Staying Long anyone?

Quote from duard:

.....puts my short sell @ 1454 in the ES as a low risk proposition.

But hey what do I know.


No change there yet.

Gap up sell-off. de rigeur for distribution.

However this bull is hard to break.

I may have to wash these shorts but not yet. We'll give it more time.
 
Quote from Enfinity:

Has it ever occured to all the bears that we have more assets in hedge funds than ever? What does that mean you ask?

It means there is plenty of dumb money going short right now complaining about the ~1,000 days since we had a 2% decline and trying to pick the top.

It means that all those "brilliant" doctors, executives, and accountants that thought they could read an income statement and decided to daytrade between patients and clients only to blow up and exit the game haven't come back to the market.

Form your own conclusions, but I recommend you write down the consecutive annual returns for the S&P500 going back 20-30+ years before finalizing your decision. Nevermind the surge in "target retirement date" mutual funds within retirement plans.

Best wishes!

:D

There are a lot of other investment vehicles competing for those dollars today than just the U.S. equity markets - a LOT more than there were 20-30 years ago.

Cash is king for now. Wait until 'Hedge Funds Gone Wild' comes out, and we see meltdown city, and liquidity contraction (a foreign concept for many new money managers) takes place.

It's coming soon. Pure ugliness.
 
Top newsletters are bullish = market keeps going up

<<
The bottom line? All nine of these top timers are bullish to at least some extent, and none is an outright bear. The average equity allocation among all nine is around 85%.

I did a similar review for my Trading Strategies column last June, at which time the top long-term market timers were, on average, recommending an 81% average equity allocation. So the top timers are slightly more bullish today than they were a couple of months ago.

That's good news, because the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI:^DJI - News) is nearly 2,000 points higher today than then.>>
http://biz.yahoo.com/cbsm/070205/7a233080edf14aa89241693491dfc4f0.html?.v=1
By Mark Hulbert
Commentary: What top newsletters are saying for February
 
Quote from shortie:

Top newsletters are bullish = market keeps going up

<<
The bottom line? All nine of these top timers are bullish to at least some extent, and none is an outright bear. The average equity allocation among all nine is around 85%.

I did a similar review for my Trading Strategies column last June, at which time the top long-term market timers were, on average, recommending an 81% average equity allocation. So the top timers are slightly more bullish today than they were a couple of months ago.

That's good news, because the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI:^DJI - News) is nearly 2,000 points higher today than then.>>
http://biz.yahoo.com/cbsm/070205/7a233080edf14aa89241693491dfc4f0.html?.v=1
By Mark Hulbert
Commentary: What top newsletters are saying for February


read that yesterday, was quite interesting seeing everyone extremely bullish.
 
Quote from ByLoSellHi:

There are a lot of other investment vehicles competing for those dollars today than just the U.S. equity markets - a LOT more than there were 20-30 years ago.

Cash is king for now. Wait until 'Hedge Funds Gone Wild' comes out, and we see meltdown city, and liquidity contraction (a foreign concept for many new money managers) takes place.

It's coming soon. Pure ugliness.

With a Jewish Fed chairman and a Jewish treasury secretary the odds of a sufficient decline are slim, these guys control the money, their friends are on wall street, end of story, go market.
 
Quote from myminitrading:

With a Jewish Fed chairman and a Jewish treasury secretary the odds of a sufficient decline are slim, these guys control the money, their friends are on wall street, end of story, go market.


100% correct...


no risk.. no fear.. just buy
 
All thats going on now is relieving pressure on the overbought indicators, just think if we trade sideways all week then come next monday we get another 5% gap up on the Vix, shoot we will have plenty of room for the bulls to stretch their legs then.
 
Have you people never seen how tops and bottoms are formed, we have weeks of volatility, 100 point swings in the dow everyday for weeks. Once the pros are out of their old positions an in their new positions then we go.
 
Quote from Dr.Greenback:

Who out there is long the current equity index markets and plans to stay long this time next week and, or for the rest of the month.
It will be interesting to see how that works out for you:cool:
Not anymore....yesterday I had a long term signal I use give me the first good indications to start "swinging" short. Also with the Naz at 40% greater volume than the Dow as of late that was another possible hint to start taking shots short (and GOOG getting owned helped me start taking shots as of yesterday).
 
Quote from Dr.Greenback:

Who out there is long the current equity index markets and plans to stay long this time next week and, or for the rest of the month.
It will be interesting to see how that works out for you:cool:


Bought calls at OEX pivot S1 today.
It didn't rise to my target goal of R1, but the market saviors at least took it back up to the pivot point by the end of the day.
Small 4% profit today. Yesterday's call trade was much better.
Volatility is drying up.
 
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