Showing posts with label euro crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label euro crisis. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

The Stock Market's All Important Chart!

Brian Hunt's
Market Notes

CHART OF THE WEEK: THE STOCK MARKET'S ALL-IMPORTANT BOX

After plummeting 17% in just two weeks, the stock market has formed an extremely important "box." This is the idea behind our chart of the week.

The benchmark S&P 500 stock index spent much of the summer bobbing around the 1,300 level. It reached 1,353 in July. Then the summer crash arrived… and took the index as low as 1,119 (on a closing basis). It has spent the past month flopping up and down in a range between 1,119 and 1,218. Some traders refer to a trading range like this as a "box."

We see the bottom of this box – the 1,119 level – as a "line in the sand" for stocks. If this line is crossed to the downside, it's a major sign the European debt crisis is infecting the rest of the world. It's a major sign the U.S. economy is getting worse.

It's going to be an interesting October…



BThe S&P 500 and its all-important box

Monday, August 22, 2011

The euro crisis is officially worse than 2008

From Pragmatic Capitalism:

One of the many enjoyable acronyms that became household names in 2008 was CDS – credit default swap. As most investors know by now, these instruments were created to protect bondholders from default. Of course, what we found out in 2008 was that they really just shifted the risk from one investor to the other. Sort of like tossing a hand grenade in a circle hoping you aren't the one holding it when it goes boom. And as Wall Street imploded on itself in 2008 this game of toss the grenade became increasingly expensive to play as evidenced by the surging cost to avoid the grenade (surging cost of CDS).
What's frightening about the developments in Europe in recent weeks is that the CDS market is once again sending the same signals. Someone is going to get left holding the grenade again. And this time, the market is actually telling us that it's even worse than it was in 2008. The only difference is that the problems appear to be...
Read full article...
More on the euro crisis:
It's time to be worried about the dollar and the euro
Porter Stansberry: Why stocks are plummeting now
Two of Europe's largest banks are on the "brink of disaster"
View the original article here