As deflation ignites, Japan and its Abe, is chasing the last idea that didn’t work, Bernanke’s legacy of QE’s. The only thing that I can say, is you should probably be long the dollar and the long bond as the…Continue Reading →
Casey Research has always been a little “out there”. The “white shoe” crowd will not have a clue when reality hits so a little bit of an outside view may be good at this time. So take a look at…Continue Reading →
So what is new. Nothing. The same people who are allowing the economic world to go into the tank are scared enough to indicate that they might do more of something that didn’t work before. All this happy talk should…Continue Reading →
We have a measure that we apply to the market that measures what we call “Fed Confidence”. In a sense it is both a measure of how confident the Fed is in what they are doing and a measure of…Continue Reading →
Today’s knee jerk rally is just another a__ backwards view of the world. Does the fact that the FED is scared about the economy a reason to buy stocks? One has to question why the stock market would go higher…Continue Reading →
The tried and true Granville OBV indicator turned negative for the Dow Industrial on the close yesterday, the first down signal since April 28th 2014. Granted that it was only negative for a little over twenty days on that prior…Continue Reading →
On the S&P, the lower boundaries of the core trading box that was built a few weeks ago, 1990 to 2011 and the expanded trading box 1979 to 2020 needs to be tested from a technical standpoint. That is what…Continue Reading →
Outside of the three big US markets, the Dow, S&P, and Nasdaq, we watch a lot of indicators that normally provide a feel for the market. Thing like commodities, world stocks like “GDOW” etc, usually help us to see what…Continue Reading →
I have been asked about our market call on September 18th, “The Perfect Ending”ie, what was it based on? The answer could be long or short, the long answer is read all of our posts since QE3 was triggered two…Continue Reading →
We continue to feel that risk-off market positions are the direction to be followed. The recent tight trading box on the S&P between 1990 and 2011 price levels remains a prominent technical factor with the Swing Point being 2000.64. The…Continue Reading →