January 2014 Wealthbuilder Stock Market Brief.

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Wealthbuilder Market Brief 12 th January 2014 Dow Theory Divergence: I have told my students and mentoring clients that they are going to get a great lesson in the trading relevance of Dow Theory and technical analysis in the very near future. For the last 10 trading days (two calendar weeks) the Dow Industrials have been trapped in a tight trading range. In Dow Theory parlance this is called a “line”. The longer this line progresses the more technically significant the breakout trend will be for savvy traders to exploit. At the moment the Dow Transport Index is in bullish “breakout” mode and is in disagreement with the Industrials. Thus we have a classic situation of Dow Divergence. This signifies that there is significant uncertainty in the market place and with it corresponding increased risk. How this will play out is anybody’s guess. Will the nifty Transports win the day and save the Industrials or will the superior valuation weight of the Industrials over power the Transports? Currently I am on the sidelines waiting for the market to tell me its secrets. I don’t think we will have much longer to wait. Dow Industrials: Daily

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May 2014 Wealthbuilder Stock Market Brief Written By Christopher M. Quigley. Investment Mentor And Investment Trainer.

Transcript of January 2014 Wealthbuilder Stock Market Brief.

Page 1: January 2014  Wealthbuilder Stock Market Brief.

Wealthbuilder Market Brief 12th

January 2014

Dow Theory Divergence: I have told my students and mentoring clients that they are going to get a great lesson in the

trading relevance of Dow Theory and technical analysis in the very near future.

For the last 10 trading days (two calendar weeks) the Dow Industrials have been trapped in a

tight trading range. In Dow Theory parlance this is called a “line”. The longer this line

progresses the more technically significant the breakout trend will be for savvy traders to exploit.

At the moment the Dow Transport Index is in bullish “breakout” mode and is in disagreement

with the Industrials. Thus we have a classic situation of Dow Divergence. This signifies that

there is significant uncertainty in the market place and with it corresponding increased risk.

How this will play out is anybody’s guess. Will the nifty Transports win the day and save the

Industrials or will the superior valuation weight of the Industrials over power the Transports?

Currently I am on the sidelines waiting for the market to tell me its secrets.

I don’t think we will have much longer to wait.

Dow Industrials: Daily

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Dow Transports: Daily

What Happened The Last Time A Major Central Bank "Tapered" QE? I am a fan of Janet Yellen.

In a way I am sorry that she has inherited such an incredibly complex FED driven situation from

Ben Bernanke. It has yet to be seen how she can balance QE tapering, interest rate inflation,

stock market “hyperbolia” and real estate trancing. I do wish her the very best.

In my view the jury is still out as to what will be the true market reaction to QE tapering.

Just before Christmas a fascinating little item appeared on Zero Hedge outlining in graphic

format what happened when Japan unwound tapering in 2006. I think it gives great food for

thought as we await the Dow Theory jury to decide the markets 2014 fate.

The Japanese Tapering Experience: Zero Hedge:

“After having followed a zero interest rate policy strategy and facing a further deteriorating

economy in an environment of falling prices (deflation), the Bank of Japan (BoJ) announced the

introduction of QE on 19 March 2001 and kept it in place until 9 March 2006. The BoJ chose

for a very orderly and gradual unwinding of its government securities portfolio, by continuing its

regular purchases of these securities (i.e. a taper and not sale). The market rejoiced at the

normalization for a week or 2... before dropping 24% in the following 2 months.

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Think a 24% “correction is OK” ? However, things "escalated". Here’s what happened

over the next 3 years: A 64% devaluation.”

I hope equity markets in America in no way mirror this Japanese scenario. Something tells

me 2014 is going to be a very very interesting year.

Page 4: January 2014  Wealthbuilder Stock Market Brief.

Just Look At What Is Happening In Europe Right Now: It is a new year and I want to be as positive as possible but it is important that American readers

realize that the economy in Europe is in reality a total basket case.

This crisis is not being adequately reported in the mainstream media. Why I do not know.

For example, yesterday in Dublin I had to get a watch repaired for my daughter. To get to the

shop where the gift was purchased I needed to go to a part of the city I had not been to for many

years. When I arrived at the city centre I was shocked. On this “busy” street shop after shop was

closed or in the process of closing down.

I asked a trader what was going on.

He said that property tax rate hikes, the online shopping paradigm shift and collapsing street

footfall were making it impossible to make retail ends meet.

He pointed out that this was not only happening in Dublin. He showed me specialist retail

newsletters which highlighted the fact that in towns all over Ireland retail “drags” were becoming

ghost malls. Whole main streets were being boarded up and falling into dis-repair. Retail Ireland,

he said, “was in collapse”.

This situation is not only an Irish experience. It is being felt throughout all of Europe.

I believe it is important that this truth reach common consciousness. Then perhaps the disaster

that is current Euro policy may be modified and allow the adoption of policies that nurture true

business development with concomitant employment growth. Without this Europe faces a grim

future.

To prove to you that my Dublin experience was not unique I present below a recent post by a

respected economic blogger:

Michael Snyder of The Economic Collapse blog:

“If you are anxiously awaiting the arrival of the "economic collapse", just open up your eyes and

look at what is actually happening in Europe. The entire continent is a giant economic mess

right now. Unemployment and poverty levels are setting record highs, car sales are setting

record lows, and there is an ocean of bad loans and red ink everywhere you look. Over the past

several years, most of the attention has been on the economic struggles of Greece, Spain and

Portugal and without a doubt things continue to get even worse in those nations.

But in 2014 and 2015, Italy and France will start to take center stage. France has the 5th

largest economy on the planet, and Italy has the 9th largest economy on the planet, and at this

point both of those economies are rapidly falling to pieces. Expect both France and Italy to

make major headlines throughout the rest of 2014. I have always maintained that the next major

wave of the economic collapse would begin in Europe, and that is exactly what is

happening. The following are just a few of the statistics that show that an "economic collapse"

is happening in Europe right now:

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1. The unemployment rate in the eurozone as a whole is still sitting at an all-time record high

of 12.1 percent.

2. It Italy, the unemployment rate has soared to a brand new all-time record high of 12.7

percent.

3. The youth unemployment rate in Italy has jumped up to 41.6 percent.

4. The level of poverty in Italy is now the highest that has ever been recorded.

5. Many analysts expect major economic trouble in Italy over the next couple of years. The

President of Italy is openly warning of "widespread social tension and unrest" in his nation in

2014.

6. Citigroup is projecting that Italy's debt to GDP ratio will surpass 140 percent by the year

2016.

7. Citigroup is projecting that Greece's debt to GDP ratio will surpass 200 percent by the year

2016.

8. Citigroup is projecting that the unemployment rate in Greece will reach 32 percent in 2015.

9. The unemployment rate in Spain is still sitting at an all-time record high of 26.7 percent.

10. The youth unemployment rate in Spain is now up to 57.7 percent - even higher than in

Greece.

11. The percentage of bad loans in Spain has risen for eight straight months and recently hit a

brand new all-time record high of 13 percent.

12. The number of mortgage applications in Spain has fallen by 90 percent since the peak of

the housing boom.

13. The unemployment rate in France has risen for 9 quarters in a row and recently soared to

a new 16 year high.

14. For 2013, car sales in Europe were on pace to hit the lowest yearly level ever recorded.

15. Deutsche Bank, probably the most important bank in Germany, is the most highly

leveraged bank in Europe (60 to 1) and it has approximately 70 trillion dollars worth of

exposure to derivatives.

16. It would be hard to put into words the extreme desperation that unemployed workers

throughout Europe are feeling right now. When you can't feed your family and you can't find

work no matter how hard you try, it can be absolutely soul crushing.

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To get an idea of the level of desperation in Spain, check out the following anecdote from a

recent NPR article:

“Having trouble wrapping your head around southern Europe's staggering unemployment

problem?

Look no further than a single Ikea furniture store manager’s experience on Spain's

Mediterranean coast.

Upon planning to open a new megastore next summer near Valencia Ikea's started taking

applications for 400 jobs at the location.

The company wasn't prepared for what came next.

Within 48 hours, more than 20,000 people (twenty thousand) had applied online for those 400

jobs. The volume crashed Ikea's computer servers in Spain, such is the level of desperation for

any work anywhere in Spain.”

Need one say more?

Thus my fervent New Year Irish wish is that throughout Europe truth begins to be reported rather

than agenda driven propaganda.

Charts courtesy of StockCharts.Com

© Christopher M. Quigley 12th

. January 2014