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Alpesh Patel
Alpesh Patel's columns :
11/22/2004Oil. Oh it's so last month
11/15/2004Eat my shorts
11/08/2004Big Rally Big Fall
10/31/2004Big Week
10/25/2004Vacuum
10/15/2004Dip and dive or dip and rise: 4600, 4700�4500.
10/11/2004Oil making us boil.
09/27/2004The Trends Re-Appear
09/27/2004Oil
09/21/2004No Retail Therapy Here
09/14/2004Do you feel lucky punk?
08/23/2004The Market Wants To Move Higher
08/17/2004August a good swing trader's month
08/06/2004Where are the jobs?
08/02/2004August a good swing trader's month
07/26/2004Takeovers abound
07/19/2004What does Branson tell us?
07/12/2004Well valued FTSE?
07/02/2004Well hello July
06/28/2004Summer aint bad
06/21/2004The Real Hot Stuff
06/04/2004Not bad at all
06/01/2004May was better than April, hows about June then?
05/21/2004Broader Market View
05/14/2004Interest Rates or GDP?
04/30/2004The Run Up To May
04/23/2004Some Big Picture Views
04/16/2004Growth Spurt or Splutter
04/13/2004The interest in Interest rates : beware and prepare.
04/07/2004Pick a Direction Already
03/26/2004After Gordon's Words
03/24/2004Hidden Opportunities
03/10/2004Hidden Opportunities and Big Momentum
02/26/2004So Much Uncertainty

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Alpesh Patel – A weekly look at market opportunities and pitfalls
Alpesh B. Patel is one of the UK's best-known traders and financial journalists. He writes a regular column for the Financial Times, has written seven bestselling books on trading, and makes regular television appearances for Bloomberg, Sky Television, Channel 4, The Money Channel, and the BBC.

Miserable or Not?

04/20/2005

There are times every year when every trader wonders, 'is it a downtrend with a temporary upward move or is it an uptrend still which has just had a small downward blip.

The answer is important because he needs to decide several things :

  1. Do I rebalance my portfolio to be net 'long' ie a holder of stocks or net 'short' using say CFDs or spreadbets to profit from further falls.
  2. Do I exit those stocks which have taken a bit of a hit and my profits no longer look as good as they did last week, or do I hold out for the resumption?

So what is it doing now? As I have repeated several times in this column, earnings exceeding expectations are providing a floor to the market falls. However, if earnings start missing, and especially if that is due to poor growth due to oil, inflation, Chinese competition, then the market fails and falls.

But, a funny thing happened with Apple's results, which teaches us a lot. It's profits exceeded expectations and rose 6-fold and the market still fell. It did not care for earnings beating expectations.

But, there is another but. I was at a board meeting this morning where we had a presentation from a Senior Economist at Goldman Sachs. Their view is one of increasing demand from China and India, not just competition. So companies selling to those economies should do well. Well, this we know, except that the earnings from those low income countries is poor. But, what if we got the markets thinking about the GDP growth in China as a boost to Western fortunes. That may provide some temporary floor.

The problem is, such a floor would be temporary, and the Apple effect worries me still. On balance it looks like a market where any upward move is a blip, not a turnaround.

How does it look in the UK? Well, over a tumultuous week, I like to see who has best weathered the storm. Pharmaceuticals are doing best. GW Pharma, Oxford BioMedica, Sinclair Pharma, Antisoma, Pharmagene and even AstraZeneca.

Elsewhere to catch my eye on performance and fundamental news where there could be an India or China demand and also some money for UK companies: 'US and India sign Open Skies agreement' - so should mean more plane orders and engines (Rolls Royce, BAe); defence too - Chinese are pushing for lifting of EU arms embargoes.

British companies with know-how and technology leads should be a starting point for the longer term investor. For the shorter term one - as I've said, rises now look like they will fall soon after.

Also, if you would like a free multi-media CDROM on 'Investing Better', which covers spreadbetting, CFD trading and momentum indicators like the MACD, posted to you then drop me an email with your postal address to alpesh@tradermind.com.

Spreadbetters

Spreadbetters and futures traders often look at hard and soft commodities. Here's my quick take on the action for the week ahead:

  • Oil: Mixed to lower
  • Copper: Mixed to lower
  • Gold: Higher
  • $/£: Higher
  • Dow: Mixed to lower
  • FTSE 100: mixed to lower
  • Soyabean Oil: lower

Email me if you'd like to know about my spreadbetting trader training CDROMs: Alpesh@tradermind.com


Alpesh B Patel, author of “Alpesh Patel on Stock Futures” available from the ADVFN bookstore.