as World’s Best Long-Term Profit Play
- How You Can Invest in the Pickens Plan
- The Twin I-Beams of Investment Success
- On SLV's 10-for-1 Split: It's All About Liquidity
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- The Disconnect Between Supply and Demand in Gold & Silver Markets »
- The Great Consumer Crash of 2009 »
- Cramer Continues to Dig a Sirius Hole for Himself »
- Petrobras: Buy and Sit Tight Like Soros »
- 5 Impressive Stocks in This Difficult Market »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback »
- Interview with Jim Rogers, Part I: Bigger Financial Shocks Loom »
- Four Brazilian Profit Plays »
- Time To Gradually Reaccumulate Energy Stocks - And Gold »
- Solarfun Power Holdings: Expect a Rally from Key Support »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Lehman Upgrade? - Fast Money Midday Recap (8/21/08)
- Kirkland Lake Gold: Buried Potential
- Seven High-Priced Stock Values
- Support for Freddie - Fast Money Recap (8/20/08)
- Why Thornburg Mortgage Will Survive
- How You Can Invest in the Pickens Plan
- Silver ETF Bull Market Remains Intact
- Making Sense of Fortuna Silver's Recent PPS Action
- Five Struggling Dividend Stocks I'm Still Bullish On
- Four Unique Oil Sands Plays You've Never Heard Of
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Salesforce.com: It's All About the Guidance
- Three Casino Stocks Rolling Over
- New Web Site For Short Sellers: You Gotta Love Capitalism
- Commodity Carnage: Where to Turn Next?
- Fannie and Freddie Shareholders Run for the Exit
- Goldman: Readying Short Position Initiation Sequence
- Apple: Great Company with Lofty Valuation - Due for Pullback
- Russia's Too Risky - Barron's
- Fannie, Freddie Shareholders Will Be Left Holding the Bag - Barron's
- Pilgrim's Pride: The Weakest Link in the Food Chain
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Alarming Negativity - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/21/08)
- Hershey vs. Cadbury - Cramer's Mad Money (8/20/08)
- Cheap Oil Related Stocks - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/20/08)
- Real Buys - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/20/08)
- Coke vs. Pepsi - Cramer's Mad Money (8/19/08)
- Clean Energy - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/19/08)
- Still Growing - Cramer's Mad Midday (8/19/08)
- Which Stock to Pick - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Buy Weyerhauser - Cramer's Lightning Round (8/18/08)
- The Price of Oil - Cramer's Mad Money (8/18/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 14 comments:
ter
borenstein
What we have seen to date was a market response to some rational measures imposed by the Treasury and the FED.As the market paranoia dimishes and the investors/speculators respond to the facts not the distorted info(please note the record short open interest),the short covering will turn into a panic buying ,creating the foundation for fundamental mega rally .Volatility is likely to continue untill the bears address the reality and are carried out on the stretchers.
I just wonder what happened to all of the bearish attitudes when they were justfiable year ago.
If you define "the economy" as "the stock market", then yes the economy looked better the last two days. Of course, "fiscal and monetary stimuli" is the same as "the federal government running up an even larger deficit and giving the proceeds to rich speculators". OTOH, if one does not equate the economy with the stock market, then no, there has been no improvement.
If the economy is poised for growth, why did it need so much artificial life-support?
"this month 26 out of 34 companies (76%) have beaten expectations, slightly better than this time last quarter, when 73% of companies had beaten." Beaten what a revised reduction of an estimated 50% fall in earnings?
WHAT CAUSED THIS POP WAS COX WARNING about NAKED shorting!!! He put the fear of god into the shorts. WFC would have missed earning except for an accounting trick. The oil price fell 5 dollars that day> GIVE me a break The producer inflation rate is at 20% and the home builders have the lowest sentiment ever. The naked shorting is much much larger than most investors ever dreamed.
This is a must listen for stock mrket investors.
www.financialsense.com...
You may want to take all your money out of the market!