THE DAILY RECKONING WEEKEND EDITIONSeptember 23-24, 2000 Paris, France By Addison Wiggin MARKET REVIEW: Dow and Nasdaq Get a Late Friday Reprieve
But End the Week Lower All the Same.
"We got a reprieve from the hangman today," says an analyst in Reuters of Friday's action. The 'buy the dip' crowd moved in at mid-session and brought the Dow to a positive close - up 81 to 10,847
after the blue-chip index had shed more than 140 points early. The Dow lost 80 points this week. The Nasdaq shimmied down 25 to close the week at 3803 - an overall loss of 32. Not bad considering
Intel's poor earnings announcement had driven the home of the Big Techs down 210 early in the day. More below
The S&P 500 shed 37 for the week
heading for Happy Hour at 1448. Comparatively, the Nasdaq is now down below it's moving average for the first time since early June and has under-performed the S&P 500 since last March. And in case you hadn't noticed
there was some noteworthy political meddling in the markets on Friday
According to the Wall Street Journal President Clinton "directed the release of 30 million barrels of oil from the government's emergency reserve in an attempt to drive down oil prices." Even though "the release is a drop in the bucket, not even enough oil to sustain the U.S. for 48 hours" (John Myers) oil dropped $1.32
and the Fed, Bank of England and the European Central Bank announced they would intervene in the market to stem the hemorrhaging euro - giving it a quick bounce back to US$.87. The Russell 2000 rose 4 to 518, down 12 since your last arousing issue of the Weekend Edition. The Wilshire Smallcap closed at 857
up 5.5 Friday, but down 16 for the week. PRICES for the week
The FED, Bank of England and European Central Bank agree to put the euro on 'life support'
Gold: $2.73, down $.03
Crude Oil: $32.68, down $3.24
Natural Gas: $5.13, down $.07
Platinum: $585, down a buck
Palladium: $727, up seven
CRB Index: 226.6, down 1.7
Dollar Index: 113.5 down 1.46
Yen: $.009 same ol', same ol'
The sad, sad Euro: $.87 up a penny
British Pound: $1.45, up $.06
Today, in Paris, you can buy 7.48 French Francs with one crisp US dollar
MARKET COMMENTS: Poster Child for The New Era gets a taste of Creative Destruction
"Intel became the poster child of limitless growth when co-founder Gordon Moore asserted the amount of information storable on a chip could roughly double every 18 months
But on Thursday, Intel warned of disappointing third quarter earnings. It was a surprise announcement. On Friday Intel fell more than 13 to 48, way down from its September high of 75. With Intel showing its Achilles heel, the tech sector looks to be facing rough seas." John Myers,
Real Asset Investor
HOT PICKS OF THE WEEK: Hot Calls in the Energy Sector
And A Quick Short In Transportation
"70% on Dynergy in just 5 days
47% on Continental Airlines
39.5% on El Paso gas."
Lynn Carpenter,
Contrarian Speculator
* * * * * * * * Advertisement * * * * * * * * * * *
The Day The Music Died
In the hubris of the Summer of '29, no one wanted to hear warning signs. The flappers danced. The bootleggers drank. The speakeasies were packed. Benny Goodman band hits blared on RCA radios. And the party on Wall Street roared. Late in October, Winston Churchill was visiting New York City on a lecture tour
walking down Wall Street he stopped to see the home of the 'eighth wonder of the world' the longest bull market in history - the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Interestingly enough, there was no panic on the floor that day
click here . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * THE DAILY RECKONING INVESTOR'S LIBRARY
Are you going to end the year with a smile - or a tax loss?
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In this edition of the DAILY RECKONING INVESTOR'S LIBRARY, you'll learn model strategies used by some of the most successful traders on Wall Street to create a stable, winning portfolio - with significant tax advantages. Get your free copy of this special report here. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * FLOTSAM AND JETSAM: You think the search for "Pi" will drive you mad
?
Every week, the world awaits numbers crunched by the BLS. Fortunes are won and lost, jobs and lives impacted, by the mathematical musings of a few government quants. Did you ever wonder how the Bureau of much Labored Statistics comes up with all those numbers? CPI, PPI, GDP, GNP, Productivity
Here's a few "basic formulas" from the Bureau of Economic Analysis website: "Basic Formulas for Calculating Chain-Type Quantity and Price Indexes Annual indexes
The formula used to calculate the annual change in real GDP and other components of output and expenditures is a Fisher index (Q_t_^F^) that uses weights for 2 adjacent years (years t-1 and t). The formula for real GDP in year t relative to its value in year t-1 is Q_t_^F^ = {? p_t-1_q_t_? p_t-1_q_t-1_} x {? p_t_q_t_? p_t_q_t-1_}, where the p's and q's represent prices and quantities of detailed components in the 2 years. Because the first term in the Fisher formula is a Laspeyres quantity index (Q_t_^L^), or Q_t_^L^ = {? p_t-1_q_t_? p_t-1_q_t-1_}, and the second term is a Paasche quantity index (Q_t_^P^), or Q_t_^P^ = {? p_t_q_t_? p_t_q_t-1_}, the Fisher formula can also be expressed for year $t$ as the geometric mean of these indexes as follows: Q_t_^F^ = Q_t_^L^ x Q_t_^P^. The percent change in real GDP (or in a GDP component) from year t-1 to year t is calculated as 100(Q_t_^F^ - 1.0). Similarly, price indexes are calculated using the Fisher formula P_t_^F^ = {? p_t_q_t-1_? p_t-1_q_t-1_} x {? p_t_q_t_? p_t- 1_q_t_}, which is the geometric mean of a Laspeyres price index (P_t_^L^) and a Paasche price index: (P_t_^P^), or P_t_^F^ = P_t_^L^ x P_t_^P^. The chain-type quantity index value for period t is I_t_^F^ = I_t-1_^F^ x Q_t_^F^, and the chain-type price index is calculated analogously. Chain-type real output and price indexes are presented with the base year (b) equal to 100; that is, I_b_ = 100. The current-dollar change from year t-1 to year t expressed as a ratio is equal to the product of the Fisher price and quantity indexes: {? p_t_q_t_? p_t-1_q_t-1_} = P_t_^F^ x Q_t_^F^. < P > "Chained-dollar" Estimates The chained-dollar value (CD_t_^F^) is calculated by multiplying the index value by the base-period current- dollar value (? p_b_q_b_) and dividing by 100. For period t, CD_t_^F^ = ? p_b_q_b_ x I_t_^F^ / 100
" Well, what do you think
GDP, CPI?
piece of cake. I'll have the figures for you by Monday.
Have a good weekend,
Addison
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * "The un-philosophical majority among men are the ones most helplessly dependent on their era's dominant ideas. In times of crises these men need the guidance of some kind of theory; but, being unfamiliar with the field of ideas, they do not know that alternatives to the popular theories are possible. They know only what they have always been taught." - Leonard Peikoff |