DJIM #14 2008

As the jobless rate spiked down to 2003 levels, it is almost impossible to argue a recession is in place, but it is also impossible to say that the Bear haven't lost it's grip on the markets as we saw the Bulls pulling the indices up and shrugging off the jobless number. As we discussed all last week, the ability of the market to hold onto its gain after the 3%+ rally was signalling the selling had cooled down and this time it would be different than what followed the March rallies of the same proportions. If this is indecision on the sellers than its good sign as they are not sure of things as before, the only argument they may use now is calling the low volume suspicious and that they are just waiting to rattle the rally. Either way, it's not your problem or ours as our goal is to capitalize when the chance arises and last week we think did just here as DJIM's players, our index you may say outperformed anything in sight. We had some nice alert leads ahead of the curve on CMP, DRYS, MELI and it's nice to see them getting some headlines right after. When you're ahead of the curve, you get a chance to sell to the herd!. That's the game!. CMP was noted on CNBC as a stealth play behind POT, MOS, we profiled it in December, and it spiked in premkt and was a feature story on IBD this weekend. DRYS was referenced on the front page of Barrons this weekend to a good story inside. Heading into the week, it's quite simple as there is no reason to change what's working and that's everything off our primary watchlist relating to...." Agri/chem, Steels, high beta Technology to Shippers, Solars and even oil stuff". What will most likely come to hand this week is an important technical picture to track. This is where volume comes into play that wasn't there last week, if it comes to the upside it will drive the market through resistance 12800. If we see the 12800 coming with dry volume, we will most likely take positions down and wait for a clearer picture to emerge. Right now, the Transports are leading the way and that is a very important positive signal for what possibly lies ahead for the rest of the indices, including the general economy. Little economic data flow this week should allow an opportunity to potentially trigger some of the resistances and that is what we'd closely track this week.
We've tweaked the DJIM primary tradelist, shadow list. We've taken down a few financials as we don't need to monitor, trade 4-5 now and a few others that are just boring now like SAM, HURC. Still the latter are EPS wins and if we get that trade again as we're starting to see, we'd keep them close to our primary list. We've added the GU, JST as more on the speculative side, reason speculative you may say is because we'd rather lay our bigger dollars on the expensive stuff that's been working as that is where the volume allowing for easy exit is and where the sideline money from institutions is flowing to. In the good ole'days when EPS and sector plays from midcaps rolled these would be on top of our list probably. Times have changed and we need to see the momo game come back to go heavy at this point in these types. Remember, if the mkt reverses in anything that resembles the past, these lower volume, cheaper plays will slide harder and have bigger spreads going down as buyers will dry up. Simply, don't become complacent now just because the market is good and you think you're indestructible. Others are included following mentions in alerts, Journal the past two weeks....MELI, RIG, CSX, SCHN. WLT is another name we're adding.











