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European Union Agreement: Good or Bad for the Dow Industrials?
Do not look to the EU agreement for a clue about the U.S. stock market trend.

By Bob Stokes
Mon, 12 Dec 2011 17:30:00 ET
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Did European Union leaders make the sovereign debt crisis "go away" last week?
 
Not even close. What they did agree on is tougher budget rules:
 
"...17 countries of the euro zone...agreed to run only minimal budget deficits in the future and allowed the European Court of Justice the right to strike down national laws that don't enforce such discipline properly..."
Wall Street Journal, (12/9)
 
Will the EU agreement prove bullish or bearish for world stock markets, including the Dow Industrials?
 
Let's put it this way: The evidence suggests that government intervention in the economy does not alter the dominant trend of financial markets.
 
For example: Look at the DJIA chart and try to identify when the U.S. government bailed out Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and other financial institutions.
 
 
  
"[The chart below] shows that in fact these actions took place in the early portion of the biggest stock market decline in 76 years. These actions did not push stock prices back up. The market finally bottomed months later, at a time when nothing along these lines happened.
 
"It is no good to claim that these actions had results eventually. By that reasoning, any future turn in the stock market would prove the contention."
Elliott Wave Theorist, March 2010 
 
 
 

If anything, the face value of this chart argues that economic government intervention makes stocks go down

There is simply no "cause and effect" relationship between government actions and stock market trends.
 
The stock market's price pattern is governed by the Wave Principle:
 
"Sometimes the market appears to reflect outside conditions and events, but at other times it is entirely detached from what most people assume are causal conditions. The reason is that the market has a law of its own. It is not propelled by the external causality to which one becomes accustomed in the everyday experiences of life.
 
"....The market's progression unfolds in waves. Waves are patterns of directional movement."
Elliott Wave Principle, (p. 21)
 
So what does the Wave Principle reveal about the market's current "directional movement"? 

This is an important time in the market's price pattern to discover the answer. And that answer can be found in our Financial Forecast Service,which you can read risk-free as you follow this link>>

 

Tags: bailouts, banks, Dow Industrials, Elliott Wave Principle, European debt crisis, European Union (EU), Fannie Mae, stimulus package, U.S. STOCK MARKET
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