ES Journal Archive (2011)

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Anyone looking to buy this?

I feel that I`m a little late entering a short here, but I don`t think I`d like entering a long either unless we can define a bottom here around 80.

Perhaps getting in long around 85-86. Any opinions?
 
I dont usually ever pay attention to anything off of zero hedge but these quotes tell me that no ones that impressed by this.


Wall Street Pundits' Kneejerk Response To FOMC Statement


Here is the summary kneejerk response out of a panel of Wall Streeters, all of whom perfectly anticipated just this announcement.

JOSEPH TREVISANI, CHIEF MARKET ANALYST, FX SOLUTIONS, SADDLE RIVER, NEW JERSEY:

"Medium and short run this policy will have little impact on the economy and even less impact on the dollar. This is what was expected."

JOSEPH ARSENIO, MANAGING DIRECTOR, ARSENIO CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LARKSPUR, CALIFORNIA:

"The market is deteriorating because the Fed didn't reduce yields on reserves. There is no additional impetus for banks to lend. It wasn't sufficiently stimulating. The stock market is reacting to that and since that has been fairly closely coordinated with oil markets, we're seeing declines there as well."

STEPHEN MASSOCCA, MANAGING DIRECTOR, WEDBUSH MORGAN, SAN FRANCISCO:

"I don't see anything of a big surprise here. The economic outlook -- everyone has got a focus on this economic outlook comment and that is what has driven the market down. In terms of the actual substantive action, the 10-year (yield) is moving down because obviously you have now created $400 billion of buying here."

CARL LARRY, DIRECTOR OF ENERGY DERIVATIVES AND RESEARCH, BLUE OCEAN BROKERAGE, NEW YORK:

"They (the Fed) is putting on the "twist" which should be weaker dollar near term and stronger long term.

"The one thing that weighs on any decision here is that we are still seeing dissenters in the Fed. And that doesn't bode well for a stable recovery.

"That is probably going to make crude weaker here until people get a better picture of what holds the Fed together.

MOHAMED EL-ERIAN, CO-CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER, PIMCO:

"The Fed has revised downwards its economic outlook and also pointed to significant downside risk. The outcome points to an even more divided FOMC."

BRIAN DOLAN, CHIEF STRATEGIST, FOREX.COM, BEDMINSTER, NEW JERSEY:

"This is pretty much what the market was expecting, though the size is a bit more than people expected. I thought the dollar would weaken because it was as expected, but that is not happening at the moment. ... I think we might see some dollar profit-taking at some point. Europe's still a mess and the global economy right now seems to be stagnating. And this seems to be the Fed's final shot."

GENNADIY GOLDBERG, INTEREST RATE STRATEGIST, 4CAST, INC., NEW YORK:

"They've kind of hit it smack on the head. This is kind of really in the middle of where the market expectations are lying. This is what the market was expecting. The estimates were running at about $300 billion to $500 billion.

"The interest on excess reserves was a close call but they probably decided not to do it because it would cause more problems.

"This is good for Treasuries, obviously. Whether this will create economic stimulus remains to be seen. It might have kind of limited economic impact."
 
IMHO:

FOMC statement = non-issue

Today =
1) brokers' payday
2) lucky retail traders will think they're geniuses
3) not so lucky retail traders will be finally convinced the market is rigged and THEY are out to get them
4) pro traders will cut down size in inverse proportion to the volatility, take their profits/losses and call it a day

Nothing new under the sky
 
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