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Davos: Robert Shiller On The Housing Market- Jan 2010
Robert Shiller, an economics professor at Yale School of Management, shares his outlook on the housing market.

Market Update: Downdraft Continues… For Now
Note: The Following is an excerpt from an intra-week update sent to our clients earlier today. Market Update: Downdraft Continues… For Now If today’s lows hold, there is a very high likely hood that we bounce from here. If not, the downdraft will likely continue. As mentioned in earlier this week, it is time to play…

The U.S. Dollar vs. Capital Markets
Th Inverse Correlation Explained:
In the recent past, there has been an inverse correlation between the U.S. dollar and dollar denominated assets (mainly stocks and commodities). By definition, the inverse correlation states that stocks and commodities (which are priced in dollars) will fall when the dollar rallies. Since early December, the greenback has steadily rallied which has put pressure on several capital markets. As the following few charts show, on a relative basis, crude oil is the hardest hit, followed by gold, then U.S. equities. What does this mean? We’ll let you draw your own conclusions by commenting below.
Global Macro Factors Impact Markets
The market is trading on macro factors at the moment, says Greg Goodsell, equity strategist at RBS, speaking to Jeremy Hook, investment director at TMS Capital and CNBC’s Oriel Morrison.

A Bullish "TELL" for Main Street
Steel Stocks Are Used To Build “Stuff”: We are seeing something bullish occurring on Wall Street, large amounts of institutional capital is flowing into steel stocks. Steel stocks serve as a good “tell” for the U.S. and global economy. Since steel is used to build “stuff” steel stocks tend to rally when the market believes the economy…

That Was Fast: The Mini Bear Market In Biotechs Is Over $IBB
The most common definition of a bear market is a decline of 20% or more below a recent high. Earlier this year, the IBB (Biotech ETF) fell 24% which dragged down a slew of momentum and growth stocks. At the time, I wrote about (here) how steep corrections were normal and actually healthy for these…

