October 24, 2008

Has Cash Been King for the Past 10 Years?

Filed under: Money — Elliott Wave International @ 11:46 am

If you’re like most investors, you’ve been nearly brainwashed with conventional market “wisdom” that stocks are the best way to grow your portfolio.

You would be crazy not to have your money in the markets, right?

But when markets drop, as we’ve seen in this credit crisis, it’s amazing how quickly the story changes.

Steve Hochberg and Pete Kendall, editors of Elliott Wave International’s Financial Forecast, challenged the notion of stocks’ superiority years before this latest downturn.

Learn how cash has been king – and will remain so – far longer than the latest news headlines may have you believe in this free excerpt from Elliott Wave International’s Credit Crisis Survival Kit.

Elliott Wave International has also made the full Credit Crisis Survival Kit available free for a limited time. In addition to this excerpt, it contains 14 other articles, reports, and videos that reveal how to survive and prosper during the credit crisis. Visit EWI to download the kit, free.

Cash’s Invisible Reign Made Visible
[excerpted from Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, August 2008]

With respect to cash and its status as the preeminent financial asset, however, we are starting to wonder if investors will ever come around to our point of view, which, as we explained in the March special section, is that there are times when “the phrase ‘focus on the long term’ means “get out and wait.’” As we also pointed out, the last eight years are clearly one of these times, as cash has outperformed all three major stock averages over this period. A July 3 USA Today article shows how this outlook is actually becoming more farsighted as the bear market intensifies:


3-month Treasuries Beat
S&P 500 for past 10 Years


The article says, “Investors who bought stocks for the long run are finding out just how long the long run can be.” But the farther back in time cash’s dominance stretches and the rockier the stock market gets, the farther investors seem to move from ever taking anything off the table. After stating that “there can be times, long times, when stocks won’t beat T-bills,” a professor and popular buy-and-hold advocate is cited as “optimistic that the next 10 years will be better than the past decade.” In March EWFF stated, “Cash will continue to outperform until stocks are no longer fashionable.” There is no sign that such a condition is even close to happening.

It’s somewhat amazing that cash is not capturing anyone’s fancy because a tremendous society-wide thirst for cash is spreading fast. “In a deflation,” the Elliott Wave Financial Forecast has stated, “Rule No. 1 is to unload everything that isn’t nailed down. Rule No. 2 is to sell whatever everything remaining is nailed to.” The banking system is surely deflating, because, echoing Elliott Wave Financial Forecast’s wording again, “Desperate American Banks Are Selling Everything That Isn’t Nailed Down.” SunTrust is selling its stock in Coca-Cola, an asset the bank held for 90 years. Merrill Lynch sold its founding stake in Bloomberg as well as various other subsidiaries.

Meanwhile, “Americans are selling prized possessions online and at flea markets at alarming rates.” Pawnshops and auction sites are booming. At Craigslist.org, the number of for-sale listings soared 70% in eight months. This fits with our review of Craigslist’s prospects when it was getting started in 2005: “This is just the set-up phase. Once the global garage sale really gets rolling, truly astounding volumes of dirt-cheap goods will be available on-line and elsewhere.” The global garage sale is on. The chart of the U.S. savings rate shows that the bull market in cash has come to life.



A 30-year downtrend in savings rates ended at minus 2.3% in August 2005. In May 2008, the savings rate skyrocketed to 5%. This jolt may be somewhat overstated due to the arrival of the government’s stimulus checks, but the burst should be the start of a critical new mindset among consumers. When the government showered the economy with $600 checks, many did something they never would have thought of through most of the bull market: They put the money in the bank, which is exactly what the administration did not want. In fact, federal, state and local governments are desperate for the tax revenue that a little ripple-effect spending would have generated.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, states must close a $40 billion shortfall in the current fiscal year. “The problem today is that tax revenue is vanishing,” says a story about the sudden appearance of the worst fiscal crisis in New York since 1975. Even cities like East Hampton, New York, where someone paid $103 million for an oceanfront house last year, are out of money. “Nobody understands how it happened,” says one resident. The pages of this newsletter show otherwise. If we are right, a deflationary decline is depleting and destroying cash flows in novel new ways that no one alive has experienced before.


The previous analysis was excerpted from Elliott Wave International’s Credit Crisis Survival Kit. The kit, featuring 15 free resources to help you survive and prosper during the credit crisis, is available free. Visit EWI to download the kit, free.

Elliottwave News Roundup

Filed under: Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 9:42 am


TED Spread – The World Will (probably) Not End Today

Filed under: Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 9:35 am

The TED Spread has fallen sharply off its stratospheric record highs. Even as the global stock markets sink to five year lows from the absence of bidders there is at least a glimmer of hope that the interbank credit freeze is beginning to thaw.

October 21, 2008

Credit Crisis Survival Kit (Free)

Filed under: Elliott Wave — tradingfives @ 12:50 pm

The Credit Crisis Survival Kit, a brand new Club EWI resource, is now online.

In these tough economic times, you’ll be hard pressed to find a more relevant and useful free resource than the Credit Crisis Survival Kit. It’s packed with 15 hand-picked reports, videos, and articles to help individuals survive and prosper from the Credit Crisis.

Here’s a list of the topics included in the Kit:

* The Worst Credit Crisis Since the Great Depression
* What Started this Credit Crisis?
* What If You Can’t Sell Your House?
* The ‘Silent Crash’ Makes More Noise
* What Happens During a Credit Implosion?
* Why Deflation is the Real Worry
* Why the Fed Can’t Fix This Credit Crisis
* What Next After the Bailout?
* Buy & Hold or Sell & Fold?
* Don’t Believe It When They Tell You That’s It’s Over
* How To Ride Out the Credit Crisis? Think Cash
* How Do I Find a Safe Bank?
* When Will the Hard Times End?

Download your free Credit Crisis Survival Kit

Dollar rallies as credit thaws

Filed under: Forex Trading — tradingfives @ 9:29 am

The greenback was boosted by a thawing credit market and stimulus talk by Fed chair Ben Bernanke.
By Kenneth Musante, CNNMoney.com staff writer


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — The dollar surged to its highest level against the euro in nearly a year and a-half Monday as the frozen credit markets showed further signs of thawing and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested a second economic stimulus package.

The dollar gained against the euro, which fell to $1.3343 from $1.3379 late Friday. The last time the dollar was higher was June 14, 2007, when the euro was trading at $1.3311.

The dollar also rose against the British pound, which fell to $1.7163 from $1.7202, and gained against the Japanese yen, rising to ¥101.87 from ¥101.59.

The interbank cost of borrowing U.S. dollars fell dramatically Monday as the overnight Libor rate fell to 1.51% from 1.67% on Friday, according to Bloomberg.com. Libor is the daily average of what 16 banks charge other banks to lend money in London and is used to calculate adjustable rate mortgages. [Ed. On Friday we post the TED Spread. Let's give it a few days to see if the credit crunch is easing.]

The overnight Libor was nearly even with the 1.5% rate the Federal Reserve charges banks to borrow. Just two weeks ago the overnight Libor had reached as high as 6.88% after the Treasury’s $700 billion bailout bill was signed into law on Oct. 3.

The greenback also got a boost from Bernanke, who said Monday that Congress could consider a second stimulus package, although he did not indicate what should be included.

Source: CNN Money

October 20, 2008

How Does MarketClub Trade Triangle Technology Handle Volatility?

Filed under: Trading Mentor — Adam Hewison @ 10:01 am

MarketClub publishes their quarterly “Trade Triangle” results on corn, wheat, soybeans, crude oil, gold, and the Dollar Index. We’ve tracked these markets through their ups and downs and published the results on a regular basis. We have been doing this for 15 months and I’m happy, but not surprised to say that our “Trade Triangle” technology has been profitable in every quarter.

The graphic on the left shows quarterly trading profits through the incredible upsurge in volatility we have all experienced in Q3/Q4 – the Trade Triangle has handled the volatility very well, indeed!

Go to the MarketClub blog and read the whole article. There are more performance charts and a video showing some crude oil trades you can get something from.

October 19, 2008

Is Elliott Wave Now Mainstream?

Filed under: Elliott Wave, Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 6:56 am

Following is an excerpt from an article in London’s Financial Times about the FTSE Travel and Leisure sector. Nothing remarkable about the article itself. I mention it for its casual reference to Elliott Wave Analysis in the last paragraph. I’ve been reading Bob Prechter at Elliott Wave International and studying Elliott Wave Analysis since 1981-1982. Given the outright hostility to Elliott Wave among the financial establishment in the early years I find it somewhat remarkable that a prestigious financial newspaper would mention Elliott Wave without a big to-do explanation about it. Kind of makes it mainstream

Stay-at-home Brits Shun Travel

By Dominic Picarda

The era of borrow-and-spend is on hold, at least for now. With price rises outstripping wage growth, Britain’s consumers are battening down the hatches. Spending on unnecessary luxuries such as eating out, as well as holidays, is likely to suffer…

However, any bounce is unlikely to be the start of a new bull market for the sector. Applying an Elliott Wave interpretation, travel and leisure is at risk of dropping to below its recent low of 3079.

Source: Financial Times

October 18, 2008

TED Spread and the EURO

Filed under: Forex Trading — tradingfives @ 9:34 am

The chart on the right is the 5 year TED spread. The “TED Spread” is a measure of credit risk for inter-bank lending. It is the difference between (1) risk-free 3 month U.S. treasuries, and (2) the 3 month LIBOR rate, which represents the rate at which banks typically lend to each other. A higher spreasd indicates that banks perceive each other as higher risk counterparties. Wikipedia

The TED spread is “normally” measured in a few basis points with the day-to-day difference being attributed mostly to changes in the 3 month U.S. Treasury rate. Around September of 2008 the Ted spread widened to never before seen proportions, indicating that banks were reluctant to lend even to each other. The TED spread is a quick visual of the severity of the credit crisis.


The bottom left chart is the EURO over the same 5 year period. Although difficult to pick off dates from he charts you can see that the EURO came off its highs against the USD about the same time as the TED spread started to balloon. Not to read too much into such a simple comparison, but it does appear that the global financial markets are not ready to dump the USD as the world’s reserve currency. Not while they’re selling EURO to buy dollars anyway.

October 17, 2008

Market Commentary

Filed under: Personal Finance — Elliott Wave International @ 6:48 am


October 16, 2008

Forex Trading System Creates 8 Millionaires

Filed under: Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 2:39 pm

I’m still not sure what to make of this Forex trading system but I’m posting it because there is a 75% off coupon that apparently expires on October 16. Black boxes go against the grain with me but this guy has posted on the net the results of every single trade made by his system. The winning percentage is 91.46%. The chart below is equity in the trading account covered by the report. Very impressive.



Looking further at the account statement there are a few runs of losing trades where the average amount lost per trade exceeds the average amount won per trade by a wide margin. I suppose you could be terribly unlucky and start using the system at the beginning of a losing run, but if you prepared for that possibility then it looks pretty good.

Their sales page looks like it’s targeted at inexperienced traders so there’s more fluff than I would like to see but the important information is there too. Forex Autopilot

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