A Big Intraday Reversal Sends Stocks Well Off Their Lows Of The Session; The VIX Hits A 21-Year High

October 11, 2008

Wow. That perfectly explains the action the past week in the stock market. There is no doubt that the past week was the weakest week any of us have seen in our lifetimes. That can best be seen in the SP 500 which fell 18.2% this week easily beating its old record in the week of the crash in 1987 when it lost 12.2%. So as can be seen this was easily one of the worst weeks any of us have ever seen.

The worst index this week of major importance was the NYSE which lost a whopping 19.5% in one week! That is by far the worst drop, as the Nasdaq only fell 15.3%. These kind of huge drops did nothing to convince anyone that the bailout bill was a good idea and proof of that fear was easily registered in the VIX.

The VIX hit a shocking 76.94 intraday on Friday. That was the highest level since 10/20/1987 when the VIX hit 172. This extremely high level on the VIX is something most of us have never seen as most of us were not investing full-time or doing this for income back in 1987. This extremely high level has a lot of people believing that Friday must have been the volume. Especially since volume came in the heaviest ever on the Nasdaq expanding by 41% from Thursday’s levels. Volume expanded around 50% on the NYSE. Even though my charting service Telechart does not show record volume, IBD shows that volume on the NYSE was a new high for at least 2008.

While the extremely big volume, along with the very bullish reversal from the Nassy being down 6% to closing up .3%, was very bullish on a day that saw some extreme fear intraday, there was still a slight problem. The fear that showed up in the VIX just has not showed up in the put/call ratio. The shocking and almost unbelievable fact is that the put/call ratio actually fell on Friday to 1.16 from 1.20 on Thursday. This is still off the recent highs of 1.3 which is still below the 1.5-1.6 put/call ratio that showed up in March when BSC was the first of the bad eggs to knock the financials lower. I don’t know how this is happening, with all the fear being driven up by the news media, but it is happening.

Despite this bad news, the other good news that is showing market participants are getting too bearish is the investors intelligence survey which shows bears hitting a five-year high of 53% and bulls hitting a five-year low of 25.3%. With professionals this bearish, it is a good sign that most of those that are going to sell have sold. This very weak reading can get weaker so don’t think just because these are five year highs and lows that this means this is a bottom. The put/call and lack of a follow-through day should keep anyone from declaring the worst over yet.

Even if it is not over, we are so oversold that I think with the comeback intraday today, along with some other data, show that a bounce must be expected sometime soon.

Two things that clearly show me that we are extended to the downside and poised for at least a bounce soon is that out of 7050 stocks in my Telechart system ONLY 261 are above the 50 day moving average. That is a number I do not believe I have ever seen in my Telechart above the 50 DMA scan. It is shockingly low. But what makes it worse is that the majority of the stocks in an uptrend and above the 50 DMA are all ETFs. Most of the regular stocks are in downtrends.

The last thing that really shows an extended market to the downside is the new 52-week highs to new 52-week lows. Leaving out the AMEX, there were 3 new 52-week highs to an outrageous 3,398 new 52-week lows. A number so high that I believe I have never seen that before. I do not keep data on 52-week highs and lows going back to when I started in 1996 but I am sure I have never seen that many stocks making new lows at once. Adding to this, the AMEX had 45 new 52-week highs (all ETFs) and 649 new 52-week lows. If your keeping track that is 48 new 52-week highs to 4,047 new 52-week lows! Stunning!

I believe that we could see a bounce however I don’t know how anyone with a sane mind would play this, minus looking to short a low volume rally. There are zero good looking charts out there setting up in my CANSLIM scans or in my “perfect setup” scans. This lack of quality stocks setting up, along with poor leadership, shows that it is going to be a rough move higher if we do move up off the lows here. However, nobody said that this all can not be part of a long bottoming process. We have been in a bear market for almost a full 12 months now. This is not something new. A lot of people act like we just started moving lower and nothing could be further from the truth.

If this is not part of a bottoming process we will know soon enough. We will not see any new stocks setup in nice patterns, IPOs will not come to the market, low volume will be on the indexes, and the rally will, obviously, fail and we will hit new lows on higher volume. That would be the worst scenario, in my opinion, because the government has their hands in the market.

I am not sure if we are about ready to enter a new world of Socialism but I am praying that my worst fears do not come true. If they do, I believe that the USA can still produce some exciting innovative companies. I like to believe that we have not dumbed-down our culture enough that the entrepreneurial spirit is dead. I like to believe it is alive and well and still kicking and even if we have to go through four years of Socialism we will come out ahead because we are hard working Americans. God help us all, if I am wrong.

For now, it would be smart to take profits in any shorts that you have a 20% or higher return on your investment. We have come down a lot the past couple of months and the past week was one of the worst drops ever. To not cover SOME (not all) of your shorts into this environment would be foolish. If you are not going to take any profits, don’t come crying to me if you get a big fat short-squeeze that takes you out of your position. There is a difference between being smart and being greedy. In bull markets you can get the big 1,000% gain. In bear markets, you must take profits along the way from 20% to 99%, depending on the chart pattern and price descent.

I hope everyone has a nice weekend. Relax, enjoy your company with family and loved ones. The truth is that is the most important thing in our lives. Not money, but family. As long as you cut your losses, which I have ALWAYS preached, you can always wait for the proper bull market to make a LOT of money. There is always a bull market from a bear market. This too shall pass. Aloha!!

YouTube video will be up before Monay. Gold and Platinum subscribers can watch the full size version in the forums.

A Big Intraday Reversal Sends Stocks Well Off Their Lows Of The Session; The VIX Hits A 21-Year High

Waiting for the sun? Godot? No, Mitsubishi. (MS, rated BUY)

October 11, 2008

Morgan Stanley is in a white knuckle situation, having just had a 22% haircut today. They are waiting on a big chunk of change($9 billion) from MTU on Tuesday. I believe that the government won’t let Morgan Stanley fail. Look for them to get a cash infusion from Uncle Sam now that Paulson has been given the power to do so. Also, don’t rule out them being bought lock, stock, and barrel. Still, this is a speculative pick and should only be made with money that you can afford to lose.

Waiting for the sun? Godot? No, Mitsubishi. (MS, rated BUY)

Kiener: Gold Prices To Double On Paper Market Default (GLD, rated BUY)

October 11, 2008

urg Kiener, CEO of Swiss Asia Capital, told CNBC this morning that the flight from paper currencies as a result of global interest rate cuts will lead to a doubling in the price of gold within a short period, as demand for physical precious metals outstrips supply, causing paper contracts on gold to default.

http://conquerthewallstreet.blogspot.com/2008/10/kiener-gold-…

Kiener: Gold Prices To Double On Paper Market Default (GLD, rated BUY)

FDA Calendar: Near-Term Movers (DSCO, rated BUY)

October 11, 2008

FDA Calendar of Decision Dates: Some Likely Near-Term Movers


Some likely near-term movers on the FDA’s decision date calendar for 70 different items (click to enlarge, left) include Cypress Bioscience ( CYPB ) + partner Forest Labs ( FRX ) with a pending decision on milnacipran in the treatment of fibromyalgia slated for the end of October in addition to results from a Phase 3 trial for the drug some time before year end.
Also, Discovery Labs ( DSCO ) is not listed on the calendar, but expects to file a complete response to a May 1st FDA approvable letter for Surfaxin by the end of September and expects a Class I review by the agency with a potential decision in just two months.
Another company not listed on the calendar is BioDelivery Sciences ( BDSI ), which expects approval for Onsolis [BEMA fentanyl] during the first half of 2009 after making modifications to the risk management program it previously submitted as required by the FDA for approval of the high-potency opioid pain medication.
The current slide in shares of Eli Lilly ( LLY ) could prove to be a good entry point assuming the issues surrounding the delay are minor or just caused by the FDA being understaffed. Analysts are forecasting blockbuster sales for Effient, which could eventually reach $2 billion by some estimates; so approval for the drug is important to fuel the future growth of Eli Lilly in the face of looming generic competition for Zyprexa. Effient would represent new competition for the multi-billion dollar blood thinner Plavix, which is marketed by Bristol-Myers ( BMY ) and Sanofi-Aventis ( SNY ). Given the complexity of the regulatory filing for Effient and the previous three month delay, it appears the FDA probably just needs more time to review the application rather than something more ominous such as requiring additional clinical trials.
Also, many companies have faced similar delays by the agency, such as Cardiome’s ( CRME ) wait of over six months for an approvable ruling on Kynapid.Momenta Pharma ( MNTA ) represents a pure-play on the future of complex bio-generic drugs with a major near-term opportunity to steal market share from Sanofi’s ( SNY ) Lovenox, which posted blockbuster sales of $3.8 billion worldwide in 2007.
The company’s stock price tanked to below $5 per share last November as the FDA rejected the ANDA for Enoxaparin. The generic division of the FDA does not issue decision date deadlines, but the fact that no new clinical trials were required and the complete response has now been filed by the Sandoz generic drug division of Novartis ( NVS ) removes a degree of uncertainty and makes it a waiting game for Momenta investors.

FDA Calendar: Near-Term Movers (DSCO, rated BUY)

Two More VIX Records

October 11, 2008

Bill Luby submits:

Once again, the VIX is in the record books, with two new highs:

  • new closing high: 69.95
  • new intra-day high: 76.94

Of course, today is also the first time the VIX traded over 70.

Complete Story »

Two More VIX Records

Bulls Take a Stand - Cramer’s Stop Trading! (10/10/08)

October 11, 2008

Recap of Jim Cramer’s comments on Stop Trading! Tuesday October 10.

Bulls Make a Stand - Citigroup (C), NYSE (NYX), Bank of America (BAC), Apple (AAPL), General Electric (GE)

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Bulls Take a Stand - Cramer’s Stop Trading! (10/10/08)

IBM: Lessons from the Great Depression

October 11, 2008

Kevin Maney submits:

[[IBM]] has a habit of being a beacon during economic calamity. Of course, its earnings yesterday helped everyone feel for at least a moment that the world wasn’t coming to an end. But that pales in comparison to IBM’s feat during the Great Depression. Hopefully, we’ll see more of the same from the company.

I know about this because I wrote a book about the guy who built IBM, Thomas Watson Sr., titled The Maverick and His Machine. (Earlier this week, blogger Ed Cone picked up on the connection between IBM then and now.)
 
IBM may seem pretty staid today, but Watson was actually quite the gambler. As the Depression killed off IBM customers and forced others to cut back on orders, Watson pledged that he would not shut a single factory or lay off a single worker. In fact, he recognized that while his competitors were down, he could make investments that would better position IBM when the economy turned around. 
 
In 1932, he announced that IBM would spend $1 million — an enormous sum for the company then — to build a stand-alone R&D lab in Endicott, N.Y. Every competitor at the time was slicing R&D. Watson added employees and expanded factory capacity. If no one was ordering IBM punch-card machines, Watson told the factories to keep making machines and spare parts and store them in warehouses. 
 
As sales stalled, this put enormous financial pressure on IBM. Investors started pitching a fit. In 1932, IBM shares fell to 1921 levels. The board of directors started discussing firing Watson, but he held them off. As the late, great Peter Drucker told me about Watson, "He didn’t know how close he’d come to collapse."
 
In 1935, Watson’s stubbornness paid off. That year, FDR signed the Social Security Act, instantly creating enormous demand for data processing machines. The government needed them to process claims and companies needed them to gather and send information to the government. IBM had been stockpiling machines and investing in new technologies, while competitors had shut factories and stopped R&D. IBM cleaned up — and in fact that moment was the slingshot that allowed IBM to utterly dominate the IT industry for the next 50 years.
 
In the process, Watson got rich during the worst economic despair in U.S. history. In the late-1930s, he was one of the highest-paid Americans, making more than $350,000 a year — more than $5.2 million in today’s dollars. 
 
If today’s executives remember that lesson, we’ll get out of this economic jam a whole lot sooner.

Complete Story »

IBM: Lessons from the Great Depression

Candidates’ Economic Advisers Debate

October 11, 2008

Menzie Chinn submits:

The economic advisers to Barack Obama and John McCain debated today at the UW-Madison. Ike Brannon spoke on behalf of the McCain-Palin campaign and Austan Goolsbee on behalf of the Obama-Biden campaign. Here’s the link to Proposals for Change (Adobe Flash required).

For me, of greatest interest is the excellent question by Dean Knetter of whether the current financial crisis is to be attributed to too much government intervention (e.g., it’s F&F, CRA, etc.) or insufficient regulation of the appropriate type.

Complete Story »

Candidates’ Economic Advisers Debate

Apocalypse Dow: The Search for Scapegoats

October 11, 2008

Tim Price submits:

“This notion that great misadventures are the work of great and devious adventurers, and the latter can and must be found if we are to be saved, is a popular one of our time. Since the search for the architect of the Wall Street debacle, we have had a hue and cry for the man who let the Russians into Western Europe, the man who lost China, and the man who thwarted MacArthur in Korea. While this may be a harmless avocation, it does not suggest an especially good view of historical processes. No one was responsible for the great Wall Street Crash. No one engineered the speculation that preceded it. Both were the product of the free choice and decisions of thousands of individuals. The latter were not led to the slaughter. They were impelled to it by the seminal lunacy which has always seized people who are seized in turn with the notion that they can become very rich. There were many Wall Streeters who helped foster this insanity, and some of them will appear among the heroes of these pages. There was none who caused it.”

            -    From ‘The Great Crash: 1929’ by John Kenneth Galbraith

Complete Story »

Apocalypse Dow: The Search for Scapegoats

This Isn’t a Bottom, It’s a Disturbance in The Force

October 11, 2008

Kevin S. Price submits:

Think of the moment in the original Star Wars when the bad guys destroy Princess Leia’s home planet of Alderaan with a single blast from the Death Star. Just then, back on Tatooine, Obi-Wan Kenobi shudders and says "I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened."

We’ve had a similar sensation here over the last few days as the latest data on mutual fund outflows reveal a time-honored pattern: When individual investors (and, yes, their panicky advisors) simply can’t take the pain any longer, they dump stocks very late in the game.* Now, we want to be very clear here. These data alone don’t imply a bottom any more than any other single indicator can. Especially when forced selling seems dominant and the credit markets remain broken.

Complete Story »

This Isn’t a Bottom, It’s a Disturbance in The Force

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