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What a Disaster!

By John C. Lee | September 29, 2008 | 7:05 PM | 7 Comments

WHAT A DISASTER! The Dow dropped 777.68 points or 6.98%, the Nasdaq dropped 199.61 points or 9.14%, and the S&P 500 dropped 106.59 points or 8.79%. Today was the Dow’s largest one-day drop, EVER. Oil dropped $10.52 or 10.1% to $96.36, but not before hitting $95.04 intra-day. Wachovia’s (NYSE: WB) banking operations get bought out by Citigroup (NYSE: C) and the stock lost about $19 billion in market cap in a single day. We continue to make financial history and every day is comparable to the most recent thriller/suspense movie you’ve seen.

What amazed me the most? It was the media coming out on Sunday night peddling this fluff that they called, “the deal that had been reached”. What I don’t understand is if a deal had been reached, why did it completely breakdown? If you were watching the House vote and watched the market intraday alongside, you could see how each update on the vote count actually moved the market considerably. There was a sight delay in my opinion and I was able to short when there were only about 50 or so votes left and the “nays” were well in the lead. At that point, whatever confidence I had in the financial media completely disappeared. The House is expected to present a new proposal on Thursday at the earliest, at least that’s what the media is saying…

On September 5, I wrote an article titled, "The Rally is Over." Several people made some stupid comments (not on greenfaucet…readers here are too sophisticated and friendly). Look at this comment:

"It's amazing that by just looking at charts one can predict the future and make bold statements such as "This Rally Is Over."

I wonder if there are other forces in life which could affect iron clad chart trends, and perhaps make "This Rally Is Over" sound a bit more uncertain. Nah. Wishful thinking on my end."

Haha, whatever, I don’t have to prove anything. Never underestimate the power of technical analysis. The breakouts and breakdowns I profile daily are the biggest harbingers of a chart. They will give you clues as to where the stock will go.

Anyway, I searched for my usual breakouts and breakdowns and I found 5 breakouts, one of which was the VIX, which doesn’t really count. I was shocked with the breakouts, which I’ll talk about later in the article.

Thornburg Mortgage (NYSE: TMA) gapped up 310.71% today, the largest gainer by far. However, look how the volume didn’t support price action. I can pretty much say for a fact that TMA will drop tomorrow. The board announced a one-for-ten reverse split, which is intended to boost the stock’s value above $1. TMA is also currently in negotiations with repurchase counterparties (who helped avoid TMA’s bankruptcy) and extended its tender offer for preferred stock. It’s still a $1 stock, and I would avoid it at any cost.

Delia*s (NSDQ: DLIA) agreed to sell its CCS brand for $102 million to Foot Locker (NYSE: FL) and as a result, the stock jumped 17.2%. Not bad considering that everything else went down the toilet. How bad was it today? Out of all the industries, Alternative Fuels as a whole was the best performing sector with a 0% gain!

VeraSun Energy Corp. (NYSE: VSE) spiked 81.8% today. There was no news out, at least to the public. VSE has started to fill its gap; however, I would get the hell out of VSE if there is any size gap down at the open. Be warned: VSE may fill the gap intraday. Shorting spikers on no news is a great way to go.

Another stock that spiked on no apparent news is Raser Technologies (NYSE: RZ). Looks like a major short squeeze to me. 24% of the float is short (or was). Any gap down warrants a short at the open.

The VIX ($VIX) is the last “breakout” to profile. In my weekly technical commentary that is distributed early Monday, I wrote that the VIX was forming a high-and-tight flag and that a breakout was imminent. I had no idea it would be today. At this level, the VIX will hit the 50 level. I would also like to point out that a flag or any type of consolidation pattern was never formed on the VIX for at least the last 3 years, so I knew it was something special. People are scared, and the bull camp is getting smaller and smaller each day. Expect these fear levels to remain elevated for a while.

As for the breakdowns, I found over 300 of them. If I tried to profile all of them here, the article would be almost 700 pages long. That’s how bad of a day it was.

Here are some of the biggest losers. I declined to draw trend lines because I thought they were obvious and pointless. Many of these no longer have any support levels remaining. I warn you NOT to go long in any of the following:

Once again, NO long positions, please! I don’t care if you think that the stocks are "cheap". Trust me, they’ll get even cheaper (you might even get a 50% discount tomorrow!). If you don’t know how to short, just stay in cash. Standing aside is also considered a position.

On the top 100 largest declines for both the NYSE and the Nasdaq, all 200 of them declined by 17% or more. I highly recommend that no long positions be entered in any of them.

Today, there were 1,142 new lows hit and only 23 new highs made. The market cannot rally with these kinds of numbers being hit.

The rally has been over, and I can confirm that we officially began the third primary leg of this bear market. Don’t ignore chart patterns; they’re trying to tell you something!

Fair warning to longs: we have a lot more new lows to hit.

Comments (7)  |  Related Topics  » | | | |

 
1st anonymous person - I

1st anonymous person - I don't know about everything, but most. If someone isn't right most of the time in this type of market, they will get crushed. Always be mindful of charts, they provide clues.

2nd anonymous person - cash is the best way to preserve capital. There's noting wrong with not being invested. I don't really do other types of instruments, but I can tell you that I am long QCOR, CPB, and STSA. STSA was a "quiz" feature on my "How to Trade BO and BD's" article. Did you know that CPB was the only stock that was up in the S&P 500 (499 declined)? I wrote an article about CPB on Sept 12. This is one of the strongest stocks out there. QCOR is a major spike play since around $5.25, which is the major support level.

Jerry/Jim - THANKS!!!

Submitted by John C Lee on Tue, 2008/09/30 - 8:30pm » reply |
 
cpb, qcor, stsa

I don't like CPB because I am a food snob. I won't buy any kind of small or mid cap pharma or biotech. Done that & been burt before, once going to zero. I don't have the time to research these. STSA is interesting though, looks like a survivor. Would be interested in other names in this same theme, not necessarily or even preferably US based. Thks.

Submitted by jim2 (not verified) on Wed, 2008/10/01 - 7:04am » reply |
 
Well

It doesn't really matter if you like them or not, right? If I have long positions in this type of market, you know they're good :)

 

 

Submitted by John C Lee on Thu, 2008/10/02 - 3:41pm » reply |
 
You're calling everything

You're calling everything perfectly.
Thanks

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 2008/09/30 - 4:43pm » reply |
 
Hello John, Keep the

Hello John,

Keep the analyses coming, and if possible, can you please give us some ideas of what you would do to preserve capital for the short term, and some alternative types of investment that might give some returns in the medium term supposing that equities go nowhere for a year or two.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 2008/09/29 - 10:01pm » reply |
 
Excellent Work

John, you have excellent insight and great knowledge on charting and the markets! Keep up the great work and commentary! Jerry

Submitted by Jerry Slusiewicz on Mon, 2008/09/29 - 8:01pm » reply |
 
Indeed

Great insight John, we appreciate your contribution.

 Can you believe the VIX hit 55 today? Insane.

Submitted by Jim Slagle on Mon, 2008/09/29 - 9:58pm » reply |

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