Wow! That was some week. As I went back through what happened, it is hard to believe it all happened in one week. There was:
- the Nationalization of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and AIG;
- the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy;
- Bank of America's purchase of Merrill Lynch;
- historic government actions and regulations to reduce short-selling;
- massive government intervention on a worldwide scale;
- a Fed meeting;
- Government discloses a plan to buy-up the bad assets;
- billions of dollars of liquidity pushed into the market; and
- an incredibly aggressive short squeeze.
Here is what it looked like on a weekly chart of the Dow.
Wall Street experienced several of the best and worst days in its history. Fear spiked early in the week, and there were two days that saw markets lose about 5%. Individually, each of those down-moves was bigger than anything we've seen since 9/11. Then after what many will call a Key Reversal Day, there was a breakaway gap higher of more than 4% on Friday.
Somehow, foreign markets were even more volatile. For example Russia's RTS Index had a 17% loss in one day, and had trading halted for two days, only to gain 22% when it opened again on Friday.
It all happened last week.
So, where do we find ourselves? Somehow, pretty much where we were at the beginning of the week. Except you know something important happened. It even trickled down to Saturday Night Live. This week there were several SNL skits related to the market and the market action. People were spooked. More importantly, governments were spooked.
We are witnessing unprecedented market action. I suspect that they will be writing about this period in history books.
Hopefully the actions taken by the government will ultimately have a positive impact. From a trader's perspective, it sure hasn't been easy.
So, how did the interventions affect the markets. One way to see is to look at how various sectors performed this week. This chart, from Bespoke, shows that Financials and Energy were the beneficiaries this week.
Here are a few of the posts I found interesting this week:
- Bush Defends Bail-Out (WSJ)
- "The Week That Changed American Capitalism" (Big Picture)
- Chart Showing Big Gains in Global Markets late last week (Bespoke, FT, NYTimes)
- Does Thursday Qualify as a Key Reversal Day? (MarketWatch, Quantifiable Edges)
- VIX Spikes to 42 on Fear last week (VIX and More)
- A Market Indicator that Shows What Panic Looks Like (Trader's Narrative)
- Swenlin Analyzes recent charts looking for perspective on the Bottom (Decision Point)
- How common is a week with multiple daily losses greater than 4% ? (Bespoke)
- Short-Selling Ban Spreads to Foreign Markets (Big Picture)
- Treasury to Guarantee Money Market Funds (Intl. Herald Tribune)
- Treasury Seeks Authority to Buy $700BB of Toxic Assets (Bloomberg)
- Interactive graphic of $1.86 Trillion of Losses in the Financial Sector this year (NYTimes)
- Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to become Bank Holding Companies (WSJ)
And, a little bit extra:
- SEC Bans Frowning (Financial Sense)
- How Wall Street Lied to Its Computers (NYTimes)
- How close did we come to Armageddon in the markets (NY Post)
- Here is the text of the Plan Paulson presented to Congress (Kedrosky)
Weekly Commentary through September 26th, 2008
This was a tough week for the markets. Strangely, it might soon prove to have been a good week for the markets as well.
So what is it going to take for the markets to finally bounce? History shows that most intermediate or long-term bottoms are characterized by panic selling, hopelessness, and people simply giving-up. If that is the standard, then we may be close.
Here is some of the evidence of the fear, uncertainty, doubt that often accompanies bottoms:
However, as bad as the markets did last week, they held up reasonably well considering how much bad news there has been and how close to the edge things really were (or are). Also, while markets went down, it was on lower volume than last week, and we didn't break last week's low.
The Calm After the Storm. It's also probably worth noting that, historically, periods of great volatility are often followed by periods of much less volatility.
With that in mind, I do believe that the government will reach a reasonable compromise to end the "Deal - or No Deal" situation very quickly. It's also likely that this agreement and the liquidity that it brings will give the markets some room to breathe and some fuel for a meaningful rally.
On the other hand, there is a long way to go from here to recovery. Some people see this as the end of the crisis. At best, I see this as the end of the first step on the road to recovery.
You Can't Bounce Until you Hit Bottom. There are many corollaries in nature. This troubling time created a clearing. Much of the fear, uncertainty, doubt, and baggage from past mistakes are being wiped away. Firms are closing, the landscape is changing, Wall Street and our economy will literally never be the same again. And, yet, this kind of clearing is often the catalyst to new beginnings and fast growth.
Noise Reduction. When creating automated trading systems, one of the things that becomes increasingly important is to recognize the difference between signal and noise. Right now, there's a lot of noise. The markets, market players, and even governments are spooked. Under those circumstances, it doesn't take much to stir things up.
The bailout and worldwide cooperation can be looked at as noise reduction. Temporarily, there will be a forced and tenuous peace. The hope is that as things calm down, people will make decisions from a stronger position (or at least from a position that's less fearful than where they are now).
Remember, a journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. Here's to progress.
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