*****Graham Corp
*****Recovery Portfolio
We know that the stock market is forward-looking. That’s because investors attempt to anticipate future prices based on what is known today. If stocks react strongly to news, it means that investors were taken by surprise. They then have to adjust their price expectations.
When stocks rally on what appears to be bad news, that’s a sign that investors have anticipated that news and adjusted prices accordingly. Investors tend to overshoot, and the news can never be perfectly anticipated – that’s what makes the stock market so interesting. To me, anyway.
*****Sometimes, the stock market crystal ball gets a little cloudy. Like earlier this week. Stocks rallied strongly at the end of 2008 and for the first few days of 2009. Stocks then sold off sharply as several companies lowered their earnings estimates.
Yesterday’s action encourages me that profit-taking was the correct answer. After an already decimated retail sector posted worse-than-expected holiday sales, stocks took a nosedive. But buyers stepped in to stage a late day rally that left the Dow with minimal losses and the Nasdaq with a slight gain.
That rally out of the hole was a good sign that investors are comfortable with current stock valuations, even when there is worse-than-expected news.
*****If investors are comfortable with valuations, it’s critical to ask why. Why do investors feel optimistic about stocks? Obviously, that’s a tough one, so let’s turn to a colloquialism from my
He likes to say that when you’ve got yourself in a hole, the first thing to do is stop digging. For the most part, it appears that investors believe that we’ve stopped digging. The worst has happened. While unemployment may still rise and the housing market hasn’t bottomed, we’ve reached the point where we’re working to get out of the hole.
And I still say that there is some optimism for President-elect Obama’s stimulus plans.
*****Yesterday, I suggested it may be time to take our profits on Graham Corp. (AMEX:
I suspect that oil has already hit its lows around $35. Plus, Graham has broken above its 50 day moving average. That puts support around $11.50. It’s close to that now. And Jason Cimpl, the junior strategist at TradeMaster Daily Stock Alerts, tells me that if Graham drops below its 50-day MA, it’s probably going to $10 a share. A limit sell at $11.40 might be wise.
*****In the December 29 edition of Daily Profit, I let it slip that I was putting up $100,000 of my own money to show individual investors how they can use "an aggressive approach to conservative investing" and start taking back losses from 2008.
Well, I’m happy to announce that Ian Wyatt’s $100,000 Recovery Portfolio will launch with a special video presentation on January 22, at
We’ve opened pre-registration. If you’d like to attend, here’s the LINK
*****I know I’m starting to sound like a broken record, but I couldn’t get to the next round of reader mail again. I’ll shoot for Monday. With a whole weekend, I should be able find the time. As always, thanks for your emails.