November 30, 2006

UPDATE - US Midwest business slows surprisingly in November (at Reuters)

Filed under: S&P 500, Stock Market — Yahoo! Finance: ^GSPC News @ 10:30 am

Distressed Real-Estate: Priced to Sell in 2007

Filed under: Residential Real Estate — RealEstateJournal.com Residential Real Estate News @ 12:00 am
Next year is looking promising for investors looking to purchase foreclosed properties as a weak housing market nudges the foreclosure rate higher.

Burnt-Out Home Set for Demolition Becomes a Profitable Investment

Filed under: Residential Real Estate — RealEstateJournal.com Residential Real Estate News @ 12:00 am
A North Carolina scientist literally buys a house in a fire sale for $5,000, rebuilds it and turns it into a profitable rental property. After nearly 30 years of ownership, he's expecting to get about $400,000 in a sale of the mulitfamily home.

November 29, 2006

GLOBAL MARKETS-U.S. stocks and dollar rally on GDP, oil jumps (at Reuters)

Filed under: S&P 500, Stock Market — Yahoo! Finance: ^GSPC News @ 5:39 pm

US economy stronger than first thought in 3rd qtr (at Reuters)

Filed under: S&P 500, Stock Market — Yahoo! Finance: ^GSPC News @ 5:03 pm

The Dollar: Things Are Getting Scary… Again

Filed under: Elliott Wave, Forex Trading, General Interest — Elliott Wave International @ 1:00 pm

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
Elliott Wave International Forex Focus

If there’s a theme to the stories in the forex media this week, it can be summarized in one sentence: “The world is finally waking up to the dollar’s weak fundamentals.”

It is certainly starting to look scary for the buck. Today, the euro/dollar exchange rate broke above $1.32 – a level not seen in two years. What’s more, “While the economic data remain soft, the dollar will continue to fall,” say the analysts (Financial Times).

Wait, weren’t they saying the same thing in December 2004, when the EURUSD stood at an all-time high of $1.356? Yes, that’s exactly what they said – and we all know what happened next. Defying the “crash and burn” forecasts, in 2005 “the greenback enjoyed its best year against the euro and yen since 1999 and 1979 respectively” (WSJ ). So unexpected was the 2005 rally that even Warren Buffet, the Sage of Omaha, who famously bet “$20 billion or so” against the buck that year, was caught off guard by its sudden and sustained turnaround.

The USD rebounded in 2005 not because its “fundamentals” suddenly improved. On the contrary, the enormous U.S. trade deficit – the “biggest threat to America’s economy” – only got worse in 2005. The dollar rebounded that year because the market’s collective psychology went to an absolute dollar-bearish extreme in late 2004 – and then had nowhere else to go but the opposite way.

That’s why I wouldn’t place too much faith in the dollar’s “weak fundamentals.” Perhaps recognizing their limited impact on the dollar’s trend, even the FT this week attributed the “the dramatic dive of the US dollar” to “the power of round numbers” – a technical market indicator…

Yes, it pays to pay attention to technicals, and more than the media would have you believe. It was technical analysis of the EURUSD – namely, Elliott wave – that as early as Nov. 09 allowed EWI’s Currency Specialty Service to make this forecast for the recent rally in the pair:

Posted On: Thu, 9 Nov 2006 00:17:00 GMT. EUR$ is within a week or two of starting a thrust higher that will carry above 1.2798. Measured objectives lie at 1.3140, where wave five will equal wave one, and 1.3286…

dollar.gif

What turned our forex analysts bearish the USD on November 9 wasn’t its “fundamentals” – it was that contracting triangle pattern you see in the chart above. So far, the EURUSD has only hit – and surpassed – our first target, $1.3140. Will it break the second one, $1.3286? We’ll know soon enough…

Housing Markets Where Prices Are Rising, Not Falling

Filed under: Residential Real Estate — RealEstateJournal.com Residential Real Estate News @ 12:00 am
While the U.S. saw the biggest median-price drop on record in the third quarter, price tags are still on the way up in some locales. In this week's news survey, we take a look at which city saw the biggest increase, where properties are commanding big bucks in New Jersey, why bargain hunters are hot on Nashville, Tenn., and why Raleigh, N.C., is a strong but slowing market.

Fewer New-Home Sales, But Median Price Rises

Filed under: Residential Real Estate — RealEstateJournal.com Residential Real Estate News @ 12:00 am
The number of new homes sold declined at an annual rate of 3.2% in October, but the median price increased to $248,500. The sales numbers were worse than what Wall Street expected.

November 28, 2006

[$$] A Change of Character for the Market (at RealMoney by TheStreet.com)

Filed under: S&P 500, Stock Market — Yahoo! Finance: ^GSPC News @ 2:05 pm

Dynamic Traders Current Trade Set-Up - Forex

Filed under: Forex Trading, General Interest, Technical Analysis, Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 7:04 am

The Current Forex Trade Set-Up below is just one page from the most recent Friday issue of the Dynamic Traders DailyTM Forex Report.

USD/JPY (Swing Trade Set-up)

forextraderec.jpg

Probable Net Trend for the Next Few Trading Days

With the (8) daily DTosc bearish reversal, both the (8) and (13) daily DTosc’s are bearish signaling the net trend over the next few trading days should be sideways to down. A decline below the Nov. 14 low should be followed by a decline to below the Nov. 1 low.

USD/JPY Swing Trade Strategy

Short following a decline below the Nov. 14 low as long as the (34) 60M DTosc is bearish or short following the next (34) 60M DTosc bearish reversal and trade below a minor swing low as long as today’s high is not exceeded.

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