Market summary - dead on accurate
posted on
Feb 13, 2012 12:59PM
CUU own 25% Schaft Creek: proven/probable min. reserves/940.8m tonnes = 0.27% copper, 0.19 g/t gold, 0.018% moly and 1.72 g/t silver containing: 5.6b lbs copper, 5.8m ounces gold, 363.5m lbs moly and 51.7m ounces silver; (Recoverable CuEq 0.46%)
The author here is right on the money so to speak. It addresses a lot of the questions about our sp. When you factor in the specifics that we know about our stock with this general information you get a better idea of what's to come.
Stocks gave up some of the gains they have made over the past 6 weeks as investors took profits on Friday. This move was expected for a number of reasons. Anytime a market moves up for 6 weeks straight, there is a high probability that traders will want to sell positions and lock in short term profits. They will tend to do this as markets come in to resistance, which is what the S&P 500 did this week. Finally, the VIX broke its downward trend line on Wednesday and in to Thursday. The VIX is an indication of fear as it moves up when investors start paying more for options which many investors use as insurance.
Thus far, the weakness does not represent a signal that the market is going to go in to a lasting downward trend. Investors who are in the market remain optimistic overall as the upward trend line has not been violated.
Volume has been light so, while market participants are optimistic, they are hardly a large group. Most investors continue to sit on the sidelines in cash. The stability of the US Treasury bond market over the past six weeks tells us that money remains in safety even while stocks have been going up.
The rally in stocks since Dec 20th has been on very light volume. Normally, it takes volume to move stocks up because the buyers have to overcome willful sellers. In this market, it seems the market has been going up because there is a lack of sellers. A drift higher for no apparent good reason has been the result.
The market has been so tumultuous over the past few years that any weak stomached investors have now thrown in the towel. That leaves primarily longer term money invested in stocks. The typical retail investor is not participating in this market.
That makes this recent rally one for traders, those with a myopic view for their trades, eager to move in and out in a relatively short time frame. Therefore, just as this has been a trader rally, I expect the pull back to also be short term in nature. There will be profit taking in the very short term but I don't expect the long term turnaround to finish.
Look for the market to show uncertainty over the next week or two but strength in the months ahead. This strength will be driven by a change in investor psychology, resolution of problems in Europe and a slowly improving global economy. We should not underestimate the potential for stimulus that tends to comes with a US Presidential election.
What we have seen in recent weeks is a move away from the high correlation between assets. Stocks are not all moving together the way they did for the latter half of 2011. Individual stocks are able to make strong, market beating moves if they capture the attention of investors.
I continue to seek out stocks that show abnormal trading activity out of otherwise boring trading. It is reasonable to expect good things when stocks make a strong price gain on heavy volume after trading very quietly for some time.
Remember that stocks and markets do not move on what has happened, they move on what investors expect will happen. Looking at headlines has little use because that information is already priced in. Always look forward and what change is coming when you are analyzing any stock or market.
It is difficult to buy stocks when there is no apparent reason to do so. The emotionally hard trade is usually the right one to take, waiting for everyone to agree that a stock is good means you are getting in too late. To be successful, you have to buy in to the risk phase, not the reward phase.