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  • Association of Investor Awareness - Week of 12/18/2008

    In This Issue:

    The Economy Is Bad, But Stocks Are Priced For Worse
    Stocks Outshine Their Competition
    Behold The Halo Effect
    A January Bounce Seems Likely
    Energy And Foreign Growth Are Positives
    We May Be Halfway Through The Economic Downturn
    What Everybody Knows...
    The Bottom Line This Week

    Last week we received additional signals that a bear rally is probably in the works. During the five day period, investors were treated to a smorgasbord of bad news. Congress turned thumbs down on bailing out the Big Three automakers. Unemployment surged to a 26 year high. T-Bill returns dropped to essentially zero. Many bellwether companies issued earnings warnings. Several firms cut their dividends, and investors were shocked by a $50 billion hedge fund collapse.

    So what did the market do? It barely budged. The Dow eased down less than 0.1%. The Nasdaq actually rose 2.1%. The market was also strong during the first three days of the current week. In our opinion, such resilience in the face of disturbing economic events indicates that investors are probably getting ready to do some buying.

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  • Association of Investor Awareness - Week of 10/30/2008

    In This Issue:

    A Big Rebound May Be Close
    Like Kids In A Candy Store
    Super Stocking Stuffers
    These Trends Are Your Friends
    The Bottom Line This Week

    Another bear trap snapped shut last week when the 4.8% stock market gain from October 6 - 10 turned into a 5.4% loss for the Dow and an ugly 9.3% plunge for the Nasdaq.

    As has been the usual pattern during this stock market plunge, the drop was larger than the previous bounce. One of our group compared the market to a slot machine that gives just enough money back to make people want to keep playing.

    We saw another inducement to play on Tuesday of this week when the market surged nearly 890 points when it became known that the Fed would lower interest rates again. When the official announcement came on Wednesday, stocks eased back 74 points. It was a textbook example of the old Wall Street rule to "buy on the rumor, sell on the news."

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