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Recent market action is very typical of fourth quarter trading. Although we
are in the seasonally favorable November to April period (see Yale Hirsch's Stock
Traders Almanac for historical perspective), this does not mean the market
is immune to wide swings as it ebbs from overbought to oversold. I do believe,
however, that investors can look to buy any near-term correction, that the
market is lining up for a solid year-end rally with follow through likely into
2006.
I wrote on October 26th that a little more selling might be constructive.
While we weren't fortunate enough to get that final wave of selling, as odd
as that sounds, perhaps another short-term buying opportunity is coming soon.
The days surrounding Thanksgiving often bring about the completion, or re-test,
of the initial rally off the October lows. First we see the market bottom near
Halloween amidst oversold and sometimes washed out conditions; interestingly,
many times such action corresponds with the October 31st year-end for mutual
funds, which dump their losers at about this time as they close their books
for the year. A quick bounce frequently follows in early November, with a pause
to consolidate those quick gains coming later in the month that often lasts
until mid-December.
This pause may be no more than that nap on the couch between football games
on the way to more turkey after the guests leave.
Finally, perhaps as individual investors wrap up their tax-loss selling, we
start to see more strength into the last days of the year; it looks like such
classic market vigor is likely and I now believe that it will carry into 2006,
in contrast to 2005, when the January rally was a bust. Just yesterday one
intermediate-term indicator I closely monitor, the bullish percentage of all
optionable stocks, reversed up, confirming recent strength in shorter-term
gauges and giving me confidence of a more lasting up-trend.
Next year will certainly see some interesting developments. Despite what you
may have heard recently, history has actually been kind in the early months
of new Fed regimes and the stock market also tends to like the ending of the
tightening cycle. With one certain to occur in 2006 and the other one likely,
the combination of the two is likely to have a surprisingly powerful bullish
impact. Right now I am concentrating new buying in the Internet, Software,
Investment brokers, and with a further pullback, perhaps the Oils. International
holdings, particularly Latin America and emerging markets, also continue to
act well.
Because there seems to be so much to worry about rising interest rates,
avian flu, high energy prices, a politically damaged White House, the end of
the Greenspan era and more - the surprising move in early 2006 would be stock
market strength, which is precisely what makes that outcome likely. As a result,
investors should look to do some buying if the market takes its traditional
Thanksgiving nap.
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Bruce Zaro
Chief Technical Strategist
Delta Global Advisors, Inc.
877-746-4228
bzaro@deltaequity.com
Over his 20-year investment career, Mr. Zaro has become a highly-regarded
technical analyst who runs private client portfolios at Delta Global. For the
last 3 years, he served as Managing Director of Granite Wealth Management outside
of Boston and spent nearly 15 years prior as a Vice President at Gage Wiley & Co.
His current firm is full-service, but specializes in providing international
market access as well as alternative investment strategies.
Copyright © 2005-2007 Delta Global Advisors, Inc.
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