A Bear Rally to Warm Wall Street’s Black Heart

What a difference a week makes! Last Monday, with the Dow Industrials approaching the nadir of a nearly 1200-point slide, one might have thought the world was about to end. In just one issue of The Wall Street Journal, we read about a nascent slump in housing and auto sales; a deflationary trend in pricing power for a wide swath of U.S. businesses, particularly mid-tier retailers; a shift toward defensive stocks by portfolio managers; and, alarming growth in the debts of emerging nations. It didn’t help that the neutron bomb called Obamacare continued to emit deadly toxins, threatening to consume what remains of middle-class households’ meager after-tax savings. There was even talk in some quarters of reversing the Fed taper and perhaps even increasing the amount of funny money injected into the banking system each month above the original $85 billion.

By late Friday afternoon, however, the Dow had rallied 450 points from its lows and all was seemingly right with the world. The Indoos closed on the high of the week with a 165 point gain,  Wall Street’s obsidian heart melted, and all was sunshine, roses and lollipops. Would it be churlish of us to mention that the entire rally over the course of the week was driven solely by short-covering rather than investors betting on America’s future? This was very obviously the case, even if business reporters were reluctant to acknowledge it.  Granted, there were no celebratory headlines. But this was probably because of the daunting news that the U.S. economy had generated only a measly 113,000 new jobs in January – barely better than the previous month , when 75,000 jobs were added.  Regardless, the mere fact that the stock market had recouped in just three days more than a third of 2014’s losses must surely have planted the seeds of hope on which Wall Street’s brazen con-game thrives.

Self-Mutilation

Concerning the short-covering, we described it here earlier as an act of self-mutilation by bears. Although they need only sit back and watch the global economy crumble while stocks continue to cascade, they couldn’t wait to cover their bets last week as stocks defied gravity.  Five years of relentlessly higher share prices have undoubtedly made the bears so skittish that they cannot believe things are finally going their way.  Under the circumstances, they will likely remain a stubborn force in propping up a market that has flouted rationality for too long. For our part, before stocks opened we advised subscribers to cover a bearish position that had racked up a theoretical gain of around $1920 when stocks were falling hard in January. By day’s end, however, the temptation was too great to jump back in. This subscribers did by way of a new put position in the Diamonds, a proxy for the Dow Industrials. A stop-loss was suggested to limit losses to a theoretical $180 if the short-squeeze continues into this week.

Meanwhile, assuming Chechnyan terrorists are held at bay, we’ll have the Sochi Olympics to take our minds off the world’s troubles in the weeks ahead.  The news media have focused thus far on the boondoggle aspects of this $51 billion production, but once the events are under way and the athletes take center stage, the political stories and niggling criticisms will quickly recede into the background. (Late-breaking note:  The opening ceremony was spectacular, notwithstanding the failure of one of the five Olympic rings to light up properly to open the show. With the news media focused, as is their habit, on the faulty ring, I found myself rooting for Putin.)

  • VILE VLAD February 16, 2014, 1:55 am

    rick, I see you erased my strongly reinforced dji BEAR call from yesterday,
    BEAR call I’ve over 2 weeks previously stated herein,
    that 16,200 dji area,
    would contain current bullish over exuberance, as last big BEAR market stand;
    yet no one believes this now, but, dji is about to take cliff dive, IMO, from all I see.

    I am dead serious. cliff dive trouble straight ahead, IMO to 14700 dji, and–maybe more.
    cliff dive. before end of february. 1,500 dji points. and after that, I don’t know. you tell me.
    maybe up to your 17,600 dji, or further. however, if my rubicon 14,500 dji breaks–party over.

    and I will add this, if my 14,700 dji BEAR call does not hold up, over next two weeks,
    I will never comment again herein, regarding anything predictive, re stockmarket.
    IMO, there will be last h&s shoulder, occurring next week, with mega swift skydive drop.
    beyond 14700 dji, don’t know. but february ‘14 will bring a 1.5k dji drop. bet on it. IMO.
    and if this does not occur, and I’m wrong, I leave all stockmarket matters, to genius gary.
    then I only comment on fundamentals, backstory matters, and leave dji lead, to el garo.

    &&&&&&

    You’ve repeated your forecast so often, Vlad, that I assumed everyone knows where you stand. With the broad averages at or new record highs, I have summarized my own outlook in the current commentary. RA

  • Troll February 14, 2014, 6:02 am

    People should be afforded the opportunity to make an argument.

    If you, DK, disagree with that, you are nothing but a communist masquerading in a free man’s shoes.

  • Iro Noiro February 13, 2014, 8:41 am

    Au /P\ @ 1313.9

  • Troll February 13, 2014, 3:42 am

    I will buy a gun, armed with the knowledge that I am going to have to shoot my neighbors.

    I will stock up on food because nasty corporations are going to create a food shortage.

    I will watch Jessie Ventura religiously and pay homage to everything ZeroHedge has to say about life, the universe, and everything (even though ZH is often wrong about life, the universe, and everything).

    I will agree with everything Red has to say, including his bowing down to Rolling Stone Magazine (even though they used to just right about music).

    I will disown Gary (despite the fact he does, every once in awhile, conjure up reasonable arguments).

    In short, I will become a sheep.

    Like the rest of you.

  • Troll February 13, 2014, 3:18 am

    Wow, between a few sparse comments from me and VV, you are leaving the board?

    Thank you, no one has ever referred to me as a “goober” before.

    That is much nicer than I would have expected from someone as high up in the world of investment and economical know-how, as you are obviously are.

    What did I say?

    That Prechter was a waste of time and Rick’s HP’s were better.

    For that, I get a snide comment from you-know-who (no surprise there, sadly).

    So, sometimes it doesn’t matter what people say here:

    We can say Rick’s course is great, but that gets thrown out the window because we don’t share in your “zombie world” scenario.

    Sorry.

    It’s a wonderful world and it’s a shame most of you are so busy looking for what’s wrong with it that you forget that simple fact.

  • VILE VLAD February 13, 2014, 2:30 am

    extremely impressed by the zerohedge site you recommended. for its world diversity.
    I have zero interest in their fools’ commentary (have enough with yours), however,
    range of world comments therein, is extraordinary. obvious, tyler durden ain’t one person.
    tyler is system of entities. for what purpose, don’t know, maybe collecting winston smiths.
    whatever. place is interesting. amazed at range of entire world articles.

    here is one.
    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-12/judge-who-jailed-ukraine-protesters-shot-dead
    ukraine, a ussr offshoot, is birthplace of many great thinkers, artists. ukraine is historical great.
    but now, a young judge, shot dead, just for sending criminals to house detention. today’s world.

    And this:

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-11/22-facts-about-coming-us-demographic-shock-wave

    “Today, more than 10,000 Baby Boomers will retire. This is going to happen day after day, month after month, year after year until 2030. It is the greatest demographic tsunami in the history of the United States, and we are woefully unprepared for it. We have made financial promises to the Baby Boomers worth tens of trillions of dollars that we simply are not going to be able to keep. Even if we didn’t have all of the other massive economic problems that we are currently dealing with, this retirement crisis would be enough to destroy our economy all by itself. ”

    GET OUT OF DODGE, BOY. SNIPERS AIN’T GONNA HELP YOU, IN YOUR BS CUL DE SAC.

    however, thanks for telling me to read zerohedge, daily.

    • gary leibowitz February 13, 2014, 7:27 pm

      Mysterious deaths? Wow 2 people working for JPM? Really? Any history related mental problems? Must be a death squad. Now the bad news on demographics? Can anyone see a positive out of this? Not this group. How about the fact that as these huge numbers retire there is certainly a huge number of unemployed willing to take up the slack.

      So lets get the facts straight. It is bad that fewer baby boomers will stay employed, adding to the government retirement system burden. Yet there seems to be no mention of all those young talented individuals begging for a job. If all these jobs are replaced wouldn’t the burden go away? I guess my math is a little rusty.

      I can show you hundreds of ZEROHEDGE outrageous articles that never came true. Just stoking the flames for the people that certainly don’t need any stoking. Same for FOX. Listening to FOX today they continue to see the economy in ruins, blame Obama for everything, dismiss the notion that there is a huge imbalance of wealth, blame the poor as lazy, dismiss raising min. wage and apposes it on grounds that it would mean less jobs. Never once mentioned the HUGE profits these companies are reaping TODAY! They defend Chris Christie, distort and lie about facts in order to feed the meanness and divisiveness factor. Keep people from learning the truth behind our problems. It must be Unions, Social Handouts, and the godless democrats that want such nonsense as higher wages, immigration reform, medical coverage for all.

      Where is the discussion on what should be the front page of ZEROHEDGE. Corporate profits, gross margins, productivity, and wealthy individuals at record setting highs, during a time of deep recession job and wage growth. Now there’s a scoop!

      • Jason S February 14, 2014, 1:25 am

        Gary, here is a positive for the demographics: invest in funeral homes. They are going to be getting 10,000 more customers a day for 30 years soon.

        Maybe timber too, for coffins.

        Morbid, I know…

      • gary leibowitz February 14, 2014, 2:57 am

        Jason S,
        lot of people I know are opting to get cremated.

      • VILE VLAD February 15, 2014, 5:43 am

        yes, jason, you are behind times. forget funeral homes, coffins, et al. cremation is king.

        I hate to agree with gary on anything, but, wake up, and smell the next cremation coffee.

      • redwilldanaher February 16, 2014, 5:14 am

        There’s cremation and there’s soylent green. Only the elite will be afforded burial space.

      • VLAD February 17, 2014, 5:01 am

        redwilldanaher, forgot about harsher ‘soylent green.’ yet, you are predictively correct,
        ‘soylent green’ is coming, in cans, that even sad-eye dad and kid, of pathetic book ‘the road,’
        will happily eat, so pretentious maudlin pulitzer stories like it, won’t be teary-eyed read,
        and the more truthful expansive sci-fi novels, like ‘lucifer’s hammer,’ will be guides.
        so, did you re-read ‘lucifer’s hammer,’ like you told me you would, around 2-3 years ago?
        also recommended to you, rick, for I know you’ve never read it. but it’s coming to you asap.

        &&&&&

        Yes, right, okay: Lucifer’s Hammer. I am backed up right now, immersed in Carroll Quigley’s ‘Tragedy and Hope…’ and a few other books. RA

  • VILE VLAD February 13, 2014, 1:19 am

    ackerman, thanks for telling me to read zerohedge. went today, since you block me here, anyway.

    its a funny place. take a look at this. two very screwed up countries moneywise, spain and turkey,
    decide, out of nowhere, to build an aircraft-carrier ship together! haha. lunacy.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-12/surreal-news-du-jour-spain-turkey-jointly-build-aircraft-carrier

    world has gone to hell. 1% oligarchs have run amock, while their 10% minions, follow suit.

    where is madame defarge when you want her, to chop off heads. so come, bastille day. come.

    $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$

    but here is something more to your call. 2 jp morgan young execs, 39 and 37, died in 2014,
    with mysterious deaths. one was a supposed jump-window suicide, and this last one, no one still knows, at least public media-wise.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-12/another-jpmorgan-banker-dies-37-year-old-executive-director-program-trading

    this stuff reminds of the clinton’s private attorney foster, ‘committing suicide’ in early 90’s,
    by wrapping himself up in a carpet, and dropping himself off, in a washington d.c. park.
    foster was said to have a ‘crisis of conscience,’ at the time. but that’s not good, for 1%ers.

    looks now that some young ‘da boyz’, that ‘know something’, are dropping off like flies.
    maybe they were also having a ‘crisis of conscience.’ and that’s not good, among the 1%ers.

    • Rick Ackerman February 14, 2014, 6:25 pm

      Can’t believe you were unaware of ZeroHedge. The sum total of things worth knowing about the financial system can be found there. And they LOVE cuss words and nasty putdowns.

      • VILE VLAD February 15, 2014, 5:37 am

        I read some zerohedge few years back,
        and never saw it as, anything else but,
        top winston smiths’ collection agency.

        however, they have a sense of humor.
        and humor is giving up, around here.

        and I probably ran off good john jay–not intended.
        but where we vile varmints roam, nobles disappear.

        sense of humour is my stock in trade–for existence is cosmic joke.

  • VILE VLAD February 13, 2014, 12:33 am

    I still say this current dji rally will tank in low 16k’s.
    my bearmarket’s last stand. 16,200 dji area.

    above that, huge bull. even larger than rick’s 17,600 dji call. maybe an 19,600 efervecent dji.

    however, now I see range. 16,200 dji area, to 14,700 area. above or below these, BIG firework.

    but I always bet lower, in this FRAUDULENT, ONLY mega-DEBT-fueled, stock/bond market.

    so, come on, 14,700 dji, BREAK. and take them all. all the fraud lovers. BREAK THEM ALL.

  • DK February 12, 2014, 7:46 am

    http://www.cnn.com/2014/02/11/politics/e-mail-photos-destroyed-osama-bin-laden/index.html?hpt=hp_t1

    LMAO!!

    Don’t release more footage of Benghazi either, that might incite violence, more “terrorist recruitments,” or hamper Clinton’s campaign.

  • mario cavolo February 12, 2014, 4:50 am

    FYI – LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) — China’s exports rose 10.6% in January compared to a year earlier, accelerating from a 4.3% advance the previous month, customs data reported Wednesday showed. The result was well ahead of a 2% forecast rise from a Reuters survey and projections for a 0.1% gain in a Wall Street Journal poll of economists. Imports increased by 10%, picking up their pace from an 8.3% December advance and beating estimates for a 3% rise in both the Reuters and Wall Street Journal surveys.

    • gary leibowitz February 13, 2014, 8:01 pm

      A BIG change in outlook. China must have put the coal to the furnace this last quarter when it looked like there was some trouble ahead. The term centralized government really means something there.

      • Mario February 14, 2014, 4:59 am

        Yea, I’m meeting with a market research firm next week, in fact they are realizing that China’s economy is picking up steam even more so and are using their report. It’s as I’ve been indicating all along. China’s not a place to be worrying about, only to the degree they’ll be impacted by external issues.

        Cheers, Mario

      • Jason S February 14, 2014, 7:13 pm

        Mario,
        What is the Chinese opinion of their attempted annexation of small islands in the South China Sea? They are pissing off five of their neighbors with whom they dispute that territory.

        On a personal note, it has me a little worried since it was small grabs for resources like this that were accommodated that led to larger land grabs that led to two world wars. History does rhyme.

      • Mario February 16, 2014, 9:27 am

        Generally not much opinion. Beijing will do whatever Beijing will do. It’s a global economic game of chess. Hopefully wouldnt ever go beyond occasional escalation, military skirmishes, economic tradeoffs, headlines, as it has.

  • Jason S February 12, 2014, 4:26 am

    Gary,

    Serious question for you:
    You agree that the market is being propelled higher by debt (both public and private) around the world and you have said that you expect things to come apart at some point in the future, but not in the near future. My question is, what are you looking for as indicators that we are reaching the end of this bull market/phase? I guess my second question is, what economic worries keep you up at night (if any?)

    The reason that I ask is that your views and opinions are very different than mine and I like to hear what other people think when they disagree with me. It helps me make better decisions.

    Thanks in advance.

    • gary leibowitz February 13, 2014, 6:55 pm

      Jason, I mentioned numerous times my reasoning.
      A list from most important to least:
      1 – productivity gains vs. costs
      2 – 10 year bond yield not exceeding 3 percent
      3 – positive job growth with median increase between 150 and 200K.
      4 – no external contagion, like a default from one of the EU nations.
      5 – China’s continued expansion.
      6 – no extreme optimism by investors. this can take many forms. Huge inflow into stocks, parabolic moves in market.
      7 – credit market remains calm via LIBOR rates.
      8 – no decidedly negative forward guidance from major companies in each sector of the economy.

      I am just rattling this off the top of my head. If I missed something important I apologize.

      • gary leibowitz February 13, 2014, 7:59 pm

        Jason, you mock me.

        “The reason that I ask is that your views and opinions are very different than mine and I like to hear what other people think when they disagree with me. It helps me make better decisions.”

        It took me a while. I am the slow naïve type after all.

      • Jason S February 13, 2014, 8:47 pm

        Gary, I didn’t mean to mock you. Your views vary from mine. You see things in the market that I do not see (you also see things that I see). Good decision making comes from getting as many inputs of various views and analyze them. I would like to avoid confirmation bias as much as I can when it comes to investing, etc. This is one way to help with that.

        Sorry you are so gun-shy.

      • gary leibowitz February 13, 2014, 11:33 pm

        Jason, gun-shy is a mild definition when it comes to viewing my opinions here. In case you haven’t notice I get called an idiot to a shill. I am a bit of a conundrum. I have always been a half-empty, pessimistic person that jumped at the chance to verify that all is bad. I have fought my emotional bias with detached analytical thinking. Not easy to do.

        I look at the historic charts of the SPX and see a huge parabolic move these last 5 years. That alone causes me to question when the next drop would be.

        So perhaps that is why I am expecting a bear soon, just based on emotional over confidence caused from the stellar 5 year move. We have a tendency to forget the bad quickly and latch onto any good scenario we can. Obviously I am not talking about this group. These people are the minority where suspicion is the norm.

        It would make my decisions easy if we do see another big move up soon. So far the technical don’t seem to indicate an end right here, nor does the fundamentals on the domestic front. That can change rather quickly. My macro view, set a long time ago, indicates we are due for a bear cycle, just based on a time scale. I also believe we have strong 7 to 8 year cycles for whatever reason. That would indicate 2016 as a possible end to this mega run. A 20 percent drop in 2014 would fit nicely since it would relieve the emotional frenzy building up since the last crash. No hard core theory I am afraid. Looking for reasons to get out early and perhaps bet on a bear cycle even before we start the swoon. Can’t do it just yet.

  • Troll February 11, 2014, 3:05 am

    PS I agree with you Rick, the opening ceremony was spectacular.

    A shame our western-based media seems more focused on what doesn’t work as opposed to what does.

  • Troll February 11, 2014, 2:57 am

    Why all the fuss about Prechter?

    He’s been right about once.

    I won’t say EWT is a waste of time, but it doesn’t have (in my experience) the accuracy of Hidden Pivots.

    We can easily quote anyone who thinks the market (and life as we know it) is doomed. There is no shortage of people hopping on “the market cannot possibly go any higher” bandwagon, in the hopes they will be heralded as the next stock market guru.

    Maybe the guru is right here.

    He’s already said (much to his chagrin, I am sure) the market could very well move higher.

    Of course, Rick has to taper that prediction a bit with comments like, “I don’t know how,” etc so all you bears won’t get too disheartened.

    &&&&&&&&

    Having subscribed to Prechter’s hotline for a while in the mid-1980s, when I worked as a market maker on the PSE floor, I’d say he was (and probably still is) the most accurate forecaster who ever lived. Not only did he routinely call S&P swing points to within hundredths of a point, he predicted within a minute or two exactly when in the day the turns would occur. This was more than merely useful, since the swings were lethal back then, before mini-contracts had been invented. A 1.00-point move in the S&P futures contract was worth $500. Using these skills, Prechter has built a very successful forecasting business with institutional clients — a quiet operation that you don’t much hear about.
    RA

    • redwilldanaher February 11, 2014, 10:42 pm

      At this juncture Tool isn’t amusing to read either. Prechter’s books reveal that he’s a very bright guy and has performed research that few others can match. But take it from Tool, he’s useless since he’s not a Bubblevision cheerleader.

      • Troll February 12, 2014, 1:41 am

        How was your New Years, you miserable dick? You spent it alone didn’t you?

    • VILE VLAD February 12, 2014, 4:01 am

      prechter was millisecond trader in early 80’s. I also was there to witness, his unique bull calls.
      but as decades passed, bob chose to become multi-century market historian, probably it’s best.
      ergo, prechter is not a short-time caller anymore. his eye are in the sky, of the soon to be future.

      and I assure you all, including you, host, that those that family-live in ussa rich cul-de-sacs,
      don’t have slightest chance to survive, once real final shht hits, of obvious megadebt vacuum.

      so, ever-censoring, self-indulgent, self-catering host, I won’t believe you at all any you say,
      until you move away, away from ussa suburb easy prey, and you and fam go country way.

      idiot translation—while you live in a rich denver suburb, don’t believe anything you say.
      however, if you get a family self-subsisting farm in iowa, let’s say, then I might respect you.

  • gary leibowitz February 10, 2014, 11:56 pm

    My comments already awaiting moderation. Looks like my time here is kaput. Red, I did answer you although I really don’t know why. If Rick lets it go thru that is. If Rick lets THIS go thru. Oh my. I did have an actual real point counter-point in last blog. Perhaps the first and only. I can now die content. (lol)

  • gary leibowitz February 10, 2014, 10:56 pm

    Using Prechter is foolish since his crash happened decades ago, but no one paid any attention. Why use someone that has a one sided approach to everything he sees and hears. In science, if a theory continues to be disproven, do you one day wake up and think that theory will eventually be right? More likely that by forever declaring a crash he will eventually catch one.

    As for the sentiment, there are many measures, such as institutional bullishness. The last drop happened after “optimism is soaring while upside momentum is waning”. I guess a 30 percent jump shouldn’t have selling and consolidation. You would rather see a straight line higher? Funny how a normal move after such a huge run up is considered bad. People see what they want, and this group sees crashes all over the place, in any given year for the past 5. Not exactly narrowing down cause and affect very well.

    Earnings and most importantly earnings projections so far are on target. No real surprises on the down side. Productivity once again surged as costs fell. Hard to declare the end of this market unless something really immediate is going to reverse this trend. I would look at consumer and business confidence and spending. Both service and non-service sector are expanding.

    I too wait for the eventual drop, but no amount of wishing for it will make it so. Has anyone gone back the last 5 years and analyzed the mistakes in assuming an imminent crash? It might help to review where the mistakes were made. it’s called using an unemotional scientific approach, as in Ricks System.

    To again talk about ramping up QE is way ahead of any discussion out there. There is no derailment seen, as far as I can tell. In fact some very puzzling contradictions came out of the jobs reports. The housing survey estimated 616,000 jobs created, not 113,000. New construction jobs created in January the most since 2006. This same survey showed 1.8 million new full time jobs created in 20013, while only 8,000 new part time jobs. 29,000 of those jobs lost last month were government jobs, the first time we saw that in a very long time. Government austerity is here.

    Sorry but the government reports these last few months are way lower than private reports. You would think it would be the other way around. Some conspiracy theorists would say perhaps this government is purposely down playing the strength. They did manage to drop the 10 year rates below 3 percent yet again.

    Who knows, just based on the 5 year string of unheard of gains, it makes sense we are over due for a deep correction. If the credit market once again runs into trouble where the consumer can’t muster enough money to expand this economy we will know is short order.

    I also scratch my head on this string of good fortune for corporate America. P/E ratio is creeping up to possible triggers for a correction. I still expect new highs before we fall, just based on the slew of economic reports that haven’t been focused on a trend on way or the other. this muddling along with some mixed and contradictory reports suggest we might yet have another quarter of good earnings.

    • allen42 February 11, 2014, 5:21 am

      Give it up Gary,you wore everyone out long ago with your crap.You should get a job on cnbc or the likes spewing crap next to the other shills on the main stream bs networks.

      • Chuck February 11, 2014, 5:53 pm

        I don’t disparage Gary his position on these issues. After all, he made 30% plus? money last year on equities…..and I didn’t.

        &&&&

        Chuck, might I suggest that you sign up for an upcoming Hidden Pivot/Camouflage Trading Webinar? It would be time better spent than trying to track Gary’s claimed profitabilty. RA

      • Troll February 12, 2014, 5:06 am

        Well, you should Chuck. Rick is way better than Prechter, in spite of his compliments toward MR EWT, who has not gotten much right in the past thirty years. Rick is just being polite. Rick kicks Prechter’s ass, and is too polite to say as much.

        And I don’t give a rat’s ass what our own little ray of sunshine, Mr Red Willandaherherher, has to say in rebuttal.

        He wouldn’t know what a nice day is all about if it kicked him in the ass.

      • DK February 12, 2014, 7:14 am

        Oh the hilarity.

        Once again on the attack, and always the hypocrite.

        There’s probably a harsh denunciation against you in the Agenda 21 blueprint; a metaphorical car idling.
        “Do something for the planet.”
        Advice for you… stop wasting oxygen.

        Most in here, especially RWD, could wipe their sphincter with your nose any hour of any day.

        Please excuse me while I retire to reality, away from this fictitious, centrally planned, rigged, garbage of a market.

        Much respect for Mr. Prechter. He is an encyclopedia of knowledge with more experience in the dirt under his pinky finger than most people will ever live up to.

        Apologies Rick, no more from me.

        Always a pleasure.

        The board has too many wild swings. Usually I love witty banter and thoughtful perspective (even from El Garo), but, I’ll go back to being just a casual reader.

        Between VV and the return of that goober, Troll, I’ll be on the sidelines.

        VV, you can do so much better and you know it. I’m very intrigued and I have a bunch more to throw in and perhaps challenge you on (my own .02).

        Good luck all, in everything. Peace.

      • Troll February 13, 2014, 3:21 am

        Wow, between a few sparse comments from me and VV, you are leaving the board?

        Thank you, no one has ever referred to me as a “goober” before.

        That is much nicer than I would have expected from someone as high up in the world of investment and economical know-how, as you obviously are.

        What did I say?

        That Prechter was a waste of time and Rick’s HP’s were better.

        For that, I get a snide comment from you-know-who (no surprise there, sadly).

        So, sometimes it doesn’t matter what people say here:

        We can say Rick’s course is great, but that gets thrown out the window because we don’t share in your “zombie world” scenario.

        Sorry.

        It’s a wonderful world and it’s a shame most of you are so busy looking for what’s wrong with it that you forget that simple fact.

        (Pardon the double post . . . this is the one meant for my reply)

      • DK February 13, 2014, 7:51 pm

        Leaving this screen up (unfortunately) and having it refresh when I come to check email, it is no surprise to come back to more puke.

        Did I not point out that you were once again on the attack?

        “How was your New Years, you miserable dick? You spent it alone didn’t you?”

        Yes, mine was much nicer, but also, I believe, more illustrative. Apparently your definition of snide is very loosely interpreted, and directed towards you, very sensitive.

        I don’t believe in the above, RA puts up with it, but I also think that’s part of what makes him great at what he does; he ends up being very appropriate in his dealings.

        I couldn’t care less about your opinion of Mr. Prechter, EWT, etc. , the proof is in the pudding.
        The originator, RNE, who tied some of his work to Fibs, basically called the bottom in 35′.
        Rick work echoes some Fibs as well, and Rick has parlayed many times in the past how some students describe HP’s a somewhat of a miniaturized EWT.

        Most here feel the same way about him as Rick does, as do his dozens of international institutional clients. Well, you get the point… or maybe you don’t.

        No surprises there.

        Now, I’ll be sure redirect to the main page and articles.

      • Troll February 14, 2014, 5:53 am

        Oh, Gee, Rick! I am going to leave because Boo hoo hoo, there are people here who dispute what I have to say. Boo hoo hoo!

        You ‘re a baby, DK.

        What do you want?

        That everyone bows down to your opinion without being afforded the opportunity to dispute what you have to say?

      • VILE VLAD February 15, 2014, 5:24 am

        dk, I concur with most you say. and I will listen to your pennies of horsesense, anyday.

        as to troll, what to say, except obvious: she/he is a troll, name says it all. so disregard.

      • Chuck February 12, 2014, 11:11 pm

        I think in fact I WILL sign up……I want to report my good run with SVM, AEM, and EGO since start of year….when I purchased them…SVM is 31% YTD….also coffee (JO) is 30% YTD…..although I didn’t get in on that ride.

      • Chuck February 13, 2014, 10:28 pm

        holy SH_T check out SVM today……+9% just today……41% YTD……!!!

      • gary leibowitz February 12, 2014, 1:14 am

        Just like the market wore you out? Any sense of justice doesn’t resonate well when investors look at the bottom line.

        We survived this quarters earnings rather nicely. I suspect we have till next quarter before we see a possible market trend change.

      • gary leibowitz February 12, 2014, 1:15 am

        Was directed at allen42.

      • allen42 February 12, 2014, 5:02 am

        I haven’t played the market in quite sometime moron.

      • redwilldanaher February 12, 2014, 5:14 am

        Allen, erroneous conjecture and assignment is El Garo’s stock in trade, along with the construction of strawmen, lots and lots of strawmen…

    • redwilldanaher February 11, 2014, 10:38 pm

      Not even amusing to read at this juncture.

      • redwilldanaher February 11, 2014, 10:39 pm

        That was directed towards El Garo’s latest absurdity.

  • Iro Noiro February 10, 2014, 10:50 pm

    Dow:Euro (115.77) has broke below its lower median line, dipping below both the 50 and 200 day EMA on the daily chart and is now testing a warning line. The RSI, MACD, Slow Stokes are all in oversold territory. Resistance sits at 130. If 109 support holds there may be one more rally left for Dow:Dollar that exceeds Rick’s expectations.

    _Iro

    “Darkness Lies One Inch Ahead”

    • Iro Noiro February 11, 2014, 5:11 am

      VV, that is absolutely a big (IF). The DJIA traded within a range from mid April to early November 2013, then broke out of this range into exhaustive highs. This is usually the kiss of death. For the short time that I have been following these markets, this sort of move precedes a market crash. But one man’s crash is another man’s correction. 14,500 is definitely the ‘Rubicon’ on the monthly, as for the daily, should 15,000 hold, that would be doubly bullish because it would also invalidate Rick’s 14,700 D target.

      _Iro

  • redwilldanaher February 10, 2014, 2:54 pm

    Hi Rick, since you cited the “jobs number”, you and the gang may be interested in this short read. Although it it deals in economics, I find it quite amusing and of course disgraceful at the same time. Nothing new really, but from time to time it makes sense to reacquaint ourselves with the fraud behind the statistics that get fed to the herd nearly each and every day.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-09/about-those-29-million-jobs-lost-january

    El Garo will be along shortly with an incantation: “this is nothing new, every government in history has done this…”

    Apparently that trick makes the underlying problems invisible and contained.

    • gary leibowitz February 10, 2014, 11:18 pm

      Boy are you monotonous. Here is your BLS report you seemed to forget to mention. An oversight I am sure. The numbers are so bizarre they lack any real meaning. From an article I just read :

      “What’s Going on With Non-College Grads?: The unemployment rate for people with just a high-school degree fell from 7.1 to 6.5 percent … in one month. That’s unbelievable. As in, literally, not something to be believed, on its face. The BLS numbers are here, and they reveal some funky happenings among high-school grads.
      •The labor force is declining.
      •The number of people with jobs is declining.
      •The number of people without jobs is declining.

      Look, maybe HS-grads are a dying breed because more people are going to college. Indeed, the college-grad labor force grew by several hundred thousand. But 0.6 percentage points is just a remarkably bold month-over-month figure.

      Which brings us to our monthly caveat: One months’s data is just one month’s data: nasty, brutish, and often short-lived.”

      Any questions? Answers? But keep trying to prove the world is flat. Imagine companies not only reported, for the most part, glowing earnings for the quarter, they also stuck with glowing expectations for next. Are all public companies in on this conspiracy?

      You call me out all the time proving to me that any day now we are going to witness the mother of all crashes. You have done so over years of so called reports that prove your case. In all that time you also insist that we have a long way to go in this “fake” recovery as the market marches ever higher. So which is the “real” you? I know, the one where whatever happens in the market you can take credit for. me, I am just a soldier ant mindlessly looking out for potential harm to the colony.

      For once try and converse with what is called intelligent debate, instead of your one liners. I can always learn new things and adapt. if you can show me where the danger really is I will gladly listen. I already answered Vlad on the exact opposite conclusion from the household survey. A huge disparity. So much for the winter months reports. Why would we ever want to smooth out the reports? Gosh, don’t people spend and get hired in bad winter storms as well as sunny spring days? This year kinda had a nasty winter so far, or would you conclude that’s just another conspiracy theory.

      And so it goes…. And so I get bashed over and over for bringing up such nonsense and naïve thinking. Does anyone ever realize that years of this one sided reporting does no one any good? Discuss with an open mind. Preachers never learn, they just pass on their repetitive sermon.

      btw, I hope and wish we do have that drop soon. it will accomplish two things. A much needed correction and a happy blogging place.

      • Mario February 11, 2014, 3:22 am

        Rwd, Gary, hi guys.

        Let me suggest to both of you that the employment related stats and numbers are no longer a meaningful leading indicator to watch, they are also part the illusion game governments play to distract us from what’s really going on.

        I mean to suggest, we already clearly clearly know the state of the “New normal” US employment situation. The die is cast. Most new jobs being created are low paying. The lower half of the country is struggling more, though now aided by ocare subsidies, however that turns out, the upper half is doing well. And I do mean to say that IF someone with a nice set of assets earning over 100k has to now pay a few thousand more in taxes than before, I’m not having a pity party for them. Society is supposed to be governed in a balanced way that benefitsn the whole society, not mostly the top and special interests. US government has failed at every turn on this regard for 2 decades.

        Didn’t mean to digress from my original point. We already know the score regarding employment, it’s not so pretty. There are other far more meaningful indicators and trends to consider.

        Cheers, Mario

      • Jason S February 11, 2014, 7:08 pm

        Mario,

        It seems Janet Yellen agrees with you since as part of her dry and boring testimony this morning she said (at least I think that is what she said reading through her jargon and double-speak) that the unemployment numbers don’t really mean what they say and that she does not see the strength in employment that it would suggest.

        Now back to our previously sponsored debate/boxing match between RWD and Gary…

        &&&&&&

        Did she really say that? Even if in Fed-speak, it would be a major departure from the usual Fed policy speeches. RA

      • redwilldanaher February 11, 2014, 10:48 pm

        Thanks Mario. I couldn’t agree more, which is why I posted the link that proves what a farce they really are at this point. I kinda thought that I didn’t need to get more explicit than that but maybe I should have.

        El Garo, like Swiss clockwork, showed up precisely as expected and did his pathetic best. As predictable as ever.

        It’s to the point where it is like “Johnny Caspar” in the Coen Brothers’ Miller’s Crossing:

        “If you can’t trust a fix, what can you trust?”

        This entire charade is held together by countless fixes, it relies on countless fixes like never before yet El Garo can’t spot even one!

        Cue Gerry Rafferty…

      • redwilldanaher February 12, 2014, 1:29 am

        Never called for MOACrashes Gary. Merely pointing out how walltowall corrupt everything AmeriKan has become, how artificial it all has become. Straw men are a need of yours.

      • Jason S February 13, 2014, 11:06 pm

        Rick, here is a transcript of what Yellen said about employment which I paraphrased as “the stated unemployment numbers are bunk”

        “The unemployment rate is still well above levels that Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) participants estimate is consistent with maximum sustainable employment. Those out of a job for more than six months continue to make up an unusually large fraction of the unemployed, and the number of people who are working part time but would prefer a full-time job remains very high. These observations underscore the importance of considering more than the unemployment rate when evaluating the condition of the U.S. labor market.”

    • Rick Ackerman February 12, 2014, 11:43 pm

      The information provided by the ZeroHedge article you’ve linked would be laughable if it weren’t such a perfect example of the statistical shell game that has come to encompass our political and economic lives.

  • Mario February 10, 2014, 3:08 am

    As always, another of Rick’s superb compelling narratives. Looking more closely, to suggest it’s all sunshine, roses and lollipops would be foolish, while to suggest the global economy is crumbling, equally so.

    Lately reading Hot, Flat and Crowded by Thomas Friedman, he doesn’t pull his punches on the mess were in, nor on the areas of strength…Iput it in the must read category for the gang here…

    Cheers, Mario

    • Chuck February 10, 2014, 6:29 pm

      before any ‘evaporation’ occurs, a big currency war will take place….and it is already becoming clear that the ‘global economy’ has full faith in the US dollar (or rather full faith in the US military – same thing).

    • Oregon February 10, 2014, 6:30 pm

      Vlad, you should really try and get out more often, go for a walk or something, if you can. Make good use of recess or ‘yard time’, whatever your situation might be. Just a suggestion with some offense intended.

      &&&&&

      ‘Yard time’? We’ll soon find out if our Vlad has a sense of humor. RA

    • VILE VLAD February 11, 2014, 5:19 am

      I think you are a setup liar, rick. I think you lie.

      &&&&&

      Yeah, that’d be me, all right: dishonest to the core. I actually work for the Trilateralists, although the Masons use me occasionally as their mole in the guru world.

      If you want to see yourself in print here again, you know exactly what I expect of you. If not, no one would miss you, you horse’s ass. RA

    • John Farrell February 11, 2014, 3:12 pm

      Thank you, Rick. I’ve been finding VV’s posts disruptive, arrogant and abusive. He is indeed well-yclept.