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Market Comments
December 3, 2008 |
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TSP
Fund share prices as of:
12/02/08
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Fund - |
G Fund |
F Fund |
C Fund |
S Fund |
I Fund |
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|
12.7126 |
12.2086 |
9.7748 |
10.9014 |
12.8277 |
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$ Change - |
0.0010 |
0.0311 |
0.3746 |
0.4963 |
0.5863 |
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% Chg day - |
+0.01%
|
+0.26%
|
+3.99%
|
+4.77%
|
+4.79%
|
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% Chg wk - |
+0.02%
|
+0.67%
|
-5.32% |
-6.52% |
-3.12% |
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% Chg mon - |
+0.02%
|
+0.67%
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-5.32% |
-6.52% |
-3.12% |
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% Chg 2008 - |
+3.52%
|
+2.34%
|
-40.97% |
-44.91% |
-48.19% |
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|
L2040 |
L2030 |
L2020 |
L2010 |
L Income |
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11.5803 |
11.8101 |
12.1578 |
13.4222 |
12.5207 |
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$ Change - |
0.4035 |
0.3620 |
0.3132 |
0.1778 |
0.1094 |
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% Chg day - |
+3.61%
|
+3.16%
|
+2.64%
|
+1.34%
|
+0.88%
|
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% Chg wk - |
-3.91% |
-3.40% |
-2.79% |
-1.36% |
-0.88% |
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% Chg mon - |
-3.91% |
-3.40% |
-2.79% |
-1.36% |
-0.88% |
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% Chg 2008 - |
-36.51% |
-32.16% |
-26.98% |
-13.18% |
-7.05% |
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Today's Comments (Short Term Outlook)
Printer friendly |
Are stocks cheap now?
Stocks
rounded strongly yesterday as the TSP funds made back 4% to 5%, not
quite half, of Monday's
pillage and
plundering of the market. The moves continue to be wild and the
trend is certainly still down, but that intermediate-term trend will be tested sooner
rather than later.
The S&P 500 rebounded but did not quite make it back to the
20-day moving average, and it is about 3% below the
resistance from
the top of the declining trading channel, so the test of the
downtrend will be almost immediate. Today, look for 875 to be
a trouble spot on the upside.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com
There is certainly no shortage of bottom calling from the media
(mainly CNBC) but as we talked about on Monday, the indicators won't
confirm that for quite some time. In the meantime, the chart
is not looking like a bottom, but it could be the start. If
the October 10th low had held, I would be more inclined to be
optimistic. But the fact that we have seen that low taken out
twice in November, tells me we will at least test that new low (741)
once again on the S&P. Whether that test holds we don't know,
but the charts don't give us any reason to believe the downtrend
will end.
That declining trading channel drawn in above is just the intermediate-term trend.
If we see a move back over 900, that would be a good sign of an
upcoming intermediate-term rally, but the long-term bear market
trend continues to loom. We could actually rally all the way
up to 1200 on the S&P 500, a rally of over 40%, and we might
remain
in the long-term downtrend. So, to call a bottom here is quite
speculative, but hey - that's what we do - speculate.
Oil dropped to $47 a barrel yesterday, levels not seen since late
2004. Just as $150 a barrel seemed too high, we are starting
to see oil hit numbers that may be too low. But that doesn't
mean that oil has bottomed yet. What this reiterates to us is that bull markets
will move up higher and longer than what would seem reasonable, just
as bear markets will move down lower and longer than seems
reasonable.
So when you hear the
stock
analysts,
who base
their opinion on a company's stock fundamentals, saying that stocks
are cheap, that is not necessarily a good reason to buy. Cheap
stocks can get very cheap - unreasonably cheap - before they bottom
out.
Was a stock like Citi (C)
cheap when it went from $50 to $40? How about when it hit $30?
$20? Even if you waited to buy when it hit $10, you would
have still lost about 70% as it drifted near $3 a share before
finally rebounding.
So price is relative. Is the S&P 500 cheap at 848?
Maybe. But that doesn't mean it will stop going down.
Watch the charts, not the number.
That's all for today. Thanks for reading. We'll see you here
tomorrow.
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