This blog will effectively analyze daily stock market trend analysis, market timing and the proper selection of the best stock/future/forex/commodity picks to maximize profit potential.


Monday, December 13, 2010

Closing Bell & Software Update


Stocks ended flat Monday after expectations that a tax-cut package will pass the Senate kept them higher for much of the day. The tax-cut compromise brokered by the White House and Republicans was scheduled for its first Senate vote late Monday. If enacted, the package will extend tax cuts passed during the Bush administration for all income levels for another two years. It will also extend unemployment benefits through next year and put in place a one-year reduction in Social Security taxes. Economists expect the nearly $900 billion tax package to boost economic growth and increase the size of the budget deficit. House Democrats have pledged to block the measure unless tax rates rise for the nation's wealthiest estates. Traders were also encouraged by a handful of deals announced Monday. General Electric Co. is paying $1.3 billion to buy British oilfield company Wellstream Holdings PLC and Dell Inc. is spending $960 million for network storage company Compellent Technologies Inc. The S&P 500 index eked out a new 2010 high for the fourth time in four days. The index rose 0.06 point to 1,240. Other indexes took a late afternoon spill. The Dow Jones industrial average closed with a gain of 18, to 11,428, having been up as many as 70 points earlier. The Dow is now just 15 points from its 2010 closing high, reached Nov. 5. The Nasdaq composite index fell 12,to close at 2,624. That snapped a six-day streak in which the index notched new 2010 highs. Falling shares and rising ones were almost evenly matched on the New York Stock Exchange. Consolidated volume was 4.4 billion shares.

Boring day? Not quite. We nailed 5 ES points and opened several swing trade positions. We'll let our charts speak for themselves.

FYI - We have received a lot of email requests for our software release January 1, 2011. However, due to increased demand, time constraints and and limited licenses, the price for retail subscribers will be increasing to $500 per month.

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