Tonight seems like a good time to talk about the big picture. This forum was rabidly bearish in the first half of 2009. The discussions were about inverse ETFs, shorting, lack of earnings, insolvent banks, Dow 1000, etc. Most of the original posters have vacated the forum or at least this topic, and the discussions are very different. The few remaining original posters are not talking much about shorting the market anymore, or the fact that people who own stocks will lose money.
Now I need to say Happy Anniversary to a famous bubble. I calculated a "last wall" of cycle and anniversary dates that the stock market should not run past, but the dates themselves have exceeded the cycles that go along with them. Anyway, the anniversary dates are: February 3, 1637 was the top of the Tulip Mania 374 years ago and February 9, 1966 was the top of the 1932 to 1966 bull market 45 years ago. 374 and 45 are somewhat significant from a cyclical standpoint. In addition, I calculated a "last wall" of prices that the market should not exceed by historical standards and they are: 11,918 on the Dow and 1307 on the S&P futures. The 1307 number was mentioned a few months ago. The Dow closed over 12,000 this week and the S&P futures traded 1308.50 on Friday morning. Given the poor fundamental nature of the economy, I doubted these numbers could be challenged, but they were (at a cost of trillions to the taxpayers, in theory).
For awhile, I was posting some "Maximum Ruin Updates" to talk about how much money I had lost shorting the stock market. At one point last Summer, I had turned those losses into a gain and decided to no longer post on that topic, as it wouldn't seem believable or realistic. Anyway, last June I covered all my shorts for a gain of 7%, then went short again in September. I am now happy to report that I have lost 12% of my money being short. That's kind of a joke, but actually I feel quite good about that at this point, given the extremity of this bubble. On the other hand, when I had lost 10% of my money shorting back in September 2009 and pulled out, I felt quite bad, as it seemed like the bubble could get even stronger and was nowhere near completion. I had figured back at that time that I really could ruin myself by staying short and not pulling out. Now I believe the bubble is running on fumes and feel OK being short and may even add more soon (very carefully).
Like most anyone who is trading the market, I do a lot of technical studies. Just tonight, I looked at the percentage of stocks above their 20 day moving average smoothed with a 20 day moving average. This study is a typical example of how extreme this bubble is and I'll just paste it in. I drew the red lines and dots. To me, they indicate the stock market is sort of defying gravity at this point.
http://oi51.tinypic.com/f0vktt.jpg
So that's about all I have to say tonight. Reading the stock market news, these are once again heady days in America. Unemployment is down, wages are up, the service economy is improving and the Dow has closed over 12,000 this week. Is this April 1930 all over again? My guess is yes, it is. "We have arrived."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/41439800