Posting Times

Posts will be between 8:30 PM to 10:00 PM PST
Mikey's Short Term Trading Rules

1) Make up a list of stocks, commodities or ETF's to trade. This list should be names that have good earnings and high relative strength.
2) Monitor this list and throw out the weaker names
3) Buy only stocks or ETF's that are intermediate and daily up (green) and the market is Daily and intermediate term up (green)
4) Buy pullbacks on these stocks to the 20 and 50 day averages
Usually you get 4 to 6 20 day pullback buys and 2 or 3 50 day pullback buys in an intermediate term trend
5) More agressive traders can buy the 7 day average in the first 3 to 8 weeks of the uptrend.
6) Buy pullbacks not runups. A buy should not be easy or exciting but difficult and somewhat scary. DO NOT CHASE
7) Place stop at 5% below the buy price. Do not remove
8) Sell 3 to 5 days after the stock price takes out its most recent 2 week high with at least 15% gains
9) Uptrends that are 12 weeks or more may be ripe for a correction. The first 2 pullbacks to the 50 day are usually safe.
Intermediate term uptrends and downtrends generally last from 8 to 16 weeks with 12 weeks being the norm.
10) Shorting is a viable strategy in downtrends for experienced traders only. In general, reverse the above rules
11) Tweet Mikey @themarketshadow with questions or ideas

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Citi says its making money for the past 2 months....Now you tell us?

DJIA 6800 +253 Gold 902.40 -15.60 Oil 47.57 +.50 Dollar Index 88.23 -.77

Citigroup Stock Rebounds On Pandit's Upbeat Report

Citigroup was profitable in the first two months of 2009 and is confident about its capital strength, Chief Executive Vikram Pandit said, easing concerns about the troubled bank's survival prospects.

"I am most encouraged with the strength of our business so far in 2009," Pandit wrote in a memo to staff on Monday. "We are profitable through the first two months of 2009 and are having our best quarter-to-date performance since the third quarter of 2007."

Pandit's assessment suggests that Citigroup may surprise analysts, who on average expect the third-largest U.S. bank by assets to lose money at least through September, following $37.5 billion of losses over the past 15 months.

Citigroup earned $2.2 billion in the July-September period in 2007.

"It's better than being in the red," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Avalon Partners in New York.

Citigroup shares [C 1.33 0.28 (+26.67%) ] rose sharply after falling below $1 for the first time last week.

The cost of insuring its debt against default fell from Monday's record high, indicating investors see less risk.

Other bank stocks also rose, including a gain of 18.7 percent for Bank of America [BAC 4.64 0.89 (+23.73%) ], the largest U.S. bank by assets. The KBW Bank Index rose 7.2 percent.

Since October, New York-based Citigroup has received two federal bailouts, $45 billion of capital from the Treasury Department's Troubled Asset Relief Program, and a government agreement to cap losses on $300.8 billion of troubled assets.

Last month's bailout would make the government Citigroup's largest shareholder, with a potential 36 percent stake.

The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, on Tuesday said U.S. officials were examining fresh steps for Citigroup if its problems mounted. But it said talks were preliminary and no imminent rescue was planned.

Citigroup also faces waning patience in Washington for expanded taxpayer support of the banking system.

In the memo, Pandit said he was disappointed with "broad-based misperceptions" about the bank, and that its credit spreads reflect neither its condition nor the government's interest in supporting the financial system.

Pandit said revenue in January and February was $19 billion, excluding various writedowns, versus a quarterly average of $21 billion as adjusted in 2008.

He also said deposit flows were "relatively stable." Expenses of $8.1 billion over the two months were below the bank's target.

Moreover, Pandit said the government's assistance would make Citigroup "the strongest capitalized large U.S. bank."

Some key Republicans in Congress have said the United States should consider letting some large troubled banks fail rather that commit more money to prop them up. Among these are Richard Shelby, the top Republican on the Senate banking committee, who Sunday called Citigroup a "problem child."

Pandit said the bank was confident about its capital strength after undertaking stress tests, using assumptions that were more pessimistic than those of the Federal Reserve.
David Williams, head of European bank research at Fox-Pitt Kelton, said Citigroup should disclose more about its tests to help regain credibility with investors.

"A one dollar stock price tells you the market has stopped listening," he said.

Williams said investors would "significantly reward" Citigroup if first-quarter results, expected in mid-April, reflected Pandit's upbeat tone.



Gee I guess the government made a pretty good buy at a buck fifty after all. Can you say what a racket?
The beat goes on...... Mikey

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