The Red Roadmaster’s Technical Report on the US Major Market Indices

January 20, 2009

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This is what happened last week…

Bad news, bad news and bad news again (tell’em, tell’em again and tell’em what you told them). Nevertheless, last Friday, the market rallied some off of Thursday’s technical reversal action.
The are still sending out the worst news, what with breaking up and Bank of America needing more cash to digest Merrill Lynch, it is a fact that Wall Street has moved to Washington, D.C., perhaps never to return to Manhattan. If that was not enough, the production capacity numbers were worse than anyone expected.
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Technical Report on the U.S. Major Market Indices

November 3, 2008

The US Indices Big Picture

After getting crushed during the month of October, the U.S. markets came to life last week.

Last week, the DJIA put on 114.32pts, 1.57%, to 9,325.01, the S&P 500 rose 14.66 pts,1.54%, 968.75, and the NAS rallied 22.43pts,1.32%, to 1,720.9 .

The Big Q: has the up turn marked an early sign of a market recovery or does it represents a consolidation before the next leg lower.

The Big A: Time will tell.

When we measure the up turn’s power, the following is a checklist to use in determining a MML (major market low).

Most of the following below have to happen:
• An off-the-charts strong-volume rally that is not driven by government intervention.
• The emergence of sector leadership. Along with the financials, the airlines are well, but these groups cannot do it alone, the techs have to really join the party.
• At least one, and preferably two, 20-to-1 up days to neutralize the October breakdown. Over the past many sessions, the U.S. markets have suffered three 20-to-1 down days from the breadth POV.
• A volatility drop to digest the market crash. For instance, a series of 100-point Dow moves, in either direction, uninterrupted by these 800-point whipsaws.
• From a sentiment standpoint, analysts need to stop declaring how great this buying opportunity is. This is a must
• A decisive break through in overhead resistance.
That is it from the Technical POV.

Now, when considering the final point, a break through in overhead resistance, see the following areas:
• Dow resistance at 9,387, matching the two week prior closing high.
• NAS resistance initially at 1,844, matching two week prior closing high, followed by the 1,900.
• S&P 500 resistance spanning from 1,000 to 1,010, two week prior closing high held at 1,003.
From a technical standpoint, anything transpiring under these levels is little more than “noise” according to some analysts, and as these areas are approached, the risk of another sharp downturn increases.

The Big Q: What should we look for this week?

The Big A: Earnings season is winding down, and there are only few companies left to report results that have the potential to influence the broad market. Stay tuned…

.
My pal Wally Stein’s Words of Wisdom
Be curious, mistrust dogma and common assumptions, belief in free will, and be confident in the face of the unknown. Your biggest enemy in the stock business is opinions and emotion.
Err on the side of Green.
Last week’s 18 World Big Stories, Ok, it seems the markets have priced in the bad news.

1) World markets are stabilizing, Interbank interest rates are falling.

2) the US$ recorded its biggest monthly gain against a basket of currencies in more than 17 years last Friday, boosted by month-end demand and concerns about a deteriorating global economy.

3) US Stocks: On the Week: U.S. stocks posted their best week in 34 years last week with the first two- session gainer in a month. On the Month: the DJIA logged its biggest monthly decline in a decade, and the S&P 500 had its worst month since October 1987.

4) The Russell 2000 Index, where hedge funds own an average 13% of shares, lost 21 percent in October, ending a five- month streak of beating the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index,

5) The London FTSE 100 closed up 2 pct at 4,377.34, capping its best week ever.

6) Moscow’s stock exchange put in the best week on record with gains of close to 50%, buoyed by state purchases of stocks and corporate bonds.

7) Japan’s Nikkei index ended October down 24%, its biggest monthly fall in its 58-year history, on continuing fears over a global recession and profit taking ahead of a long weekend

8) Hong Kong shares fell 2.5 percent last Friday, posting its worst monthly slide since Oct. 1997, on worries over the global economy.

9) The US, China, India, Korea, and Japan cut central bank lending rates, and the door is open for more.

10) The US Commerce Department reported last Friday that consumers cut monthly spending for the first time in two years in September.

11) Saudi Arabia and other Crude Oil producing Gulf states voiced their interest is in a stable energy price, not huge volatility that has Crude Oil prices soar and collapse, and a well-functioning global economy.

12) Crude Oil fell about $2 last Friday pressured by a stronger US$, weak consumer demand and the global economic crisis putting it on track for the biggest monthly drop in history. In three months, Crude Oil’s slide has wiped out gains that took more than a year to build.

13) OPEC announced last week it would cut Crude Oil output by 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd), they have started. Venezuelan Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said on Thursday that OPEC should cut Crude Oil output by another 1 million bpd, and should set a minimum price target of $70 or $80bbl.

14) Russia and Libya are negotiating a deal where Moscow would build, supply fuel, manage and operate nuclear research reactors for the North African state, Libya has Africa’s largest Crude Oil reserves and Russia is moving swiftly to participate in their energy projects.

15) Struggling auto makers GM and Chrysler are still in talks on a merger, but Bush administration ruled out providing government funding for it, so the deal will have to wait until after the presidential elections on Tuesday.

16) The US national debt has reached $10,523,955,355,856.66 as of October 24, an increase of 9% in about two months. So now each American citizen owes $35,079.85. (note the Pennies) http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/BPDLogin?application=np

17) The NFL, America’s most watched television sport, is borrowing $1.4 billion through a four-year term loan and another $460 million with a 10-year term note that will guarantee teams’ operating money through credit-market turmoil. This, even as the largest US banks continued to avoid the corporate bond market, showing the strength of the league in this environment.

18) Latest Bond outing, Quantum of Solace, starring Daniel Craig, smashed the previous record for a Friday opening of US$ 6.6MM, held by Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.

5 Big and Really Big Breaking Stories:

1) India’s central bank unexpectedly cut interest rates for the second time in two weeks and reduced the amount of money lenders must hold in reserve in a bid to protect the economy from the global slowdown. India’s Reserve Bank also reduced (the first time in 11 years) the statutory liquidity ratio, i.e., the amount of deposits that lenders need to invest in government debt or bonds of state run companies by 100 basis points. Also, the Bank of Japan’s interest rates may be headed back to zero, with the US Fed rate to follow.

2) The heads of Panasonic Corp and Sanyo Electric Co Ltd. have agreed in principle to a deal that would see Panasonic take over Sanyo, to create Japan’s largest electronics maker, three people familiar with the matter said.

3) Germany plans a 2 year program of investments and incentives to provide a 50B Euro (US$64B) boost to the economy that has been strangled by a freeze in global credit markets. “Measures to safeguard companies’ financing and liquidity are provided by funding investments worth slightly more than 20B Euros,” according to a joint paper by the economy and finance ministries, obtained by Bloomberg News. They “will encourage investments and orders by companies, private households and municipalities, totaling about 50B Euros.”

4) The Boeing Co. machinists start returning to work on Sunday after accepting a 4 year contract with 15 percent raises, ending a strike that idled the plane maker’s factories for eight weeks and cut profit by about $10.3 million a day, and sent BA shares South.

5) The China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to a seasonally adjusted 44.6 last month from 51.2 in September, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today. That was the lowest since the gauge was launched in July 2005. (A reading below 50 reflects a contraction, above 50 a expansion)
China’s cabinet has pledged extra infrastructure spending to stimulate the world’s fourth-biggest economy amid the global slowdown.
+ Two big Qs: 1) the huge event that is on all of our minds: Tuesday’s elections, and 2) Is the worst over for markets? Stay tuned…
A bit on politics: Socialism refers to a broad set of economic theories of social organization advocating state or collective ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods, and the creation of an egalitarian society.
Modern socialism originated in the late nineteenth-century working-class political movement. Karl Marx posited that socialism would be achieved via class struggle and a proletarian revolution, which represents the transitional stage between capitalism and communism. Source: Wikipedia

Joseph Schumpeter’s argument, set out in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy (1941) that liberal democracies were evolving from “liberal capitalism” into democratic socialism, with the growth of workers’ self-management, industrial democracy and regulatory institutions.

What One Big Money Manager thinks:

“We could have a huge rally,” says David Corbin, chief investment officer of Corbin & Co. in Fort Worth, Texas, which manages about $75 million. “The Fed is pumping up liquidity, and sooner or later some of this is going to find its way into the market. I feel like a kid in a candy store. My biggest problem now is in deciding what to buy.” Corbin thinks the Dow will hit 11,000 by this year end, and rise to 11,800 by mid-2009.
4) There is a huge buildup of cash on the sidelines that points to a bounce for equities. Money-market fund assets totaled $3.4 trillion as of Sept. 30, vs. $13.3 trillion of stock-market valuation, leaving the ratio of liquidity to market value at a near-record 25%. That’s comparable to the ratio in the early 1980s, when money funds yielded double digits. According to Ned Davis Research, since late 1980, the market almost always rises at least 12% whenever money-fund balances reach about 11% of market value. “A lot of money is on the sidelines,” says David C. Hartzell, founder of Cornell Capital Management in Buffalo, N.Y., which handles about $50 million. “if you’re a money manager, you can’t afford to be out of the market, because you might miss the comeback.”
5) Based on the market’s 50% decline between 2000 and 2002, and its 48% drop in the 1973-’75 Bear market, some believe we’re most of the way through this downturn. The S&P 500 is trading at 12 times trailing earnings, the best valuations seen in almost 20 years.
Market Factbook:

1) October 2008 was a month to forget for global stocks, as the DJIA, and the S&P 500 mirrored the weak performances by other indexes around the world. The S&P 500 fell 16.83% in October, its ninth-biggest monthly percentage decline on record. The DJIA dropped 14.06% in October, its 17th worst month in its history.

2) Increasing US taxes is not consistent or appropriate to continue energy sector investment. If the big oil companies are not making the investment or increasing investment in discovery and infrastructure, it will impact jobs, and there will be fewer jobs. So, increased taxation leads to less Crude Oil supply, and ultimately higher cost of energy and fewer jobs.

3) Barron’s latest Big Money poll reveals unrelenting bullishness among many money managers, despite prognostications for a contagious recession and lame profits through 2009. Now that stocks have tumbled to five-year lows, 62% of Barron’s Big Money respondents say they are oversold and undervalued, up from 55% last spring. 7% think equities are overvalued at today’s prices and almost 70% say stocks will be the best-performing asset class in 2009, 13% favor cash, and 11% favor bonds.

More of Keith K. Hatanaka’s Food for Thought on S&P 500 Valuations and Gold.
S&P 500 is undervalued. However, M3 levels became so high, and when you factor that in, perhaps it may not be undervalued; remember, Cash is still King.
The US government stopped reporting M3 money supply in 2006. M3 Money through Oct. 10th is sitting at approximately $14 Trillion, and 16% year over year rate of increase. If money supply is expanding at 16% annual rate that means your investments must grow at more than 16%.
Gold supply worldwide is short, below is from a recent letter from Bill Murphy over at the GATA (blog):
I talked to the chief broker in charge of the precious metals dept. of one of the largest metals banks in the Netherlands this morning. He told me that his bank had no gold in the vault for the first time in one hundred and forty seven years of its history! He had clients waiting in line for bullion coins of any type, and for the first time in his career, he had No supply! None, zero, zip, nada! I called a broker in West palm beach, Fl. and he confirmed he also had no supply! He also said he had funds of two and one half million dollars in his acct. from one client, and could not find product to fill his order! Bewilderment is a term he used! He asked me how silver and gold could be so cheap in the markets when there is no supply! That discussion I will have with him another day!
Precious metals refinery capacity maxed out globally in recent weeks due to record levels of investor demand in the metals.
Recent currency volatility and financial institution fragility has been cited as the driving reasons for the record numbers of investors flocking to silver and gold in recent weeks looking for the stability and safe haven the metals have traditionally offered. Global bullion refining capacity has been quickly overwhelmed by the sudden spike in demand for physical bullion supply.
“People are often surprised to learn there are less than seventy industry accredited refiners in the entire world” said AFE’s bullion treasury manager Simon Heaps this week; “refineries have been running three fully-staffed shifts most of the year. The industry is just not geared for such huge spikes in demand as we have seen in recent weeks”.
Many refineries are announcing long delivery delays and many are taking no further orders till Q1 quarter of 2009, particularly for refining of smaller investor type bars and coins, while North America coin dealers have been out of all stock for many weeks.
AFE announced this last week, after weeks of record demand, it continues uninterrupted supply to its clients with allocated good delivery bars through its network of long term supply relationships and unique global infrastructure. “In peak times like these, long term multi-decade relationships are critical” commented AFE’s Founding Director, Philip Judge. Posted by Alex Stanczyk on Oct 26, 2008
Article from US Constitution Section 10.

No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance, or Confederation; grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal; coin Money; emit Bills of Credit; make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts; pass any Bill of Attainder, ex post facto Law, or Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts, or grant any Title of Nobility.
In other words, Gold and Silver is the money, not paper money (fiat money equals debts). There is no place in the US Constitution that says paper money can be circulated as the official currency. As matter of fact it prohibits a bill of credit (paper money) from being used as legal tender between the States.
I am sure that Gold and Silver will be back, and back strong.
God Bless, KK
Snap Shot of the Major US Market Indices
DJIA: Most agree that DJIA was the main indicator on the test of the early October low. Last Tuesday it held above that low and reversed on good volume. This is positives action that indicates more to the Northside on this move with the 50 day EMA (9966), and 10,000 within reach.
Stats: +144.32 pts (+1.57%) close 9325.01 Volume: 311MM shrs last Friday vs. 267MM shrs on Thursday.
S&P 500: the S&P 500 closed the week by breaking through the 18 day EMA (962) as it sets up to move North in here.
Stats: +14.66 points (+1.54%)close 968.75 NYSE Volume: 1.563B/shrs (+13.68%). up Volume: 1.16B/shrs (+17.856MM/shrs) down Volume: 399.02MM/shrs (+174.456MM/shrs) Last Friday Advancers led 2.68 to 1 Last Thursday:: Advancers led 4.11 to 1
NAS: the NAS made a new closing low on the year last Monday and rocketed North on Tuesday moving up to the 18 day EMA where it closed last Friday. The NAS is still trending South but it is trying to set up for a move North. It is lagging the others but in position to make the break North too.
Stats: +22.43 points (+1.32%) close 1720.95 Volume: 2.488B/shrs (-1.95%). Good volume on Tuesday’s reversal putting it position to move North too, up Volume: 1.451B/shrs (-466.722M/shrs), down Volume: 1.011B (+356.449M), Last Friday advancers led 2.99 to 1, Thursday’s session: advancers led 2.67 to 1
The Charts*
DJIA Chart: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=djia
The S&P 500 Chart: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=sp500
The NAS Charts: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=NAS
Stock Chart School: http://stockcharts.com/school/doku.php?id=chart_school
Stock Charts Glossary: http://stockcharts.com/school/doku.php?id=chart_school:glossary_s
*Charts from Stockcharts.com
The Sentiment Indicators: These indicators are psychological indicators that attempt to measure the degree of bullishness or bearishness in a market. These are contrary indicators and are used in much the same fashion as overbought or oversold oscillators. Their greatest value is when they reach upper or lower extremes.
1) VIX: 59.89; -3.01. Typically, the highs on VIX are reached weeks before the bottom auguring for a bounce in here and then a test of the early October lows thus confirming the bottom.
2) VXN: 60.3; -2.89
3) VXO: 61.38; -3.93
4) Put/Call Ratio (CBOE): 0.96; +0.16. last Friday marked 3 days below 1.0 on the close after three weeks closing above that mark. The indicator is working fine.
*The Market Volatility Index (VIX) measures the volatility of the market. A recent news story described it as “the options market’s gauge of investor fear.” Traders use VIX as a general inverse indicator of market volatility and sentiment. High numbers mean that there’s excess bearishness, and low numbers indicate excess bullishness. The VIX is updated by the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), using Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) bid/ask quotes. It was created in 1993.
**The CBOE NAS Volatility Index (VXN) employs the same formula used to calculate $VIX, which is based on the implied volatility of S&P 500 index options. This formula is derived from a basket of put and call options. Some are out of the money, some in the money, and some at the money. The resulting $VXN represents the implied volatility of a hypothetical 30-day option that is at the money.
***The VXO is the ticker created to track the “original VIX” that was calculated using the prices of S&P 100 options. The new VIX uses the ticker $VIX and is calculated using the prices of S&P 500 options. The fundamental nature of the VXO is the same as the VIX, but it is less robust and not as simple as the VIX.
Bulls vs. Bears:
Bulls: The Bulls ended the week at 21.3%, fading from 22.2% last week, this is way below the 35% level considered bullish.
For your reference: The Bulls bottomed in the Summer 2006, the last major round of selling ahead of this 2007 high, near 36%, and 35% is considered Bullish.
Bears: The Bears ended the week at 52.7% down from high of 54.4% on this move, this too is way above the 35% threshold considered Bullish.
For your reference: This is the highest the Bears have climbed since 1995 and is negative in the extreme. Again, 35% is the level that indicates extreme pessimism.
What to expect this week, and down the line…
As earnings season comes to a close there is little in the numbers that could have any real impact on the markets.
The consensus is that the market is in position to continue North in here perhaps after a pause to refresh, but last week’s action points us Due North. The market always looks out 6 to 9 months and not to the last GDP scrapbook.
The move North is a bounce off of the lows and is usually a set up for a test of the October lows, nevertheless, this is a tradable range.
DJIA 10,000-10,100 (get the DJIA 10,000 Cap out) is the rally target in here and with that it is likely that if you listen to the talking heads you will hear that the bottom is in, that’s about the time that most analysts including yours truly will be looking for that test of the October low. That kind of action will be what may be needed to establish the bottom and set up a Bull charge North, though it is not necessary. Stay tuned

The Major Indices Resistance/Support Levels
DJIA: Close 9325.01
Resistance:
9323 June 2003 high
9575 September 2003
9814 August 2004
9852 25% off of the October 2008 low
9937 May 2004 low
9966 the 50 day EMA
10,000 to 10,100
10,127 April 2005 low
10,215 Q4 2005
10,365 a 2008 low
10,459 a September 2008 low
10,776 the 90 day SMA
10,827 the July 2008 low
10,962 the July closing low
11,060 February 2006
11,317 March 2006
11,388 the 2008 August low
Support:
9200 the July 2003 consolidation high
9141 the 18 day EMA
8982 the 10 day EMA
8985 the low in the 2003 consolidation
8626 December 2002
8521 interim high in March 2003
8197 the second October 2008 low
7882 the early October 2008 low
7702 the July 2002 low
7524 the March 2002 test low
7282 the October 2002 low
S&P 500: Close 968.75
Resistance:
995 June 2003 consolidation high
1065 the Q4 2003 level marking the run to 2007 high.
1071 the 50 day EMA
1075 August 2004.
1106 late September 2008 low
1133.50 mid September 2008 low
1181 the 90 day SMA
1200 the July 2008 low
1244 an August 2005 high
1245 the 2002/2003 up trendline
1257 the March 2008 low
1270 the January 2008 low
1279 the 200 day SMA
1285 the July 2008 high
Support:
965 the 2003 consolidation low
938 the 10 day EMA
889 an interim 2002 high
866 the 2nd October 2008 low
853 the July 2002 low
839 the early October 2008 low
800 the March 2003 post bottom low
768 the 2002 Bear market low
NAS: Close 1720.95
Resistance:
1752 2004
1782 August 2004
1882 October 2003
1900 the October 2008 gap down level
1912 April 2005
1930 the 50 day EMA
1947 the gap down point October 2008
1984 the late September 2008 low
2070 September 2008
2099 the mid September 2008 closing low
2155 the March 2008 low
2167 the July 2008 low
Support:
1669 the 10 day EMA
1644 August 2003
1620 the early 2001 low
1565 the 2nd October 2008 low
1542 the 1st October 2008 low
1521 the late 2002 high following the bounce off the Bear market low
1387 the 2001 low
1253 the March 2003 low on the test of the rally
1108 the 2002 low
This week’s Economic data (these are expectations complied from various reliable sources. (These, and official reported data often vary). Once again, lots of data this week.
Monday, November 3
September Construction Spending (10:00): expected -0.8%, prior 0.0%
ISM Index, October (10:00): expected 42.0, prior 43.5
Tuesday, November 4 (Election Day)
October Auto Sales: 4.3M prior
Truck Sales, October: 5.3M prior
Factory Orders, September (10:00): expected -1.5%, prior -4.0%
Wednesday, November 5
October ADP Employment (8:15): expected -80K, prior -8K
ISM Services, October (10:00): expected 48.5, prior 50.2
Crude Oil inventories (10:30): 493K prior
Thursday, November 6
11/01 Initial Claims (8:30):
Productivity Q3 Preliminary (8:30): expected 1.0%, prior 4.3%
Friday, November 7
October Average Workweek (8:30): prior 33.6
Hourly Earnings, October (8:30): prior 0.2%
Nonfarm Payrolls, October (8:30): prior -159K
Unemployment Rate, October (8:30): prior 6.1%
Pending Home Sales, September (10:00): prior 7.4%
Wholesale Inventories, September (10:00): prior 0.8%
Consumer Credit, September (3:00): prior -$7.9B
John Mauldin is back this week with: Electing the Janitor-in-Chief and a tribute to Tony Bennett
That’s all for now Readers, have a great week, and always remember take what the market gives…
Have a great week and stay tuned.

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Have the U.S. Markets been Revived?

November 3, 2008

After getting crushed for a month, the U.S. markets came to live last week.

On the the week, the industrials put on 114.32pts, 1.57%, to 9,325.01, the S&P 500 rose 14.66 pts,1.54%, 968.75, and the NAS rallied 22.43pts,1.32%, to 1,720.9 .

The Big Q: has the up turn marked a early sign of a market recovery or does it represents a consolidation before the next leg lower.

The Big A: Time will tell.

When we measure the upturn’s power, the following is a checklist in determining a MML (major market low).

Most of the following below have to happen:

*
An off-the-charts strong-volume rally that is not driven by government intervention.
*
The emergence of sector leadership. Along with the financials, the airlines are well, but these groups cannot do it alone, the techs have to really join the party.
*
At least one, and preferably two, 20-to-1 up days to neutralize the October breakdown. Over the past many sessions, the U.S. markets have suffered three 20-to-1 down days from the breadth POV.
*
A volatility drop to digest the market crash. For instance, a series of 100-point moves, in either direction, uninterrupted by these 800-point intraday whipsaws.
*
From a sentiment standpoint, analysts need to stop declaring how great this buying opportunity is. This is a must
*
A decisive break through overhead resistance.

That is it from the Technical POV.

Now, when considering the final point, a break through over overhead resistance, see the following areas:

*
resistance at 9,387, matching the two week prior closing high.
*
NAS resistance initially at 1,844, matching two week prior closing high, followed by the 1,900.
*
S&P 500 resistance spanning from 1,000 to 1,010, two week prior closing high held at 1,003.

From a technical standpoint, anything transpiring under these levels is little more than “noise.”, and as these areas are approached, the risk of another sharp downturn increases.

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Technical Report on the U.S. Major Market Indices

October 20, 2008

Once again we booked another wild market (the wildest in history) last week in the US and throughout the world…a week in which most analyst agree that the technicals are out the window, and the action is a rollercoaster of fear, panic, excitement, requiring nerves of steel to play. Traders are shaking their heads and dizzy…

Last Week’s Market Highlights.

Last week was a week that will go down in market history, chalking up the worst session since October 1987, not only that but it was the best week in the market since 2003. On Monday we saw a follow through on the previous Friday’s 1000+ pt action with another 1000pt swing in a mad rush of buyers, do you think Warren Buffett is leading the charge?. Then we saw a 700+ pt move to the Southside on Wednesday, followed by a 782 pt reversal to the Northside on Thursday. Last Friday was Options Expiration, we saw a 563pt swing.

It was the lowest volume, least volatile session on a super volatile week that perhaps set a classic double bottom pattern (W) on the major US indexes. It may only be an interim bottom, we have to wait to see as the Elliot Wave theory says we can go lower in here on the 4th and 5th wave…and many stocks are looking for a reason to run North off of their consolidating patterns. Remember that the market is always looking ahead and the stage could be set for a Bull Charge going forward, if that’s the case then October is the best month to begin.

Recap: The Jones Industrial Average ended the week up 401 points, or 4.7 percent, closing the week at 8,852. The S&P 500 gained 41 points for the week, or 4.6 percent, finishing at 940. The NAS composite index ended the week up 62 points, or 3.7 percent, closing at 1,711. The Russell 2000 index finished the week up 4 points, or 0.76 percent, ending the week at 526. Year-to-date, the DJIA, S&P 500 and NAS are all down at least 30%.
Was it historic or hysteric…I say both, and this Bear Market action is making a lot of players a lot of money fast.

Daily Market Wisdom
As you allow your resistances to melt, clarity and spaciousness will arise, and you will be able to move through Life with graciousness, and ease, guided by the confidence and spontaneity that are the fruit of trusting Life, in other words go with the flow and don’t fight the tape.—GuruRR

Today in US Stock Market History
Today is the 21st anniversary of the 1987 stock market crash that happened on Oct. 19, known as “Black Monday.” On that date, the fell a record 22.6%, the largest one-day percentage decline on record. Note: This October, the DJIA is down about 38 percent from its record closing high set a year ago on October 9, 2007.
These are the 10, sorry 15 Big Stories as the world’s markets try to sort out the chaos. (Another seesaw between Good, Grim, and just OK)

1. The Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers said on Friday its index of confidence plummeted to 57.5 in October from 70.3 in September. The lowest since June. October registered its largest monthly decline in the history of the surveys. Indicating Fear and Panic gripping the consumer.

2. Construction starts on new homes fell to a 17-1/2 year low in September. Last Friday’s data was a stark reminder that the world’s economic and financial troubles all originated in the U.S. housing market.

3 The nation’s home builders (big and small) will have to consolidate and change business model
4. sinks on supplies and declining usage world wide. Gasoline in US fell to under $2.99 gallon in some areas for the first time in 8 months.
5. Morgan Stanley saved by the Japanese with US$9B investment at the 11th hour.
6. Credit crisis pounding an already weak economy.
7. So far earnings are not coming in too bad. Personally I always liked Coke better than Pepsi anyway.
8. The LIBOR rates and the TED spread improves some, this is real plus.
9. International credit freeze begins to thaw.
10. European central bankers calling for Euro Brand consolidation and regulation.
11.  General Motors Corp and Chrysler LLC talk merger.
12. Prosecutors investigating the collapse of serve dozen subpoenas being including one to the investment bank’s chief executive, Richard Fuld. Will Dick Fuld to be the Gov/Street scapegoat?
13. Billionaire investor, Carl Icahn has put his 177 ft motor yacht, Starfire, up for sale. His WCI Communities Inc. (homebuilder) has filed for bankruptcy.
14. Mega Billionaire Warren Buffett comes on and tells investors, buy stocks now. “Exaggerated concern about the long-term prosperity of financially secure U.S. companies is foolish, and most probably will be setting profit records in years to come”, Buffett said. He may focus his personal investments on US companies only.
15. Action-packed “Max Payne” shot its way to the top of the North American box office, grossing $18 million during the video game adaptation’s first weekend in theaters, “Beverly Hills Chihuahua” moved to the No. 2 spot grossing $11.2 million, bringing its total receipts to $69.1 million.
Really Big Story: European leaders are pressing to convene an emergency meeting of the world’s richest nations, known as the G8, to be joined by India and China, to overhaul the world’s financial regulatory systems. Bloomberg reports today that President Bush and, French President Sarkozy and European Commission President Jose Barroso said in a joint statement after meeting yesterday that they will continue pressing for coordination to address “the challenges facing the global economy.”
The initial summit will seek “agreement on principles of reform needed to avoid a repetition and assure global prosperity in the future,” and later meetings “would be designed to implement agreement on specific steps to be taken to meet those principles,” the statement said.  The summit is scheduled to take place after the elections on November 4th in the USA.
Big Breaking Story: OPEC says it may cut oil supplies in two rounds, one when they meet next week in Vienna and a second later on, to drain oil supply surplus off markets and firm up prices, Chakib Khelil told Algerian state television Sunday.

Food for thought  from friend and fellow analyst Keith K. Hatanaka, international specialist in precious metals and soft commodities.

I mentioned to you before regarding Gold…… Maybe US$ peg to Gold????

European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said that reshaping the world’s financial system should try to return to the “discipline” that governed markets in the decades after World War II (WWII), creating stability by adapting frameworks that have worked historically.
At Bretton Woods, nations agreed to fix exchange rates, establish the International Monetary Fund, rebuilding Europe’s economy in the aftermath of WWII by encouraging coordinated economic policies.
After the collapse of , $638 billion in write downs make reluctant to lend. Therefore, the ECB and the Fed cut interest rates and this week agreed to flood the financial system with US$s.
Recent market turmoil is partly a consequence of the deregulation that occurred after Bretton Woods’ demise. That was triggered in 1971, when inflation forced the U.S. to abandon the US$’s peg to Gold, an anchor of the system, however, Bretton Woods II is the sign of the era of floating exchange rates.
Among these nations talk about the system should be going back to pegging the UD$ to Gold.
“The central bank is an institution of the most deadly hostility existing against the Principles and form of our Constitution. I am an Enemy to all discounting bills or notes for anything but Coin. If the American People allow private to control the issuance of their currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the People of all their Property until their Children will wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered.”— , Founding Father, Third President of the United States, and the principal author of the US Declaration of Independence
Next, let your readers know the total potential cost of the financial rescue to the U.S. taxpayer is already rapidly approaching US$5T, over seven times as much as Congress’ $700B rescue bill.
Based on Reuter’s summary, here is a breakdown of the rescue’s cost to taxpayers so far.
Bailout Type    Cost To Taxpayers
Pelosi’s latest economic-stimulus package     $300 billion
Paulson’s Bank Nationalization package    $250billion
Bailout to the American car companies    $25 billion
Nancy Pelosi’s bailout of the state and local governments    $150 billion
Financial “bailout” bill    $700 billion+
Bear Stearns financing    $29 billion
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac nationalization    $200 billion
AIG loan and nationalization    $85 billion (+ extra request of $35 billion)
Federal Housing Administration housing rescue bill    $300 billion
Mortgage community grants    $4 billion
JPMorgan Chase repayments    $87 billion
Loans to via Fed’s Term Auction Facility    $200 billion+
Loans from Depression-era Exchange Stabilization Fund    $50 billion
Purchases of mortgage securities by Fannie/Freddie    $144 billion
POSSIBLE TOTAL    $2.56 trillion+
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS PER U.S. CENSUS    105,480,101
POSSIBLE COST PER HOUSEHOLD    $24,269

In addition, the U.S. government has said it will temporarily guarantee US$1.5T in new senior debt issued by , as well as insure US$500Bin deposits in non-interest accounts, mainly used by businesses. These figures take the potential cost to US$4.559T + – or US$ 43, 221 per household.
Furthermore, when we account for the fact that the credit default swap market is around US$62T, and that derivatives worldwide are worth between US$1 and US$2 quadrillion, can you count the Zeros?
A way out: close down the CDS market, net out all existing positions, and cancel contracts. Let CMBS holders hold their positions (there’s not enough money in the US Treasury plan to buy them up). Adjust the cost accounting basis on the books of holders so that they do not have to mark their securities down. Next, give the Fed and Treasury unlimited transparency into every financial firm’s books on a strictly private basis and let them manage, merge and close down the insolvent players while guaranteeing every deposit in every bank and money-market fund.

Some good advice in this Storm…

Let us assume that things will get worse before they get better, so here are some steps to take care of yourself and your family:

•    Deal with Debt: If you have debt, pay it down. Better still, eliminate it completely. Going forward, pay cash for everything you buy. That may keep you from making some purchases; if so, that is good.

•    Downsize Your Life – Before it Downsizes You: Differentiate between things that you want, and things that you need. By streamlining your life, you will rediscover that some “things” are more important than other things.

•    Stay in, Don’t Cash Out: If you’re a decade or more away from retirement, everything we know about market probabilities and recorded history suggests the better option is staying in the market, as opposed to cashing out. But do not go crazy, either. We also know that balanced funds, hard assets and a solid emphasis on income offer the best shot at higher returns over time.

•    Be Real: If you are already retired, and your “nest egg” has been eviscerated, conduct a realistic appraisal of your financing needs. If you realize you can’t risk losing part – or all – of the money that you still have invested in the markets, talk to your financial advisor immediately. It may be better to pull out of the markets and move on to safer choices.

Snap Shot of the Major US Market Indices

DJIA: All of the indices looked alike last week, including the small caps, though the DJIA lagged a bit.

Stats: last Friday-127.04 pts (-1.41%) close 8852.22 Volume: 360MM shrs Friday vs. 422MM shrs last Thursday

S&P 500: the index moved North to the 10 day EMA (980.50) last Friday, and finished flat on the day.  It will try to cut thru the 10 day this week to continue the advance I believe…
Stats:  Last Friday Stats: -5.88 points (-0.62%) close 940.55 NYSE Volume: 1.74B/shrs (-12.88%) Up Volume: 818.794MM shrs (-738.405MM) Down Volume: 913.803MM/shrs (+502.715MM/shrs) A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 1.23 to 1
NAS: the NAS put in a good performance on an action packed historic market week, it moved up to the 10 day EMA last Friday faded closed flat. The pattern look like a short term double bottom that could send NAS North to the 2000/2100 level on this move, you know the techs love to lead. Case in point, last Friday earnings from IBM, AMD and GOOG, AMD, lit a fire under the techs. The NAS has the bit in its mouth and appears ready to lead off or the short double bottom. Keep AAPL in you sights.
Stats: last Friday -6.42 points (-0.37%) to close at 1711.29 Volume: 2.765B/shrs (-18.89%) Up Volume: 1.323B/shrs (-1.586B) Down Volume: 1.417B/shrs (+959.974M) A/D and Hi/Lo: Decliners led 1.29 to 1
Previous Session: Advancers led 1.21 to 1

The Charts*
1)    DJIA Chart: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=djia
2)    The S&P 500 Chart: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=sp500
3)    The NAS Charts: http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=NAS

*Charts from Stockcharts.com

The Sentiment Indicators: These indicators are psychological indicators that attempt to measure the degree of bullishness or bearishness in a market. These are contrary indicators and are used in much the same fashion as overbought or oversold oscillators. Their greatest value is when they reach upper or lower extremes.

1) VIX: 70.33; +2.72 on Friday after hitting record high of 81.15 on Thursday.
2) VXN: 71.26; -1.13
3) VXO: 71.06; +0.72
4) Put/Call Ratio (CBOE):  0.97; -0.18

Note: A contrary POV; when everybody bets one way it is likely to go the other, stay tuned

*The Market Volatility Index (VIX)  measures the volatility of the market. A recent news story described it as “the options market’s gauge of investor fear.” Traders use VIX as a general inverse indicator of market volatility and sentiment. High numbers mean that there’s excess bearishness, and low numbers indicate excess bullishness. The VIX is updated by the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE), using Standard & Poors 500 Index (SPX) bid/ask quotes. It was created in 1993.

**The CBOE NAS Volatility Index (VXN) employs the same formula used to calculate $VIX, which is based on the implied volatility of S&P 500 index options. This formula is derived from a basket of put and call options. Some are out of the money, some in the money, and some at the money. The resulting $VXN represents the implied volatility of a hypothetical 30-day option that is at the money.

***The VXO is the ticker created to track the “original VIX” that was calculated using the prices of S&P 100 options. The new VIX uses the ticker $VIX and is calculated using the prices of S&P 500 options. The fundamental nature of the VXO is the same as the VIX, but it is less robust and not as simple as the VIX.

Bulls vs. Bears:

Bulls: 22.4%. The Bulls are down from 25.3% below the 35% level considered bullish and from 40.7% on the high from the rally off the July 2008 lows.
For your reference: The Bulls bottomed in the Summer 2006, the last big selling before the charge to the October 2007 high.

Bears: 52.9%. The Bears declined a bit off of a high 53.0% high above the 35% level a bullish indication; this is the highest Bear number since 1995 and negative in the very extreme. 35% is the point indicating too much pessimism.
For your reference: the Bears hit a high of 37.4% in September of 2007. 53.0% Bearishness is way above their 2005 high and that is what ignited new rallies.

What to expect this week, and down the line…

Earnings and LIBOR, earnings and LIBOR.
Most analysts believe that earnings will turn in their 5th  straight Q of declines, but last week the Icons KO, JNJ, GOOG, IBM) beat. If the LIBOR continues to ease, and earnings continue to please, the market will begin settle and find some upward direction yet this October as it seeks to set a bottom.
With this kind of action look for traders to play the short term and scalp profits if they can going North or South.

Not Warren Buffett though, he is not a trader but a long term investor, that’s his secret. The market could very well get serious in here and rally North off of this short double bottom (W) pattern. Lot’s of analysts are saying no to the financials, that being the case, you should be looking at the big guys from a contrarian POV. Real rallies are lead by the financials, so watch them carefully.
Remember that the sentiment is extreme, the action is extreme, and the financial fix is in, all that said the markets are setting up for a move that may fool the talking heads. Warren Buffett is not Dope. Stay tuned…

The Major Indices Resistance/Support Levels

DJIA: Close 8852.22

Resistance:
8985 the closing low in the 2003 consolidation
9200 the July high in the 2003 consolidation
9211 the10 day EMA
9323 June 2003 high
9575 September 2003, May 2001
9631 the 18 day EMA
9814 August 2004
9937 the May 2004 low
10,100 to 10,000
10,127 April 2005 low
10,215 4thQ 2005
10,365 new 2008 low
10,459 the September 2008 low
10,503 the 50 day EMA
10,827 the July 2008 low
10,962 the July closing low
11,061 from February 2006
11,127 the 90 day SMA
11,317 March 2006
11,388 the August 2008 low

Support:
8626 December 2002
8521 interim high in March 2003
8197 2nd October 2008 low
7882 early October 2008 low
7702 the July 2002 low
7524 the March 2002 low
7282 the October 2002 low

S&P 500: Close 940.55

Resistance:
965 the 2003 consolidation low
981 the 10 day EMA
995 from June 2003 high
1031 the 18 day EMA
1065 the 4th Q 2003 point that the S&P 500 started the run to the 2007 high.
1075 from August 2004.
1106 the late September 2008 low
1133.50 the mid-September 2008 low
1142 the 50 day EMA
1200 the July 2008 low
1226 the 90 day SMA
1243 the 2002/2003 up trendline
1244 August 2005 high
1257 the March 2008 low
1270 the January 2008 low
1285 the July 2008 high
1302 the 200 day SMA
1313 the August 2008 high
1317 the February 2008 low
1324 the April 2008 low
1348 an old trendline

Support:
889 an interim 2002 high
866 2nd October 2008 low
853 the July 2002 low
839 the early October 2008 low
800 the March 2003 post bottom low
768 the 2002 Bear Market low

NAS: Close 1711.29

Resistance:
1752 from 2004
1768 the 10 day EMA
1782 August 2004
1859 the 18 day EMA
1882 from October 2003
1900 the gap down to point in October 2008
1912 from April 2005
1947 gap down from point in October 2008
1984 the late September 2008 low
2070 from September 2008
2070 the 50 day EMA
2099 the mid September 2008 closing low
2155 the March 2008 low
2167 the July 2008 low
2202 the January 2008 low
2261 a March 2008 interim low
2286 the 1st April 2008 gap up point.
2300 mild resistance
2132 the 200 day SMA
2340 the March 2007 low

Support:
1644 from August 2003
1620 from the early 2001 low
1565 the 2nd October 2008 low
1542 the 1st October 2008 low
1521 the late 2002 high following the bounce off the Bear market low
1387 the 2001 low
1253 the March 2003 low
1108 the 2002 low

This week’s Economic data (these are expectations complied from various reliable sources and official reported data often vary). The calendar is light again this week.
Monday, October 20
Leading Economic Indicators, September (10:00): -0.3% expected, prior -0.5%
Wednesday, October 22
10/18 inventories (10:35): 5.61M prior
Thursday, October 23
Initial Jobless Claims (8:30): 461K prior
Friday, October 24

Existing Home Sales, September (10:00): 4.93M expected, prior 4.91M

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Explaining the Dow Jones Industrial Average

October 15, 2008

Yesterday the had the biggest pointgainer in 112 yrs and the fifth largest percentage gainer in its storied history after several weeks of forced and panic selling.

Many of you have e-mailed me letting me know that you are tracking the as never before, and have asked to give a brief overview of the Average, what it is made of, what it indicates, etc. It is clear that many folks do not know the basics, so here you go, as follows;

The index is made of 30 of the biggest U.S. companies and is set up as a calculated measure of performance. Today it is the world’s most famous and watched index.

The Dow, as it has come to be known (there is also Dow Transports, Dow Utilities and Dow Theory), is the oldest continuing U.S. market index; it measures the combined stock values of 30 Big U.S. companies known as the “Blue Chips.”

We do not find any Transports or Utilities in the Dow Industrials, but it is interesting to note that in 1999 the industrial’s only tradition was broken when Intel (INTC) and Microsoft (MSFT) were added. This marked the first time that a NASDAQ (non-NYSE) traded stock became a member of the .

Started on May 26, 1896 by financial reporter Charles Dow, at its inception It started with 12 companies, including now-defunct companies like U.S. Leather Co. and Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Co and and was priced at $40.94  It is interesting to note that the only original component still around is General Electric Company (GE).

Today the Dow Industrials has expanded to 30 components and reflects the U.S. economy’s move from big industrial companies to  include big financial companies like Citigroup Inc., technology bellwether IBM Corp. and drug manufacturer Pfizer Inc. (Financials, Technology and Drugs: healthcare).

The Dow Industrial index today is made up of these big US companies: 3M, Alcoa, American Express, AT&T, of America, Boeing, Caterpillar, Chevron, Citigroup, Coca-Cola, DuPont, ExxonMobil, General Electric, , Hewlett-Packard, Home Depot, Intel, IBM, Johnson & Johnson, JPMorgan Chase, Kraft Foods, McDonald’s, Merck, Microsoft, Pfizer, Procter & Gamble, United Technologies, Verizon Communications, Wal-Mart and Walt Disney.

In the beginning the was simple: Charles Dow, when he complied the index back in 1896, originally took the price of one share of each company’s stock, added the numbers up and divided by the number of companies.

Thus the average when the index launched was $40.94: these pale compared to today’s 1000 pt surge to close at 9,387.61, or its record closing high of 14,165.43 on Oct. 9, 2007 just a year ago.

The way the is calculated today by the Dow Jones & Co. is by a mathematical formula to adjust for things like stock splits, i.e., when a company doubles the number of stocks its shareholders have, splitting the price of each in half, or new companies being added or removed.

The formula is a way to keep the index consistent over time and to make sure today’s value can be compared in a meaningful way to what it was in years past.

This is done mathematically by changing the “divisor”, a number that is divided into the total of the 30 stock prices. That divisor today is 0.122820114.

Next, the index utilized what is termed a “price-weighted average,” meaning expensive stocks have more weight (influence) over the number than lower-priced issues. This is done because the index is based purely on the US Dollar value of the stocks in the index, i.e., a high-priced share goes up/down (move) 20% is a larger dollar increase than a cheaper share’s 20% move.

For example: when we note the drop in the price of last week, we also know that it did not have a huge effect on the Dow because the automaker’s stock is already low. The stock fell $2.15, or 31 percent, on Thursday but only lowered the Dow by 17.1 points. Therefore, GM’s drag was small on day when the index plunged 679 points.

Some of you have asked me if the is a good measure of how the US companies are doing in the market, overall.

The answer is that some folks on Wall Street downplay the importance of the average because it is not as broad a measure as the Standard & Poor’s 500 index, which measures the performance of 500 NYSE companies stocks.

But once again, the Dow is the patriarch of all U.S. market indexes, and it presents an simplified snapshot of how the market is performing up or down.

Most analysts that I know believe it is a very good tool when combined with the other market indicators, including the and the NAS composite, an index of shares on the tech-heavy NASDAQ . You will often see these indexes go up and down together percentage wise as you saw today.

Dow
9,387.61                       +936.42                     +11.08%
Nasdaq
1,844.25                       +194.74                     +11.81%

1,003.35                       +104.13                     +11.58%

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The world is in a state of “PURE PANIC”

October 13, 2008

All of us at StockPreacher.com have been working tirelessly to keep our members up to date with breaking information from across the markets during this historic and troubled time. Our team has been expanding our information base as we have recruited analysts from around the world to provide current market forecasts and summaries of the days and weeks occurrences. There is an example of this on the left hand side of this report, titled:  “Some Wisdom from a Reader: The world belongs to those who adapt.” It is written by Paul Ebeling Jr. better known as the Red Roadmaster, a US market analyst and commentator.

Before we can make a judgement decision as to what our financial future holds, we have to know two things: What has happened so far and where we currently stand financially. Investor sentiment has reached a level of pure panic. We have all just witnessed one of the worst weeks in the history of the global markets. First off: The Dow is off the rails and completely out of control. On Friday the Dow Jones Industrial average took us on a 1,000 point swing. This is the largest intraday swing in the history of the exchange. The index recovered from almost a 700 point drop, surging more than 300 points into the green, before finally closing down 128 points at 8,451. Like a tired, old accountant, filing his last quarterlies before declaring bankruptcy, the Dow’s tally at the end of the week was a loss of 18.2%. This is the steepest weekly decline since 1914. The TSX Composite lost 16% as oil and many other commodities plummeted. The volatility being displayed in these markets has reached levels never predicted.

The door to the credit market is temporarily shut. Government officials from around the world are doing their best to open it, but have yet to succeed. We are at a standstill because banks are afraid to lend money. There is next to no available capital and everyone seems to be waiting for the other guy to make the first move. If everyone waits, nothing happens. Demand for commodities has tail-spinned into an absolute nose dive. What correlates with a widespread decrease in commodities? The increase in value of the US dollar. The greenback is running high right now for a combination of reasons; none make much sense. The euro has fallen off because of a deteriorating economic environment. The Canadian dollar is losing its value at a feverish pace, declining multiple percentage points last week. To be more specific, the Canadian dollar had the largest single day and weekly decline in 37 years against the greenback. Look for Canada’s trade to increase with the decrease in value of the loonie. Although a correction in the commodity markets may occur, demand for many of these metals will continue to be very strong out of Asia.
Global demand for commodities is being cut off because there is no influx of capital. This will not be remedied until buyers feel protected and aren’t worried about sharing the same fate as the investment bank, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. This fear that is dominating the markets is justified, to a point. Investors are always most fearful and irrational right before things calm down and the markets turn around.
A market strategist from Wells Capital Management, Mr. Jim Paulsen made some very insightful comments recently. He stated that, “The US Federal Reserve and the US Treasury made things worse by every day coming out with a different emergency policy.” He went on to say that, policy makers should stand down for now and make the case that the series of rescue measures introduced need time to work. He then stated, “They’ve been looking like chickens with their heads cut off. It makes you wonder who’s even running this country. Is it policy leaders or the Dow Jones Industrial Average.”
As investors, we have to be concerned with the fact that banks are not lending to each other. This is a problem above all others. It is affecting every aspect of the market. The Group of Seven (consisting of the finance ministers from the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Japan, Italy and Canada) met Saturday morning with President Bush at the White House. On Friday the G7 agreed on a framework for addressing the crisis, but gave no details as to exactly how they will go about averting a global recession.

Japanese Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa expressed hope that investors worldwide will ultimately be in favour of the Group of Seven Nations’ decisions on combating the global financial crisis.

Until liquidity comes back and capital is easily attained, the markets will underperform and rampant fear will be the norm. There is a light at the end of the tunnel. The old saying, ‘It’s always darkest before the sun rises’ is true. In the meantime, this volatility has provided opportunities galore. We encourage everyone to review their portfolios and make decisions as if you are the CEO of your own company – not just another irrational and scared investor.
All the best with your investments,
StockPreacher

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