Wednesday, January 14, 2009

the VIX has spiked all the way to 51.03, up 17.9% so far today and up 32.3% from just six sessions ago.

Since this kind of measure interests me, I can't say that it's good news for the near future. From Trader's Narrative:

"Conference Board Consumer Confidence At New All Time Low

The Present Situation Index of the Consumer Confidence

survey from the Conference Board fell to 29.4:

confidence board consumer confidence present situation Jan 2009

That’s lower than the 2002 bear market bottom. Lower than the confidence level in 1991. Lower than the early 1980’s. Even slightly lower than the darkest days of the 1970’s bear market.

As far as I can tell, the current reading is the lowest that this survey has seen since it was started in the 1960’s!

The Conference Board surveys 5000 US households and their answers to questions about their employment, spending and

From a contrarian perspective this is good news. And this is just another in a long line of extreme pessimism from the average consumer and investor in the US. But from another perspective we need to see at least the start of a change in the doom and gloom before things get better.( I AGREE ABOUT BOTH POINTS )

If you have a really long term view and don’t particularly care about further declines in the short term, then this is a good signal( TRUE ). But if you want to avoid such potential losses then you have to give up trying to anticipate the market’s exact inflection point and wait for confirmation by giving up some gains to the upside."

In my view, the VIX and TED are places that I would look for things to begin to get better, because I believe that the market will begin to get better before the overall economy does. So, let's look at the VIX on VIX And More:

"VIX Tops 50 for First Time Since Mid-December

With the SPX failing to find support at 850 and financials falling another 6% this morning, the VIX has spiked all the way to 51.03, up 17.9% so far today and up 32.3% from just six sessions ago.

Since the large gap down at the open, today’s action has been more of a slow grind than a sharp panic, suggesting that there could be a fair distance still to the down side. SPX support may come in the 820-830 range, but if those levels fail to hold, the possibility of a drop back down to 740 suddenly looms large.

[source: BigCharts]

No good news here, I'm sorry to say. Next week is a big week for me, since I believe that the end of the Bush administration will be greeted with a jolt of new found confidence, once we have been delivered from this plague of incompetence.

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