The Taskmaster - TSC
The Market Still Hasn't Found What It's Looking For
04/02/01 - 07:12 PM EDT
SAN FRANCISCO -- Today was one of those days that make you go, "hmm, maybe Bill Fleckenstein was right when the famously bearish hedge fund manager said here recently that it can't be a bottom when everyone is looking for a bottom."
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GuruVision: Where Have All the Gurus Gone?
As mentioned in the RealMoney.com Columnist Conversation, Don Hays, of Hays Advisory Group, never said the bottom is firmly in place and that you should start buying hand over fist. November, has taken some lumps on his short-term calls more recently. Still, his intermediate-term calls on the market's general direction have been as accurate of late as any guru I've followed. That said, I'm sure many investors are starting to appreciate the more direct approach of folks like Jim Rohrbach of Investment Models in Orlando, Fla. As described previously, he does not aim to exactly time market tops and bottoms, but to identify them quickly enough to catch the bulk of upswings and miss the worst of downswings. Rohrbach's timing models either say buy or sell, and have been flashing sell for a while -- since Feb. 9 on the Nasdaq indicator and Feb. 23 on the New York Stock Exchange. They remained so inclined as of this morning. Rohrbach's models don't leave a whole lot of room for nuance, but it's doubtful his followers mind: Since Feb. 9, the Nasdaq is down 27.8%. Since Feb. 23, the NYSE Composite is down 5.4% and the S&P 500 is off 8%. "I know this isn't 1974 but it sure reminds me of it," Rohrbach said today via email. "That year I kept saying that the market could not keep going down, but it did until November. That is not a prediction, just an impression. No one knows when this thing will stop going down. We are waiting and watching, not predicting." Speaking of scary (on a different level), faithful readers will recall the last time Steve Hochberg, co-editor of The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast in Atlanta, was featured here, he predicted the market would continue to fall into a so-called Fibonacci turn window set to begin March 20, and then start rallying. The newsletter editor foresaw two likely scenarios thereafter: that the market continued to rally through the next major turn window beginning April 24, or that it rallied into a smaller window around April 2-3, suffered a brief pullback and then rallied again into late April. At least the first part of that latter scenario appears to be unfolding. Whether the second portion emerges remains, of course, to be seen. Still, the recent track record of the Elliott Wave forecasters gives me hope the recent reasons to be bullish call remains intact, despite today's setback. Additionally, the action seems consistent with the preconditions for a so-called Wyckoff spring, as described here last week. On a more fundamental level, despite constant protestations to the contrary from many, the economy is improving, at least judging by today's NAPM and construction spending reports, as well as recent consumer confidence figures. It's not going to be a V-shaped rebound, but we could be starting the first upswing in what proves to be a W-shaped recovery.Where Have All the Gurus Gone, Part 2
By accident or design, Jim Cramer's piece today about permabulls Abby Cohen and Joe Battipaglia omitted one of the biggest permabulls of all: Thomas Galvin of Credit Suisse First Boston, who in 2000 even eclipsed Abby J as the "official" spokesperson for the bullish camp. In a report out today, Galvin noted how the S&P and Nasdaq just completed their fourth-consecutive quarterly declines, during which he was steadfastly bullish, for the first time since 1984. Rather then owning up to his own failings, Galvin had the temerity to suggest "Wall Street economists are underestimating the vitality of Main Street" -- essentially, that everybody else has got it wrong. "If we can weather the upcoming final two weeks of the earnings preannouncement storm and finally make progress on the credit crunch while keeping stock levels close to or above current levels, this market may never look back!," he wrote (with the included exclamations). "Get bullish!" Amazing. The inability of strategists such as Galvin to even tone down their optimism -- much less fully capitulate -- is admittedly not a reason to be bullish. Meanwhile, that preannouncement storm gathered strength after the bell today. With the first quarter completed, many companies that haven't already warned are now brandishing the red flag. Leading (for lack of a better word) tonight's offerings was a stunningly harsh warning from Ariba ARBA. Shares of the B2B software developer were plummeting in after-hours trading, along with those of its erstwhile merger partner, Agile Software AGIL. (For more on GuruVision, check out this primer.)With the market giving mixed messages, let's revisit Ixia and the telecom-equipment slowdown.
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