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Archive for December, 2009

Individual Investors Have Jumped Into Another Fire December 18, 2009

By Robert Prechter, CMT

The following article is an excerpt from Robert Prechter’s Elliott Wave Theorist.

First they bought into the “stocks for the long run” case and got killed. Then they jumped on the commodity bandwagon and got killed. Many investors are buying back into these very same markets, but others are running to what they perceive as safe “yields” in the municipal bond market. So far this year, individual investors have “poured a record $55 billion” (Bloomberg, 11/12) into muni bond funds, with the pace running $2b. per week in August and September; many other investors are buying munis outright. These must be the people who tell us that they can’t live without “yield” and also cannot imagine their city, county or state government going bust. But as Conquer the Crash warned and as The Elliott Wave Theorist has reiterated, the muni bond market is heading for disaster.

Municipalities have borrowed more than they can repay, they have pension liabilities that they cannot meet (up to a trillion dollars’ worth, according to Moody’s), and tax receipts are falling. The only reason that states haven’t failed yet is the so-called “stimulus package,” which took money from savers, investors and taxpayers—thereby impoverishing the people who live in the various states—and gave it to state governments to spend so they would not have to cease their profligate spending. But political pressures will eventually cut off this gravy train. In the 2010-2017 period, the muni bond market will become awash in defaults. The leap in optimism since March, which has shown up in every financial market, has fueled a retreat in muni bond yields to their lowest level since 1967 and narrowed the spread between muni bond yields and Treasuries.

This rush to buy municipal bonds is occurring right on the cusp of a dramatic decline in their values. While many individuals are loading up right at the peak so they can participate in the next major market disaster, smarter investors, such as insurance companies Allstate and Guardian Life, are getting out. Subscribers to our services, we trust, own not a single municipal IOU. Our recommendation for investors is 100 percent safety, and such a program does not include muni bonds. If you are a recent subscriber, please read the second half of Conquer the Crash as a manual on how to get your finances safe.

Get Your FREE 8-Lesson “Conquer the Crash Collection” Now! You’ll get valuable lessons on what to do with your pension plan, what to do if you run a business, how to handle calling in loans and paying off debt and so much more. Learn more and get your free 8 lessons here.


Robert Prechter, Chartered Market Technician, is the founder and CEO of Elliott Wave International, author of Wall Street best-sellers Conquer the Crash and Elliott Wave Principle and editor of The Elliott Wave Theorist monthly market letter since 1979.

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Question about the Elliott Wave Theory?

i understand the Elliott Wave cycle, but from what I’ve read it never says WHY does this pattern exist, what causes the market to act this way

and also does the market always act like this? what are the exceptions?

oh, and can you reccomend some good books about the Elliott Wave Theory, or about Dow Theory

thanks!

elliot mentions no reason for the basic 1-5 pattern, only that he kept seeing similar paterns on many charts.

search amazon from "elliot wave"

robert prechter is the "foremost" elliot wave technician in practice today. prechter gained prominence in 87 after calling the crash – however, he stubbornly kept predicting a massive decline ever since. and completely missed the 90s bull market.

markets never "always" act within the elliot wave, but it is extremely helpful – the problem, for me, is where do you start the count, its entirely up to you where to begin. also in the book – elliot wave principle by prechter and frost – the elliot count study they did in the 70s on the dow got so arcane that it virtually rendered it useless.

however, the basic 1-5 bull count, and the basic ABC decline count are still very much in use as a "guide" if you will.

there might be a few blogs that are devoted to elliot – do a blogsearch on google for elliot wave.