March 31, 2009

Follow-up Videos: S&P and Crude Oil final call?

Filed under: Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 1:11 pm

Crude oil plays such an integral part in our lives whether we care to admit it or not. This one source of energy drives the US economy and indeed the world’s economy.

So what’s ahead for the new black gold? After seeing this market move to its best levels in some time, we have seen a sharp pullback from the recent highs as the crude oil market appears to be mimicking the equity markets.

In this new video you will see in detail as to what the technicals are showing for this market. I think you’ll find the analysis interesting, revealing and above all educational.

Crude Oil Video

The S&P500 market, along with the other equity markets, rallied sharply and created a massive gain of 20% in a matter of weeks. This is the biggest and fastest gain that these indices have seen since the 1930s.

So the question is: Is the move over, or is this the pause that refreshes?

In this new video you will receive insight into what is happening in the equity markets right now and in particular in the S&P500 market.

I think you will find these observations which use the Fibonacci tool and charts to be quite revealing.

S&P Video

As always, the video is with my compliments and there is no registration requirements.

March 25, 2009

Key To Trading Success: Ignore Nature’s Laws?

Filed under: Elliott Wave, Trading Mentor — Elliott Wave International @ 7:55 pm

The following is excerpted from Robert Prechter’s Independent Investor eBook. The 75-page eBook is a compilation of some of the New York Times bestselling author’s writings that challenge conventional financial market assumptions. Visit Elliott Wave International to download the eBook, free.

By Robert Prechter, CMT

…The natural tendency of people to apply physics to finance explains why successful traders are so rare and why they are so immensely rewarded for their skills. There is no such thing as a “born trader” because people are born — or learn very early — to respect the laws of physics. This respect is so strong that they apply these laws even in inappropriate situations. Most people who follow the market closely act as if the market is a physical force aimed at their heads. Buying during rallies and selling during declines is akin to ducking when a rock is hurtling toward you.

Successful traders learn to do something that almost no one else can do. They sell near the emotional extreme of a rally and buy near the emotional extreme of a decline. The mental discipline that a successful trader shows in buying low and selling high is akin to that of a person who sees a rock thrown at his head and refuses to duck. He thinks, I’m betting that the rock will veer away at the last moment, of its own accord. In this endeavor, he must ignore the laws of physics to which his mind naturally defaults. In the physical world, this would be insane behavior; in finance, it makes him rich.

Unfortunately, sometimes the rock does not veer. It hits the trader in the head. All he has to rely upon is percentages. He knows from long study that most of the time, the rock coming at him will veer away, but he also must take the consequences when it doesn’t. The emotional fortitude required to stand in the way of a hurtling stone when you might get hurt is immense, and few people possess it. It is, of course, a great paradox that people who can’t perform this feat get hurt over and over in financial markets and endure a serious stoning, sometimes to death. Many great truths about life are paradoxical, and so is this one.

For more information, download Robert Prechter’s free Independent Investor eBook. The 75-page resource teaches investors to think independently by challenging conventional financial market assumptions.

Robert Prechter, Certified Market Technician, is the founder and CEO of Elliott Wave International author of Wall Street best-sellers Conquer the Crash and Elliott Wave Principle and editor of The Elliott Wave Theorist monthly market letter since 1979.

Video Explanation of the New MarketClub Charts

Filed under: Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 5:54 am

After MarketClub announced they were coming out with the new charts they were flooded with over 12,000 email and phone requests for more info! Yes 12,000! It’s clear that these new charts from MarketClub are really making an impact across our industry.

So take time today and watch the video that explains every aspect of these new charts. It is worth your your time as these charts WILL help you improve your trading…

Watch the video here.

Great trading and good luck,

March 23, 2009

New MarketClub Charts Impress…

Filed under: Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 11:29 am

MarketClub has updated their charting system and you will be impressed. No one has better charts then these right now…period! Visit the link below to watch a video on how the charts work:

See the new charts

Here are a few details:

  • Flash based, automatically update with price changes
  • multiple time periods on one chart
  • easy to read prices and bars
  • MarketClub’s Trade Triangle signals, over 230,000 covered symbols
  • 23 different technical indicators
  • THEY TALK TO YOU! Yes the charts literally tell you what’s going on with the symbol you’re looking at.

Take a few minutes and check out the MarketClub education page to watch the charts in action.

March 20, 2009

Two Markets…Two Directions (S&P and Crude Oil)

Filed under: Crude Oil, Stock Market, Trading Mentor — Adam Hewison @ 4:48 pm

In our new video we are going to be looking at two different markets that are headed in two different directions.

We recently looked at the equity markets and alerted you to some very important levels that we thought the markets would have problems with. Those levels have now been reached and it remains to be seen if we are going to see the kind of market action that we were looking for. See the video here.

The second market were looking at is the crude oil market. This market has recently come alive to the upside and bears watching.

This is a short video, but it may contain the blueprint for these two markets. No registration is required to watch this video.

Enjoy,

Adam Hewison
President of INO.com
Co-creator of MarketClub.com

How To Tell a Good Forecast from a Bad One

Filed under: Trading Technique — tradingfives @ 8:00 am

Here’s a forecast for you. Clear and direct. As quoted by a Reuters reporter in his January 15, 2009, article, entitled, “Global Lending Thaw May Yet Return to Deep Freeze.”

“‘This is a temporary respite and when it’s over, the stock market will make new lows…,’ says Robert Prechter, chief executive officer at research company Elliott Wave International in Gainesville, Georgia.” [Reuters, 1/15/09]

But there are lots of forecasts out there – for the economy, for the Dow, for the price of oil, for the chances of the Boston Celtics repeating as NBA champions – so the question arises, how can you tell a good forecast from a bad one?

Bob Prechter addressed that very question with another reporter in a Q&A originally published in the book, Prechter’s Perspective.

Editor’s Note: For more market insights from Bob Prechter, visit Elliott Wave International to download Prechter’s FREE 60-page Deflation Survival eBook, part of Prechter’s NEW Deflation Survival Guide.

The following text was originally published in Robert Prechter’s 2004 bestselling book, Prechter’s Perspective.

By Robert Prechter, CMT

Q: In general, is there any way for a person to tell a good forecast from a bad one?

Bob Prechter: There is a subtle way to tell a potentially useful forecast from a useless one. Most published forecasts are at best descriptions of what already has happened. I never give any forecast a second thought unless it addresses the question of the point at which a change in trend may occur.

As an example outside the financial markets: a sportswriter for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution published his ratings (scale 1-5) for each of the players on the Atlanta Braves baseball team as a forecast of how they would perform in 1984. At the start of the season, he rated 1983’s Most Valuable Player a “5,” Atlanta’s slugger a “4,” and the right fielder a lowly “2″ due to bad performance in 1983 following two excellent years. Later in 1984, the MVP was batting only .215, and the slugger was batting a dismal .179, while the lowest-rated player, the right fielder, had hit 8 home runs and led the team in batting average and RBIs.

The point is not that the sportswriter was wrong in his predictions. The point is that he didn’t make any predictions, even though he thought he did and said he did. He was merely rating the 1983 Braves in retrospect. He ignored possible bases upon which to forecast the 1984 season, things like motivation, new developments or events in a player’s life, cyclic changes in playing success, etc. As with most forecasts, these things weren’t even considered.

Read forecasts carefully. If they are mild-mannered extrapolations of a recent trend, it’s probably the best policy to toss them aside and go search for something potentially useful.

Q: Obviously, the same holds true in finance.

Bob Prechter: All the time. When economists say, as they so often do, that they see “no reason to expect anything different” from the recent past, they mean it from the bottom of their knowledge. The linear projections they typically employ result in logic such as that expressed by an economist in a national newspaper, who said, “This rising consumer confidence is good news for the economy. Rising confidence spurs the economy, and the pickup in the economy then serves to heighten confidence.” By this line of reasoning, no change of direction could ever occur. That’s why, absent other knowledge, the only forecasts even worth your time considering are those that predict a change. Not because the forecaster is certain to be right, but because it shows that he is thinking and perhaps employing a tool that can anticipate trends.

Q: So the word “prediction” doesn’t necessarily apply to the future!

Bob Prechter: Right. And it’s those predictions about the future that are the tough ones. That’s why economists stick to predicting the past, which is a crafty solution. It leads to misery among the people who follow them, but it doesn’t seem to affect economists’ jobs, so it certainly keeps them happy!

Q: Do you think that predicting the economy is possible?

Bob Prechter: It is not only possible, it is downright easy compared with predicting the stock market. One economist has gotten a lot of chuckles by saying that the stock market has predicted something like 19 of the last 13 recessions. However, that is only a reasonable statement if you believe that a certain rigid definition of a recession is the only one that is viable. In fact, if you look at the ebb and flow of economic activity and generally realize that it lags stock market activity of between 0 and 12 months, you will find that there is no better single indicator of what the economy is going to do than the stock market. Not only that, but even 19 out of 13 is infinitely better than any economist has ever done.

……….

For more on deflation, download Prechter’s FREE 60-page Deflation Survival eBook or browse various deflation topics like those below at www.elliottwave.com/deflation.

* What happens during deflation?
* Deflation survival
* Why is deflation bad?
* Deflation personal debt
* And much more in Prechter’s FREE Deflation Survival Guide.

March 19, 2009

Are We Near a Low in the Stock Decline?

Filed under: Trading Mentor, Trading Technique — Elliott Wave International @ 6:50 pm

Two Unique Charts Reveal the Answer

Robert Prechter, New York Times best-selling author and renowned market analyst, was recently asked to present his thoughts on the real estate market and the financial crisis to the Georgia Legislature. The following article has been adapted from the transcript. Elliott Wave International has made the full presentation available free, including the full transcript and 30-minute online video.

By Robert Prechter, CMT

I’d like to try to answer a question: “Are we near a low in the stock decline?” Because in these times when stocks and real estate are declining together, they tend to bottom roughly together as well. So I want to take a minute and look at a valuation chart for the stock market.




What we have here on the “X” axis is the bond yield/stock yield ratio for the S&P 400 companies. Sounds fancy, but all it means is that the further you go out to the right, the less companies are paying in dividends compared to what they are paying on their IOUs—on their bonds. On the “Y” axis we have stock prices relative to book value. Book value is roughly equivalent to liquidation value, in other words, if you went and sold all the assets on the open market. When stocks get expensive, prices tend to rise relative to book value, and dividends tend to fall relative to the cost of borrowing. Why does that happen? At such times, people don’t really care about dividends because they think they are going to get rich on capital gains. So dividend payout falls, and stocks get more expensive.

The small square boxes indicate year-end figures. The large box is a general area that has contained values for the stock market for most of the years of the 20th century. We had a few outliers: 1928 and August 1987, which preceded crashes in the stock market. And of course stocks were really cheap in the early ’30s and again in 1941. If you are really astute, you have noticed something about this chart, which is that I’ve left off some of the data. It ends in 1990. What happened in the past two decades? Now I’m going to show you same chart but with the data from the last two decades on it. The March 2000 reading we call Pluto. Real estate wasn’t so bad; I think it only got to about Neptune. But the stock market reached Pluto in March of 2000 in terms of the bond yield/stock yield ratio and the price multiple of the underlying values of companies. That’s going to take quite awhile to retrace.



I’ve also plotted the reading for November 2008. The market has made quite a trek back toward normal valuations, but if you look at these multiples in terms of book value, we are at 4 times. It has to go down to 2 times to get back into the box, and we are getting there on the bond yield/stock yield ratio which means that the dividend payout is rising somewhat to catch up with borrowing costs. And because the S&P is down 45%, of course, the dividend payout as a percentage has gone up. But there is a problem there. If you’re reading the newspapers, you know that companies have been cutting dividends. In fact, they’ve been cutting them at the fastest rate in half a century. So it is going to be difficult for values to get back to a normal valuation range. So the stock market has quite a bit lower to go in order to catch up with normal values, and this suggests that real estate may have the same sort of trend going on.

For more information, access Robert Prechter’s full presentation to the Georgia Legislature, free from Elliott Wave International. It expands on the excerpt above with the full transcript, a 30- minute online video, and 12 additional charts and figures.

Robert Prechter, Certified Market Technician, is the founder and CEO of Elliott Wave International author of Wall Street best-sellers Conquer the Crash and Elliott Wave Principle and editor of The Elliott Wave Theorist monthly market letter since 1979.

March 17, 2009

Bob Prechter addreses Georgia legislators

Filed under: Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 1:25 pm

I want to share with you a FREE 30-minute video that might just change the way you think about government’s response to the unfolding financial crisis. Please learn more below or get access to the video now.

Greetings,

If you’re even remotely worried about what the government is doing to combat the financial crisis, please continue reading.

When I watched the free 30-minute video I’m about to share with you, its insights and independent thinking took me aback. It was so compelling that I’m now eager to share it with you.

In December 2008, our friend the famed financial analyst Robert Prechter, Jr., spoke before his state legislature. The House and Senate Economic Committee had invited him to give his unique outlook on real estate, financial markets and the economy and to share with them his ideas for what – if anything – a governing body should and shouldn’t do to make its state a more attractive place in which to live.

Since then, the video – complete with Prechter’s eye-opening charts – has been passed from friend to friend and has also reached some very influential people – perhaps even in your state government.

Prechter’s insights are anything but conventional; in truth, some could be considered downright radical. But, as Prechter says in the presentation you’re about to watch: Today’s environment is anything but typical. An atypical problem calls for atypical solutions.

If you believe the government might be trying to do too much, but you’re concerned that doing nothing at all is also a flawed approach, you should watch this insightful video right away.

If you agree with Prechter’s insights, go one step further – pass them on.

Get completely free access to Bob Prechter’s 30-minute legislature presentation here.

March 14, 2009

You Need a Little Optimism Before Getting Disappointed – Again

Filed under: Trading Mentor — tradingfives @ 8:37 am


Adam Hewison’s video looks at this week’s rallies in the DJIA, NASDAQ, and the SP500 to gauge the probability of whether or not the market has made a legitimate bottom or a dead cat bounce. I won’t disclose the plot but I will say that I agree with his analysis. See the video here.

If you look at charts from 1982 the most obvious signal that the bear market had ended were the huge volume spikes that occurred on rally days. They lasted for weeks. What I remember about that time was that the financial press talking heads were calling it a bear market rally. Of course what was really happening was the birth of the greatest bull market in our country’s history – one that lasted more than 20 years.

Elliott Wave International Headlines and News

Filed under: Elliott Wave — tradingfives @ 8:34 am


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