• 30Nov

    Economic rescue could cost $8.5 trillion

    Heavy spending to battle the financial crisis is unlikely to abate soon. Analysts say next year’s deficit could top $1 trillion.
    With its decision last week to pump an additional $1 trillion into the financial crisis, the government eliminated any doubt that the nation is on a wartime footing in the battle to shore up the economy. The strategy now and in the coming Obama administration is essentially the win-at-any-cost approach previously adopted only to wage a major war.And that means no hesitation in pledging to spend previously almost unimaginable sums of money and running up federal budget deficits on a scale not seen since World War II.

    Indeed, analysts warn that the nation’s next financial crisis could come from the staggering cost of battling the current one. Just last week, new initiatives added $600 billion to lower mortgage rates, $200 billion to stimulate consumer loans and nearly $300 billion to steady Citigroup, the banking conglomerate. That pushed the potential long-term cost of the government’s varied economic rescue initiatives, including direct loans and loan guarantees, to an estimated total of $8.5 trillion — half of the entire economic output of the U.S. this year.

    Nor has the cash register stopped ringing. President-elect Barack Obama and congressional Democrats are expected to enact a stimulus package of $500 billion to $700 billion soon after he takes office in January.The spending already has had a dramatic effect on the federal budget deficit, which soared to a record $455 billion last year and

    began the 2009 fiscal year with an amazing $237-billion deficit for October alone. Analysts say next year’s budget deficit could easily bust the $1-trillion barrier. “I didn’t think we’d see that for a long time,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

    “There’s a huge risk of another economic crisis, a debt crisis, once we get on the other side of this one.”But the Bush administration and the economic team that Obama is rapidly assembling like a war Cabinet are vowing to spend whatever it takes to avoid a depression; they’ll worry about the effect later.

    “I don’t think that there’s any way of denying the fact that my first priority and my first job is to get us on the path of economic recovery, to create 2.5 million jobs, to provide relief to middle-class families,” Obama told reporters last week.

    “But as soon as the recovery is well underway, then we’ve got to set up a long-term plan to reduce the structural deficit and make sure that we’re not leaving a mountain of debt for the next generation.”The mountain is already there, and rising faster than at any time since the 1940s, when the United States was fighting a global war.

    Analysts say the current flood of red ink calls into question Obama’s ability to launch programs such as middle-class tax cuts and a healthcare overhaul. In 1993, a deficit only a third the size of next year’s projected $1 trillion prompted President Clinton to abandoned his campaign pledges of tax cuts.

    Once the financial crisis eases, higher interest rates and soaring inflation will be risks. If they materialize, they could dramatically increase the government’s borrowing costs to meet its annual debt payments. For consumers, borrowing could become more expensive even as the price of everyday items rise, holding back economic growth.

    “We could have a super sub-prime crisis associated with the meltdown of the federal government,” warned David Walker, president of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and former head of the Government Accountability Office. But even deficit hawks such as Walker acknowledge that the immediate crisis is priority No. 1. Just as with World War II, the government can worry about paying the bills once the enemy is defeated.

    “You just throw everything you have at the problem to try to fix it as quickly as you can,” said David Stowell, a finance professor at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. “We’re mortgaging our future to a certain extent, but we’re trying to do things that give us a future.”

    Washington could wind up spending substantially less than the sum of the commitments. Though the total estimated cost of the government’s efforts adds up to $8.5 trillion, only about $3.2 trillion has been tapped, according to an analysis by Bloomberg. And not all the money committed is direct spending. About $5.5 trillion in loan guarantees and other financial backing by the Federal Reserve is included in the total.

    “The only way those commitments would become obligations would be if the economy completely collapsed, in which case it’s a whole new ballgame anyway,” said John Steele Gordon, a business and economic historian.

    The government even stands to make money on some expenditures, such as the $330 billion it has used to buy equity in banks and other financial institutions through the Treasury Department’s Troubled Asset Relief Program. In the $1.2-billion bailout of Chrysler in 1980, the government ended up gaining $311 million when it sold stock options back to the company three years later.But the federal efforts to forestall a depression are still historic in scope.

    A $1-trillion deficit next year would represent about 7% of the nation’s total economic output, or gross domestic product. That would top the 5.9% reached during the height of the Great Depression in 1934 but would fall well short of the deficits of World War II. In 1943, the high point, the deficit amounted to 30% of GDP.

    The national debt is soaring too. In September, the National Debt Clock in New York City ran out of digits as the figure ticked over $10 trillion. The debt is now larger than the 45% of GDP it reached at the end of the Great Depression, but less than in 1946, when war spending had pushed the debt to 129% of GDP, said Gordon, author of “Hamilton’s Blessing: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Our National Debt.”

    There’s a potentially crucial difference, however, between the spending then and the commitments now: Much of the Depression-World War II spending was on industrial production — building new factories and converting existing plants to produce tanks, planes and ships. Huge sums also went into developing new technologies.Those investments, combined with pent-up consumer demand and savings from the lean war years, quickly led to budget surpluses and sharp economic growth in the late 1940s as the baby boom began.

    Analysts warn not to expect that to happen again. This time the government spending is largely ethereal, with the Federal Reserve printing more money to inject liquidity into the financial system and keep banks and other institutions afloat. And savings rates are low.

    “Too many Americans have overextended themselves with regard to credit and debt, and too many have been following the bad example of the government,” Walker said. “It is imperative that we recognize that this country has been living beyond its means and that we face large and growing structural deficits even after we turn the economy around.” Walker said he understands the need to attack the financial crisis. But the spending only adds to the looming problems of unfunded Social Security and Medicare commitments as baby boomers begin to retire.

    He noted that the Moody’s bond-rating firm fired a shot across the government’s bow in January with a warning that spending on entitlement programs poses a long-term threat to the triple-A rating for government bonds. And that was before the financial crisis.Interest rates remain low because of the crisis. But they will rise, particularly when the U.S. government starts borrowing more money to cover its growing debt, analysts predict. That could cause inflation to increase as well.

    “We could easily enter into a highly inflationary situation because of all the stimulus we have and all the borrowing we have once it works its way through the economy,” MacGuineas said. “The single most important priority right now is to stabilize the economy . . . but it really means that there is a huge risk on the other side.”

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  • 27Nov

    UBS says finds some U.S. tax fraud cases
    UBS said on Thursday it has discovered a few cases of tax fraud as part of a U.S. inquiry into whether it helped wealthy Americans dodge taxes through accounts in Switzerland.

    “Our investigations have uncovered a limited number of cases of tax fraud under both U.S. and Swiss law,” Chairman Peter Kurer told 2,400 shareholders gathered to vote on the bank raising 6 billion Swiss francs ($5 billion) with a convertible bond issue to the Swiss state.

    Kurer, who took over in April, also said current and former top executives would give up 70 million francs in bonuses they received after coming under fire for accepting fat salaries despite steering Switzerland’s flagship bank into heavy losses.

    He reiterated that UBS, one of the hardest-hit banks in the subprime turmoil, still aimed to make a profit in 2009, but stressed market conditions remained difficult. UBS made a small third-quarter profit, mainly thanks to tax gains and accounting factors, but analysts expect it to take a new hit this quarter.

    UBS is also under pressure from the U.S. tax investigation launched earlier this year, which led to the indictment of the bank’s head of global wealth management this month and threatens to weaken Switzerland’s precious banking secrecy laws.

    But bank-client confidentiality, a pillar of Swiss banking, “is not there to protect cases of tax fraud,” Kurer said, suggesting UBS could be ready to hand over some client details to U.S. authorities as part of a possible settlement.

    The U.S. authorities are seeking the names of about 17,000 U.S. clients of UBS who have Swiss-based bank accounts. Swiss lawyers representing U.S. clients of UBS have said Switzerland is considering disclosing information on only a few hundred.
    Kurer, who is trying to rebuild the bank’s reputation after it was forced to write down about $49 billion on risky subprime assets, said UBS had taken broad measures to address its shortcomings, including aggressively reducing its balance sheet and overhauling its pay structure.

    The chairman said he was personally replying to the many angry shareholders who had written to express their discontent with UBS, formerly an icon of Swiss banking whose stock used to be popular among Swiss retail investors.

    Under the new pay system, the chairman will not get bonuses. Ex-Chairman Marcel Ospel, whose drive into investment banking many analysts blame for UBS’s present woes, has also returned some of his pay, along with other executives.

    “UBS is a leader in this regard,” Kurer said, adding he was working on getting more bonuses waived or returned.

    “Those who are responsible must be brought to court,” said a 68-year-old UBS investor who lost much of his pension savings.

    “I have lost nearly all what I and my wife had saved up for later years. What am I going to do now.?”

    Kurer gave no details on to what extent UBS was stemming client money withdrawals, which totaled a record $49 billion in the third quarter in its core wealth management business.

    UBS said earlier this month the pace of client outflows had started to ease after the Swiss government announced its rescue package. The deal also allows UBS to hive off up to $60 billion of illiquid assets in a special central bank-controlled fund.

    He said the Swiss government intervention — including the 6 billion francs of new capital the shareholders approved on Thursday, “has helped bolster confidence in UBS and the Swiss banking and financial services industry as a whole.”

    UBS shares, which have lost more than two thirds of their market value this year, rallied 4 percent earlier on Thursday, but later trimmed gains. They were up 2.4 percent at 15.16 Swiss francs at 8:07 a.m. EST, when the DJ Stoxx European banking sector index was up 2.5 percent.

    “Kurer’s forecast that 2009 will be profitable may help. But he has also warned that the situation could get worse,” said a trader.

    ($1=1.199 Swiss francs)

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  • 27Nov

    Remember Friday is a half day session.  Markets close at 1:00 PM ET on Friday the day after Thanksgiving.

    Some of the ket Technical idicators pointing to a down session for Friday:

    3 consecutive closes up
    3 consecutive higher highs
    advancing issues 2-1 over declining issues
    advancing issues over declining issues 2 days in a row

    On the light volume days surrounding holidays manipulation can occur. The volume on the DOW on Wednesday was actually close to average.

    EBS closed at 21.37 reached a new high. Keeping an eye on this issue now that the markets are starting to set up for the next sell-off.
    Consumers cut spending at the sharpest rate in seven years last month, the
    Commerce Department said. October personal consumption fell 1.0% from the
    month before. Separately, orders for durable goods decreased by 6.2% last
    month, in another sign tight credit conditions and rising pessimism over the
    economy are leading firms to put off capital spending.

    Have a great Thanksgiving Holiday!

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  • 26Nov

    Stockshakers see’s selling pressure mounting in the market internals.

    The News about the Fed infusing $800 Billion to the credit markets sounds like great news but it may be a case of more of the same for the market. Technical analysis is based on trading what the charts are showing you. Stockshakers see downside movement.
    Don’t get caught on the wrong side of the trend.
    Expect reduced volume in Wednesdays and Fridays shortened session.

     Friday is the retail “Black Friday”

     

    Stockshakers would like to wish you and your families in the U.S.A. and our troops abroad a safe and happy Thanksgiving 2008! If you are traveling for the holidays be safe.

    Remember Friday trading is a half day.

    Tags:

  • 26Nov

    Massive new programs aimed at loosening credit
    Bush administration and the Federal Reserve pledge $800 billion to loosen credit for consumers and businesses

    Rolling out powerful new weapons against the financial meltdown, the Bush administration and the Federal Reserve pledged $800 billion Tuesday to blast through blockades on credit cards, auto loans, mortgages and other borrowing. Total bailout commitments, loans and pledges of backing neared a staggering $7 trillion.
     
    Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who has been criticized for constantly revising the original $700 billion rescue program, said the administration was considering even more changes in its final two months in office.

    Reports on the nation’s economic health weren’t getting any better. The Commerce Department said the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, declined at an annual rate of 0.5 percent in the July-September quarter, even worse than the initial 0.3 percent estimated a month ago as consumer spending fell by the largest amount in 28 years.

    In Chicago, meanwhile, President-elect Barack Obama named his budget director and said they both will focus on the nation’s soaring budget deficit but only after economic revival is under way. Paulson stressed that Obama’s transition team was being kept informed of the government’s moves.

    Investors digested it all and sent the Dow Jones industrials 36 points higher, a modest gain but still the first time the average had risen three straight days in more than two months.

    Millions of Americans rely on the kinds of loans that were targeted in one of the new programs announced Tuesday.

    The Federal Reserve will purchase $200 billion in securities backed by different types of debt including credit card loans, auto loans, student loans and loans to small businesses. That market essentially froze in October. These types of loans as a result have become harder to obtain and have carried higher interest rates

    The Fed also announced that it would spend $500 billion to purchase mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and another $100 billion to directly purchase mortgages held by Fannie, Freddie and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

    This would greatly expand an initial modest effort announced back in September in which Treasury spent $26 billion to purchase mortgage-backed securities. The current credit crisis was triggered by soaring losses on securities backed by subprime loans.

    The announcement of the new programs had an immediate positive impact on credit markets Tuesday, sending demand up and rates lower. Analysts predicted the program could send mortgage rates down by as much as one-half to a full percentage point in coming months, helping to spur demand in the beleaguered housing market, which is suffering its worst downturn in decades.

    The programs to buy mortgage-related assets and securities backed by consumer debt have the same aim: to boost demand for those assets. In doing so, the government hopes to lower the costs being charged for consumer loans. That would make loans on everything from mortgages to cars more available.

    “This is one of the key actions we’ve been advocating,” said Charles McMillan, president of the National Association of Realtors, referring to the purchase program for mortgage-backed assets.

    The latest federal moves raised U.S. commitments to contain the financial crisis to nearly $7 trillion — though no one thinks the government will actually spend anything like that figure, which would be almost half the nation’s total gross domestic product. The figures include loans that are expected to be repaid, loan authorities to back mortgages, purchases of stock in banks, guarantees to support loans among banks and pledges backing other transactions.

    In the case of the Federal Reserve, the amount covers huge loans that financial institutions will have to pay back. In the case of the Treasury rescue effort, the government will at some point sell the stock it owns back to the banks, presumably when the banking system is doing better and the stock will be worth more.

    As for Tuesday’s actions, the mortgage-backed securities the Fed will buy will be investment-grade assets — not the toxic mortgage-related assets that the administration initially had said the $700 billion financial rescue program would buy.

    By focusing on investment-grade securities, the Fed will be able to help provide a functioning secondary market. It will pay the prices for these securities that are being set by the market. Had the Fed needed to buy bad assets, it would have had to develop a mechanism to properly price assets that weren’t being traded.

    The use of Fed resources also gets around another problem Treasury faced: a limited amount of money in the program. The $800 billion being committed to buy mortgage-related assets and other assets backed by consumer loans will come from the Federal Reserve’s vast resources. It will not count against the $700 billion rescue program.

    The Treasury Department also announced Tuesday that the rescue program had spent another $2.91 billion in direct purchases of stock from 23 regional banks around the country. These institutions ranged from HF Financial Corp. in Sioux Falls, S.D., to Centerstate Banks of Florida Inc. in Davenport, Fla.

    The government has now injected $161.5 billion in 53 institutions. The goal is to spend $250 billion of the $700 billion bailout fund to buy bank stock as a way of encouraging banks to resume more normal lending to bolster the shaky economy.

    A boost to the overall economy is considered vital at a time when nearly every day has brought further evidence that the country is sliding into a severe downturn.

    Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, said he thought the economy would shrink by an even more drastic 4 percent annual rate in the current quarter and keep falling through the middle of 2009.

    “We are in the early stages of one of the worst recessions in the postwar period, even factoring in a massive stimulus program,” Behravesh.

    Obama is putting together a stimulus program with the goal of creating 2.5 million jobs over the next two years. It’s an effort that many economists think will need to total between $500 billion and $700 billion to bring the benefits needed to help shore up the economy.

    Obama pledged Tuesday to make deficit reduction a goal of his administration — but only after recovery from the financial crisis is well under way. “We are going to have to jump start the economy,” he said.

    At a news conference, Obama claimed a “mandate to move the country in a new direction,” and promised to consult with Republicans as he goes about it.

    The effort to restart the frozen market for securities that back consumer debt will get an assist from the government’s $700 billion financial rescue fund, which Congress passed on Oct. 3. Paulson told reporters that the fund will supply $20 billion as protection for the Fed against losses in its purchases of securities for the program.

    He also signaled that the program could be expanded to include asset-backed paper that covers commercial mortgage loans. Those loans are used to finance shopping malls and office buildings.

    Paulson defended the administration against charges that it has made haphazard changes in the financial rescue program, sending confusing signals to markets. Initially, the effort was sold to Congress as a way to buy toxic mortgage-related assets off the books of financial institutions. The idea was to give them the capital needed to resume more normal lending.

    When the financial crisis worsened and Paulson decided it would take too long to get the toxic purchase program operating, he switched to making direct purchases of bank stock with the rescue funds. Paulson announced that the first $350 billion installment of the rescue fund probably would not be used to buy any toxic assets.

    “It is naive for any of us to think that when you are dealing with a situation of this magnitude that a bill could be passed or a single action taken to make all the issues go away,” Paulson told reporters.

    Paulson declined to say whether the Bush administration would seek authority from Congress to tap a portion of the second half of the $700 billion fund before leaving office. That decision had not yet been made, he said.

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  • 25Nov

    Dow support 8000 resistance 8710.

    Down in the morning looking for a bounce later in the session on Tuesday.

    Dollar continues to weaken making the GOLD and commodity moves look to be a wise move here.
    Call option positions open on BIIB and GLD.

    SKF continues down, if we sell-off SKF will find traction and bounce near 161.
    AMGN continues up target $58.
    IBM may retest $78 and then bounce $83 is the target.
    Stockshakers Market scan:

    AHD Atlas`Pipeline Holdings LP 4.27
    AQQ American`Spectrum Realty 26.35
    ASB Advansource`Biomaterials Corp 0.30
    BLU Blue`Chip Value Fund Inc 2.05
    DTPI Diamond`Mgt Tech Consultants 3.96
    DVM Cohen`& Steers Div Majors Fd 8.28
    EGBN Eagle`Bancorp Inc 6.50
    FNDT Fundtech`Ltd 7.31
    GABC German`American Bancorp Inc 11.25
    HITK Hi-Tech`Pharmacal Co Inc 4.65
    IDSY I.D.`Systems Inc 3.66
    JRS Nuveen`Real Estate Inc Fund 3.54
    KSW KSW`Inc 4.70
    MED Medifast`Inc 3.80
    MIGP Mercer`Insurance Group Inc 11.24
    MOCO Mocon`Inc 7.71
    MXA Minnesota`Muni Inc Port 10.46
    ONXX Onyx`Pharmaceuticals Inc 25.29
    OXPS Optionsxpress`Holdings 12.34
    PFL Pimco`Floating Rtn Incm Fd 5.81
    PURE Pure`Bioscience 2.25
    RMH Rmk`High Income Fd Inc 0.72
    SFN Spherion`Corporation 2.27
    SKS Saks`Holdings Inc 3.35
    SRO DWS`RREEF Real Estate Fund II Inc 0.70
    SRQ DWS`RREEF Real Estate Fund Inc 1.55
    TLI Lmp`Corporate Loan Fd Inc 5.83
    TLP Transmontaigne`Partners LP 12.03
    VCBI Virginia`Commercebancorp 3.70
    VCGH VCG`Holdings Corp. 1.66
    WEL Boots`& Coots Intl Well 1.30

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  • 24Nov

     

    8400 proving to be a point of resistance for the DOW. This is an important retest.
    If we fail to break above 8400 and stay above it Stockshakers would expect a reversal.
    Stay nimble here and watch the volume.
    We are currently at 1 1/2 x  normal volume.

    A break above the 8405 level can lead us to the next point of resistanc at 8750!
    If the retest fails look for the lows of Fridays session as support if that fails we will issue a new update. That would be a significant breakdown.

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  • 24Nov

    Fed Pledges Exceed $7.4 Trillion to Ease Frozen Company Credit
    The U.S. government is prepared to lend more than $7.4 trillion on behalf of American taxpayers, or half the value of everything produced in the nation last year, to rescue the financial system since the credit markets seized up 15 months ago.

    The unprecedented pledge of funds includes $2.8 trillion already tapped by financial institutions in the biggest response to an economic emergency since the New Deal of the 1930s. The commitment dwarfs the only plan approved by lawmakers, the Treasury Department’s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. Federal Reserve lending last week was 1,900 times the weekly average for the three years before the crisis.

    When Congress approved the TARP on Oct. 3, Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson acknowledged the need for transparency and oversight. Now, as regulators commit far more money while refusing to disclose loan recipients or reveal the collateral they are taking in return, some Congress members are calling for the Fed to be reined in.

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  • 24Nov

    The federal government agreed Sunday to take unprecedented steps to
    stabilize Citigroup by moving to guarantee close to $300 billion in troubled
    assets weighing on the bank’s books.

    Treasury has agreed to inject an additional $20 billion in capital into
    Citigroup under terms of the deal hashed out between the bank, the Treasury
    Department, the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
    Treasury officials will charge a higher interest rate for the capital
    injection 8% for the first few years than it has charged to dozens of
    other banks now borrowing money under the government’s the $700 billion
    rescue package approved by Congress last month.

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  • 23Nov

    Official: Richardson to be commerce secretary

    A Democratic official says President-elect Barack Obama will name New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson as commerce secretary.

     

    Rothschild Investment Banking Posts Record Results
    Have you heard of Gazprom? Have you ever looked at the new age Russia? Their entire country is run by Gazprom…and they control 17%

    of oil reserves in the world. Gazprom is the training facility for Russian leaders that cycle through and
    make millions and appoint their friends. Learn something about the potential for the second cold war with Russia.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gazprom

     
    Citi In Talks With Fed, Treasury

    You won’t be shocked to hear this but we can now confirm that Citigroup has begun talks with the Federal Reserve and the TreasuryDepartment. A source familiar with the situation say top bank officials are meeting

     
    US Equities Markets

    DOW            8,046.42   +494.13 +6.54%
    NASDAQ      1,384.35    +68.23 +5.18%
    S&P 500        800.03      +47.59 +6.32%
    10yr Note   104.6875   -1.5938 -1.50%
    Oil                 49.93        +0.51 +1.03%
    Gold            791.80      +43.10 +5.76%

     

    Looking for leverage? Here are some options:

    Direxion

    S&P 500 Bull 2.5x Fund (DXSLX)
    S&P 500 Bear 2.5x Find (DXSSX)                   
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    Nasdaq 100 Bear 2.5x Find (DXQSX)

     
           
    Rydex

    S&P 500 2x Strategy (RYTNX) - Bull (Titan)
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    Ultra S&P 500 Bull Fund 2x (ULPIX)
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    ETFs

    ProShares Ultra S&P500 (AMEX:SSO)
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    ProShares UltraShort QQQ (AMEX:QID)

     

    Projections for mondays stock market trading session:

    We may retest the support levels on all indeicies Monday.
    The prevailing trend currently points to the potential for some bullish moves but not before we see some selling pressure.
    As the Dollar starts to get toppy here we may see the gold and commodity plays strengthen.
    Stockshakers will be looking for the initial retest, if it holds support 7600/7700 on the DOW Stockshakers would take our long positions.
    QQQQ likely to retest at the 26.00 - 25.25. Stockshakers would look for support above 25.00 as a possible cue for a bounce.
    The S&P 500 will follow thw DOW.

    Stockshakers Scan:

    POT target 68
    RIG 69
    MA 135
    SWM 30
    RIMM 50
    DXD 93
    BIIB 43.50
    PETS 21
    WEYS 32
    DGP 16.10
    WFC 24

    US Dollar peaking near 86 expect a dip here
    GLD call options look favorable if the US Dollar sells off
    Stockshakers will trade the short side pullback with the 3x ETF shorts
    BGZ, TZA, FAZ, ERY

    Then when the reversal occurs in the form of support levels holding,
    Reverse direction with the bull 3X ETF’s:

    BGU, TNA, ERX, FAS.

    If support doesn’t hold stay on the short side as the trend will then be a clear shot down.
    Once again this is an incredibly dangerous set of conditions in this market right now, If you don’t have to be in this market - then stay out. There is no need to walk in front of an on-coming truck.
    This market is far to volitile. These are extreme conditions make no mistake about it.
    At some point we will breakdown in a breath taking manner.
    However there is a possibility of a bullish cycle coming our way before the end of the year.

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