Posting Times

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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

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

China, China, How I love you, How I love you, my dear old China

Chinese investment surged in May on the back of government pump-priming and a recovery in the property sector, providing fresh evidence that the world's third-largest economy is leading others on the path to recovery.

Investment in urban areas in fixed assets such as apartment buildings and roads rose 32.9 percent in the first five months from a year earlier, compared with a 30.5 percent rise in the first four months, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Thursday.

Economists said that translated into a 40 percent leap in May alone. Adjusted for inflation, the increase was even greater because Chinese prices have been falling for several months.

"I think this is a welcome sign of momentum building in the Chinese economy, and it's good for the global outlook," said David Cohen with Action Economics in Singapore.

The median forecast of economists polled by Reuters was for a rise of 31.0 percent, but the figure of 32.9 percent had been whispered in China's financial markets all week.

Given that rumors of Wednesday's inflation figures also proved to be spot on, the accuracy of the leak lends credence to talk in the market -- reported by two newspapers -- that data on Friday will show industrial production rose 8.9 percent in the year to May. That would be the sharpest rise since September.

The MSCI index of Asia Pacific stocks outside Japan was up 0.6 percent, adding to gains in global markets a day earlier in anticipation of a strong industrial production report.

Economists attributed the strength in investment to the government's 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) economic stimulus plan, announced in November, and an associated record surge in credit growth from the state-dominated banking system.

The need for strong domestic stimulus was underscored by customs data showing that exports and imports fell in May from year-earlier levels for the seventh month in a row -- and at an accelerating pace.

"External demand remains weak as the U.S. and European economies are still contracting, so it'll be hard for China's exports to see a quick rebound," said Feng Yuming, an economist with Orient Securities in Shanghai.

Exports fell 26.4 percent from May 2008, while imports fell 25.2 percent, resulting in a trade surplus of $13.4 billion, compared with $13.1 billion in April and $18.6 billion in March.

Economists had expected a $14.8 billion surplus based on a 23.1 percent fall in exports and a 22 percent drop in imports from year-earlier levels.

After seasonal adjustment, however, exports rose 0.2 percent in May from April and imports rose 4.4 percent, customs said.

If you remember late 2007 and 2008 the emerging markets and China was going to save the day. This is just a rerun of the same old song and dance complete with the dollar sell off and the commodity rally. The only problem is that if you would have bought that hype you would be down a cool 50%. Well that song worked then so they are going to replay it now. China, China, How I love How I love you my dear old China.


The beat goes on...Mikey

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