Sorry, I'm a little confused. Is the current assumption that the market will make a brief retracement back down to (DOW) 16,750, before continuing its recent uptrend to ~17,500? After hitting that upper resistance, it will begin to free fall??
quote:Still think the channel is heading down, regardless of the bouncing around within it?
We are headed first to the top of the channel. Currently that comes in around 17k DOW, give or take 100.
quote:yesquote:Still think the channel is heading down, regardless of the bouncing around within it?
We are headed first to the top of the channel. Currently that comes in around 17k DOW, give or take 100.
quote:But trust your money to the majors, eh?!?!
of course they did
quote:In my best Louisiana swamp rat gap toothed voice:
I got out of my short about 5 handles off the low before the real squeeze started. Bears potentially fumbled a key reversal day opportunity with the end of the day squeeze. Probably means we end up squeezing a little higher to the 2020-2040 prior to the FOMC meeting next week.
quote:Check out the 10 day chart and what do you see that occurred? Can you see it?
Let's call this my "Juke" or "Fake out" move:
Here is an example of what I'm speaking about on the high side. The first green line shows resistance set that lasted all the way from November through most of December. All those shorts accumulating over that time that hung in there because, after all, "we're still in the game here". But notice the rapid rise that peaks up (happens to be into earnings, which is another lesson in itself). It looks small on the chart but it's nearly a THIRTY DOLLAR upside peak fueled by the big money and, not amusingly, undisciplined shorts getting scared out and actually exacerbating the spike! I absolutely love this pattern occurring when I have aligned my readings/studies showing a macro top. While they are jumping ship I am going in strong. Pull up some intraday charts and you can see this tactic playing out prior to break down/break out movement. Hope this makes sense and helps!
quote:
"Why don't folks see that stockbrokers can't predict the future? After all, people scoff at astrologers and tarot card readers, but if some guy in a suit says he is a market analyst, people can't wait to hear his insider advice for what to do during a stock run or slump. Investment adviser Mark Matson calls these so-called experts what they are: bullies."
From the book description...
Um, I don't think this is what he is looking for.
quote:quote:
"Why don't folks see that stockbrokers can't predict the future? After all, people scoff at astrologers and tarot card readers, but if some guy in a suit says he is a market analyst, people can't wait to hear his insider advice for what to do during a stock run or slump. Investment adviser Mark Matson calls these so-called experts what they are: bullies."
From the book description...
Um, I don't think this is what he is looking for.
I used to think that while these guys are cannot predict the future, they knew more than the average Joe. I think I was wrong.
I took up a job in a well known financial data firm and my product helped portfolio managers make models for recommending stocks and funds. When I had to troubleshoot some of them from well known IBs, I realized how goofy they were. Everyone seemed to want to come up with their own "secret sauce" and the models got crazier and crazier, just to be different.
Eventually they all used historical data to try to predict the future with mixed results. You can rely on analysts to analyze, but NOT to predict. A good analyst can look at financial information and point out red flags, but predicting stock prices is and assigning "targets" is just a load of crap.
So for the past year, I just buy ETFs based on the Nasdaq and they generally do well. It's been down this year, but much better than putting my life savings in the hands of a single CEO.