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To: Davy Crockett who wrote (47734)4/13/2012 1:02:33 PM
From: Johnny Canuck   of 49914
 
I think there is a psychological shift happening to traders. It is still too early in earnings season to see if it takes on a deeper conviction with traders.

aapl has some decent support at the $600 level. I would be more inclined to set my initial sell point at a break of $600. Keep in mind aapl is a volatile stock so I would set my stop a little looser than normal as it is easy to get stopped out early. The next support level is $550 and then there is a big gap in support based on volume by price.

aapl has been down 5 days in a row and volume has been declining each day as the selling pressure dries up. I would expect a bounce in the next 2 days. The strength or weakness of the bounce will tell you more about the psychology of traders in this stock.

Despite the 5 days of selling appl is still only off 3%. That is not much for such a volatile stock.

Remember that appl is product release and earning news driven stock for the most part. In between these event you are correct to assume it will loosely track the indices like the COMPQ as it is broadly held as a surrogate for technology.

appl in my mind has been less of a technology company and more of a lifestyle company like some of the fashion brand companys like KORS. It depends on selling consumers an image that just happend to be based on technology. Based on P/E it is cheap compared to other technology companies. It is at the high end of the P/E for a consumer lifestyle company though. Its execution is what has given it the premium. Without Jobs, can they achieve the same execute only time will tell. Some of that uncertainty is being priced in.



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To: Davy Crockett who wrote (47734)4/13/2012 1:17:13 PM
From: Johnny Canuck   of 49914
 
Despite what the VIX is saying I have to admit the lack of the ability of the indices to string together consistent and consecutive up or down days is getting a bit concerning. Traders are reacting to every tidbit of economic news rather than signaling confidence in a specific trend. That is a reflection of the reality that no one is sure if the world's economy is recovering, slowing for a safe landing or going to dramatically slow.








There is really not much to do except set you trailing stops and let the market take you out of positions, hopefully at a profit, and then wait for the next trend to emerge. The next trend could be up or down.

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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (47737)4/13/2012 1:23:00 PM
From: E_K_S   of 49914
 
Hi Johnny - Any technical opinion on the NG price and XCO. They seem to be tracking together (and should). I expect some type of eventual divergence when and if NG finally bottoms.

Is there support at NG $1.78?

EKS

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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (47737)4/13/2012 1:49:29 PM
From: Johnny Canuck   of 49914
 
High ROE, low debt and positive up trend scan 83 candidates

Ticker
AAPL
ABV
ACN
ADP
AE
AMOT
BBBY
BIDU
BIG
BIIB
BODY
BVN
CHRM
CMG
CNS
CRYP
CTSH
CYAN
DLTR
DMLP
DSW
DUSA
EDU
FDS
FHCO
FOSL
GMAN
GORO
GPC
GPRC
GWW
HIBB
INTC
ISRG
JOBS
LPH
LULU
MELI
MNST
MSB
MVO
NKE
NRCI
NRT
NTES
NUS
NVO
PCLN
PCYC
PII
PIR
PNRA
POZN
PWRD
PZZA
QCOR
RDA
RGR
ROST
RUE
SAM
SAVE
SBUX
SCSS
SKUL
SLP
STMP
SYNT
TARO
TCX
TDC
TGA
TJX
TNH
TPL
TRCR
TSCO
UAN
UG
ULTA
WCG
WD
YNDX

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To: E_K_S who wrote (47738)4/13/2012 2:04:05 PM
From: Johnny Canuck   of 49914
 
I don't really see a bottom for natural gas based on the chart. There is no historical precedent for the price of gas being this low. In addition there is some strong resistance in that $2.50-$2.60 range. There looks like there is sufficient volume today to get a short term bounce. The strength or lack there of in the bounce may indicate whether further weakness is ahead. This kind of damage usually takes time to work itself out. I would want to see the moving averages start to converge as a result of the price moving sideways for an extend period of time before looking for any kind of bottom.



As a counter point the natural gas index which I am assuming is a normalized price adjust index is showing some support in this area and technically looks due to bounce. I don't think we get any kind of sustained rally till the shoulder season is over though.




Keep in mind I don't follow the natural gas sector very closely.

When you are referring to XCO are you referring to the stock?



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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (47740)4/13/2012 2:44:47 PM
From: E_K_S   of 49914
 
Thanks Johnny -

Yes I am using XCO as a means to buy NG as they are a large NG E&P w/ lots of reserves. They seem to have been tracking the lows in the NG commodity. XCO (for me) also has a hidden asset gem in their 50% interest in a NG gathering & pipeline distribution called TGGT Holdings ( tggtholdings.com  ).

My premise is that eventually XCO's stock price will diverge from tracking NG prices and that will be the point to buy XCO. I calculated XCO's 50% interest in TGGT Holdings to be worth around $2.80/share. So when XCO sells at $5.77, the rest of the company w/ all their NG wells is selling for under $3.00/share.

So, if/when NG prices bottom, XCO may become a long term buy and hold stock for me. We are exploring historical 10 year lows in NG prices so it is indeed a long term view I am looking at. Any bottom will take several weeks if not months to establish it's self.

Been following your daily technical chart observations. They are pretty good. Maybe from time to time you can include a comment on NG and/or XCO.

Good recent charts and observations on GRH and RGDEF.

EKS

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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (47740)4/13/2012 2:48:25 PM
From: Johnny Canuck   of 49914
 

China’s Slowing Growth Shows Why BRICS Are Broken: Ruchir Sharma



By Daniel Gross


By Daniel Gross | Daily Ticker – 1 hour 36 minutes ago

China on Friday reported that its economy grew at an annualized rate of 8.1 percent in the first quarter, down from 8.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011.


The phenomenon of slowing growth in one of the world's booming economies is one we may have to get used to, says Ruchir Sharma, author of Breakout Nations: In Pursuit of the Next Economic Miracles. Sharma is the rare pundit who puts other people's money where his mouth is. He's head of emerging market equities and global macro at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, which runs about $25 billion in emerging market assets.

In Breakout Nations, Sharma takes readers on a tour of the world. And one of his big takeaways is that the huge economies that have been growing at such a rapid clip — the BRIC bloc of Brazil, Russia, India and China — are not likely to repeat their performance of the past decade.

"If you look at the history of investing, you find there's always some theme that captures the imagination in a particular decade, and then it runs out of gas the following decades." Think of tech stocks in the 1990s, Japan in the 1980s, gold and inflation plays in the 1970s. In the 200s, Sharma notes, "every single emerging market did extremely well." Fueled by easy money and rising volumes of trade, emerging economies that grew at a 3 percent clip in the 1980s and 1990s began to sport growth rates of 6 percent or more. "The biggest beneficiaries of this were the largest emerging markets," he said — i.e. the BRICs.

But a look under the hood reveals that these speedsters have some problems. China, Sharma notes, may not be "too big to boom." People tend to overlook the fact that China, with a per capita income of about $6,000, has already become a middle income country. "And it's much harder to grow form a large base." Thirty years of a one-child policy have left China with a demographic imbalance. Rapid urbanization has been a huge driver of growth. But now, 50 percent of Chinese people already live in urban areas. "I'm not saying China is going to collapse, but it can't keep growing out at 8 percent," Sharma said. "China is maturing as an economy and needs to slow down. The country may be shifting into lower gear, and this quarter's GDP report may be the first sign of that trend.

Sharma says that the downshift has already started in the other three components of the BRIC bloc. India, whose economy is hamstrung by political corruption and poor infrastructure, is settling back into a 6-7 percent growth band. Even with the continuing commodity boom, Russia's economy only managed to grow about four percent in 2011. And in 2011, Brazil turned in an unspectacular performance of about three percent growth. Sharma sees Brazil's struggles continuing, in part because it has an expensive currency. "That's making their industries uncompetitive," he said. One of Sharma's favorite indicators is the Four Seasons Index — essentially how much it costs to stay at a posh Four Seasons Hotel in different markets around the world. (I hereby volunteer for the arduous job of compiling the relevant data). "The index shows that Brazil and Russia are two of the most expensive emerging markets in terms of exchange rates."


finance.yahoo.com 

[Johnny: We have reference this phenomena before on the thread. The decline of westernized nations as the direct driver of world economies is also a trend that needs to be taken into consideration. America is on the verge of making the shift that we saw the United Kingdom where there was a shift from the pound sterling as the fiat currency to the American dollar. It may go back to a gold back currency till an new fiat currency emerges.]

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To: Davy Crockett who wrote (47734)4/13/2012 7:16:14 PM
From: Davy Crockett   of 49914
 
Thanks for the analysis Johnny. Much appreciated!

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To: Davy Crockett who wrote (47734)4/14/2012 2:01:34 PM
From: Johnny Canuck   of 49914
 
I would expect any fall out from the price fixing lawsuit on e-books will be minor. They have enough of a war chest to pay billions of dollars in fines and still not make a dent in their ability to grow and develop the next technology.

I would be more concerned if the next technology will sustain their growth. The next iPad was not really the game changer most people expected. The next iPhone is going to have to something special to keep the momentum growing. There has been some negative feedback on Siri not living up to the hype. It has not effected them negative as there were other apps such as video conference that have kept the momentum going. Keep in mind the video conferencing was WiFi based as opposed to 4G so the hype around 4G is overrated.

Again this company is a lot about spin and creating a lifestyle image. Sometime the technology does not have to live up to the hype.

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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (47744)4/14/2012 2:25:57 PM
From: Tim Lamb   of 49914
 
Hi JC:

I think Siri on the phone will continue to improve. Maybe by version 3.

Hard to see what the next "it" thing is that will drive growth with the app store. Not that the phone or pad have yet run their course. I know a lot more people and business moving to Mac because of the Ipad.

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