Where's the relief?
It just seems to be getting worse and
worse out there. After the worst year in over 70 years in 2008, some
of the worst January and Februarys in history, March starts off with the
worst first week it has ever had. Relentless. So when do we get a
break?
Six or eight months ago, I would have been jumping into stocks based on the
extreme readings of many of the indicators and the severity of the recent
decline. But I have been hurt a few times since then trying to time a
relief rally and while we will eventually see a rally, the severity of the
bear market has been such that the rules have changed.
Is my bearishness an indication of an impending rally? Very possibly.
But yes, it IS different this time. There are no real solutions being
thrown around, and earnings are such an unknown in the coming quarters, that
it is not even possible to know if today's low prices are actually low
enough.
The S&P 500 continues its relentless decline after support was broken
quite easily last week. The break in support now sets up some serious
resistance levels overhead; levels which some are hoping we at least test so they can
sell at a higher price.
If you remember, I had said one way to play a potential double bottom was to
buy at the support level, but sell if if breaks and can not get back above
within a few days. That's what happened last week and there are
folks who are now stuck in stocks waiting for the bounce to sell into.

Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
We talked last week how the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey hit 70%
on the bearish percentage. That is the highest reading, perhaps since
that survey started, I can't be sure. But shouldn't sentiment be at
its most bearish ever, considering the market is performing about as bad as
it ever has?
Those surveys tell us what people are saying about the market, but the
put/call ratio is a sentiment indicator that tells us what people are
actually doing with their money, and remarkably, the CBOE and Equity
put/call ratios, also considered the "dumb money", are still showing a
bullish bias. Compare the CBOE readings of 1.25 and 1.14 during the
October and November lows, to the current 0.91 reading today.


Chart
provided courtesy of
www.decisionpoint.com,
analysis by TSP Talk
Unless there is something amiss with
these ratios, these current readings are quite concerning.
How can the average investor be acting complacently in this environment?
I would be more willing to buy if these folks were panicking, but they are
not.
Now that the major indices are below
the 50% loss levels, a new group of bulls who thought the 50% retracement
level would hold, are now getting nervous and may start to bail. How
low can we go? That's the problem, we don't know and support is
deteriorating.
How many more Bear Sterns, Lehman Brothers, AIG's, Citigroups, GE's, GM's,
etc., are out there? Some of them are gone, some are hanging by a
thread. What happens if GM goes bankrupt, or GE financial leg takes
them down? How will the market react? Is it priced in already?
We WILL get a bounce - that is for sure. But when and how long it will
last is anyone's guess.
We could see one with a revision to Mark
to Market accounting, or a change in the uptick rule.
But these changes will be mere band-aids on a much larger wound.
Until this bear market is over, these rallies need to be sold as picking a
bottom in this environment can be financial suicide. Just ask anyone
who has tried in the last few months.
That's all for today. Thanks for reading. We'll see you
back here tomorrow!
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