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When the market took a 2,500 point correction (large in % terms) in 1998, many of our clients made BIG bucks!  The above charts are of companies in Utilities and Food Production.  The huge market dive began the last week of August, 1998 and continued until the first week of November 1998.    Note the ^ on the charts, which shows where the stock prices began to rise (September 1, 1998), while the market in general was failing.  The first chart shown was listed as a Rolling Stock in our stock reports.  At the beginning of a major market correction look for those Rolling Stocks and Range Riders which are in the sectors shown below and in commodities which people can't live without in ANY market condition.  When investors jump out of aggressive stocks, these are what people jump into in declining markets!  The sectors are clearly marked above the charts if you are using Telechart 2000 (free CD with any purchase of our stock reports, per the terms stated) for stock analysis.

1.  View the following charts in TC 2000 by entering the following symbols (click once anywhere on the chart, press the letter J on your keyboard, and enter one of the symbols below):
NYSE: 
nyse
NASDAQ: 
compqx

2.
If NYSE is taking a serious 'long-term' dive and NASDAQ is stable: 
Invest in rolling stocks and range riders exclusively in NASDAQ until it recovers (see next page), and choose stocks only from the market sectors below. 
If NASDAQ is taking a serious 'long-term' dive and NYSE is stable: 
Invest in rolling stocks and range riders exclusively in the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) until it recovers (see next page), and choose stocks only from the market sectors below.
If NASDAQ and NYSE are both tanking 'long-term':  Invest in range riders exclusively, and choose stocks only from the market sectors below.

If you're going to invest on FRIDAY
, recognize that of the five days of the week Friday is the day traders are LEAST likely to jump into the market during market failures, and it's also the day they tend to sell off shares.  A good strategy could be to wait until ONE HOUR BEFORE the close of the primary (non-extended) trading hours to get into the market, as share prices are often cheapest at that point... and if they're going to go 'long' over the weekend quite often they'll start buying within the last 45 minutes!

GROWTH STOCKS tend to perform better in up markets while VALUE STOCKS (generally those with low P/E's, or price to earnings ratios [lower is better]) tend to perform better in down.  Overall, VALUE STOCKS trend toward better returns in general.

Did anyone ever tell you when many stocks went down, many others went UP, some WAY UP???!

MEDIA GENERAL GROUP      

3/9/00 to 4/14/00

3/9/00 to 9/5/02

Short MAJOR Decline

Long-Term Decline

      

NASDAQ

- 34.19 %

      

- 75.21 %

      

Tobacco

+ 10.43 %

+ 164.81 %

Aerospace/ Defense

+ 14.06 %

+ 74.83 %

Health Services

+ 4.90 %

+ 58.64 %

Leisure

+ 6.44 %

+ 39.91 %

Real Estate

+ 12.47 %

+ 36.87 %

Insurance

+ 20.69 %

+ 32.41 %

Transportation

+ 7.84 %

+ 25.29 %

Food & Beverage

+ 4.17 %

+ 23.97 %

Banking

+ 7.22 %

+ 23.66 %

Consumer Non-Durables

+ 9.24 %

+ 16.15 %

Materials & Construction

- 1.52 %

+ 14.41 %

Specialty Retail

+ 3.22 %

+ 11.28 %

Chemicals

+ 9.09 %

+ 8.12 %

Metals & Mining

- 1.72 %

+ 4.98 %

Retail

+ 7.72 %

- 0.12 %

Manufacturing

+ 9.76 %

- 3.51 %

Conglomerates

+ 12.00 %

- 5.63 %

Utilities

+ 6.82 %

- 6.90 %

Energy

+ 0.50 %

- 9.84 %

Wholesale

+ 6.31 %

- 11.32 %

Financial Services

- 0.40 %

- 13.90 %

Automotive

+ 7.95 %

- 18.73 %

Utilities

+ 6.82 %

- 6.90 %

The above makes sense, doesn't it?   People tend to invest in sectors they depend on in ANY economic condition!  Of course, past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

Here are THE top performing market sectors in many major market failures:
Drug Manufacturers
Utilities- Natural Gas
Utilities- Electric
Banks- Large Regional
Savings & Loans
Diversified Financial
Investment Brokers
Business Services
Restaurants
Food Production
Beverages- Soft Drinks
Beverages- Alcoholic
Tobacco
Insurance- Life/ Multi
Insurance- Brokers
Insurance- Property/Casualty
Personal Cosmetics
Building- Residential
Building- Heavy Construction
Hotels/ Motels/ Casinos
Medical- Health Services
Medical- Products
Hospital Management
Oil- Domestic
Oil- Services
Oil- International
Household- General Products
Diversified Manufacturing
Transportation- Railroads
Aerospace- Defense
Media- Misc. Publications (old)
Shoe Manufacturing
Electronic Instruments

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