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The good news is:
• Most of the major indices closed at multi year or all time highs on
Friday.
Short Term
The market is and has been overbought for a month or more and it keeps going
up.
The blue chips have been outperforming the secondaries which is usually a
negative. May, after the first few days, has historically been good for the
secondaries, but not the blue chips. The market has been doing a good job of
following the typical seasonal pattern recently and, if that continues, there
will be a shift to strength to the secondaries in the next few weeks.
Intermediate term
On Tuesday the NASDAQ AD line (OTC ADL) completed its first string of 4 consecutive
down days since last August.
The chart below covers the past year and a half showing the NASDAQ composite
(OTC) in orange and an indicator showing the percentage of the past 4 trading
days that the OTC ADL was up in purple. Dashed vertical lines have been drawn
on the 1st trading day of each month and the lines are red on the 1st trading
day of the year.
You do not have to look at this chart very closely. There is a lot of open
space on the bottom then the market is moving upward and a lot of open space
at the top when the market is moving downward.
The indicator usually makes its first excursion to the bottom of the chart
well ahead of the beginning of a down move and it made its 1st one last Tuesday.

It makes sense that the number of new highs increases in a rising market.
The chart below covers the past year showing the OTC in orange and an indicator
that is a 10% trend (19 day EMA) of NASDAQ new highs (OTC NH) in green.
The indicator hit a marginal new high in late February and was well below
its February high when the OTC hit a multi year high on Friday.
There is room for a lot more deterioration, but, the pattern does not indicate
a robust market.

Seasonality
Next week includes the 5 trading days ahead of the 2nd Friday of May during
the 3rd year of the Presidential Cycle.
The tables below show the week ahead of the 2nd Friday in May for the OTC
from 1963 - 2003 and the S&P500 (SPX) from 1955 – 2003 during the
3rd year of the Presidential Cycle. The market traded 6 days a week prior to
1953 so that data has been ignored.
There are summaries for both the 3rd year of the Presidential Cycle and all
years combined.
Over all years both the OTC and SPX have, on average, had a negative return.
During the 3rd year of the Presidential Cycle the OTC has been much stronger
than the SPX. The OTC has been up 73% of the time with a positive average return
of 0.43% while the SPX has been up only 38% of the time with an average negative
return of -0.20%.
Report for the week before the 2nd Friday of May
The number following the year is the position in the presidential cycle.
Daily returns from Monday to 2nd Friday.


Mutual Fund
Compliance issues demand that I not mention the mutual fund that I manage
by name or symbol in this letter.
To see a current chart of the fund go to: http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=APHAX&t=3m
For information about the fund go to: http://www.thealphafunds.com/index.htm.
The fund now has service class shares available.
Conclusion
For the past 10 years or more the Federal Reserve Bank has had a history
of inflating the money supply in response to national or international economic
problems. The result has been a series of asset bubbles, first the stock market,
then the housing market and now the stock market again. Money supply growth
has been well above trend for the past 6 months and is currently running at
nearly 11%. Under these conditions an "irrationally exuberant" stock
market is not surprising, but it does make analysis difficult.
I expect the major indices to be lower on Friday May 11 than they were on
Friday May 4.
This report is free to anyone who wants it, so please tell your friends. They
can sign up at: http://alphaim.net/signup.html.
If it is not for you, reply with REMOVE in the subject line.
Gordon Harms produces a power point for our local timing group. You can get
a copy of the power point at: http://www.stockmarket-ta.com/.
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