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Conference nyoss1::market_investing

Title:Market Investing
Moderator:2155::michaud
Created:Thu Jan 23 1992
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1060
Total number of notes:10477

135.0. "Trader's Corner" by EPIK::FINNERTY () Mon Mar 30 1992 10:44

    
    Sooner or later the market will undergo a correction.  When it does,
    which stocks will lose the most on the down-side, and which will
    benefit the most on the subsequent recovery?
    
    My guess is that:
    
    	a) Generally weak stocks making new lows will be the worst
    	   until the downturn, then
        b) High-fliers will be the worst when a significant correction
    	   occurs, and then
        c.1)  former high-fliers with good fundimentals which were
    	      battered the worst on the downside will be the best
    	      picks on the upside.
    	c.2)  if the downside is really bad, then 'value' stocks
    	      will become the best picks.
    
    /Jim
    
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135.1Fear continues to haunt TokyoSUBSYS::GANESHGaneshWed Apr 01 1992 18:2611
    If Tokyo matters at all any more, it just might happen sooner 
    rather than later. Just heard a totally unconfirmed rumor that 
    the Nikkei dropped more than 800 points today (over 4%) under 
    heavy trading.
    
    I wonder if Wall Street is going to brush this off as irrevelant
    as usual, tomorrow. In any case, I'm quite relieved about having
    pulled all of my SAVE money into cash as of today's close.
    
    Ganesh.
                    
135.2M2 and the FedVIZUAL::FINNERTYThe bug stops hereTue May 26 1992 10:0435
    
    Apparently last Thursday the WSJ contained an article which said that
    the Fed Open Market Committee and Alan Greenspan were giving less
    emphasis to slow M2 and M3 growth.  According to Randall Forsyth in
    Barron's this week,
    
    	"The Fed's emphasis on money supply as a key policy variable has
    	 waxed and waned over the years.  But if the FOMC has indeed decided
    	 to downplay the persistently weak growth of the broader monetary
    	 aggregates, it would mark a stunning reversal.  Just last month,
    	 when the Fed engineered its most recent easing, Greenspan and
    	 other Fed officials emphasized below-target M2 and M3 as the
    	 primary reason. (That may have been to deflect attention from the
    	 importance of the Tokyo-led global equity plunge in the decision
    	 to ease.)"
    
    Even before this, I was never clear about how to interpret M2
    statistics, now it's less clear.
    
    If M2 is growing at a low rate, that indicates either a lack of demand
    for loans or an unwillingness/inability to make loans on the part of the 
    banks, and is generally viewed as a bearish signal.  On the other hand, 
    if the Fed responds to this by easing rates, isn't this a bullish signal 
    for both bonds and stocks in the short term?  Historically, low M2 growth
    has resulted in poor stock price performance, but I'm not sure that the
    Fed has always played such a controlling role in the market (though this
    may be the case).
    
    And if the Fed is placing less importance on M2/M3, what will it be 
    replaced by?  Fed funds rate targets?
    
    Can anyone shed some light on this area?
                                           
       /Jim