
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Thursday, March 31, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Dumb money talks. By one measure, the market hasn't been this oversold since May 2004. We look at several leading indicators based on sentiment and deduce the market may be ready to rally
--- Advertisement --- ------------------------- A SEDUCTIVE SCENARIO By Eric J. Fry Jay Shartsis doesn't write poetry
but he does craft some very seductive prose. Jay doesn't pen verses about love or romance, but he does issue trading alerts that examines the fleeting passions of investors. Specifically, he examines a wide range of sentiment indicators to gauge the stock market's likely future course. In the days preceding yesterday's rally, Shartsis had been warning his clients of an extreme "oversold" conditioned in the U.S. stock market. Based on his observations, the savvy options trader for R. F. Lafferty in New York had devised a "working scenario" in which stocks bounce very forcefully for several days, before ultimately exhausting themselves and "rolling over" to new multi-month lows. Jay based this scenario primarily on the fact that option- buyers had become a bit too bearish, which, as a contrary indicator, suggested that stock prices would advance. "The market is heading toward a 'tradable low,'" Jay predicted late last week. "Some put/call gauges are showing high levels of pessimism, as the air but looks like the final stages of a decline." Jay pointed out that option traders were increasing their bearish bets against the market. In particular, he noted that small investors (those who purchase less than 10 contracts at one time) had become conspicuously aggressive put-buyers. This group of traditionally "dumb money" often bets against the market at exactly the wrong time. "It is probable that the market is approaching a tradable low," Shartsis reiterated late last week. "Several put/call gauges show a pretty high level of pessimism, but they allow for a further downside spike to get them into extreme territory. Perhaps the best strategy now is to get ready to go long, but not unless the market puts in a solid reversal day. A solid reversal day requires a lower morning - perhaps sharply so - and a reversal back up late in the session with a strong close on heavy volume. If that does not appear, I would stay away because he could get quite ugly fast." Monday morning, Jay fired off a fresh missive to his clients in which he continued to alert them to the possibility of an imminent rally. "As anticipated," Jay reported, "the market continues to slide deeper into oversold territory
The NYSE oscillator of Larry McMillan (editor of the market letter, McMillan Analysis) is below - 600, 'very rare territory,' as he calls it, and he notes that the last three times this phenomenon occurred were May 2004, October 2002 and July 2002. All three instances marked major bottoms, followed by strong rallies. McMillan remains cautious but is allowing for a sharp, short-lived rally. Which sounds right to me." Shartsis also observed bullish signals emanating from two other sentiment gauges he monitors. First of all, the plummeting NYSE advance/decline readings of recent days suggested to him that the market had reached an important "selling climax." Five out of the prior eight trading days had recorded sessions in which at least 1000 more stocks fell than advanced. As a result, the 15-day average of the NYSE advance/decline line get to an oversold level that has produced 30-day rallies in 37 of 38 prior occurrences. "Also suggesting that a market bottom is approaching," said Jay, "is the ISE Sentiment Index, which last week dropped to 119 (i.e., 119 calls purchased for every 100 puts purchased), which is the most put-buying since last October 14th, immediately before the start of the day to year-end rally." Your editor checked in with Jay yesterday to see if he had altered his outlook in any way. "Not really," came the reply. "Investors are exhibiting the sort of extreme pessimism that often precedes tradable rallies." "You said you were waiting for a 'big reversal day' to signal the start of a new rally. Does today's big up day satisfy you?" we asked. "Since it follows so close on the heels of Tuesday's sell-off, does this qualify as the reversal day you were anticipating?" "Well it wasn't exactly the type of reversal I was looking for," he replied, "but it might have to do. I feel pretty sure this rally will last long enough to bring a few smiles to Wall Street. But I'd caution against falling in love with it. You'll want to trade this rally for a good time, but not for a long time." "Why's that?" we asked. "Because longer-term sentiment indicators tell a very different tale. The CFTC Commitment of Traders report lurks in the background like the grim reaper." 
Shartsis was referring to the final phase of his scenario - the looming sell-off after the rally. "After the market has a rally to relieve the current oversold condition," he wrote to his clients earlier this week, "a first-rate problem for the bulls is the position of the 'large speculators,' thought to be mainly hedge funds, that own Dow futures contracts. They are often wrong and are now net long a record 14,196 contracts. The last time they were heavily net long was in February 2001, when they were net long 7,407 contracts, and the Dow cratered 17% in only a month a half into mid-March 2001. Particularly worrisome now is that their position is nearly twice as large as in 2001, and that looks pretty ominous." Jay Shartsis may not know an iamb from a dactyl, but he does know a thing or two about the cadence of financial markets. So we should not be surprised if U.S. stock market rallies for a while, before returning to its losing ways. [Ed. Note: It is a matter of public record that Doug Casey was recommending uranium stocks as far back as October 1998, with spectacular results. (Cameco, up 542%; International Uranium, up 1,497%; Paladin Resources, up 1,412%; Strathmore, up 340%
) For a FREE copy of his just-published report, 31 Uranium Companies Reviewed, simply follow the link below. Uranium stocks - the sure winners
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Eric J. Fry It has become somewhat chic to deride the bull market in energy stocks as a "mini-bubble." We don't agree. Perhaps the energy bubble is so mini that it is invisible to the naked eye, or perhaps it is concave. This "bubble" currently sells for about 13 times TRAILING earnings, while the rest of the stock market - that portion which resides outside the energy bubble - sells for more than 20 times earnings. When dealing in the context of recent financial market history, the bubble accusation seems even more ludicrous. As the nearby chart illustrates, the weighting of energy stocks within the S&P 500 has fluctuated over the last decade, but has not increased one iota since 1995. Meanwhile, financial stocks have greatly increased their presentation in the S&P 500 over the same time frame.
Back in 1980, financial stocks and energy stocks possessed the exact opposite weightings in the S&P 500 that they do today. Energy accounted for about one-quarter of the index while financial stocks accounted for less than 10%. We all know what happened next: financial stocks soared for the next two decades, while energy stocks languished. Today, however, the opposite situation abides. But we did not expect it to abide for much longer. In a world of rising energy prices and rising interest rates, we would expect oil stocks to steal S&P 500 "market share" from the financial stocks, in which case the mini-bubble that some investors find so troubling to become much, much bigger before it eventually bursts. "The assets on the balance sheets of energy companies are a lot more tangible, and in a globalized world, a lot more valuable than say, a pool of mortgages," observes Dan Denning, the mind behind the Strategic Options Alert. "Pools of oil versus pools of mortgages. You make the call." [Ed. Note: Dan Denning shorted oil stocks on March 14, 2005 with some put options on the XLE, when he judged the market to be overbought. A brave trade indeed! But it worked. Yesterday he closed the position, snatching 47% profits. If you are interested in macro-speculations just like this, have a look at Dan's service, Strategic Options Alert
Strategic Options Alert http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/STA/superB01 ------------------------- And the Markets
| Wednesday | Tuesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,541 | 10,406 | 98 | -2.2% | S&P | 1,181 | 1,165 | 10 | -2.5% | NASDAQ | 2,006 | 1,974 | 15 | -7.8% | 10-year Treasury | 4.55% | 4.58% | -0.04 | 0.34 | 30-year Treasury | 4.80% | 4.84% | -0.05 | -0.02 | Russell 2000 | 615 | 605 | 0 | -5.6% | Gold | $426.35 | $426.20 | $1.40 | -2.6% | Silver | $7.12 | $6.96 | $0.20 | 4.5% | CRB | 311.02 | 308.93 | 4.14 | 9.5% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $53.99 | $54.23 | -$0.85 | 24.3% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 107.54 | JPY 107.50 | -1.17 | -4.8% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2916 | $1.2922 | 24 | 4.7% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8788 | $1.8741 | -95 | 2.1% |
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