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Market Comments
February 17, 2009 |
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TSP
Fund share prices as of:
02/13/09
|
Fund - |
G Fund |
F Fund |
C Fund |
S Fund |
I Fund |
|
|
12.7762 |
12.5107 |
9.5872 |
11.3789 |
12.4687 |
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$ Change - |
0.0009 |
-0.0662 |
-0.0977 |
-0.0859 |
-0.1236 |
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% Chg day - |
+0.01%
|
-0.53% |
-1.01% |
-0.75% |
-0.98% |
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% Chg wk - |
+0.05%
|
+0.60%
|
-4.75% |
-4.24% |
-4.83% |
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% Chg mon - |
+0.09%
|
+0.30%
|
+0.31%
|
+1.53%
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-0.69% |
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% Chg 2009 - |
+0.28%
|
-0.56% |
-8.12% |
-6.78% |
-12.53% |
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|
L2040 |
L2030 |
L2020 |
L2010 |
L Income |
|
|
11.5661 |
11.8126 |
12.1706 |
13.4967 |
12.5834 |
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$ Change - |
-0.0958 |
-0.0859 |
-0.0745 |
-0.0416 |
-0.0276 |
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% Chg day - |
-0.82% |
-0.72% |
-0.61% |
-0.31% |
-0.22% |
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% Chg wk - |
-3.74% |
-3.27% |
-2.73% |
-1.29% |
-0.86% |
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% Chg mon - |
+0.30%
|
+0.29%
|
+0.24%
|
+0.19%
|
+0.17%
|
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% Chg 2009 - |
-7.39% |
-6.42% |
-5.35% |
-2.43% |
-1.57% |
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Today's Comments (Short Term Outlook)
Printer friendly |
Coiling continues
The market got off to a hot
start in February as the S&P 500 gained 5.2% during the first week
of the month. Unfortunately, those gains dissolved last week
as the S&P gave back 4.8%. Where to next?
The wedge pattern remains intact and as the index gets closer the
the apex and the trading range tightens, it should be getting ready
to uncoiling one way or the other. The break through the lower
end of the wedge last Wednesday was short-lived as the market
rallied bringing the S&P 500 right back into the wedge.
Whether that action was a prelude of things to come, or a "false
breakout" that will lead to a move higher, remains to be seen, but
as I write this Monday evening, the futures are down just over one
percent and if that holds into the open (Tuesday), it would put the
index back below the rising support line of the wedge again.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
The MACD still looks promising, but again in this oscillating
market, it may not be relevant. The more relevant indicator is
the stochastics (STO), which is heading down but not yet oversold.
The overbought/oversold indicator remains relatively neutral and it
too is forming a wedge pattern. I assume it will break in the
same direction as the market.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
We have been watching various sentiment surveys and have
seen some interesting and somewhat contradictory results. The recent
Wall Street Sentiment Survey, which can be considered "smart money"
hit 10% on the bullish percentage.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
That is one of the lowest reading in years. The interesting
thing about the prior readings near 10 were that they came during
the bull market, and they were actually pretty good times to be a
buyer. I don't know if the 10 reading in a bear market will
produce similar results, but keep in mind that the Wall Street
survey is much more volatile than other sentiment surveys and could
reverse by the end of the week.
President's Day is not one of the better holidays seasonality-wise.
Friday's 82-point loss played right into the chart (-1), and today
(+1) is kind of mixed as the day averages a negative return from
1968-2004, but is up about half the time.

Chart provided courtesy of
www.sentimentrader.com
I played the F-fund this month but as I mentioned, I was only
looking for a short-term bounce in bonds. Bond yields are in
an obvious new uptrend and that is bad for bond prices, and the
F-fund.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
Anything can happen, particularly if stocks start to breakdown, but
the pullback in yields found support at the 20 and 50-day moving
averages, approximately 2.75% for the 10-year note, as well as the lower trendline, so I am done with that
F-fund trade.
That's all for today. Thanks for reading. See you
tomorrow!
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