Dow, NASDAQ and S&P all crater on good news

When good news is bad news.

Hooray, hooray the Fed cut interest rates 25 basis point yesterday ... good news, right? This should have been good news for stocks so why did the markets crater? If the FED had cut by 50 basis points, would the market have fallen twice as far?

Here's a case of good news being bad news. When the market finally digest the Fed notes and saw that the odds where high that the FED was done cutting for the year, it said to itself OH, OH, no more getting the keys from the FED to take stocks for a ride.

Here's my take, and we have mentioned this before on this blog. The longs after a five year bull run are just tired. The technicals are beginning to break down and weaken.

MarketClub members should look at the MACD and see that several major indicies are rolling over but have not yet dropped into a full bear mode.

Here are the key levels we are watching very carefully ...

DOW: Major Support at 12,517

S&P: Major Support at 1,370

NASDAQ: Major Support at 2,386

We would go into an extreme bearish mode if these levels were to give way. Right now the indices are in a broad trading range that appers to have a negative bias.

As we have said before it's going to be a bumpy and interesting ride.

Watch the trade triangles for confirmation.

Good luck and stay tuned to this blog for updates.

Adam Hewison

Dollar Likely To Drop No Matter What Fed Does - Hewison Quoted By MarketWatch

Dollar likely to drop no matter what Fed does
Greenback to stay under pressure whether the Fed cuts a lot, a little or not at all


By Lisa Twaronite, MarketWatch
Last Update: 5:20 PM ET Oct 30, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- As analysts ponder the U.S. Federal Reserve's next move on interest rates, currency investors ponder the likely market reaction, and the consensus for both is that it's a matter of degree, no direction.

Just as no one is expecting an interest rate high Wednesday, no one is betting on a sustained dollar rally this quarter, either. And just as bad economic or corporate headlines -- or even record-high crude oil prices -- rarely seem to derail stock market rallies these days, nothing the Fed delivers is likely to halt the greenback's slide.

Whether the Fed cuts its benchmark a quarter percentage point, as expected, or a half-point -- or even not at all -- the dollar is likely to bear the near-term brunt of the market's kneejerk reaction either way, and then move in one direction: down.

Regardless of whether or not the Fed cuts rates, "the dollar is in for a beating," said Marilyn McDonald, marketing director at Interbank FX.

"The U.S. dollar is finally in trouble. For quite some time now, it has been onof the top five yielding currencies among the [Group of 10 industrialized] nations, which is why it has been used in the carry trade for so long," she said.

Carry trades involve borrowing lower-yielding currencies, such as the yen, and investing it in high-yielding assets. The dollar has long benefited from such trades, but the benefits are dropping in line with U.S. interest rates.

"While this doesn't mean it has a bright future as a funding currency -- that will only happen if it drops into the 3% range -- it does mean that the carry trade is in trouble," said McDonald.

No cut?

Many economists and investors are betting that the Federal Open Market Committee will lower the target on the federal funds rate to 4.5%, down from 4.75% currently, and a few are betting on a large cut to 4.25%. Read story on Fed meeting outlook.

But Wall Street Journal Fed watcher Greg lp suggested that central bankers may not cut interest rates at all on Wednesday, contrary to market expectations lp said inflation concerns persisted, especially when the dollar's recent weakness.

"The behavior of financial markets implies near certainty by investors of a quarter-point cut in the Fed's key short-term interest rate," wrote lp. "But for policy makers, the decision is between the quarter-point reduction and no cut at all."

Since the lower rates erode the returns on dollar-denominated assets, all things being equal, the dollar should theoretically benefit if rates stayed steady. But all things are not equal, and the dollar would probably drop if the Fed stands pat.

"No cut would be a shock and be viewed as a negative for the dollar," said Meg Browne, senior currency strategists at Brown Brothers Harriman.

"The Fed would be seen as not proactive especially given warning that [the forth quarter] was likely to slow. Expectations for a 50 basis-point cut would shift to the next meeting in December. The dollar would likely sell off and stay sold off, " she said.

"We don't expect the dollar's downtrend to come to an end until sometime in [the first quarter] when the U.S. economy shows signs of stabilizing," she added.

Shortcovering possible

Tuesday afternoon, the euro touched a fresh record high of $1.4440 against the dollar since the European unit began trading in January 1999.

The euro is now testing strong resistance between $1.4500 and $1.4545, the latter being its all-time high based on the Deutschemark's record high before the European nations united behind a single currency, according to BNP Paribas technical analyst Andre Chaveriat.

The euro "has scope to reach $1.4500 or $1.4545 to $1.4600 with an 'as-expected' 25 basis point cut, and if they surprise with a 50 basis point cut, we could see $1.4700 to $1.4750, " he said in emailed comments.

Other technical analysts, even those who believe the dollar's downtrend is intact, did not rule out a brief dollar rally after Wednesday's Fed announcement. If the dollar doesn't fall as much as some investors expected, those who bet on a plunge might be forced to buy back the dollar to cover their short positions.

"We expect to see the dollar remain under pressure until the Fed announces, " predicted said Adam Hewison, president of INO.com, a technical analysis Web site.

"I think this could be a case of buy the rumor/sell the news. In this case it would be sell the dollar then cover when the Fed announces, " he said.

"We are close to our $1.450 euro/dollar target zone and like any good player it pays to take some chips off the table," he said.

Lisa Twaronite reports for MarketWatch form San Francisco.


*MarketWatch is a registered trademark and belongs to the Dow Jones Companies

Trick or Treat from the FED and Chairman Bernanke

The markets are waiting, we are waiting, the world is waiting to see what the FED is going to do this afternoon.

Traders that I am hearing from are mixed in their opinions. The consensus seems to be that we will see a cut of 25 basis points.

What if the Fed cuts 25 basis points and the market does nothing, what then?? The markets particularly the DOW and the S&P 500 are all acting a little tired but have not turned down and entered into a negative phase. Today could change all that.

The bright spots and strength have all been on the NASDAQ with APPLE, GOOGLE and RIM acting as the juggernauts of the economy.

It's going to be a volatile day, so fasten your seat belts and get ready for a scary ride.

Stay safe,

Adam Hewison

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China Correction? - Hewison on CNBC

China is red hot right now, but could a correction be in the near future?

Adam Hewison, of INO.com, and Zachery Karabel, of
Fred Alger Mgmt., share their insight.



Excerpt from show...

Burnett: “So Adam, this sounds very rational out of Zachery, but your saying we're not just talking about any old correction. We're talking about something very soon and very large...”

Hewison: “When we look at the market on a technical basis and we've been tracking the FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index (FXI), which is the main index over there, for quite sometime and it charts beautifully. It actually is quite predictable. We're looking for a high this market, we had, actually its great to be on the show today because we hit a new high over 30,000. But we're looking for the market to possibly trade as high as 33,000 and then we're looking for a 20% correction. I'm not going to disagree with Mr. Buffet, he's one of the best investors around in the history of the world. And, he's skeptical and I'm skeptical too."

Burnett: “And your saying 20% in China means at least 10% as a result here in the U.S. Market?”

Hewison: “That's how it's worked in the past, we've seen a 20% correction In China; we've had three 20% corrections that we can track and each time it has meant a, uh, the last one was about a 10% correction in the U.S. So I'm guessing that's what's going to happen here.

Burnett: “So Adam let me ask you... I was just looking here at my screen at things that were up more than were up more than 5% today, John Deer was up, Goldman Sachs was up and then this thing FXI was the ticker which happens to be the FTSE/Xinhua China 25 Index, and that's the way you would trade this and I guess you would go short that?”

Hewison: “I wouldn't go short. I mean a 20% decline... I wouldn't want to sit through a 20% decline, no one, no investor does. But I think if you're an intermediate term trader you may want to take some chips off the table now with this FXI index, which is the best way I believe to trade the China trade.”

Burnett: “Alright so take some money off the table there.”

To Watch The Video ... Click Here Or On Video Image

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