SPKU Call Right but Too Early

Several weeks ago I called for a buy of SPXU. The Pro Shares Ultra Pro Short S&P 500 (SPXU) seeks a triple leverage or 300% return on the inverse performance of the S&P 500. Conversely, Pro Shares Ultra Pro S&P 500 (UPRO) is a triple leveraged fund that seeks a 300% return on the performance of the S&P for a single day. If you believe as I do that we are setting up for a leg down on the S&P then SPXU is the best way to profit from this trade. Despite this week's rally I believe the bear market rally isn't over. The traditional definition on Wall Street is that bear market rally's end once stocks have fallen 20 percent and I believe this one won't be any different. At its intraday low this past Tuesday, the S&P 500 was off 21.6% from its May 2nd high, marking the 16th “official” bear market since 1940. Before Tuesday's close, stocks rallied back above the 20% threshold on hopes that Euro–zone officials would be hatching a bigger and broader bailout plan. While after the day's 4% reversal, the equity benchmark continued to rocket higher the next two days and ended the week about 16% below the May high. In my opinion, investors shouldn't presume that the dance with the bear is over. Tuesday's pattern did not meet the explosion in volume that typically comes with a climatic capitulation. Once a bottom is formed it generally takes several months to complete the bottoming process. The ugly news is that historically this bottoming process could involve a further 10 to 12% decline with heavier volume. Over the last 70 years, bear markets have averaged 32% decline and a median 28.8% drop. The deepest bear market ended November 2008 following the collapse of Lehman Brothers, with more than half of the equity market's value wiped out from the 2007 top. However, the equity losses credited to the housing crisis were even deeper if you ignore a slight 47 day respite at the end of the year when the benchmark snapped back by 24%. However it continued to lose more than another 20% before finally bottoming out in May 2009 at the ominous intraday level of 666.76. If this bear market I am predicting holds true, the U.S. will find itself in good company. The majority of major markets in the world are in bear territory. At last count 20 of the 29 major world markets – from Italy to China to even Columbia were in bear market territory. I believe this is a Lehman Brothers situation in Europe and our dance with the bear is far from over. Europe is in recession and the U.S. and China will be there soon. To further illustrate my point I believe we are near that emotional point that occurs near the end of bear markets when sentiment gets so negative that there is nearly no one left to keep selling and therefore a rebound must ensue. This capitulation typically occurs with a few down days or strong reversal days on very high volume.
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