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| subject: | Market Action |
"A Tale of Two Markets". Today's NYSE chart looks like Monument Valley. It jumped straight up in the morning, plateaued there, and then jumped back down in mid afternoon. The NASDAQ/OTC tried to follow, but as soon as that led it above 2,000, it panicked and ran screaming back--then in mid-afternoon it jumped off a cliff. I've often maintained investing is half fundamentals, half psychology. I think investors probably agree that the hardest sequence is to have bought a stock at the wrong time, seen it fall without applying the 7% Solution, doggedly hold on until it recovers, finally sell out somewhere near cost, and then see it subsequently make the move we expected when we bought it. If that hasn't happened to you, you haven't been investing in stocks much. It's a tough situation to live through. Let me suggest the way to look at the situation is we paid our dues for a poor tactical decision when we bought, and failing to acknowledge our mistake by promptly applying the 7% Solution. Also, a stock that fell like that is really more likely to fall in the future than sky-rocket. It's the ones that do that we remember. As I said a few days ago, we really should accept the issue here is how we made the purchase decision and why we didn't protect ourselves, not why we sold out too soon to take advantage of the profits we wanted. If we'd sold when it dropped 7% below our purchase price, we'd still have had most of our money to reinvest if it was really that good an idea. As I recall in both 2001 and 2002 the market gurus were telling us, "sure the first half has been bad, but just wait for the second half." What we weren't willing to admit is that we were really in a Bear Market. Now, that's good news for Dollar Cost Averagers, bad news for "active investors"--OK, the word is "Momentum Players". In a Bear Market, most stocks don't "follow" the market averages down, the market averages go down because the stocks are falling. How is it we expected to make money in that environment using a Momentum strategy? Something's wrong with our tactics here! I still don't see a Bull Market yet. This still isn't the time to be trying to apply a Momentum strategy. My suggestion for the past year or so is our buying should have been aimed at carefully upgrading the quality of our portfolios with "blue chip" and "best of breed" sorts of stocks for long term apreciation and stability. That's called Value Investing. That's what you do at market bottoms. Price Vola- Momen- Volume Oscil- Summ. Change tility tum lator Index -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ __>_ _ ___< 11/26 _>__ |___ __|_ _ ___< 11/28 __>_ >___ __|_ ___ ___| 12/01 _>__ >___ __|_ ___ ___| 12/02 _|__ >___ __|_ __ 12/03 Timing Signals: I don't use or recommend timing signals, but they're fun to watch. If I did though, well, I might use something like this. (Be warned!! It tends to whipsaw around signal points!) Last Signal: BUY Date: 11/24/03 S&P: 1052 Winner or Loser: tbd By: tbd See my market tracking charts for '01-'02 and my investment strategy study at my website(s): http://www.xprt.net/~pgrogers/Pers.html http://www.angelfire.com/or/paulrogers/Pers.html http://www.geocities.com/paulgrogers/Pers.html ... Remember when sex was safe, jumping off bridges dangerous ___ MultiMail/MS-DOS v0.35 ---* Origin: The Bare Bones BBS (1:105/360) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 @PATH: 105/360 106/2000 633/267 |
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