Friday was an important and telling day. All hopes of retail investors were pinned on the Bailout passing Congress. We were told that without the Bailout we were doomed. Well, the market rose initially in anticipation of the bill being passed, and then when word came down that it was passed, the market summarily sold that news and sold it hard.
The fact is, our politicians sold us feel-good legislation. It won’t solve the problems this economy is facing, it won’t even come close. Consider that AIG alone needed $85 billion to become solvent, and that’s just one company. How is $700 billion going to solve the credit crunch of the entire banking system? Well, it’s obvious that the market recognizes that the Bailout was a temporary diversion, because now investors are focused on the economy. The ISM Manufacturing numbers are a very telling indicator as to what is to come, and the decline in jobs was the exclamation point. We can expect unemployment numbers to start to accelerate from here.
Now, to the uninitiated, ending up 30 points down on the day for the Nasdaq, and a measly three points with Apple (AAPL), may not seem like such a big deal. But when you consider that the Naz has dropped nearly 11 percent this past week, and AAPL has dropped almost 25 percent, you’ve got to recognize this is scary stuff. Put on your crash helmet and buckle up because that’s not the worst of it!
The Naz lost an important level on Friday, and did it in such a way as to confirm the gravitas of that event. The 2000 level represented a potential triple bottom reversal, meaning that one would expect that when challenging a bottom for the third time, as the Naz did over the past four years, that we would reverse off that bottom. But we didn’t. In fact, we plunged through it on big volume and ended up a full 1% below that mark. That my friends, is a classic breakdown, one that will be very difficult to reverse anytime soon. What we can expect are much lower prices from here.
So, what is an AAPL Investor/Trader to do? I have been recommending a cash position. Preserve that capital, it’s going to come in handy when we finally do come off the bottom. Wherever that may be. And where do I think the bottom is? The only time I feel comfortable calling a bottom is when we have bounced off a level and backtested it at least once, and rallied off of it. But in this Bear market, you can still only assume that it’s a temporary rally.
Is there any place to hide? What about commodities like Gold? All I can say is forget about it! Commodities are dead. That includes Gold, Oil, Steel, AGI, you name it! I can see some relative safety in consumer staples, such as paper, non-perishable foods like soups and canned veggies, as well as soups, and cereals. These are the things people are going to start to hoard as jobs are lost and money becomes tight.
click to enlarge
Related Articles
|
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »



This article has 25 comments:
- ABetterPlace
- 10 Comments
Oct 06 08:23 AM- Jared
- 22 Comments
Oct 06 09:25 AMSay what you want about Zach's posts over the past few weeks, but you should see now he was right. It's not that he doesn't like Apple. But he saw the reality of what was coming. Fundamentals, brisk iPhone sales and packed Apple stores don't mean a d@mn thing in this market. It's all going down. AAPL is not immune to this.
- 20smoney
- 77 Comments
My Website
Oct 06 09:28 AM- imurphit
- 12 Comments
Oct 06 09:43 AM- Infinite loop
- 6 Comments
Oct 06 10:40 AMOh, and nice article Zach. Keep up the good work. :o)
- Shorting Should be Banned
- 136 Comments
Oct 06 10:50 AM- Mr. Awesome
- 17 Comments
Oct 06 11:25 AM- BS Detector
- 256 Comments
Oct 06 11:33 AM- Apple at 60$
- 61 Comments
Oct 06 11:43 AM- Tom B
- 1741 Comments
Oct 06 01:04 PM- JadedConsumer
- 5 Comments
My Website
Oct 06 01:28 PMHowever, the author of this piece misses the substance of the federal government's stabilization transactions. This isn't throwing $85Billion and $200Billion and now $700Billion into the wind to stop a storm as he suggests. I've discussed both Apple's "safety net" and this author's position on the bailout at The Jaded Consumer.
Tom B's comment is definitely on the right track for unlevered long-term investors: people aren't going back to typewriters. Or LP records. Or The Walkman. Or land-line telephones. Apple's margins advantage is sustainable in a way Dell's wasn't, and Apple's cash flow seems to make the idea of sudden failure a distant fiction.
- rip
- 4 Comments
Oct 06 01:51 PMThe economy might be tanking, but the customer base of Apple: wealthy, educated, and employable. Students will still buy computers. Households will cut back on other things, not computers. Computers are now a must have item. Along with cell phones.
I'll be adding to my Apple position. In fact, I'm getting ready to pull a John Templeton.
- lcpcp
- 28 Comments
Oct 06 02:00 PM- Shorting Should be Banned
- 136 Comments
Oct 06 02:35 PM- Zach Bass
- 78 Comments
My Website
Oct 06 02:59 PMI have been suggesting a cash position since early September. Had you listened, you would not be worrying about the near-term.
- Shorting Should be Banned
- 136 Comments
Oct 06 03:06 PM- Shorting Should be Banned
- 136 Comments
Oct 06 03:17 PMWhat, me worried? I don't bet my mortgage money in the stock market, I do not buy stocks on margin (painful lesson learnt after the dotcom bust), and my 2 German high-end autos were bought cash.
So, no worries here.
- Apple at 60$
- 61 Comments
Oct 06 03:21 PM- aapladay
- 37 Comments
Oct 06 04:09 PMSure times are bad right now, but never underestimate the media's flare for drama.
The people that have the most cash are going to want the best price to get back in. These people will be dressed the scariest and screaming the loudest.
- F. J. Taylor
- 46 Comments
Oct 07 12:42 AMDespite Apple's excellent products and position, this market is tanking big time - as I figured it had to some years since. The only things keeping it afloat were the housing bubble (which I also saw coming and sold up while the getting was good) and of course, Greenspan's "irrational exuberance." (Oh yeah - and the M-I complex's war profiteering outfits...)
The Street is rather like a bipolar case off their meds at the best of times, and in this situation and economy, more so.
However, as Baron Rothschild is said to have remarked; "Buy when the blood is running in the streets." (One hopes he was being metaphorical, and that it doesn't actually come to that...)
However, my bet long term remains on Apple. I sold off half my shares when they were high. As I had bought low, they paid for the lot, with a few bucks profit, so its "house money" now - and I plan to keep what I have, and when I think it has bottomed out, get more.
If you can't stand the heat, then by all means get out of the kitchen - all these amateurs and day-traders have helped create the havoc in the market (along with some corporate greed-heads at various levels and their political accomplices).
Like Zach, I don't anticipate any speedy recovery from this, so don't bet your bottom dollar on ANY stock - unless you can afford to lose it. Remember, the market is just like Vegas - a gamble - but if you have done your homework and due diligence, AND are lucky... you may come out on the other side (whenever and wherever it is) in one piece.
As to the notion that cash is somehow "safer" - don't forget what "cash" is - paper - with NOTHING behind it anymore. So as to gold and silver, own some (the real thing, not "shares"). Same goes with food - own some (real) food, not just shares. If the foreign investor trends continue, and any more oil producers yank the petrodollar, be aware that the BIG crash will come sooner rather than later, as all the US has left as a real ace in the hole is its military machine...
Meantime, good luck to all of you.
- mollytjm
- 273 Comments
Oct 07 10:28 AM- bigpal
- 7 Comments
My Website
Oct 07 12:05 PM- Itsonlymoney
- 84 Comments
Oct 07 01:39 PM- Stone Fox Capital
- 92 Comments
My Website
Oct 07 02:16 PM- wallstreettoughguy.com
- 12 Comments
My Website
Oct 08 01:15 AMMore by Zach Bass