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*~1Best~*

08/27/07 3:39 PM

#2389 RE: TREND1 #2388

Firework to upside once short squeeze starts since markets are already loaded with shorts.

Many are already shorted and just waiting for market to sell-off as volumes were increasing going into 8/16 reversal.

Need to be careful.







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Posted by: __1Best__
In reply to: None
Date:8/27/2007 12:12:19 PM
Post #of 2387

Light volume markets as longs are waiting for a pull back for safe entry and shorts are waiting for sell-off to cover shorts.

This is Summer light volume trading sessions as well.

Fire upside will start short-squeeze fire work...

Need to carefully reassess markets.


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More Investors Are Betting On Major Selloff in Stocks

By Jim Kingsland | 27 Aug 2007 | 02:54 PM ET

Not everyone on Wall Street is convinced that the worst is over.

In fact, some investors are betting tens of millions of dollars that the market is headed for a selloff--a major selloff.

The reason: worries about a worsening credit crunch, along with speculation that the Federal Reserve may defy expectations and hold off on cutting interest rates at its Sept. 18 meeting.

So far, over $500 million in in so-called put options have been purchased betting that the benchmark Standard and Poor's 500 index

will tumble anywhere from 5% to 11% in September. Some investors are even buying put options calling for 52% decline. A "put" option increases in value as the underlying stock or index falls.

To put it in perspective, a 5% drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average would be the equivalent of 667 points. An 11% decline would equal 1,468 points. And a 52% drop? You don't even want to know.

The upshot is that some major investors are putting up big money that the market is facing a major decline.

"There is still fear and investors are buying crash protection," says Todd Salamone, senior vice president of research at Schaeffer's Investment Research.

Of course, there are always investors betting on big declines--they're called bears. What's unusual is the amount of money being put up on such a doomsday scenario.

"The activity in those puts has been a lot more aggressive then we have seen in the past," said Bill Lefkowitz, options strategist at brokerage firm Finance Investments. "Part of it is the environment and volatility where the Dow Industrials can easily swing over a hundred points during the day, or session to session."

Salamone of Schaeffer agrees that the index options have been "put dominated over the last several months." And the bets may have as much to do with hedging portfolios--basically an insurance policy you hope you don't need--as much as outright speculation.

Whatever the reason, Lefkowitz says worries about what the Fed will do about interest rates are spurring big investors to buy protection in case of a major market drop.


Is Market Turbulence Over?

"If the Fed doesn't cut Fed funds, the options market is telling you that the overall stock market will come down hard," says Lefkowitz. "We could be quickly under the 1400 level of the S&P 500 if the Fed doesn't act."

Fed-fund futures and a variety of market pundits have been forecasting a 100% likelihood the Fed will lower the benchmark lending rate, now at 5.25%, meaning there's no room in the market from the Fed for a surprise.

Lefkowitz also says the activity isn't strictly driven by money managers looking to protect portfolios. The put options are tempting enough for speculators to jump in. He says even if the market doesn't fall to below S&P 1400, the put options could still easily rise in value by "20, 30, 40 percent if we saw another large down day.



http://www.cnbc.com/id/20461003