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It doesn't take a great treatise or any "rocket science" to expose the ugly
and sordid reality of the true condition of the broad US stockmarket - all
it takes is a few charts and a modest helping of common sense.

The reason why the Dow Jones Industrials Average features so prominently in
the mainstream financial press is that it is the principal tool used by wholesale
vendors of stock to sucker the ordinary retail investor into buying at market
tops. The recent past provides a perfect example. On our 10-year chart for
the DJIA we can see how it broke to new highs last year, an event that was
accompanied by great fanfare in the media, who have since been trumpeting the
glorious achievements of the "bull market" ever since. The problem is that
the Dow Jones Industrials is not a true representation of the state of the
market as a whole, being made up as it is of a narrow basket of very high cap
stocks.

The real stock market is shown much more accurately and faithfully by the
relatively neglected S&500 index, the chart for which tells a very different
story. On its 10-year chart we can see that it has definitely not broken out
to new highs, and is instead buckling beneath the heavy resistance approaching
its 2000 highs, with which it is danger of forming a Double Top. Investors
in the US stockmarkets who nevertheless remain impressed with the gains of
the past 4 years, during which time this index has risen from about 800 to
1400 would find it educational and rather sobering to try spending those gains
in other countries.

If you factor in the decline of the dollar over the past 4 years, the gains
during this period look nowhere near as impressive. This can easily be done
by plotting the S&P500 against say the Euro or the Swiss Franc. The 10-year
chart of the S&P500 chart plotted against the Euro shown here exposes the
ugly and sordid reality that the so-called bull market of the past 4 years
is nothing more than an anemic bear market rally, that has taken the form of
a bearish Rising Wedge - and some mighty unpleasant stuff is likely to hit
the fan once it breaks down from this pattern, which it is now close to doing.
Not that the writer wishes to "rain on your parade", just call a spade a spade.
You owe it to yourself and those around you to face reality as it really is,
and not as some would like you to believe.
We will be looking at the implications of a continuing fall in the broad market
for the Precious Metals sector on www.clivemaund.com in
the near future.
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