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It was a hot summer in 2007 - one of the hottest on record. But the summer
heat was totally eclipsed by the record amount of fear and panic felt by the
masses as the mainstream media dropped one big "fear bomb" after another on
investors from July through September.
A picture is worth a thousand words, so here's a graphic depiction of just
how much fear there was in the summer of '07. It shows a record spike in public
short sales this summer as the average trader reacted to the barrage of negative
and crisis-related news stories by betting the farm on a system-wide financial
collapse. So far those short positions haven't paid off and if Tuesday's response
to the Fed lowering interest rates was any indication, those short positions
won't pay off.

Here's a press clipping I saved from one of the media's many scare tactics
of the past summer: the so-called "Bin Laden Option Trade." According to a
widely circulated article across many Internet sites, an unknown trader placed
an options bet on S&P 500 put and call options that won't pay off unless
there is an extremely large price move in the S&P between now and the end
of September. Another press report claims that a "mystery traders" has placed
a put option bet that the Dow Jones Eurostoxx50 index will crash by 25% by
options expiration day this month. These high-profile "mystery" trades are
being were just some of the fear tactics used by several independent and mainstream
media outlets to conjure up images of another 9/11-type terrorist episode.
Indeed, Halloween was early in coming this year for many.
I predict the promoters of this particular fear campaign will simply put their
hands in their pockets, walk away and whistle a rousing rendition of "Dixie," all
the while conveniently forgetting they ever made such dire predictions in the
first place. Their mission was accomplished: they convinced millions of everyday
investors and observers to hit the panic button and run for cover while they,
the fear promoters, profited immensely on the very fear they engendered.
Before any major trend in crowd psychology finally exhausts itself there's
always one final move that seems to take the prevailing emotion of the crowd
and compress it into last explosion of emotion. Call it the "last hurrah" or
the final "blow-off" in the crowd's extreme pessimism of the past year. It's
a necessary cathartic exercise as the crowd releases all that pent-up fear
and emotion in one final "whoosh" before finally letting it go. And when the
crowd finally catches its breath after its summer scare-fest and its collective
sanity returns, it is only then that the crowd will realize what it feared
most didn't come to pass. Indeed, the exact opposite will have transpired.
It will then realize the truth of the old maxim, "The anticipation of fear
is often worse than that which is feared." After this realization sets in,
the crowd will slowly lose its fear and begin adjusting its attitude to suit
the current investment climate, a climate which is increasingly bullish.
From a chart standpoint, the final exhaustion of crowd emotion normally manifests
in a parabolic move, whether up or down. In this case the final exhaustion
move is a parabolic dome. When you're looking at crowd psychology from the
vantage point of the charts (an excellent place to start!) you can see the
beauty of this final release of fear as the old downtrend trend ends and a
new uptrend begins. With that in mind, let's start our analysis with one of
the best benchmarks for analyzing the psychological state of the broad market
-- the NYSE Composite Index. This particular market average is best for parabolic
analysis as we'll shortly find out.
Notice the former conflict of the "dueling bowls" in the NYSE Composite shown
below. Now look at the parabolic bowl that has so far managed to contain the
August correction. The outer rim of the bowl isn't important as its slope could
change. What is important is that the market's August correction bottomed to
the left of the bowl's center or vertex, which is technically bullish. That
means the stock market remains in strong hands and the bigger of these two
conflicting parabolic structures, namely the bowl, is the stronger one. The
NYSE Composite should succeed in eventually climbing back to the previous high
at 10,200.. Can a new all-time high be made before this new bullish move has
run its course? Sure it can, and it should happen based on the market's psychology
composite.

The NYSE has just blasted its way out of that small parabolic dome that had
kept the market in a fear-laden trading range and prevented a challenge of
the all-time high made in July. The dome is really irrelevant; the important
thing to note about this chart is the large bowl formation in the NYSE chart.
(Incidentally, traders who bought the August low on my previous recommendation,
take some profit at this time).
Now that two major "freak outs" appear to be over (namely the anxiety over
the Fed's interest rate decision and the Bin Laden options trade), how much
more fear remains for the average investor? That remains to be seen and only
the aggregate psychology indicators will tell us that. For now they are sending
a bullish message as they have been since the August correction lows. There
is still a lot of short interest out there for the market to feed off before
the public's fear turns to jubilation. That means the stock market's "Wall
of Worry" is firmly intact and the intermediate-term upside potential remains
heading into the fourth quarter.
Now for an update on the PM sector. Back in August we took at look at the
Ishares Silver Trust (SLV, $127.07) which tracks the silver price. We concluded
that a tradeable rally lay ahead for SLV and the silver price based on the
super-oversold indication coming from the 5-day and 20-day price oscillators
for SLV. "The decline in silver along with the PM stocks in the recent panic
selling in August was overdone and the indicators suggested the market will
compensate for the extreme selling that was done by taking price back up to
its pre-panic level," we wrote.

Since then SLV has rallied back up to its pre-August crash level around $127.
Take some profit at this time and prepare for a pullback or consolidation since
SLV is now overbought based on the oscillators. The above chart shows the key
20-day oscillator (blue line) is very much in the overbought zone of the chart
which is the proverbial "danger zone" in the very short term. Silver traders
will need to tread cautiously in the next few days until the price oscillators
for SLV show us the recent internals excesses have been worked off.

What about the silver stocks? Let's turn to the silver stock internal momentum
indicators for a glimpse of what to expect in the near term. Once we get past
the current correction process, the SS HILMO momentum indicators for the silver
stocks tell us to expect another rally attempt that should allow the actively
traded silver to make a higher high above the most recent rally peak. This
expectation is based on the observation that the 20-day and 30-day momentum
indicators should continue rising beyond the current week and into the later
part of the month. When 20-day and 30-day momentum is rising it generally puts
an upward bias on the short-term outlook, allowing the stocks with the best
short-term chart patterns to push higher.
The upward turn in the 30-day internal momentum should provide buoyancy as
well as a continued upward bias for the leading silver stocks in the short
term outlook. In other words, higher highs are expected for most of the major
actively traded silver.
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