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Stocks Vulnerable to Selling in September
Stocks Vulnerable to Selling in September
By, DARYL MONTGOMERY
Aug 31, 2010
The Dow Industrials will end August down around 4%. September could be much worse however since the technical condition of the market continues to weaken. If the economic numbers show the economy continues to move down, the market is likely to fall right along with it.
 

U.S. stocks are set to close out August with the Dow Industrials (NYSEArca: DIA) dropping more than 4% on the month. If the economic numbers continue to indicate a possible double-dip recession however, stocks are likely to fall by a much greater amount in September.

Historically, it isn't crash-prone October when U.S. stocks have their worse performance, but September. Stocks are entering the month in a technically weakened state that began earlier in the summer. In July, all four major indices - the Dow Industrials, the S&P 500 (NYSEArca: SPY), the Nasdaq (NasdaqGM: ONEQ) and the Russell 2000 (NYSEArca: IWM) - began a bear market trading pattern when their 50-day moving averages fell below their 200-day moving averages (sometimes referred to hyperbolically as a death cross). This is not enough to confirm a bear market however. The 200-day moving average needs to also start moving down. This has happened on the Dow Industrials and the S&P 500 in the last few trading days. The 200-days on the Nasdaq and the Russell 2000 have been moving sideways for a week or more and should start dropping soon. The Dow Transportation Average also needs to have a 50-day 200-day cross to confirm the negative action on the Industrials. As long as there isn't a massive rally, this will happen today. So stocks will be entering September in a technically vulnerable condition.

If more negative economic reports that indicate the economy continues to deteriorate then take place, the mix could be combustible. More hints of a double-dip recession from jobs or manufacturing would be especially damaging. Housing numbers this fall probably won't affect the market as much because things simply can't get any worse (with the exception of housing prices, which still have a lot of room to drop). The bad news on housing from the summer - numbers worse than those at the bottom of the Credit Crisis - may have a delayed impact on stocks though. Jobs have been the perennial weak spot of the attempted recovery and numbers have continually been at recession levels for over two years. Worsening unemployment figures would not be viewed kindly by stock traders. Falling manufacturing numbers won't be either since manufacturing led the economy up from its bottom in the fourth quarter of 2008.

U.S. stocks (NYSEArca: VTI) may also be following Japanese stocks (NYSEArca: EWJ) down. The Nikkei dropped 325 points or 3.55% in its last day of August trade. It is now at 8824 and could easily test its Credit Crisis bottom, which is around 2000 points lower. U.S. investors need to watch the key 10,000 level on the Dow Industrials and 1000 on the S&P 500. Stocks moving and staying below these key points would damage sentiment severely. The only thing left at that point to hold up the market would be the Fed's liquidity injections. These might work until the election on November 2nd. If so, you may not want to own stocks later that week.

Disclosure: No positions

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

Daryl Montgomery is an independent contributor to ETFguide. His viewpoints do not necessarily reflect those of ETFguide or the ETF Profit Strategy Newsletter. 

 
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 Comments
Tony said on September 01, 2010
  When do we get a revision to today's ISM that barely came in better than projections. Abliet it showed that the manufacturing sector is expanding, we know that this is being gamed by the fed's intervention.
 
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Larry said on September 01, 2010
  Looks like the black box traders (always buying) saw this article and decided to show who's boss on Sept 1... :^) I agree that all the news is not good. Getting impatient for the big leg down.
 
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ace8 said on August 31, 2010
  good article Daryl and I think your analysis is spot on. The Federal Reserve, the SEC -- all of them -- are going to have one heck of a time taming the 2nd and 3rd round of market madness. U.S. stocks are not cheap, because corporate earnings have been manipualated to appease auditors and accounting boards. Most shareholders are clueless about what's really happening behind the scenes at their beloved companies. Also, the SEC's vote to give shareholders more power in the boardroom is too little too late. It's the kind of patch work they should've done decades ago. What took them so long?
 
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 Author Profile
Bullet DARYL MONTGOMERY
  New York Investing meetup
  Organizer
  Mr. Montgomery is Author of Inflation Investing – A Guide for the 2010s. He's an independent market strategist and trader along with organizer of the New York Investing meetup.
  http://investing.meetup.com/21
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