Thursday, March 17, 2011

NEM – Newmont Mining (Last:50.30)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

We hold 400 shares purchased overnight Tuesday at 50.40. Since the stock could fall to as low as 48.10 if it breaks down here, set a stop-loss at 49.94.  You should plan on re-buying at 48.15, no stop, good-till-canceled.  I've included a chart that shows night-session price bars on the 5-minute chart.  ______ UPDATE (11:56 a.m EDT): Raise the stop-loss to 50.18.

ESM11 – June E-Mini S&P (Last:1258.00)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

Yesterday's bottom at 1241.25 came off a Hidden Pivot that was precise to-the-tick (see inset).  If the futures continue lower today, expect the same precision relative to the 1231.00 target shown in the chart. A relapse to that price could yield an excellent buying opportunity. Alternatively, bulls would seize the offensive if they can pop the futures above  a small peak at 1263.75 made on the way down yesterday (easily visible on the 15-minute chart). ______ UPDATE (9:41 a.m. EDT):  There being no clear evidence the world was going to end today, stocks have vaulted the ol' Wall of Worry like Princess Bride's Fezzik on steroids. As is so often the case, today's short-squeeze, which got within 1.75 points of a 1275.25 Hidden Pivot target, was mostly over before the regular trading session was more than a few minutes old; thus, most traders, even bullish ones, would have missed it.

DJIA – Dow Industrial Average (Last:11613)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The bottom of yesterday's selloff came within 30 points of an 11525 Hidden Pivot that can continue to serve as our minimum downside objective.  However, any slippage beneath that support would portend more weakness to at least 11355.  For anyone looking to catch a trampoline bounce, that number looks like it would be an excellent place to moor a speculative bid with a tight stop-loss.  The provenance of both targets is shown in the accompanying chart. _______ UPDATE (9:52 a.m. EDT):  The Dow began the day with a not atypical short-squeeze, disdaining to curtsy toward our lowball bid.  The thrust was impulsive, implying that whatever pullback that occurs here is just that.

Liquidity will out…

– Posted in: Free Rick's Picks

Considering the relentless rumble of earth-shaking news lately, it's hard to believe the Dow Industrials have given up only a measly 800 points since topping in late February. I've noted here before, somewhat facetiously, that it would probably take nothing less than a mushroom cloud over the Saudi oil fields, or a smoldering tanker in the Strait of Hormuz, to truly spook investors.  More and more, it seems this is actually the case. Clearly, this is how the stock market is programmed to react when the irresistible force of a massive global-liquidity blowout is pitted against grim economic realities that augur a possible Second Great Depression.  The bulls (i.e., algorithmic trading-machines fueled by OPM and Fed funny-money) are feathering back at the moment, but shorts had better dive for cover if and when the Japanese restore auxiliary power to their cooling capacity. (And neither should it be overlooked that Japan has recently augmented financial-system liquidity by a reported trillion-and-a-half yen.)  A respite from meltdown worries seems bound to produce a short-squeeze capable of recouping most of the lost ground in just a few days. If so, it would likely be a short-lived spree that will itself succumb to such nagging problems , two name just two, as $5 gasoline and a destabilized Middle East in which the U.S. has almost no role to play.

A Biblical Forecast for Interesting Times

– Posted in: Commentary for the Week of March 8 Free

(Because this essay drew so many interesting comments, I am running it for a second day. RA] With debt spinning wildly out of control and the States threatening to revolt against Washington, we asked some frequent contributors to the Rick’s Picks forum how they thought the economy would look five years from now. The essay below, by Brad Bolz, is quite different from the others because it is based on Biblical prophecy. For starters, he sees a nuclear war in 2018 and then the emergence of an Antichrist in 2021. If such stuff isn’t your cup of tea , please bear in mind that we try to present many points of view here. This one is surely miles from the beaten path -- although, when you consider how screwed up the world is these days, it doesn’t seem too farfetched – at least not to us -- to blame Satan. If you want to skip to the bottom line, Brad predicts near the end of the essay that today’s financial bulls will prove to have been right, although the bears’ predictions of a dramatically lowered standard of living will also be borne out.] Where will the economy be in five years? I’m going to try and use Biblical prophecy for my prediction.  Fools jump in where angels fear to tread, right?  Normal caveats apply. I’m not a prophet nor biblical scholar, but this may be the only a possible framework in which to structure investments.  Investing is changing. Rules and charts guide us, but I suspect we’re approaching a season in which the events that unfold will be observably linked to Biblical prophecy.  Our personal opinions about prophecy won’t matter because, I believe, there are people at the very top who are pushing us toward the End Times. The problem with predictive