Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Market Reaching Critical Inflection Point?

From Marty Chenard's "StockTiming.com website. He is asserting that the Institutional Index of "core holdings" has reached a double top and if the market fails to push higher, we're due for a major correction off a double top.

Marty also mentions that yields on 30 year T-bills and mortgages has climbed precipitously, suggesting that the Fed risks permitting yields getting out of control. So what's the solution for making bond yields come back into line??.. Generate a decline in the equity markets that drives capital into the "safe haven" of government debt. This is how it works.. huge sums of money slushes from equities to debt on a regular basis. It would appear we're getting due to see that happen again.

Today's very poor retail sales for Best Buy certainly didn't help matters either. It was off 15% on poor earnings. And if BBY can't produce good earnings (given all the gadgets it sells), it doesn't bode well for the rest of the sector.

It's a scary thing to be short this liquidity driven market, funded by QE2, but I'm almost getting tempted to give it a try. It's also "quadruple witching" this Friday, but the CNBC article tells us not to worry.. Well.. when CNBC tells us not to worry, the Contrarian in me tells me we should worry.

Another thing.. JP Morgan was caught red-handed in a massive short position in Silver. It's rumoured that they controlled about 40% of the market via swaps and other derivative positions. So just the other day they announced that they were unwinding that position in Silver.

Why is this important? Because if JPM has stopped trying to hold down the silver market, some speculators assert that that it lifts the resistance to further silver (and gold) upside.

But what if JPM merely sold off it's exposure to other institutions, thereby keeping that pressure on the silver market? Then any decline in the price of silver will correlate to upside pressure on the Dollar (and downside pressure on almost all commodities).

And the prevailing theory is if the USD rises, it will be bad for equity markets as well, especially for those companies dependent upon overseas sales for profits. Now.. most of the "core holdings" discussed above are international companies that are vulnerable to movements in the dollar.

So I concur with Marty Chenard.. we're at an inflection point in the markets. And we're certainly long overdue for a correction.

The rest of the week, and next, should provide some general trend guidance of future market direction..

Scrutinizer

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