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Summary:
I plan on publishing a midyear economic and market update sometime next week.
In advance, here are a few comments on the recent behavior of the stock market.
Friday marked another day when what was hyped by Wall Street as containing "constructive" news
-- good IBM earnings and tame June consumer prices -- translated into a session
in which strong gains early on could not hold. The DJIA saw a 75-point advance
turn into a 23-point loss. Putting in a much worse performance was the NASDAQ
100. Its early 10-point, 0.7% gain, became a 24-point, 1.7% loss by the close.
Put somewhat euphemistically, July has been "disappointing" for the bulls.
And last week's expiration worked no magic, nor did Wall Street's attempts
at promoting "better-than-expected" earnings, inflation data, etc., etc.
For July to date, my seven-measure equity-market tracking group is down an
average 4.6%, with losses running in a range of 2.2% for the NYSE Composite,
to a much larger 8.2% for the NASDAQ 100, the latter reflecting the recent
bloodletting in the tech sector.
And this not-so-good July showing has now pushed all but one of the tracking
group's seven components into the red for the year. The group is down 1.7%,
on average, for 2004 to date, with returns running in a range of +0.2% for
the NYSE Composite, to minus 5.2% for the NASDAQ 100. The balance of the group's
year-to-date returns are: Russell 2000, -0.3%; Wilshire 5000, -0.6%; S&P
500, -1.0%; Value Line, -1.7%, and DJIA, -3.0%.
Not long ago, I reaffirmed my opinion that July was likely to be a "problem" month.
In addition, I opined the likelihood of serious breaches of respective 200-day
moving averages -- perhaps double-digit serious. At the time, the starting
points were higher, but the following table breaks out what 5% and 10% moving-average
violations would entail for the DJIA, NASDAQ Composite and S&P 500, measured
from Friday's closing prices. As of Friday, each proxy stood below its 200-day
moving average.
200-DAY MOVING-AVERAGE VIOLATIONS --
VALUES PROJECTED FROM CLOSE ON 07/16/04 |
| Measure |
07/16
Close |
MA Violation/
Resulting Price |
% Decl/Gain From
07/16 Close At
Violation Of: |
| 0% |
5% |
10% |
0% |
5% |
10% |
| DJIA |
10140 |
10233 |
9721 |
9210 |
+0.9 |
-4.1 |
-9.2 |
| NAZ Comp. |
1883 |
1987 |
1888 |
1788 |
+5.5 |
+0.3 |
-5.0 |
| S&P 500 |
1101 |
1107 |
1052 |
996 |
+0.5 |
-4.5 |
-9.5 |
I have plenty of ideas why this is happening and happening now, many of which
have been discussed in past research and forecasts. I will reexamine this in
next week's review/update research missive.
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Douglas R. Gillespie, Sr.
Gillespie Research Associates
165 Sheridan Avenue
HO-HO-KUS, NJ 07423
201-447-5743
Doug Gillespie oversees his own financial-market and economic
consulting firm, Gillespie Research
Associates. For a complimentary sample of Dougs material, e-mail him at drgillespiesr@aol.com.
Copyright © 2004-2005 Gillespie Research
Associates. All rights reserved.
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