Subj : Market Action To : All From : Paul Rogers Date : Tue Oct 04 2005 06:21 pm Content-type: text/plain Prices were flat and volatility low until after lunch, then it all came apart. The head of the Dallas Fed Bank confirmed what the Street had been fearing: there are signs of inflation at a level the FOMC will take action against. (I suppose the oil pit traders are saying, "Who, me?") And with Q3 officially over and companies working on their earnings, it's time for confessions again. Clorox, and Proctor & Gamble released warnings. At the close prices were down enough to be significant, and volume jumped to +17% above average. That's enough for my formulas, or anybody else's, to call it a "Distribution" day, when the big holders were "distributing" their stock to anybody who would buy. The price change alone was enough to push my Momentum indicator into negative territory, popping a Sell signal! (Well, I didn't accept last week's Buy.) So we're right at what has appeared to be a Support level, and we got here with "enthusiasm". We'll see if it holds-up. I expect more than a little of today's selling came from stocks the mutual fund managers had marked for sale, and they were just getting what they could before prices fell even more. There's a clue for tactical rules on "bottom fishing". I watch the behavior of stocks on my shopping list long before buying. I never have a "target price" that will prompt me to buy. I watch the price and volume action, just as I report here on the S&P500. If a stock falls to a price I had in mind as a bargain, but it has been falling on heavy volume, I back off. The big holders are bailing, so I don't want to be their cushion. That's more likely to happen on a day like this at this time of year. I'd rather see them fall on low and decreasing volume, indicating sellers are already out and a lack of current interest. But that's not enough. A stock can remain unloved for a long time, and the longer, the more risk that something even worse might happen. I'll keep watching till it begins to show signs of buying interest, prices rising on rising volume. Then I'll reconsider buying. And of course, if I'm wrong and it falls 7% from my buy price, I'm gone. Price Vola- Momen- Volume Oscil- Summ. Change tility tum lator Index -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ -__+ __|_ _<__ _|__ __>_ _>__ __<_ 09/28 __>_ _<__ __|_ __>_ _>__ __<_ 09/29 __>_ _<__ __|_ __>_ __>_ __<_ 09/30 _>__ _|__ __|_ __>_ __>_ __<_ 10/03 _|__ _|__ _|__ __>_ _>__ __<_ 10/04 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: SELL Date: 10/04/05 S&P: 1214 Winner or Loser: Loser By: -13 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 .... "No maintenance" means impossible to fix ___ MultiMail/MS-DOS v0.35 --- * Origin: The Bare Bones BBS (1:105/360) .