Another wild ride in the markets this week, as we saw the Auto makers and Citigroup in the headlines. Also this week, another 500,000+ joined the unemployment lines, same as the previous week (over 1 million in two weeks, over 4 million ongoing claims, and we are expecting close to 500,000 again in the coming week).
Treasury yields (Bonds) dropped to near zero (on the 3 month bills) as investors flocked to safety. In October, Consumer prices plunged by the largest amount in the past 61 years. Oil continued to fall, closing below $50 per barrel, while Gold closed back above $800. Also, three more banks were shut down this week. The saga continues...
The Nasdaq is down 50% from its 'high' of 2800 last October. This 2800 'high' was down from the 5100 high in 2000, a double whammy for investors! Another blow to the 'long term, buy & hold strategy' crowd. In 10 years not only did you NOT make any profits, you actually lost money, even before counting annual inflation.
Next week we have a short week because of the Thanksgiving holiday. We got a nice rally on Friday, but we'll have to wait and see if it continues, or if it fizzles like the other big rallies we had on Nov 13th, Oct 28th, and Oct 13th! President-elect Barack Obama is expected to formally announce his economic team this week. The market rallied on Friday after the announcement of his pick for Treasury secretary.
"NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Wall Streeters returning to work Monday have at least one thing they can be thankful for: Thanksgiving is one less day the market is open."
***Breaking news: U.S. rescues Citi with $20 billion capital
As stock plummets, Citi on the brink
Will Citigroup Survive? Four Possible Scenarios
FDIC to guarantee $1.4 trillion in bank debt
The Auto Makers Are Already Bankrupt
Best housing 'bailout' may be no bailout
Trillions down and still bailing
30 reasons for Great Depression 2 by 2011
Obama Targets 2.5 Million Jobs With Stimulus Plan
How a Year-End Rally Could Materialize
The Death of Buy and Hold
The Global Economy's Big Fear Becomes Real: Deflation
Putin Pledges to Prevent Financial Collapse in Russia
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
Stock Market Update -Nov 16th
This was a week chock full of news. The $700 billion bailout plan got switched (it never even got off the ground; remember this is the one that had to be done 'immediately' to avoid a financial meltdown, over a month and a half ago!) , AIG got billions more from the government, and now insurance companies are converting to banks to get some of that government money too (also American Express!), GM is on the brink of bankruptcy, while Circuit City filed for bankruptcy. We saw more than 279,500 homes receive foreclosure notices in October, over 500,000 in new unemployment claims for the week, more job cuts announced (Sun, Citi, etc), and Oil settled lower at $57 per barrel. With all this news, the market dropped below the October 10th low, then bounced back on Thursday.
This coming week we have the CPI report on Wednesday, and earnings from Dell, Home Depot, and Lowe's. We also have options expiration on Friday.
This could be make or break week for the markets -I expect it to turn higher, but we could always get a downside surprise, so be careful. Unless you are a professional trader, I would still be on the sidelines at this time.
U.S. Economy: Retail Sales Drop by Most on Record
Cost of Living in U.S. Probably Dropped by the Most in Almost Sixty Years
12,000 retail stores to be shuttered next year
Are you an idiot to keep paying your mortgage?
The Big Three Are a National Disgrace
Chipmaker stocks fall as bad news snowballs
DHL express service centers in U.S. to be shut down
Citigroup Shares Tumble, Pressure on Pandit
How AIG got Uncle Sam over a barrel
Uncle Sam's Credit Line Running Out?
Your $3 trillion bailout
The United States of Bailouts
CNBC -Weekly market stats
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
This coming week we have the CPI report on Wednesday, and earnings from Dell, Home Depot, and Lowe's. We also have options expiration on Friday.
This could be make or break week for the markets -I expect it to turn higher, but we could always get a downside surprise, so be careful. Unless you are a professional trader, I would still be on the sidelines at this time.
U.S. Economy: Retail Sales Drop by Most on Record
Cost of Living in U.S. Probably Dropped by the Most in Almost Sixty Years
12,000 retail stores to be shuttered next year
Are you an idiot to keep paying your mortgage?
The Big Three Are a National Disgrace
Chipmaker stocks fall as bad news snowballs
DHL express service centers in U.S. to be shut down
Citigroup Shares Tumble, Pressure on Pandit
How AIG got Uncle Sam over a barrel
Uncle Sam's Credit Line Running Out?
Your $3 trillion bailout
The United States of Bailouts
CNBC -Weekly market stats
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
Stock Market Update -Nov 9th
The market was trending up before the election, then fell for two days after the results were announced. Then with everyone expecting more selling on Friday from a horrible Jobs report, the market did the opposite of what everyone expected -it rallied on bad news! (240,000 more jobs were lost). If you are a technical trader, the charts indicate that this market wants to go up, regardless of the news.
This week England and Europe cut interest rates again, by 1.5% and .5% respectively -very aggressive. The auto makers all reported gloomy numbers this week. Two more banks were shut down on Friday, and Oil settled at $61 per barrel.
Next week we don't have much in the way of market moving events. As I've indicated before, I see the market trying to move up from these levels.
Side note: The effects of printing money irresponsibly, and subsequent runaway inflation: dinner for 1 in Zimbabwe can now cost $1.2 billion dollars (not including the tip)! The US debt clock stands at $10.65 trillion this week (see left panel).
Stocks higher despite bad news on jobs, automakers
GM grapples to avoid filing bankruptcy as cash vanishes
Jobless rate at 14-year high as losses continue
Jobs lost in 2008: 1.2 million
Consumer bankruptcies in October top 100,000
Berkshire Hathaway's profit falls 77%
Las Vegas Sands signals it may not survive downturn
Circuit City gets delisting notice from NYSE
Obama plans quick action on economy
Why it's (finally) time to buy stocks
How the Thundering Herd Faltered and Fell
China to launch $586B stimulus plan
South Korea Cuts Rate to 4% to Stave off Recession
USDA crop report first on the agenda for CBOT grains
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
This week England and Europe cut interest rates again, by 1.5% and .5% respectively -very aggressive. The auto makers all reported gloomy numbers this week. Two more banks were shut down on Friday, and Oil settled at $61 per barrel.
Next week we don't have much in the way of market moving events. As I've indicated before, I see the market trying to move up from these levels.
Side note: The effects of printing money irresponsibly, and subsequent runaway inflation: dinner for 1 in Zimbabwe can now cost $1.2 billion dollars (not including the tip)! The US debt clock stands at $10.65 trillion this week (see left panel).
Stocks higher despite bad news on jobs, automakers
GM grapples to avoid filing bankruptcy as cash vanishes
Jobless rate at 14-year high as losses continue
Jobs lost in 2008: 1.2 million
Consumer bankruptcies in October top 100,000
Berkshire Hathaway's profit falls 77%
Las Vegas Sands signals it may not survive downturn
Circuit City gets delisting notice from NYSE
Obama plans quick action on economy
Why it's (finally) time to buy stocks
How the Thundering Herd Faltered and Fell
China to launch $586B stimulus plan
South Korea Cuts Rate to 4% to Stave off Recession
USDA crop report first on the agenda for CBOT grains
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
Stock Market Update -Nov 2nd
October lived up to its reputation for being a bad month in the stock market, in spite of the 'up' week we just saw (chart below). According to CNBC, "For the first time in history,the Dow, S&P 500, and NASDAQ finished the week up over 10%." -maybe that's a good sign.
The Fed cut rates again this week, bringing the level to 1%.
Monumental profits were reported by the big oil companies this week.
The Yen continues to gain strength against most other currencies.
The US Dollar continues to gain strength too, though some say not for long.
Another bank was shut down on Friday.
Next week we get more earnings reports, along with the election, and the important Jobs report on Friday. So far, we are getting the turning point in the markets that I mentioned last week. Lets see if the election results and the jobs report support this turning point.
"Worldwide, investors have lost $10 trillion in just the last month as share values collapsed."
For the buy and hold crowd, note that after more than 20 years, Japan's stock market still has not recovered! In the US, most sectors are now back to levels seen 10 years ago! Buy & Hold doesn't work; market timing DOES work, despite what you hear from the so called 'experts'!
Hopes are 'worst October' signals worst is past
Debt Markets in U.S., Europe Suffer Worst Month on Record
The Bet That Blew Up Wall Street
Global stocks suffer again
Fed Battles 'Big-Time' Economic Erosion With New Cuts
Fed Signals Door 'Open' for Cutting Rates to Lowest on Record
Bernanke makes it official. We are Japan
Beaten down, American consumers burrow deeper
US Home Prices Posts Record Annual Decline, Consumer Confidence Collapses
GDP falls 0.3% in third quarter on dive in spending
Chase to halt new foreclosures for 90 days
Fed currency initiative eases Asian jitters
Arab countries scramble to save their banks
Gordon Brown Asks Gulf Wealth Funds to Invest in U.K.
Barclays raises $12 billion from Middle East, others
Japan Pledges Fresh Crisis Action Measures
Bank of Japan Cuts Rate to 0.3% to Fend Off Prolonged Recession
China Cuts Interest Rates for Third Time in 2 Months
India Unexpectedly Cut Interest Rates to Spur Growth
Bank of Korea Cuts Rate by Record to Bolster Market
Iceland hikes lending rate to 18%
Ethanol maker VeraSun declares bankruptcy
Hartford Financial loses over half its market value
American Express to cut 10% of work force
Treasury sales could top $1 trillion to fund bailout
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
The Fed cut rates again this week, bringing the level to 1%.
Monumental profits were reported by the big oil companies this week.
The Yen continues to gain strength against most other currencies.
The US Dollar continues to gain strength too, though some say not for long.
Another bank was shut down on Friday.
Next week we get more earnings reports, along with the election, and the important Jobs report on Friday. So far, we are getting the turning point in the markets that I mentioned last week. Lets see if the election results and the jobs report support this turning point.
"Worldwide, investors have lost $10 trillion in just the last month as share values collapsed."
For the buy and hold crowd, note that after more than 20 years, Japan's stock market still has not recovered! In the US, most sectors are now back to levels seen 10 years ago! Buy & Hold doesn't work; market timing DOES work, despite what you hear from the so called 'experts'!
Hopes are 'worst October' signals worst is past
Debt Markets in U.S., Europe Suffer Worst Month on Record
The Bet That Blew Up Wall Street
Global stocks suffer again
Fed Battles 'Big-Time' Economic Erosion With New Cuts
Fed Signals Door 'Open' for Cutting Rates to Lowest on Record
Bernanke makes it official. We are Japan
Beaten down, American consumers burrow deeper
US Home Prices Posts Record Annual Decline, Consumer Confidence Collapses
GDP falls 0.3% in third quarter on dive in spending
Chase to halt new foreclosures for 90 days
Fed currency initiative eases Asian jitters
Arab countries scramble to save their banks
Gordon Brown Asks Gulf Wealth Funds to Invest in U.K.
Barclays raises $12 billion from Middle East, others
Japan Pledges Fresh Crisis Action Measures
Bank of Japan Cuts Rate to 0.3% to Fend Off Prolonged Recession
China Cuts Interest Rates for Third Time in 2 Months
India Unexpectedly Cut Interest Rates to Spur Growth
Bank of Korea Cuts Rate by Record to Bolster Market
Iceland hikes lending rate to 18%
Ethanol maker VeraSun declares bankruptcy
Hartford Financial loses over half its market value
American Express to cut 10% of work force
Treasury sales could top $1 trillion to fund bailout
Stocks and Indexes mentioned in this blog are for educational and illustration purposes only.
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