Subj : Market Action To : All From : Paul Rogers Date : Wed Jul 20 2005 06:28 pm Content-type: text/plain Prices submarined along a little underwater until around 1PM, while Greenspan gave his testimony. After that there was a Q&A period. Now, if the major Street Houses didn't have a wire into the witness room, they at least had someone inside with a text-messaging cell phone. They know what Greenspan has said, what the FOMC minutes have said, and what the Fed-watched numbers have been doing since the last meeting. There was only one real question: Did he have anything new and exciting to say? That could be answered with one word: yes or no. One letter: T or F. One bit: 0 or 1! So when he finished his testimony, and it was all as expected, the word got out and prices surfaced and climbed to a modest gain at the close. Volume was nearly the same as yesterday, still +10% above average. Don't believe any, er, junk you read or hear about earnings, GM, IBM, or anything else. Greenspan was the only important news. One of the Congresscritters wants to pass a law to grant Greenspan another 5-year term. That's OK with me--but apparently not with his wife. I'm sorry if you disagree, but given the President's stated opinion about the current state of the economy, and the people he's got on his team (Snow's major qualification seems to be the ability to agree with the Administration's line with a straight face), I'm not sure which could do more damage--his appointment for Chief Justice or the Fed chief. There are laissez-faire, libertarian advocates on the right-wing who are adamantly opposed to "federal intervention". Remember stagflation, 20% interest rates in the early 80's? I do. I remember 6'8" Paul Volker sprawled on a normal sized chair lecturing the Congresscritters, "You may not know how to do your job, but I assure you I know how to do mine." He jacked the rates up and broke us all of expectations that inflation would go on forever uncontrolled. Greenspan has also been an inflation hawk. But if he hadn't dropped rates to virtual non-existance a few years ago, the popping of the 2000 Bubble would have been like 1929, and the following recession would have been a depression. Things aren't all good in the economy, but the fact that we don't have bread-lines again is precisely because of the Fed's active intervention independent of political administrations. We need a Fed Chief that knows what to do, isn't afraid to do it, and does it on time--because the economy requires it, regardless of what the politicians want. Engineers understand the destructive oscillations which can happen when actions and reactions are "out of phase". Pray for another Fed Chief like Greenspan! Price Vola- Momen- Volume Oscil- Summ. Change tility tum lator Index -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ __>_ _>__ __|_ __>_ __|_ ___> 07/14 __|_ _>__ __|_ _>__ __<_ ___> 07/15 _<__ _>__ __|_ _|__ __<_ ___> 07/18 __|_ __>_ __|_ __>_ __<_ ___> 07/19 __|_ __>_ __|_ __>_ __|_ ___> 07/20 Timing Signals: I don't use or recommend timing signals, but they're fun to watch. If I did though, well, I might use something like this. (Be warned!! It tends to whipsaw around signal points!) Last Signal: BUY Date: 07/01/05 S&P: 1194 Winner or Loser: tbd By: tbd See my market tracking charts for '03-'04 and my investment strategy study at my website(s): http://www.xprt.net/~pgrogers/Pers.html http://www.geocities.com/paulgrogers/Pers.html Paul Rogers, paulgrogers@yahoo.com -o) http://www.angelfire.com/or/paulrogers /\\ Rogers' Second Law: Everything you do communicates. _\_V .... Teachers don't like thinkers--they ask too many questions ___ MultiMail/MS-DOS v0.35 --- * Origin: The Bare Bones BBS (1:105/360) .