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Pit Guru Review for Financials, Energies, Commodities, and Metals (09-22-08 to 09-26-2008)
By: Pit Guru   Tuesday, September 23, 2008 10:14 AM

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The Financials Pit Review: U.S. Economy

Last week was historic to say the least. Early in the week the S&P plummeted coming off the Lehman bankruptcy, Merrill Lynch takeover, and the government seizing AIG. This created a drop similar to the terrorist attacks back on 9/11/01. The second part of the week was very different as the government took action and tried to directly infuse the markets taking on $700 billion in bad mortgage investment from financial companies. This plan was created to dodge a credit freeze which would paralyze the financial system and the world’s largest economy. Through the new plan, Secretary Paulson will have the authority to buy home loans, mortgage-backed securities, commercial mortgage-related assets and any other assets, as deemed necessary to effectively stabilize financial markets. The bill would also prevent courts from reviewing actions taken under its authority. This seems to me like it is way more power than one should have. This plan obviously adds to an already huge national debt. This bill alone spends as much as the Department of Education, Defense, and Health and Human Services combined. The Securities Exchange Commission has also banned the short selling of financial stocks through October 2nd and the U.S. Treasury said that it will insure eligible money market funds for a year, announcing that the move is essential to protecting the integrity of the global financial system. I understand that time will tell how this plays out but I can’t believe that that much should be removed from the private sector. This intervention is not an intervention; it appears to be an all-out takeover. I would expect severe volatility as this plays out.

Currencies

The Swiss franc dropped the most in five months against the dollar after the U.S. government proposed measures to move tarnished assets from bank balance sheets, encouraging investors to buy higher-yielding assets. The Swiss National Bank kept its benchmark rate on hold yesterday and joined other central banks in pumping money into financial markets to restore confidence. The Euro and the Pound increased due to investors’ interest for high yielding, export-backed currencies. Right now, low interest rates are less appealing. I expect the gains in both currencies to continue through this week.

stock chart

*Chart Courtesy of Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro

The Energies Pit Review: By PitGuru Joe Marshall

The trend for October nat gas is down. Last Thursday’s failed breakout up to 832 has brought this market back down to minor support in the 750 area. One or two days of sideways trade will build for another selloff. You are looking at a rally up past 832 to turn the trend back up. The next stop should be in the low seven dollars, look for this market to retest the 710 area.

The trend for November crude oil is neutral, with the most recent action looking strong. Last Friday’s late rally brought this market back up to a trend line at 10289. The bounce from the low nineties is showing bottoming action, but you are looking at a close above 103.25 to turn the trend to higher. Dips should fight to hold last Thursday’s low at 9550. Look for continued volatility with 3 and 4 dollar ranges every day.

The Softs Pit Review: By PitGuru Jamie Fink


The softs markets were probably the furthest thing from people's minds last week, but they did not lack for price or fundamental news. Heavy rainfall in key cocoa growing regions of Africa brought concerns of quality to the forefront again and helped cocoa prices move higher.

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The above story is the opinion of the author only and it does not reflect iStockAnalyst opinion. Further, the author is not personally advising you regarding the suitability of the story for your investment needs. In no event iStockAnalyst will be liable for any loss or damage including without limitation, indirect or consequential loss or damage, or any loss or damage whatsoever arising from or arising out of, or in connection with the use of this information. Please consult your investment advisor before making any investment decision.
  
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