MARKET COMMENT February 18, 2009 Not very impressed?
Posted on Wednesday, February 18th, 2009 | In Exchange Traded FundsFebruary 18, 2009

Not very impressed? That seems to be the way investors felt today. An early rally fizzled while volume was on the light side while breadth was negative.



There may be a sense and fear developing from rumors and chatter of bank nationalizations that would wipe-out shareholder equity and hurt bondholders. That seemed the message from financials today.









































That’s it for today. I don’t think there are many people telephoning their brokers wanting to buy stocks. Many investors are looking for help and the old industry maxims (stay the course; stick with the plan; buy the dip; average down and etc) are becoming tiresome.
The Obama mortgage plan was greeted with a shrug. In the after hour trading HP announced disappointing earnings and markets continued to sell-off.
It may indeed take a government takeover of banks to start the repair work. I don’t know about the auto industry but the government should be very cautious about throwing another $30 billion to GM.
I don’t know what spark it will take to get markets moving higher again other than a temporary oversold bounce.
I got some hate mail yesterday regarding my comments that the government is too big. I stand by that statement and pose these questions. Just how many Department of Agriculture’s do we need? We have the one really really big one (have you seen the size of that building!) in DC with lots of regional and state offices. Then, of course, we have 50 different State Agriculture departments as well. This is a depression era holdover agency and I really don’t know what they do. I know they control the FDA which is supposed to monitor food safety. But it’s been written that they turned most food inspections to the states. Of course we have a peanut somenella scare to show for that.
Is education better since we now have a Department of Education matched by 50 different state agencies?
Do we have more energy because we have an Energy Department now?
These questions answer themselves objectively I would think.
Anyway, it’s not my mission to go off the rails into politics but it’s just one of those annoyances. Besides, I’ve got this PC and blog and I can state my opinions. Holy cow!
Let’s see what happens.
Disclaimer: Among other issues the ETF Digest maintains positions in: IEF, PST, TLT, TBT, FXE, DRR, GLD, DGP, DBP, and GDX.
Last 5 posts by David Fry
- MARKET COMMENT October 22, 2009 DRIVE-THRU SOUP KITCHEN 2009 So, what the hell was yesterday about anyway? - October 22nd, 2009
- MARKET COMMENT October 20, 2009 TAKING A BREAK It was a pretty strange day. - October 20th, 2009
- MARKET COMMENT October 13, 2009 EARNINGS WORRY WARTS I just have a spooky feeling but then I always do. - October 13th, 2009
- MARKET COMMENT October 8, 2009 GETTING SOME ALTITUDE SICKNESS YET? - October 8th, 2009
- MARKET COMMENT October 2, 2009 REALITY BITES BULLS Economic reality is meeting bullish enthusiasm and the results are disappointing and upsetting. - October 2nd, 2009
bank nationalizations, Department Of Agriculture, Department of Education;, Department of Energy, Depression, energy, Exchange Traded Funds, Fda, food inspections;, Food Safety, USD
![]() About David Fry (http://etfdigest.com)
Dave Fry has devoted over 35 years to the business of trading and portfolio management. His registration as an arbitrator with both the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) and the National Futures Association (NFA) attests to his extensive experience and spotless compliance record. Dave founded the ETF Digest in 2001 and was among the very first to see the need for a publication that provided individual investors with information and advice on ETF investing. Dave is a frequent commentator on ETFs and other issues important to individual investors, and his perspectives are featured in financial news sources such as the Wall Street Journal, MarketWatch, Investor’s Business Daily, Smart Money, Dow Jones Newswire, National Business Review, MSN Money, Yahoo! Finance, Bankrate.com, Emerging Markets Monitor, IndexUniverse.com, and ETF Investor. |



