- 
	
	
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Another spin re IASB and European stress tests.
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					http://seekingalpha.com/article/2857...cial-terrorism
Hmm... do we need a robot for accounting regulations...
Does anyone have an opinion? Should one of us on the board be trying to follow this stuff and report on it? Pretty arcane stuff...
Or is it already baked into the 20DMF cake?
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					Very good Marc Faber interview on markets, on gold, on bonds etc.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/marc-f...ctively-resign
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Interview with George Soros
		
		
				
				
		
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Ed Hornstein's latest.
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					After over a two-year run, the bull market for stocks appears to have ended.  As 
I wrote on June 13, 2011:
"The operative question remains whether this is a mere correction or whether the 
market is forecasting a significant slowdown in the economy and we are seeing 
the beginning of the end for the 2009-11 bull market.  While it is still a bit 
premature to say, the continued breakdown in the former leaders from late stage 
bases, the lack of leadership in any market sectors, high levels of distribution 
in the tape with the inability to stage even small rallies thus far, and the 
historical context of financial panics and bull markets that ensue (more on this 
in my next market commentary) lead me to conclude that a new bear market could 
be in its very early stages of forming.
Markets generally do not go straight down, and history shows us that our biggest 
up days occur during bear phases.  Therefore, even if we are entering a new bear 
market, there will be numerous countertrend rallies, and big up days to suck in 
those eager to believe the correction is over.  Whatever course the market takes 
(correction or bear market), high levels of cash until the market 
follows-through and bases rebuild remain the place to be."
*				*			*			*
In July we were treated to one of those countertrend rallies I described above, 
albeit on low volume.  I noted in a comment that some leaders were attempting 
breakouts from bases, but the rally quickly failed later that month, and proved 
to be nothing more than "a last gasp for air" for the bull market.
Since that time, the market has treated us to historic levels of distribution.  
The major indices have quickly dropped approximately twenty percent with the 
market showing very little ability to stage any rallies on meaningful volume.  
What little leadership remained during the past week has gone by the wayside 
such as former leaders PCLN, AMZN, BIDU, LULU, CMG, WYNN, DECK, FOSL, GMCR, CRM 
and SODA.  Other former leaders that topped out weeks or months ago have 
continued to see incessant distribution such as APKT, PNRA, NFLX, ISRG, RVBD, 
TZOO, OPEN, and TIF.
Simply put, we are in a bear market for stocks.  This means that maintaining 
high levels of cash and preserving capital are key.  A few important points:
1)	The Biggest Rallies Occur During Bear Markets:  These rallies merely serve to 
relieve oversold conditions and to suck people back in the market.  Keep this in 
mind.  Until the market follows-through and fresh bases and leadership set up, 
all rallies should be treated as mere bear market rallies.  Time will be needed 
for the market to set up for a new bull, and we are likely to head lower before 
this occurs.
2)	Ignore the Pundits:  The pundits and prognosticators in the media never 
change their tone during bear markets.  Whether it was the dot com bust and 
eighty percent drop in the NASDAQ from 2000-02, or the financial panic in 
2007-2008, we hear the same thing nonsense every bear market:  "Stay Invested", 
"Buy the Dip", "The Market is Oversold", "Stay the Course", "The selling is 
overdone", "The market is overreacting", or  "Stocks are Cheap".  Heeding the 
advice of these people will do nothing more than cause severe looses in your 
portfolios.  The simple fact is this:  Nobody knows how far or how deep this 
bear market can go.  Until a new bull is born, stocks can go lower, stocks can 
get cheaper, the market can get more oversold, and the selling can get more 
overdone.
3)	The Difference Between an Intermediate Correction and a Bear Market:  The key 
characteristic of a bear market is that almost all of the former leading stocks 
will top out and break down, as opposed to intermediate corrections where many 
leaders will stay above key longer-term moving averages such as the 150-day or 
200-day moving averages.  During last summer's intermediate correction for 
example, many leaders stayed above these longer-term moving averages, such as 
BIDU, AAPL, CRM, OPEN, RVBD, VMW, NFLX, FOSL, and CMG.  Juxtapose today's market 
environment where almost every former leader has broken these key moving 
averages on heavy volume.  Faced with this indisputable evidence, odds favor we 
are in a new bear market for stocks
4)	The Obvious Good News:  Every major bear market has led to a new bull market.
Bear markets get rid of the excess, froth and speculation of the prior bull and 
allow new leading stocks the time to base out and set up for their future runs.  
As long as one preserves his capital and stays out of the way of mother market's 
wrath, he will have the opportunity to make a king's random once the new bull 
market begins. Unfortunately, the average investor is so devastated by the bear 
market preceding that point, that he wants absolutely nothing to do with stocks 
and misses the bountiful opportunities accompanying the new bull. 
5)	Exercise Patience During a Bear Market:  This is something I constantly 
remind myself of as it is the key to investment success.  I wrote the following 
in December 2008 and it is extremely relevant today: 
A quick note on a topic I address now and again which I consider highly relevant 
at this time.  It is the virtue of patience and not overtrading.  Throughout 
this year, I have watched as many colleagues have tried to catch a market bottom 
only to lose more money then they had to if they simply waited for a 
follow-through day and waited for bases to build and breakouts to occur.  It was 
their lack of patience, not their lack of trading intelligence that caused these 
losses.  I know many extremely talented traders who are always in the market, 
every single day, taking unnecessary risk because they somehow "feel" the need 
to trade everyday.  Without exception, this incessant need to always trade leads 
to a lackluster performance and can be an extremely costly mistake that often 
can be the undoing of a trader.  Especially in a market as volatile as this, it 
is of crucial importance to maintain discipline and not to overtrade and to be a 
slave to every tick.  All of the great traders I have studied, such as William 
O'Neil, Nicholas Darvas, Bernard Baruch, and Jesse Livermore understood that a 
large part of a successful trader's career is spent out of the market waiting 
for the fat pitch, and not swinging at anything but "their" pitch.  These 
individuals, who all had decades of success in the market, understood this fact, 
and it is what kept them consistently successful in their trading careers.
I challenge all of my readers to review their portfolios over the past year and 
to ascertain how much money they could have saved by not overtrading and by 
being more patient and waiting for the right opportunities.  Such a portfolio 
review, with an eye to eliminate needless trading, is an exercise I always find 
very beneficial.  
When a new bull is born, there will be new leaders that breakout and rally 250 
percent or more very quickly.  At a time like that, margin and aggressiveness 
can reap big rewards.  But, the prudent disciplined trader will await that time 
and not expose capital to unnecessary risks trying to capture short term profits 
on each tick. 
 I leave you with some words of wisdom on this topic.  If you have any questions 
or comments please email me.  I will have a report later this week that 
discusses the rally and any leadership that may develop in the coming days.  For 
now, I remain fully cash.
The best speculators search only for the very best opportunities. To be truly 
successful, you must wait for the right opportunities to present themselves and 
this often means doing nothing for long periods of time.
Nicholas Darvas
I have been in the speculative game ever since I was fourteen. It is all I have 
ever done. I think I know what I am talking about. And the conclusion that I 
have reached after nearly thirty years of constant trading, both on a shoestring 
and with millions of dollars back of me, is this: A man may beat a stock or a 
group at a certain time, but no man living can beat the stock market .... A man 
may make money out of individual deals in cotton or grain, but no man can beat 
the cotton market or the grain market ....  "If I knew how to make these 
statements stronger or more emphatic I certainly would. It does not make any 
difference what anybody says to the contrary. I know I am right in saying these 
are incontrovertible statements. 
Jesse Livermore
The virtue of patience in trading is often overlooked as a key success factor.  
Without patience, a trader may have the tendency to trade when he or she 
shouldn't.  Instead of waiting for the best trading set-ups, the trader would 
take extra unnecessary risk by trading when not all the factors are in their 
favor. Worse, this bad habit is compounded by the uncertain nature of the 
markets. Some of these hastily taken trades sometimes do make profits, and do 
make profits big. This reinforces the belief of the trader that he or she has 
done the right thing. On those trades that lose, the trader can deceive himself 
that, "It's ok, losing is part of the game. I'll win more than I lose.
Author Unknown
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Ed Hornstein's report of Sept. 5.
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					In my August 18, 2011 market commentary, I wrote the following:
"The major indices have quickly dropped approximately twenty percent with the 
market showing very little ability to stage any rallies on meaningful volume.  
What little leadership remained during the past week has gone by the wayside 
such as former leaders PCLN, AMZN, BIDU, LULU, CMG, WYNN, DECK, FOSL, GMCR, CRM 
and SODA.  Other former leaders that topped out weeks or months ago have 
continued to see incessant distribution such as APKT, PNRA, NFLX, ISRG, RVBD, 
TZOO, OPEN, and TIF.
Simply put, we are in a bear market for stocks.  This means that maintaining 
high levels of cash and preserving capital are key. "
*				*					*			 
During the past two weeks, the market staged a classic "jam" rally off the lows, 
with little leadership to speak of.  Such a rally was not surprising given that 
the major indices had seen historic selling off their highs.  Indeed, the Nasdaq 
Composite managed to rally into the 2600 level, which had marked key support for 
the index in March and June of this year.  Unfortunately, that support level has 
now become key resistance, and that index failed its first test of that level 
miserably.
The "jam" rally had little, if any, characteristics of a sustained uptrend, 
other than a suspect follow-through day on August 23.  That follow-through day 
lacked clear and unequivocal volume to indicate that institutions were putting 
money back to work in the market.  In addition, in the days after the 
follow-through day the major indices rallied on below-average volume, somewhat 
reminiscent of the "jam" rally we saw in late June through July before the sell 
off began.  Third and most importantly, was the clear lack of leadership and 
strong basing patterns in the market.
The few stocks that managed to make new highs recently were mostly illiquid or 
defensive-related names, and not the high-quality liquid growth names that are 
associated with new market uptrends.
Stocks such as PMST, MAKO, and ARCO are not exactly the type of liquid growth 
names that would lead the markets by themselves out of a bear market.  While 
these stocks could be future leaders down the road  -- without other liquid 
names showing strength at this time  --  they are merely illustrative of the 
smaller, illiquid stocks that may buck the trend during a countertrend rally.  
This reminds me somewhat of the August 2008 countertrend rally before the 
historic market debacle in 2008.  As my personal journal entry from August 28, 
2008 reads:
"The only stocks I see breaking out or leading now are smaller illiquid names 
that do not give me confidence the big money crowd is putting money back to 
work.  While it is nice to see a name like AVAV or AFAM buck the trend, those 
stocks appear to be the exception to the bear market, and not stocks that would 
lead us out of this nasty market environment.  For this reason, I fear this 
rally does not have a long way to go."
*				*					*
Although I wrote that journal entry three years ago, the fact that I could 
simply substitute PSMT, MAKO, or ARCO for AFAM or AVAV, is anything but 
inspiring.  Again, perhaps these stocks are future leaders, but without other 
liquid names making new highs and leading, the rally we saw does not correlate 
well with a new sustained market uptrend at this time.
Similar to today, the often-defensive medical space in August 2008 was showing 
good relative strength.  At that time names like CELG and AMGN were going into 
new highs only to eventually get crushed during the great crash in the fall of 
2008.   Similarly, during the "jam" rally, medical stocks like ATHN, MAKO, and 
CERN have shown superior relative strength.  Without other groups leading the 
charge however, precedent tells us that rotation into the medical area can often 
be a sign of a "risk-off" or defensive mindframe for the big money crowd.
Faced with suspect illiquid leadership, rallies led by defensive stocks, and 
virtually nonexistent superior basing patterns in growth stocks, the "jam" rally 
appeared somewhat suspect from the start.  And, late last week, the indices may 
have begun to tip their hands, as they turned rather swiftly to the downside 
after running into logical resistance.
While our markets were closed for Labor Day, the European markets continued 
their sell-offs yesterday, with the major European bourses down anywhere from 
3.5-5%, and the major European banks trading to 29-month lows.  This certainly 
does not bode well for our markets, and coupled with last week's sell-off 
certainly leads one to conclude that "jam" rally appears to have ended.
Certainly a retest of the August 8 lows, and another leg down in this bear 
market appears likely at this time.  For now, the only small positive is that 
some of the higher quality liquid names have shown a bit of "stubbornness" 
during last week's selling, as stocks like  AMZN, PCLN, ISRG, MA, AAPL, BIDU, 
and CMG continue to show exceptional relative strength.  These "sexy seven" 
should be watched carefully as they will offer an important clue as to the 
duration and severity of this bear market.  Should they come under heavy 
distribution and break lows from last month, the odds of a further sell-off 
would be increasingly likely.
In summation, faced with the negative environment described above, high levels 
of cash and capital preservation remain of high import.  Other than gold and 
gold miners, being long in this market continues to be a recipe for disaster.  
And only the fool will make useless predictions of how long this bear lasts, or 
attempt to trade every wiggle and tick on the tape, shorting and going long 
almost at random while masking his or her incessant need to always trade.
Just as the best poker players play only a strong hand and know to throw away 
weak ones, the skilled speculators understand to only play their strong hands in 
the market.  And the beauty of investing, is that we never have to ante until we 
see the opponent's cards -- in this case --  the cards of mother market.
Remain patient and defensive for it is an absolute certainty that sooner or 
later a new bull market will be born.  And like every new bull market, most will 
miss it as they will be too busy shorting it or refusing to commit capital once 
it begins.
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					I have assets managed by Fisher Investments since 2002.  They send me a Capital Markets Update quarterly.  This most recent one may be of interest.  Ken Fisher has been in the investment business for a lifetime, preceded by his father who was prominent during the Jesse Livermore days.   By design, the video self-erases within approximately two weeks.  The video is about 45 minutes long.  Click on the following link.  Hope it works and that you enjoy the information. buzzman
http://www.fi.com/weballey/autoexpir...0XjJaxSxVJg%3d
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Ed Hornstein's email of Sept. 6
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					I wanted to put out a brief update to my commentary from last night.
The one positive I noted was that a few large liquid growth leaders were acting 
"stubborn" and showing excellent relative strength.  Indeed, these stocks bucked 
the trend once again today, and led the major indices to close well off their 
lows in somewhat of a positive reversal day.  While the market continues to 
sell-off, these stocks continue to base build and, at least for the time being, 
are resisting the general market's distribution.
I noted that these stocks' behavior would offer a key clue as to the duration 
and severity of this bear phase.  I cannot underscore this point enough.  Simply 
stated, the seven stocks I noted, and a few others (listed below), will let us 
know whether the bear phase ends soon, or whether the indices break recent lows.  
As I noted, it would be foolish to prognosticate on the outcome and I will leave 
that for others to banter about.  For now, I note that it remains a positive 
that these stocks continue to base-build, resist the selling pressure, and show 
excellent strength.
In light of this, I am providing my first watch list in quite some time.  This 
is not a buy list, but merely a list of companies with superior fundamentals and 
that are showing the ability to resist high levels of distribution in the 
market.  Should the market embark on a sustainable uptrend, many of these stocks 
likely will be "go to" leaders.  Of course, any continued selling in the general 
market likely takes many of these stocks much lower.  One should exercise 
patience, for there will be ample opportunity to be aggressive on the long side 
should the market decide to resolve itself to the upside.
AMZN, PCLN, ISRG, MA, AAPL, BIDU, CMG, GMCR, CROX, UA, LULU, HANS, MAKO, PSMT, 
ARCO, CF, POT, NTES, ATHN, CERN, NUS, PANL, V, Z, LVS, WYNN, LNKD, AWAY, ALXN, 
VRUS ,JAZZ, QCOR, PRGO, CPHD, SBUX, WFM, SBH, AZO, JCOM, CPA.
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Yuan offshore hub
		
		
				
				
		
			
				
					Three days ago I was struck by this article: 
China to back London as offshore yuan hub
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/chi...-ft-2011-09-07
Yesterday there was a comment on it:
Analysts skeptical about yuan convertibility
http://www.tradereform.org/2011/09/a...onvertibility/
A few months ago, Singapore was also involved:
Singapore Has a Leg Up In Trading-Hub Race
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...728891436.html
Singapore can be offshore yuan centre, but won't surpass Hong Kong
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/...7FB0GW20110411
What implications will there be, if China expands to Singapore as its second yuan trading hub after hongkong?
http://www.marketcrunch.net/question...after-hongkong
And so on, you can google and find other articles. I know nothing about forex, although it fascinates me. However, it seems to me that something is boiling. Not surprisingly, I would say.
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  - 
	
	
		
		
		
		
			Soros on the euro crisis
		
		
				
				
					
				
		
			
				
					Does the Euro Have a Future? Soros explains his point of view:
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/arch...o-have-future/
				
			 
			
		 
			
                        	
		         
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
  
		
                
		
	
 
	
	
	
	
	
		
		
			
				
				Posting Permissions
			
			
				
	
		- You may not post new threads
 
		- You may not post replies
 
		- You may not post attachments
 
		- You may not edit your posts
 
	
	
	Forum Rules