|

|
|
Market Comments
February 23, 2009 |
|
TSP
Fund share prices as of:
02/20/09
|
Fund - |
G Fund |
F Fund |
C Fund |
S Fund |
I Fund |
|
|
12.7830 |
12.5108 |
8.9417 |
10.4275 |
11.6625 |
|
$ Change - |
0.0010 |
0.0210 |
-0.1015 |
-0.1210 |
-0.1430 |
|
% Chg day - |
+0.01%
|
+0.17%
|
-1.12% |
-1.15% |
-1.21% |
|
% Chg wk - |
+0.11%
|
+0.60%
|
-11.16% |
-12.25% |
-10.99% |
|
% Chg mon - |
+0.15%
|
+0.31%
|
-6.44% |
-6.96% |
-7.11% |
|
% Chg 2009 - |
+0.33%
|
-0.56% |
-14.30% |
-14.58% |
-18.19% |
|
|
L2040 |
L2030 |
L2020 |
L2010 |
L Income |
|
|
10.9047 |
11.2206 |
11.6642 |
13.2273 |
12.4119 |
|
$ Change - |
-0.1016 |
-0.0914 |
-0.0791 |
-0.0423 |
-0.0266 |
|
% Chg day - |
-0.92% |
-0.81% |
-0.67% |
-0.32% |
-0.21% |
|
% Chg wk - |
-9.24% |
-8.12% |
-6.78% |
-3.26% |
-2.21% |
|
% Chg mon - |
-5.43% |
-4.74% |
-3.93% |
-1.81% |
-1.20% |
|
% Chg 2009 - |
-12.69% |
-11.11% |
-9.29% |
-4.38% |
-2.91% |
|
Today's Comments (Short Term Outlook)
Printer friendly |
Is fear finally too high?
Stocks dropped about 1% again on Friday and it was quite a wild day.
The Dow was down over 200-points at one point, came all the way back
within 20 points of break even, before closing down 100-points.
Volume was quite high.
You have to admit, things are pretty scary out there. The S&P
500 is still looking over a precipice ready to start a new leg down.
The Dow and Dow Transportation Indices have both already broken below
the November lows, and the Dow is now touching levels not seen since
1997.
I don't know if you watched much financial news, or any news at all over the weekend, but all we are hearing about is the
financial meltdown. Glenn
Beck had a particularly gloomy show about the meltdown of
America.
It reminds me a little of the
"Stash
away the duct tape — don't use it!" scare that
we had in February 2003. Fear over terrorism was very high at
the time,
and the market was still down 50% from its highs three years before.
I certainly don't want to predict that we are at a market bottom
now, but you can see below where the peak of fear hit on the chart
of the S&P 500 in 2003.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
I am obviously interested to know when the market will hit a bottom,
but who knows when it will come? We are still in a bear market and I
will continue to just play the hit and
run game. That is, staying on the sidelines until we get setups that
suggest a higher probability of an oversold rally. I look for
short-term pops, but sell rallies once they happen. Easier
said than done, but right now it's the only real way to make money
in our TSP. We know what the buy and hold strategy has done to
many TSP accounts.
The S&P 500 almost put in a very nice reversal day on Friday, but
some late selling took that away. Volume was very high,
something you'd like to see on a reversal day, and the index closed
well off it's lows. The ideal situation would have been to see
a positive close, but the afternoon rally ran out of steam in the
last half hour.
We have seen several of these high volume reversals that produced
fairly significant 10% to 20% rallies, BUT you have to be prepared
to sell the rallies as they have not been lasting.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
With a large gap still open near 825 on the S&P (818-825) and the
broken wedge pattern's support level,
which should now act as resistance, also at near 825, I could see a
rally up toward that level. I'm not sure I would be brave
enough to stick around that long, because these rallies can reverse
back down so quickly.
I would be happy with a 2% to 3% rally to add to my account, but if
the S&P was strong enough to see a move to 825, that would be a gain
of 7% from Friday's close.
Again, the MACD indicator above is showing a positive divergence.
The indicator remains above the January levels despite the S&P
making a lower low last week.
The NYSE overbought/oversold indicator has basically reached the
-1000 level. -1000 is quite oversold despite the -1500
readings we saw in 2008.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
As we mentioned on Friday, the TSP Talk
Sentiment Survey came in at 27% bulls, 60% bears for a ratio of
0.45 to 1. One of the lowest ratios we ever get. We
have seen some very big weeks, both up and down, in the market the
last few times we had readings below 0.50 to 1.
All this said, I do want to disclose that
Trader Fred is throwing
us a curve today with one of his supplemental report signals.
Members will see this in more detail, but let's just say it is an
interesting signal at this point in time. It is not a TSP
account trading signal but this aggressive model is up over 19% in
2009 alone, trading ETF's, so I take it very seriously.
One other interesting point; The 2000-2002 bear market saw a 51%
drop in the S&P 500. The S&P 500 is now down 52% from it's
2007 high.
Fear and anxiety are high, stocks and confidence is low. The
market is very oversold and "the herd" is very bearish. This
is a recipe for either a big rally, or a crash. How will you
play it?
That's all for today. Thanks for reading. See you
tomorrow!
|
|