Guest guest Posted October 4, 2006 Report Share Posted October 4, 2006 dear vyas.. thank you for this post. can you please also resend the sept. 27th post, as my computer crash caused the loss of emails after the 26th. thanks. david hawthorne - Vyas Munidas David Hawthorne Cc: SAMVA Tuesday, October 03, 2006 12:43 PM [JunkMail] Re: stock market Dear David, The highest level I have for the DJIA is 11908.5 in Jan of 2000 (Prior I had said 2001, but it is the year 2000). We are however at the highest level since then. I've pointed out the contributing factors previously in a message posted on 27 September: "Contributing then [Jan 2000} was Su with Me in Sg with very strong Ju in Ta influencing Virgo. Additionally Venus was in Aq aspecting Leo and Mars from affluent Libra aspected Jupiter. The current situation doesn't seem so powerful on first glance, and the impression is that the all-time high will not be broken. However I will not dismiss the power of Mars ruling enormous wealth and the Sun (being the Sun of course) transiting Virgo. Venus helps to a good extent as well." Since that post, Venus is in better strength by age and itself and Mars are have drawan closer to the Sun than previously. We saw the entrance of Ve into Virgo, even under Ketu increased the momentum in the indices. (From my understanding, the axis isn't so harmful to Venus because of preceptorship. In fact, we did see Gold rise as a result of fiery Ketu on Jupiter's dispositor.) Next we should note that Mercury is transiting the affluent Libra. The circular dispositor weakness isn't so grave (deb. & combust Ve). Mercury gets a huge boost as Venus draws closer to the Sun and in good age. Additionally there was Mo-Sa opposition today. The old age of Saturn and the weakness of the Moon has contributed to a further decline in Oil prices (I predicted this and recommended shorting oil in communication outside of this list). Energy accounts only for 4.69% of the DJIA. However, it's a key indicator of investor sentiment. When energy prices rise, people are fearful of the future. When they fall, there is optimism and people put their money in other areas... pull out of energy, put it into other sectors. As the Moon gets weaker, we can expect a further decline in Oil prices. As it transits Aq, there can be an additional fall in oil due to the constrictive character of that sign and mutually exchanged dispositor weakness. We also note that Sa-Ma aspect is also drawing closer. I reiterate, Mars rules enormous wealth. Saturn in royal Cancer aspecting Mars, Sun-Ma getting closer. Ve-Sun getting closer, Me in affluent Libra.... Gains should continue. Let's see how it plays out. Note also, this is all happening without the axis' involvement. This sort of gain is sustainable in the long run. When the contributing alignments are no longer there, we can expect the index to loose its fire and dip. However, bottom picking before the next strength situation(s) is a fantastic idea. Best regards, Vyas Munidas - David Hawthorne Vyas Munidas Cc: SAMVA Tuesday, October 03, 2006 3:01 PM stock market dear vyas & friends: can anyone comment on the factors that helped the Dow Jones industrial average to rise to the highest lever ever on Tuesday afternoon? (see article posted below my signature.) in a general chart for the day, Venus, Sun and Mars are ruled by Mercury, which is considered weak, due to the debilitation of its dispositor, Venus. Jupiter and Mercury are also ruled by the debilitated Venus. Both Moon and Saturn are in old age, so in essence, all seven of the planets are weak on some account. Maybe dear Vyas can make some comment on this situation as he is well versed in the financial markets. thank you, David Hawthorne Dow: Welcome to record land Blue-chip indicator hits highest intraday point ever as decline in oil prices proves to be the catalyst. By Alexandra Twin, CNNMoney.com senior writer October 3 2006: 12:59 PM EDT NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The Dow Jones industrial average rose to its highest level ever Tuesday afternoon, taking out the record trading high hit in January 2000 before stepping back a little, as investors scooped up a variety of shares amid slumping oil prices. The Dow industrials (up 73.08 to 11,743.43, Charts) added 0.6 percent roughly 3 hours into the session and took out its all-time trading high of 11,750.28 hit on Jan. 14, 2000. The Dow reached as high as 11,754.55 before easing. The blue-chip indicator remained above its record trading high of 11,722.98, also hit on Jan. 14, 2000. The S & P 500 (up 5.16 to 1,336.48, Charts) index added 0.4 percent Tuesday and flirted with a fresh 5-1/2 year high. The broad index topped out at a 5-1/2 year high last Thursday and has struggled since then. The Nasdaq composite (up 9.31 to 2,246.91, Charts) added 0.5 percent. A selloff in tech and commodities stocks weighed on the Nasdaq throughout the morning, keeping the broader market in check. But the tone improved near midday, with investors betting that the steep decline in oil prices means that inflationary pressures are diminishing and the economy is likely headed for a slowdown, not a recession, as has been feared. "The catalyst today is falling oil prices," said Peter Cardillo, chief market analyst at S.W. Bach & Co. "Oil under $60 a barrel today is giving the Dow ammunition to make another try for those record highs." U.S. light crude oil for November delivery fell $1.81 to $59.22 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after falling as low as $58.84 earlier. That was good news for most sectors of the stock market, with 24 out of 30 Dow issues rising. Gainers included aerospace issues such as Boeing (up $1.94 to $81.91, Charts) and Honeywell (up $0.66 to $42.01, Charts) and bank stocks such as JP Morgan (up $0.62 to $47.49, Charts) and Citigroup (up $0.66 to $50.15, Charts). However, the plunge in oil prices was bad news for oil stocks, which slumped. Exxon Mobil (down $0.88 to $66.12, Charts) and Valero Energy (down $1.57 to $49.38, Charts) were among the stocks dragging down the Amex Oil (down 20.87 to 1,053.09, Charts) index. COMEX gold for December delivery fell $16 to $587.30 an ounce. That sparked a selloff in gold stocks, with the Amex Gold Bugs (down $13.23 to $289.64, Charts) index losing 4 percent. Among other movers, Marvell Technology (down $2.71 to $16.38, Charts) shares plunged 13 percent in active trade after saying late Monday that it will restate financial results going back to its initial public offering in 2000, due to misdated stock options. The chipmaker also warned that third-quarter sales will be down 10 percent from the previous quarter, due to weaker demand from disk-drive makers. Market breadth turned positive. On the New York Stock Exchange, losers beat winners 9 to 7 as 850 million shares changed hands. On the Nasdaq, advancers edged decliners by a narrow margin on volume of 1.04 billion shares. Last week, the major gauges finished out the best third quarter since 1997. The S & P 500 rose just short of 5 percent in the third quarter, while the Dow gained 4.5 percent. The Nasdaq gained 3.8 percent. Treasury prices inched lower. The yield on the 10-year note stood at 4.62 percent, up from around 4.60 percent late Monday. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.