One of the best retail reports in six months, wasn’t enough to keep the markets up for the day’s entirety. In fact by the end of the day, the major indices found themselves in the red before rebounding in to the positive to close the day. It should be no coincidence either that oil happened to be climbing while the markets were falling. Oil is nearly the lone factor affecting the markets right now, as Wall Street has convinced themselves that as long as oil hangs around current price levels or higher, the market cannot move forward. So whatever your strategy is going forward, be sure to keep the aforementioned in mind and while we don’t recommend shorting oil at this point, when oil does come back down, it will come hard and fast, and unless there is another factor(s) affecting the market, stocks will rally.

Currently, the markets are extremely oversold and we don’t recommend going heavily short at this point, instead wait for a rally, as the bears have decided to ‘sell-the-rally’ which is the exact opposite of what the bears have been doing for the past couple of months, namely ‘buying-the-dip’.

Here’s the NASDAQ and S&P Charts…

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We’re looking at a perfect storm, in which spiking oil is leading to higher prices and therefore causing inflation, coupled with a financial crisis with your banks and lenders that has led to a near financial meltdown. With these two factors, the U.S. now faces a stagflationary environment where two unlikely bedfellows, inflation and a crippled economy team up together. That’s the long-term perspective that the U.S. economy is having to deal with. But in the short term, oil is dominating market direction, and once again we sold off hard today on rising oil prices. The market will continue to trade opposite to the price of oil, and until we get a breakdown in the commodity, stocks prices will continue to fall under incredible selling pressures.

Strategy for the next couple of days is as follows, yesterday we stated that trying to play a market bounce was too high of a risk, but now, with today’s unexpected sell-off, risk/reward ratio is much more favorable for the buyer. So, we’re going to look at creating a position in an ultra-long on any selling tomorrow.

This is a difficult market for creating positions to the short side. The sell-off is very fast and quick, and in order to profit off of it, one has to anticipate the selling rather than wait for confirmation. It’s a tough market so hang in there.

Here’s the NASDAQ and S&P Charts…

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June 10, 2008

Interesting day we had on Wall Street. Futures were point to a very weak start, only to see the bulls close the gap before the bears finally pushed the indices back slightly in the red. To say the least, the bears need to pick up the pace some if they are going to push the markets lower, as the bulls are showing resiliency at and around the 50-day moving average. However, we believe that before the 50 DMA is broken, that we will likely see a rally of sorts. The technical picture on both the S&P and NASDAQ has us worried with the NASDAQ giving us a double-top and the S&P showing a confirmed head and shoulders formation. Though a dead-cat bounce is likely, and may very well happen before the end of the weak, especially since we are in oversold conditions, the potential reward of timing the bounce correctly is not worth the risk.

Also worth pointing out is that Benny at the Federal Reserve is starting to float the idea of possible interest rate hikes, believing that the economy is stabilized and downturns are minimal. So now the next task is to fight inflation. However, history shows that rate hikes creates huge problems for Wall Street.

Here’s the NASDAQ and S&P Charts…

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June 9, 2008

Not surprising to see oil down on the day after the day it had last Friday, however, investors weren’t about to jump on board with the market today. Instead we saw a lot of sideways action as the markets finished mixed. Friday’s sell-off has caused investors to put their capital on the sidelines, as they wait for greener pastures.

The technical outlook is a mess at this point, especially so for the Dow and S&P. The selling in the NASDAQ leads us to believe that investors do not trust the recent strength seen in the index as a reason to hold on any longer.

Here’s the NASDAQ and S&P Charts…

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June 6, 2008

For most of you out there, today was a terrifying day and rightly so with oil spiking higher than we’ve ever seen, and unemployment data that showed even more people without jobs. While we have managed to stay clear of a recession at this point, we will nonetheless get there if matters don’t improve. In reality, while the jobs data was no good, the market’s biggest impact was oil. Had oil traded flat today, we probably would have been hard pressed to see even a 1% decline. But when you have the biggest one-day move ever in the commodity, the impact will be detrimental to the stock market. The indices are now under a lot of pressure; the NASDAQ, which has been solid to this point, actually, in one day, broke the long-term trend line, while the S&P broke major support and put in a new ‘lower-low’ on the charts. And still, the market is far from being oversold; so more of the same could be in order next week, if oil continues to climb.

As talked about in previous posts, oil has become parabolic in its climb in price. The sell off that we saw over the past couple of weeks was clearly profit taking, and has shown that it is clearly not ready to throw in the towel. Instead it reached new highs today, much of which can be contributed to the report by Morgan Stanley stating that oil would reach $150 a barrel by July 4. So you can throw that firm in the pile with Goldman Sachs as companies who don’t seem to worry about the hysteria that they are creating by making such unnecessary predictions and the impact it has on people’s wallets.

While we are at it, what we are also benefitting from is the years of appeasement to the environmentalist-extremists who have fought to keep oil exploration in the United States at a minimum, so that we could remain dependant for our supplies on terrorist abetting countries. Folks, we need to start drilling, and we need to be energy self-sufficient .

Here’s the NASDAQ and S&P Charts…

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