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- June ETF Short Interest Surges [view article]
- Everything You Wanted To Know About This Week's Market (But Were Afraid To Look At Too Closely) [view article]
- Friday Outlook: The Dollar 'Returns' [view article]
- Tuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
- Friday Outlook: Bulls in Charge? [view article]
- Wednesday Outlook: Holding the Line [view article]
- Tech Leaders Take It On The Chin [view article]
- Dave Fry's Market Outlook For Wednesday: Big Name Tech Climbing [view article]
- David Fry's Market Outlook For Wednesday [view article]
- David Fry's Market Outlook for Friday [view article]
- Why is Google Missing From Most Internet ETFs? [view article]
Recent FDN Articles
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- ETF Update: Plays for Drop in Oil Price, Tech ETFs, Options Available on GLD
- Broader Tech ETFs Outperform Narrower Sub-Sectors
- Everything You Wanted To Know About This Week's Market (But Were Afraid To Look At Too Closely)
- Friday Outlook: The Dollar 'Returns'
- Tuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again
- Friday Outlook: Bulls in Charge?
- Wednesday Outlook: Holding the Line
- Wednesday Outlook: The Tape Is the News
- Full List of Articles »
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June ETF Short Interest Surges [view article]
According to ETFconnect.com, there are 476,300,000 shares of the SPY. If there are 197,400,000 shares short then that represents 41.4% of the outstanding shares. That is a huge percentage though the question is how that compares historically. ReplyEverything You Wanted To Know About This Week's Market (But Were Afraid To Look At Too Closely) [view article]
Well rounded commentary. Wish you could publish this weekly .. ;) ReplyEverything You Wanted To Know About This Week's Market (But Were Afraid To Look At Too Closely) [view article]
EXCELLENT article! ReplyEverything You Wanted To Know About This Week's Market (But Were Afraid To Look At Too Closely) [view article]
There seem to be other forces at work here.While I agree on much of what the author says,the institutions still cannot remain in cash for long regardless of what the economic trends tell them. This is a growing part of the investment community and it takes the bite out of speculators and individual investors ability to move markets based on sound fundamentals.Truth is,this market is probably 35% or more,overvalued ,if you use common sense ,instead of hyped thinking.I just can't find it in my heart to go long now. Reply
Everything You Wanted To Know About This Week's Market (But Were Afraid To Look At Too Closely) [view article]
Great article. I am glad to read that I am not the only person who believes that the US is entering a prolonged period of stagflation. The Fed governors say it will never happen along with the market pundits. They say that there is no inflation because housing prices are declining. They even claim that the US is experiencing deflation. LOL!! Accoring to the fake government numbers, gasoline prices actually declined in April even though April gasoline futures went from 3.26 to 3.49. The worst part is that the market seems to believe the government numbers. ReplyFriday Outlook: The Dollar 'Returns' [view article]
I second the above comments. Keep it up David ReplyFriday Outlook: The Dollar 'Returns' [view article]
The weekly chart analysis you use is a great communicator for those of us who find visual language a better vehicle for understanding than confounding commentary and the use of words that carry bias and opinion. I guess a picture is truly worth a thousand words.Thanks for compiling the picture. Reply
Tiedeman
Friday Outlook: The Dollar 'Returns' [view article]
Great charts. ReplyTuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
Lively and funny, thanks. But.....I need ideas....what to buy now in government-denied inflationary environment when commodities have already run up.....?Reply
Tuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
Thanks David for the UNG chart. Greatly appreciated. ReplyTuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
Thanks everyone! ReplyTuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
Always enjoy your commentary David; wish there were more like you but this way you are special.Having worked in big business for over 30 years, I have to add that there is another piece to the puzzle. Lower infation benefits big business by supressing wages -- workers don't demand as much when CPI "data" is low. This is another one of those
government / big business schemes that is a win/win for them and the rest of us suffer a reduced standard of living.
Control the message .. set expectations .. control the masses! Reply
Tuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
always look for your stuffthe charts w/comments, as i'm beginning to learn what they might mean :-) , are really interesting
thanks!
Reply
Tuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
I love your charts and commentary! Thank you! ReplyTuesday Outlook: Déjà vu All Over Again [view article]
I always like the Shadow Govt Stats stuff. Looking at the dark blue line, the obvious question is: When is 1980 coming again? That of course would be a major sell signal for commodities and TIPS. If economies buckle a more under the ongoing credit crunch, and if Emerging Markets really do care about taming inflation (a big If), the answer could be, "Soon!" Reply