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Saturday, May 5, 2012

All-World ETFs Signal Downtrend For Foreign Stocks

"TUESDAY" production sign
"TUESDAY" production sign (Photo credit: Vaguely Artistic)

Foreign stocks returned to their winning ways in the first 10 weeks of 2012. By mid-March, however, economic data out of China started to demonstrate sluggishness. A rapid rise in Spanish bond yields began threatening the country’s ability to manage its own finances. And European interbank lending ground to a halt.
Nevertheless, as recently as Tuesday (May 1), many commentators were giddy about U.S. stock gains. After all, the Dow had just hit a peak not seen since December of 2007.
Perhaps ironically, U.S. stocks finished the first week of May with its worst showing of the year. The Dow Industrials Trust (DIA) gave up -1.5%, the S&P 500 SPDR Trust (SPY) slid -2.4% and the Apple-powered PowerShares Nasdaq 100 (QQQQ) plummeted -3.8%... Continue to read.


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2 comments:

  1. Raul Castro declared as early as 2007 that Cuba needs more foreign investment, and the Communist Party’s economic reform blueprint reiterated the point: more foreign investment, from more countries, with projects evaluated more promptly and according to broader criteria.

    But not a great deal has happened, as Reuters reports. One long-time investor, Unilever, is pulling out, and the golf course projects remain in the “any minute now” status where they have been for years.

    The current reforms are being rolled out on a timetable that extends to 2015, so maybe everything is right on schedule. One wonders if the iffy health of Hugo Chavez is causing a re-assessment of the timetable.

    Meanwhile, the Economist reports on the arrest of a British subject some weeks ago, and El Universal reports on foreign capital flowing in to invest in houses and businesses

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  2. Moving Average Envelopes Conclusions
    Moving Average Envelopes are percentage-based envelopes set above and below a moving average. The moving average, which forms the base for this indicator, can be a simple or exponential moving average. Each envelope is then set the same percentage above or below the moving average. This creates parallel bands that follow price action. With a moving average as the base, Moving Average Envelopes can be used as a trend following indicator. Beyond simply trend following, though, the envelopes can also be used to identify overbought and oversold levels when the trend is relatively flat.
    Moving Average Envelopes Conclusions and forex signals
    Moving Average Envelopes are mostly used as a trend following indicator, but can also be used to identify overbought and oversold conditions. After a consolidation period, a strong envelope break can forex signal the start of an extended trend. Once an uptrend is identified, chartists can turn to momentum indicators and other techniques to identify oversold readers and pullbacks within that trend. Overbought conditions and bounces can be used as selling forex trading signals opportunities within a bigger downtrend. In the absence of a strong trend, the Moving Average Envelopes can be used like the Percent Price Oscillator. Moves above the upper envelope signal overbought readings, while moves below the lower envelope signal oversold readings. It is also important to incorporate other aspects of technical analysis to confirm overbought and oversold reading. Resistance and bearish reversals patterns can be used to corroborate overbought readings. Support and bullish reversal patterns can be used to affirm oversold conditions and buy forex trading signals .

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