Did you catch Nucor on 60 minutes last night?
Sorry I didn't answer this before. No, I didn't catch that.
Alright Tilted, what's your prediction for this week?
Looking at the Asian and European market news, I'm betting we continue to take another leg down.
I don't think the stimulus is going to right the leaning ship, or even if it does, it will be very short-lived.
I generally don't bother worrying about near term trends. Usually, I only care about 2 time frames - the immediate term (minutes, hours, maybe even a day) and very long term. I'll trade for the first, and invest for the later.
Sometimes a very short term technical analysis gives me compelling reason to think one immediate movement is more likely than another - and that's a trading opportunity. Also, sometimes an anticipated happening (e.g. news, earnings report, economic indicator), or what I perceive as an advantage for me in quickly assessing how that happening impacts a particular stock, can create a trading event where I believe the expected value of the trade is positive.
In the long term, I can invest in stocks whose fundamentals I love, or in which I have a lot of faith for some other reason. Because its a long term investment, I don't have to be concerned with the whims and short-sightedness of the market - eventually quality and value has to be fairly priced, and if you have enough faith in a company you can hold on to them until that moment. In addition, sometimes I will invest for the long term even when I don't have the utmost faith in a company, because they are so heavily discounted that the potential upside outweighs the potential downside. That's a bit of a gamble, but a gamble that still has a positive expected value.
So, back to your original question - I don't have a clue. Trying to predict, and then act upon, near term trends is what gets people in trouble, and my brain just isn't wired to do it much anymore. The market is an emotional creature, and it's hard enough to predict an individual's emotions over a short period of time, let alone the emotions of a huge group of people, all with different sensibilities, fears and goals - and all being affected by the demonstrated emotions of everyone else. Add to that the fact that we don't know what news will happen in the near term, so we can't even try to predict how that news will emotionally affect all of those people.
Sure, sometimes you can guess what will or won't happen. Sometimes you will be right - sometimes wrong, but for most people it's mostly just luck. There are other dynamics (like immediate movements and very long term trends) that have a much higher degree of predictability, so there's just not much reason to try to make money guessing what will happen in the near term.
I realize that's not the answer you're looking for - but it's about all I got. I think a flipped coin could do almost as good as I could in predicting the next week, unless you can tell me what the news cycle will look like.
As far as the stimulus plan affecting the market, I don't think it will have any major effect. If the market makes a big move, it will likely be for other reasons. This stimulus package is already baked into the markets for now - they're very much forward looking mechanism and the details of this package aren't news anymore. Eventually, what effects it has will play a role in dictating market conditions, but as a near term market mover its powers are limited.
On a side note, the Sirius situation remains interesting, and it's looking like they are going to strike a deal with Liberty Media. I fear that a significant development will be revealed today, while I'm out of the office for a significant period of time.