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THE MARKETS

Overall market stats:

VIX: 30.73; -4.38. Quick to rise, quick to drop. The VIX did in fact help turn things up today (despite our prognostication otherwise last night). Will it last? Volatility has not hit historical highs, but with the put/call ratio spiking, it might have been enough. Now we watch the action of leaders and price and volume.
VXN: 72.67; -3.58. Never reached 79 before the turn. Enough? Too early with this indicator to tell.

Put/Call ratio: 1.01; +0.10. Finally broke over 1.0 on the close, and that has historically been one of the elements that has occurred when the markets bottomed. Option volume appeared solid and index put options outnumbered calls while equity call options outnumbered puts. That does not mean a whole lot, but tells us that a lot of option players felt more comfortable in shorting the market than individual stocks.

NASDAQ:

Opened higher, tested the move, and then was off and running to the close. It was mostly big names as the Nasdaq 100 gained 109.06 points to the overall index' 91.40 point gain. Volume was 2% lighter, but volume on the biggest names was either up sharply or just so-so. Could be a transition, but we need to see better indicators over the next week in the A/D line.

Stats: Up 91.40 points (4.8%) to close at 2014.78.
Volume: 2.104 billion shares (-2%). 1.625 billion upside to 439 million downside. Good reversal in up to down volume, but overall volume fell back below average. Not a huge difference, and we did see individual stocks jump on very strong volume. Perhaps this is a slower steady build starting as opposed to the jump up and flameout we have seen in the past.
A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers pulled back ahead 1.26 to 1 after Monday's 4.4 to 1 drubbing. We said those were cathartic levels. With the put/call ratio hitting over 1.0, the sentiment indicators may just be falling into place to support a more sustained move up. New highs remained low at 35, while new lows fell to 263.

The Chart: http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/$compq.html

Tested Monday's low in the morning and then mounted a solid move. If volume had been lower we would be very concerned about the 2050 level; the volume today, while not overpowering, showed some real bright spots that may indicate a further building move up. this was different from the reversals we have seen of late: the index sold off all day on stronger volume Monday, and then moved up solidly today on decent volume. A small difference, but with the other indicators (put/call) showing supportive moves, it could be a significant difference. We have to see volume expand significantly on the move up.

Dow/NYSE: Tested 10,100 and recovered to close just below 10,300. Some are calling this resistance that will send it down, but the volume on the NYSE was impressive.

Stats: Up 82.55 points (+0.8%) to close at 10,290.80.
Volume: NYSE volume showed excellent pop, rising to 1.359 billion shares (+10.5%). Up volume led down volume 693 million to 660 million shares. The ratio was close, but we have to realize that the Dow sold down another 100 points from Monday's close before it started to fight back up. The up volume had to overtake the down volume.
A/D and Hi/Lo: NYSE decliners still led, but it shrank to 1.26 to 1 (3.48 to 1 Monday). New highs fell to 73 (-29) as new lows fell to 72 (-17).

The Chart: http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/$dja.html

Tested 10,100 and then made a steady climb to the close and finished the day just below the former bottom of its range (10,300) that could now very easily act as resistance. Volume was solid, however, and that is the key to breaking resistance; a quick move back over on strong volume would be a very nifty save for the Dow: remember the 'outrider' theory, i.e., if a stock or index can recover quickly, it can resume its move.

S&P 500: The big caps hit 1175 on the low but then they too made a steady recovery to close at the highs. NYSE volume was superb for the move, the highest since January. As with the Dow, there is resistance ahead at 1215, a point the S&P was using as support in late February and early March before the recent plunge. Good volume can help clear resistance as we noted with the Dow. We need to see that good volume on the break and hold over 1215.

Stats: Up 17.50 points (+1.5%) to close at 1197.66.
Volume: NYSE volume jumped to 1.359 billion shares (+10.5%).

The Chart: http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/$spx.html

TOMORROW

Upside momentum heading into tomorrow as the indexes closed on their session highs and continued to rise after hours. Nasdaq futures are up 13.50 (+7.30 over fair value) and S&P futures up 0.40 (+0.39 above fair value). Not a lot, but then again, we prefer to see modest opens build in strength as we saw today.

The real test will be whether the Dow and S&P 500 can break back over resistance and hold above it on strong volume. They might bounce down first before making another run. They might bounce down and crater. If not for the stronger NYSE volume today and the strong volume in certain stocks, we would not be very confident of the attempt. If volume can build on a move up just as we have seen it build on the moves down, we could have a very tradable rally.

Could have. The big names are still in pathetic patterns and that is not conducive to long term moves. Maybe a trading rally, maybe a crash back down. Every rally day is met with calls of an oversold bounce or a bottom. Today was no different, but there is more skepticism out there. That is helping and it is indicated in the put/call ratio. That is strong evidence a bottom is being put in. What we need to have now is patience to see if the Dow and S&P 500 can break back over resistance on strong volume and see some of these stocks we are tracking that are in good patterns start to break out. It is great to see the big names move well; makes everyone feel as if things are back to normal. The patterns belie that, and while we can play some bounces if there is no immediate resistance overhead, we have to be ready to pull the plug.

In the interim we have to remain patient and let the plays come to us. Let them move to resistance once again and start to fail for the put plays (the market is still in a downtrend), and for the upside plays let the strong patterns breakout on good volume. We rushed a play today and had to exit with a loss all because we did not let the play set up and come to us. The market is giving us good plays if we are patient to let them develop. We anticipate the market to move higher in the morning, but it will have an early test and it may be a rocky day as the bulls and bears fight it out. Friday is triple witching, and with the overall volatility that is an added spice. We have seen big moves fade fast; this one is a bit different, but we are still in a downtrend with the big names in bad patterns. The move has to start at some point, but we don't think these names will necessarily be the leaders long term just yet. Be flexible and patient. Set alarms and let the breakouts and breakdowns unfold for the plays. As for current short positions, if you are still in after today, be ready to close them out if the Dow and S&P 500 smash through resistance.

Support and Resistance Levels

Nasdaq: Closed at 2014.78.
Resistance: Possible at 2050. Then 2250 to 2300. 2400 to 2500.
Support: 1750

S&P 500: Closed at 1197.66.
Resistance: 1215. Then 1265, followed by 1285 to 1300.
Support: 1130

Dow: Closed at 10,290.08.
Resistance: 10,300. 10,750. Then 11,020 - 11,028. After that, 11,400.
Support: 10,000. Then 9750.

Weekly Economic Calendar (All times Eastern). The figures are the consensus expectations, not ours.

3-13-01
Retail Sales, February (8:30): -0.2% actual versus 0.3% expected and 1.3% prior (revised up from 0.7%).
Retail Sales, ex-auto, February (8:30): -0.3% actual versus 0.1% expected and 0.8% prior.

3-14-01
Business Inventories, January (8:30): 0.0% versus 0.1% prior.

3-15-01
Initial Claims, 3/10 (8:30): 370K versus 370K prior.
Export Prices ex-ag., February (8:30): 0.2% versus 0.2%.
Import Prices ex-oil, February (8:30): 0.3% versus 0.3%.
Current Account, Q4, (10:00): -$117B versus -$113.8B.
Philadelphia Fed, March (10:00): -25.0 versus -30.5

3-16-01

PPI, February (8:30): 0.1% versus 1.1% prior.
Core PPI, February (8:30): 0.1% versus 0.7% prior.
Housing Starts, February (8:30): 1.6M versus 1.651M prior.
Building Permits, February (8:30): 1.697M versus 1.697M prior.
Industrial Production, February (9:15): -0.2% versus -0.3% prior.
Capacity Utilization, February (9:15): 80% versus 80.2% prior.
Michigan Sentiment-Preliminary, March (10:00): 87.0 versus 90.6 prior.
Options expiration, March.

TEAM TRADES

Today we went to the well one too many times, trying to rush a play that was not set up just yet. We compounded the problem by not playing the move that did set up after that first mistake.

We were looking at index options again as one of our potential plays, and after about an hour of trading we saw the QQQ and OEX hit right at their morning highs and start to pull back. Now that can be a resistance point, and they could have fallen from there after such a massive drop on Monday: a bit of a bounce and then a fall. We decided to jump in on the QQQ and wait a bit on the OEX. We got in when it started to roll back down (43.20) with some April $50 puts just to see it catch itself at an interim top formed in the first half hour. It bounced up from there but we got lucky and it made a lower top and started to fall. Great we thought; double top means more blood letting ahead. It started to roll down, we put in a sell order that would give us about a point on the options (we were figuring on a move below the opening drop of the day or close to it and calculated our profit from there and set the order). We then went off to do some other tasks.

It hit 20 cents above the morning low and turned right back up. Did not even call the broker to let him know what we were doing. Checked on the market and gee whiz, it was rising. We could have had a gain of half a point or more (we knew there could be a bounce, so we were not going to ride it for all it was worth this time) and been satisfied. We had taken a pretty big position. Well, when we checked the indexes had formed a bullish 'flying W' pattern and were trading just over the highs. Volume on the move up was high. It crossed had crossed the morning high so we bailed. It then sold down almost 70 cents and we would at least have broken even. Angry (that darn emotion) we started looking elsewhere, ignoring the play right in front of us: the perfectly formed flying W that was testing the mid-point of the W. It then shot back up for another $2. We could have played that move up, made our money back and made a nice profit on the day.

Moral: think about what can happen and plan accordingly. We should have called our broker, set an alarm, done something to let us know. This was not a day to be ignoring the moves, especially since we said last night there could be a bounce. Also, we saw the upside pattern and the market was looking strong. We did not play what we saw. If we had not made the put play, we would have seen it unemotionally and made the play. No, we let a previous play cloud the judgment. Fight it.

For a review of frequently asked questions, please use the link below:

http://www.investmenthouse.com/1questions.htm

Good Investing!
Jon Johnson and the Tech Traders Report Staff.

All of the foregoing is commentary for informational purposes only. All statements and expressions are the opinion of Online Investment Services, LP or its paid consultants and are not meant to be a solicitation or recommendation to buy, sell, or hold securities. We are not licensed or registered in the securities industry. The information presented herein and on our related web site has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy is not guaranteed. The security portfolio of Partners of Online Investment Services, LP or its paid consultants may, in some instances, include securities mentioned herein and on our web site. Estimates, assumptions and other forward-looking information are subject to the limits of forecasting. Actual future developments may differ materially due to many factors.


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