Words can’t describe the excitement we’ve seen in the market over the past few weeks and Friday was a classic example of what could be described as “running for the hills”. Wall Street was in full fledged panic mode Friday as the Dow went back and forth in a 1,000-point range, hitting a low of 7,882 and a high of 8,901.
The last hour of trading was a toe-to-toe battle between the bulls and the bears that left both sides bloody. It was awesome. By the final bell the market had mixed results as the Dow fell 128 points to 8,451, while the S&P 500 slipped 11 points to 899. The Nasdaq held its own and managed to finish in the green, up 4 points to 1,649.
The final score for the week was a clear victory for the bears, however, as they hit the Dow and S&P 500 for 18%, while the Nasdaq slid 15%.
As a result, a lot of companies went on sale, at least in my mind. More on that in a minute. While it is extremely hard to predict a market bottom, there are signs that at least we are getting close. I still don’t trust October but as bad as the month has been historically, it is often the best time to buy when looking at long-term stocks or options if there has been a correction.
Yeap, it’s gonna be hard to go long right now, but with a game plan you can advantage of everyone’s elses fear. Take a look at how some of these big names traded on Friday.
Microsoft (MSFT, $21.50, down $0.80) hit a low of $20.65. Are you kidding me? Back in April when Microsoft was trading at $30 did you ever think you would have the chance to buy it at $20?
Back in May, Google (GOOG, $332.00, up $3.02) was at $600. Yesterday it traded as low as $310. At half-price, is it a Blue-light special?
How stupid does Yahoo (YHOO, $12.29, down $0.36) look now for not taking Microsoft’s $30+ a share offer? Yahoo may not be worth $30 but it does look cheap at $12.
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ, $55.85, down $1.73) was at a 52-week high less than a month ago and hit a 52-week low of $52. Crazy. Just crazy, man.
General Motors (GM, $4.89, up $0.13) got chopped in half after after Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services said the company’s credit could drop further.
Energy companies have taken a whippin’ as oil prices fell 10% to a 13-month low of $78 a barrel. That’s the lowest its been in a year. Gas is going for $2.99 a gallon here on the east coast. Remember our Energy Watch list from June?
Arch Coal (ACI, $22.04, up $0.49) was at $70.
Massey Energy (MEE, $20.73, down $1.15) was at $84.
Patriot Coal (PCX, $14.60, down $0.23) was at $154. There was a 2-for-1 stock-split in August at $100. Still, the shares have fallen from $154 to $28 ($14 split-adjusted)? Incredible.
Peabody Energy (BTU, $28.65, down $0.93) was $77.
Joy Global (JOYG, $28.88, down $2.09) was at $85.
I profiled quite a few of them on June 4 and two weeks later they had returns of 100%-300% as the call options exploded when the stocks were hitting new 52-week highs. Click here to view these blogs.
The VIX (^VIX, 69.95, up 6.03) blasted through the 60’s and nearly hit 77. On Tuesday, the VIX was at 52 when I said that the 60’s look like a good bet.
The point I’m trying to make is that some stocks ran too high too fast and now some of them have gone too far to the downside. Somewhere in the middle is where they may be fairly valued but we are more worried about the options on these stocks, not the funadamentals. I still don’t trust the financial stocks but there will be some winners out there once the dust settles.
The credit crunch, President Bush, the press and the talking heads have scared the be-Jesus out of everybody and nothing seems to be working to restore faith in the market. Remember what I have said about not following the herd. Yes, the market is tanking and there’s more downside risk. But everybody needs to quit beating the horse. It’s already dead. Now is the time to start buying for 6-12 months down the road.
I’m working on a “Lottery Portfolio” this weekend and I will be picking some stocks and sectors that may be worth a gamble. The market is open for business on Columbus Day although banks will be closed. Right now Wall Street can’t see the forest for the trees and hopefully by doing a Lottery Portfolio, I will be able to show you the bigger picture.
Rick Rouse
Rick@OptionsMentoring.com