One More Rally Could End It

Our 129.95 target caught the spike top in Goldman yesterday within two cents, but it remains to be seen whether that will be it for the stock’s sensational bear-market run. That’s a crucial concern for investors, since, if Goldman shares have completed their death rattle, then so has the mania that has driven the broad averages higher since early March. Some readers may recall that the stock market’s bear squeeze began with an announcement of bogus earnings by Citigroup at that time.  All of the big banks have followed suit with their own dubious boasts of profits, including a $4.6 billion gain booked subsequently by Citi’s trading desk in the most recent quarter. Our friend Dan Denning explained how those profits came  mostly from bets the bank had made against itself in the default insurance market.

goldmans-top-small

Goldman’s trading desk racked up even bigger profits during the same period, but the question no one seems to be asking is, so what?  Trading profits, even when they amount to billions of dollars per quarter, will hardly sustain banking giants that in their heyday were making many billions more through a wide variety of operations that no longer exist. Leverage was the name of the game, but leverage may be dead for the next fifty years. Under the circumstances, Goldman and every other multinational bank can pursue just one strategy in the years ahead: shrink to survive. That’s why we’re sticking with our forecast that Goldman shares eventually will trade below $30.

 Why $144 Matters

But what about now?  Is the stock about to enter a death dive after nearly tripling in price since November, when it bottomed at 47.41?  Bearish as we are on GS shares for the long-term, we think the final blowoff lies ahead. That is notwithstanding the sharp sell-off that occurred yesterday from within two cents of an important Hidden Pivot target at 129.65. If and when the stock closes above that number, we’ll be looking for a last-gasp rally to around $144. If it should go just a little higher, though, surpassing a key peak at 144.98 recorded last September, all bets would be off, since that would turn the daily chart almost invincibly bullish. Indeed, we’d have to turn bullish ourselves — for as long as we could stand it — even with the economy mired in a credit deflation that has no conceivable outcome other than complete economic collapse.

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  • Rich May 1, 2009, 4:34 pm

    Another boring day in the markets hiding a few more surprises?.
    Many new highs and Put buying soaring again suggest we may go higher here.
    GS PnF counts to 155: http://stockcharts.com/charts/gallery.html?gs
    Note Webslinger’s MidAmerica Utility CEO sees no recovery before 2011 despite the widely broadcast blip in consumer confidence (Been down so long looks like up.)
    Dollar down since 1985, real GDP negative since 2004, money supply down since 2008, real Unemployment 20% plus falling real inflation from 13% to 7%=record high Misery Index at 27%. Company profits only from layoffs and funny accounting. Reality Show Eliminations tell the true tale.
    After Fed/Treasury crony wallpapering, economy likely catches up to defaulting Bank derivatives 25 times assets. Economy worsens from even more government borrowing and taxes crowding out real people. The confluence of consequences ketchups the banks, revolutionizes Congress and the Supremes, making O a one term Prez. http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data
    Nowhere in monopoly mass media do we read how the last three quarters down -12.5% define Depression. And they said it could not happen again…

    http://stockcharts.com/def/servlet/Favorites.CServlet?obj=ID3251493