Saturday, October 11, 2008

Spike

Capitulation Low?
Saturday October 11, 2008



The S&P 500's opening down-spike to a multi-year low at 839.80 spiked the VIX into orbit that hit 70.90 early in the day before reaching a high of 76.94 in the afternoon. It is interesting to note that despite the rally in the SPX, the VIX remains extremely elevated at near 70, suggesting that investors remain very fearful of additional selling pressure on equities. This is a very good sign from a contrary perspective -- that the VIX has not reversed and plunged in the aftermath of what had the feel of a capitulation low.

In other words, even though the market rallied 350-400 Dow points at the time of my intraday chart snapshot and much more later in the day, the VIX continues to circle 70, giving me added "confidence" that the spike low, and rally in equities, likely has some shelf life this time, albeit amidst intense swings and volatility.

Moving to gold, as the streetTRACKS Gold Shares (GLD) continue to spiral lower -- closing at 83.22 from a high Friday of 90.72 -- I have to put Friday's action within the context of a big picture outlook to see how much damage has been inflicted by the day's weakness. When viewed from a weekly chart perspective, Friday's $5 (6%) decline feels worse than it looks. In fact, based on the weekly chart, current weakness represents a relatively minor pullback within a much larger dominant intermediate-term uptrend.

Be that as it may, the pain of the decline is palpable, but if I use my best efforts to remain objective, I still come to the conclusion that the GLD is "killing time" ahead of another upleg within the 2005-08 underlying bull trend.

Themes for the next 10 years

Looking ahead to themes for the next 10 years, we continue to embrace agriculture (farming/forestry), water (water rights, water treatment, etc.), new technologies playing to energy conservation (including alternative energy and nuclear); as well as climate change, including environmental pollution and resource limitation.

Crash into me



Bloomberg summed it up this way: “U.S. stocks fell for an eighth straight day, yesterday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average capping its worst week since 1914. The MSCI World Index of equities in 23 developed countries slid 20 percent this week, the most since records began in 1970.”


Run an RSI chart for the S&P back to 1928. Note where we are.

The S&P gave up almost all of it's 02-03 gains.

All 30 DOW components are below their 200 DMA. That happened once before, 1987.

Investor cash is above the 21 year mean and are the highest since 02, 98, 90.

Last week saw three 90% down days. That can't continue for long...

% of NYSE stocks trading over 200DMA is at multi year lows.

Cost of an ounce of gold is now greater than the S&P.

Extreme VIX. These extremes historically lead to rallies.

S&P down 47% YOY, Trannies 38%, historically suggesting upside