Hindenburg Omen

Calabrio

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Yes Folks, Hindenburg Omen Tripped Again
http://blogs.wsj.com/marketbeat/2010/08/23/yes-folks-hindenburg-omen-tripped-again/tab/print/

The Hindenburg Omen reared its ugly head late last week, signaling more doom and gloom as stocks plod along amid the dog days of summer.

The Omen, a technical indicator which uses a plethora of data to foreshadow a stock-market crash, was tripped again on Friday, marking the second time since Aug. 12 it has occurred. (It also came close on Thursday, but one of its criteria fell short.)

The latest trigger has prompted the Omen’s creator, Jim Miekka, to exit the market. “I’m taking it seriously and I’m fully out of the market now,” Miekka, a blind mathematician, said in a telephone interview from his home in Surry, Maine. “I would’ve probably stayed in until the beginning of September,” depending on how the indicators varied. “That was my basic plan, until the Hindenburg came along.”

The Omen has been behind every market crash since 1987, but significant stock-market declines have followed only 25% of the time. So there’s a high likelihood that the Omen could be nothing more than a false signal.

But that isn’t stopping Miekka from taking any chances, especially as September, typically the market’s worst-performing month, sits only one week away.

“It’s sort of like a funnel cloud,” he said. “It doesn’t mean it’s going to crash, but it’s a high probability. You don’t get a tornado without a funnel cloud.” He added he’s not currently shorting anything, although he may look to short Nasdaq stock index futures in the next few weeks, “depending on how the technicals go.”

Despite the ominous forecast, there are some glimmers of hope. Miekka doesn’t expect to sit on the sidelines for very long. In fact, Miekka, who is an avid target shooter despite being blind, is looking at put volumes and various moving averages that will offer clues of when he will start buying again.

“With what we have now, I think it’s possible we could get a 20% decline going into the fall,” Miekka said. “But I would expect some type of selloff and be buying at a lower price.”

(Tomi Kilgore contributed to this post)
 
One problem with these types of financial predictors is that they cause additional market panic. Investors suddenly want to sell off everything and get out of the market in anticipation of a crash, thus exacerbating the situation.

Of course, no one has really addressed any of the problems currently on wall street aside from the band-aids of bailouts, that really could only serve to slow the demise of some of these corporations. Worst part of this all, those heading the companies, those trading on wall street, they won't really suffer; those of us who have to pay our bills and work 9-5 every day will just have to deal with inflated prices, the inevitable high gas prices, lower spending by the upper and middle class as they horde their money to weather the storm, loss of jobs that follow the lower spending of the upper and middle class, and so on are the ones who will suffer. What a wonderful world we live in.

Just in time for republicans as well. This should really help them in their bids for congress. Though, as I had said before, they would be better off if they did not take away the Dem majority. Bad time for Republicans to get in there, they should wait until the markets and economy are improving so they can get in then and claim responsibility. If they go in now, only thing that will happen is they will be the ones taking the blame in place of the Democrats they are currently blaming.
 

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