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Dow Jones Industrial Average 11,220
Value Line Arithmetic Index 1,951
30-Year Treasury Yield(TYX) 5.07%
20+ Year Treasury Bond Price (TLT) 85.70
Gold 1/10 Ounce (GLD) $63.11
The Big Picture for Stocks
The 4-year cycle calls for a bear market bottom in 2006.
Technical Trendicator (1-4 month trend):
Stock Prices Up
Bond Prices Up
Gold Price Up
Thoughts about the Stock Market
I am reasonably comfortable with our buy signal last week. The market got
nicely oversold. As an indication of that, Jason Goepfert at www.sentimentrader.com calculated
the percentage of stocks above their 10-day moving average, their 50-day moving
average, and their 200-day moving average. The average of those three numbers
was under 20%. Nine out of nine times in the past when that happened, a significant
rally ensued.
I have been suggesting a defensive investment posture for many months now.
I still have some concerns. One reason is that the consumer has been the most
indebted in history. I suspect that that the long housing boom -- which propped
up the consumer but is likely over -- will lead to a serious consumer recession.
We may already be in such but the statistical indications of that haven't gotten
nearly as bad as they are likely to. And I doubt investors are prepared for
an extended period of time when retailers report down earnings. Such a situation
will send chills all through our economy. Usually bear markets end when the
news is the worst, and the worst is yet to come.
There is another factor that has been working through my psyche. Every generation
has had an event that wiped out wealth. My father's generation had the period
of 20% interest rates; my grandfather's generation had the Great Depression;
and so forth on back in time. In spite of the big bear market from 2000 to
2002, it seems to me that today the super-wealthy class has continued to get
much larger. I have a friend who is a broker at Merrill Lynch who only takes
customers that have a minimum of $10 million. This seems incredible
to me. It was only 6 years ago that I stopped being a broker myself, after
being in the business for 28 years. I never had a single customer with assets
anywhere near that amount.
If you drive around our home town of Austin, you will see large numbers of
enormous mansions. This seems to me to a sign of an economy at risk. To me,
it is reminiscent of the opulence you can see at the Newport, Rhode Island,
mansions built a hundred or so years ago -- shortly before the crash.
In past generations, few people if any could have predicted the events that
destroyed -- or at least shifted -- huge pools of wealth. If there is something
around the corner that will hit us hard, we are probably blind to it.
On the Other Hand
The problem with what I just said is that such an unforeseen problem might
be a long time off. And we still have to make decisions daily about our own
portfolios based on reason and evidence.
Our Special Situations list is oriented mostly toward small speculative stocks
that have the potential to increase a lot in value. Historically smallcap stocks
have done much better than large companies. We have had some great successes
since we started the newsletter, but we have also had some incredible failures.
The way to come out ahead when dealing with the huge volatility of small stocks
is to have more of these stocks when times are the most favorable, and fewer
of them when times are least favorable.
It appears to me that now is a time to be increasing the number of
these stocks in one's portfolio -- if you have part of your portfolio that
you deem to be suitable for this type of aggressive investing. Many microcap
stocks have dropped 50-70% from their highs just this year!
This weekend I have gone through a list of about 100 such stocks that I have
not watched very closely in the last few months because I deemed it an inappropriate
time to buy them. But now that they are down, there are a number of interesting
potential opportunities. I've selected several for your consideration as listed
on our site. For Safe Haven readers, we invite you to visit our site. Our site
is one of the few on the web that one can get legitimate ideas on microcap
stocks. But you could develop your own list of beaten-down microcap stocks.
I like to look for companies that have the potential for rapidly rising revenues,
or be significantly undervalued versus standard measures.
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