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This Stock Is Set To Rise As Apple’s Sales Increase

It's that time of year again as Apple Inc. (AAPL: 241.62 0.00 0.00%) prepares to showcase its new iPod models before the end-of-the-year spending spree. The company announced yesterday that it would show off a new iPod Touch with dual cameras before the holiday season.

But everyone knows about Apple. And I'm sure most Wall Street firms even own shares of the company. I'm not too interested in Apple's sales - but I am interested in the effect of Apple's sales on the performance of a small company I've been following.

This micro-cap company has only two analysts following it so most investors, including many big time Wall Street firms, are unlikely to know about it. And if you can get into micro-caps before major firms, you have the chance to beat the street.

***More people are purchasing iPods and smart-phones these days as demand grows for mobile devices and their applications. When somebody purchases an iPod for $199 or an iPad for $499, they are making a relatively large investment. So these customers usually make another relatively small purchase to protect their investment.

Why? Because electronic devices can easily get scratched or damaged - so customers want a protective film covering, or a case. Think about it. If you're purchasing a new iPhone for $300, you'll probably buy a protective covering for just $20 more to prevent damage to the screen.

But this covering is no simple plastic. Originally, this film covering was designed to protect the blades of military helicopters. Later it was determined that it could also be used to protect everyday electronic devices - like those made by Apple.

***There are just a few companies in this specialized industry, and most are privately held. But there is one micro-cap company in this space…

ZAGG Incorporated (ZAGG: 3.23 0.00 0.00%) makes protective coverings for electronic devices including iPods, iPhones, iPads, and global positioning systems. The company is headquartered in Salt Lake City, Utah.

If the trend toward mobile devices continues, as I believe it will (and most research supports this position), soon the majority of people with mobile devices will be flocking to ZAGG's products to protect their investment. It could even be a takeover target, although at this point that is pure speculation.

I think there's tremendous growth potential for this little specialized industry, and ZAGG is posting pretty impressive numbers. The company showed signs of strong growth after reporting earnings for the second quarter of 2010.

ZAGG reported record revenue of $15.1 million, up 63 percent from $9.2 million from the second quarter of 2009. I love young companies that have strong revenue growth, especially one that has a market cap of just $71 million.

The company brought in 66 percent of its revenue from indirect wholesale channels, 23 percent from its website (this serves retail customers), and 8 percent from its mall cart and kiosk business. If the company can further diversify its revenue stream, it will be in an even stronger position down the road.

ZAGG expects to see strong demand from its existing partners including Best Buy Co. (BBY: 31.86 0.00 0.00%) and RadioShack (RSH: 18.70 0.00 0.00%). The company also added AT&T Inc. (T: 26.94 0.00 0.00%) as its newest channel partner. Robert G. Pedersen II, President and CEO of ZAGG said this will be an "…important relationship in our future growth strategy". The company launched the new distribution agreement with AT&T in June in all corporate AT&T locations.

ZAGG's gross margin of over 50 percent should also perk investors' interest. If competition within the industry increases, the company has room to lower prices by decreasing its margins, which could thus increase demand for its products.

Although there are a few competitors in the industry - including two private companies, Power Support and SGP - I think demand for ZAGG's protective coverings will stay strong. What's more, ZAGG does not have any long-term debt, and has $6.4 million in cash on hand.

***Although the story may be bright for the company, its stock has been very volatile over the last two years. Over the last year the stock moved significantly lower - but it seems to have found support around $2.00 and has been moving higher since early summer. The stock is up 43 percent since June 1.

 

ZAGG is expected to grow earnings by 67 percent this year and 36 percent in 2011. Revenue is expected to average around 30 percent over the same period. This is a reasonably fast-growing company in a strong industry, and while it has significant exposure to discretionary spending, a potential weak spot in the economy, I believe demand for mobile devices will continue to support strong sales.

As always, I encourage you to do your own homework before entering any positions.

Singapore Stock Market Update

Morning Highlights

Singapore market opens higher after Wall Street closed up on Friday on Federal Reserve's comments that it was ready to take further steps to support the US economic recovery.

Last week, market has been seen consolidating between 2900-2950. We are expecting further consolidation from this point, after which, market will eventually gain momentum on the upside. Nonetheless, please do be mindful of the support at 2900.

Till then, our market sentiment remains neutral.

  • Starhub broke high of 2.39
  • Goodpack broke high of 1.90

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The Property Cooling Measures implemented by the government are as follow (All measures to take effect on 30 Aug):

  1. Holding Period for the seller stamp duty increases to 3 years from 1 year.
  2. Minimum cash payment increase for property buyers with existing housing loans.
  3. Buyers of second property can borrow up to 70% on property value, down from 80%. 

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Watch Out For Economic News Today:

  1. U.S July Personal Income

Corporate Announcements:

  1. Swiber acquired the remaining 10% equity interest of Equitorial Pte. Ltd.
  2. Cosco delivered a bulk carrier of 57,000 dwt to its Asian buyer.

News Updates:

  1. Bernanke pledges Federal Reserve will fight deflation, but doesn't outline trigger to act; U.S. stocks rally on Bernanke's reassurances; Friday gains pare indexes' weekly slump
  2. Second-quarter U.S. GDP revised down to 1.6% growth rate from 2.4%
  3. Dell matches H-P's $27-a-share offer for 3Par, whose board again sides with Dell offer; Hewlett-Packard lifts bid for 3Par to $30 a share, again topping Dell's latest offer
  4. Intel cuts third-quarter revenue forecast, citing weaker-than-expected PC demand
  5. Microsoft co-founder Allen suing Apple, Google, Yahoo, eBay, others over patents: report
  6. Antitrust regulators approve airline merger of United and Continental
  7. Bank of Japan to hold special policy meeting Monday to consider yen rise; Tokyo shares powering ahead as an emergency Bank of Japan meeting raised hopes the bank would announce additional easing measures to curb the yen's growth-damaging climb
  8. Hong Kong shares snapped a six-day losing streak to advance early Monday, as resource stocks led by Cnooc Ltd. jumped on higher commodity prices and strong cues from Wall Street.
  9. China funds lost US$65 billion in H1 due to Stocks
  10. U.K August House Prices down by most since April 2009

Quick Picks: Here is a quick pick screen that we have designed to pick out potential stocks, both Bullish and Bearish. These are measured with emphasis on larger changes in price and volume.

Bullish Stocks (Singapore)

 

Symbol

Name

Entry

SL

TSL

TP

Remarks

1

TECH

Technic Oil & Gas

0.845

0.785

 

0.905

 
2 BENK Beng Kuang Marine 0.30 0.225 0.375

 

Boeing Postpones Delivery Of Dreamliner For The Sixth Time

In what seems like a never ending saga, The Boeing Co. (NYSE:BA) postponed delivery of its 787 Dreamliner for the sixth time, promising now to finally hand over the first plane to customers in the middle of the first quarter of 2011.

The latest delay came after Rolls-Royce Group PLC told the world's largest aircraft maker it would be unable to supply an engine needed to complete flight testing, Boeing said in a statement Friday. Rolls said the delay wasn't related to a 787 engine blowout on a test bed in Derby, England, which this month forced it to shut the site for repairs.

The composite-plastic plane is already more than 2 1/2 years late following delays caused by working with new materials, parts delays from suppliers and redesign work involving an Italian sub-contractor.

Boom Of The “Gas Age” Set To Precipitate A Collapse In Gas And Petroleum Prices

Major new energy issues are about to transform still further the strategic balance of the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea, with foreseeable consequences for the global energy market over the coming decade. Soon-to-be-evident new wealth in the Red Sea/Horn of Africa region will transform the intensity of conflict there, which in turn will affect not only the region, but the world's most important trading route: the Red Sea/Suez sea line of communication (SLOC).

Much of the anticipated change is developing around the flood of new discoveries and exploitation of natural gas fields in the Indian Ocean region, particularly extending through Ethiopia, Egypt, and other countries of the Red Sea region. Apart from the impending influx of new energy wealth into the region, facilitating new levels of confidence and capability in the security environment, the boom of the "Gas Age" also seems set to promise - within a decade - an oversupply of gas to the world market, almost certainly precipitating a collapse in price for gas and petroleum.

The strategic balance in the Horn of Africa, and reaching through the Red Sea to Egypt and the Mediterranean, is changing rapidly - and in many respects is becoming more unstable - as political, geopolitical, economic, and ideological issues begin to clash. The war over the reunification of Somalia, incorporating both the old Italian Somaliland (now Somalia) and the Republic of Somaliland, has now become indisputable, and nominally-moderate Egypt has come down firmly on the side of reunifying the area under the clear dominance of an Islamist-dominated but anomic - essentially lawless - Somalia.

Egypt - with its unstable political transition underway at the same time as the discovery of increasing quantities of natural gas - has been covertly supporting a wide range of radical actions along the Red Sea littoral and in the Horn with the sole goal of ensuring that Ethiopia does not use its traditional heartland strength to be able to revive its dominance of the Red Sea and the sea lane which links to Egypt's Suez Canal.

In the process, however, the Egyptian Government has given support to the same radical jihadist groups which fundamentally oppose Egyptian secular governance, which support Iranian expansion into the Red Sea/Africa framework, and which have transformed a strategically benign Ethiopia into one which must now accept confrontation with Egypt and its regional allies.

This situation has been compounded by the recent Islamist/pan-Somalist success in winning power in Somaliland, but of equal importance has been the first quiet stage of the transformation of Ethiopia into an energy exporting power. Ethiopia's natural gas reserves which the US Energy Information Agency (EIA) in 2009 rated as zero and in early 2010 at one-trillion cubic feet (TCF), now have been demonstrated to be significant, and gas exports will begin within five years.

Malaysian State-owned oil and gas company Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) has now proven as much as four TCF of gas in its reserves in the Ogaden basin region of Ethiopia. Petronas is one of about 85 companies which have oil and gas exploration licenses in Ethiopia, but the Malaysian company is the first to begin its production phase, which should see a gas treatment plant and a gas pipeline from the Ogaden to Djibouti (at a total cost of $1.9-billion) on-line within five years. Estimated Ethiopian gas reserves, as of 2010 (not "proven reserves"), were reported at 12.46 TCF, but this figure was likely to be expanded frequently as new discoveries are reported.

Significantly, although the externally-supported and -armed Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) has continued to sustain sporadic armed contact with Ethiopian security forces into August 2010, the second week of August saw the senior ONLF leadership in Washington, DC, meeting secretly (under US sponsorship) with representatives of the Ethiopian Government. Just days before that, representatives of the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) also met in Washington, DC, with senior Ethiopian Government officials. Both the OLF and the ONLF have been receiving extensive logistical support, weapons, training, and funding from Eritrea, supported directly or indirectly by both Egypt and Iran.

It is now apparent to both the ONLF and OLF that their foreign patrons have been waging a losing battle against the Ethiopian Government, and that, with the growing strength and wealth of the Ethiopian Government, now is the time to consider coming to terms with Addis Ababa.

Any thought that the pan-Somalists, who have recently scored a major success in winning the Presidency of the Republic of Somaliland, can effectively make headway in the ethnically-Somali Ogaden region of Ethiopia have been quashed by the effective military action by the Ethiopian Defense Force (EDF) in its combat contacts with the pan-Somalists. The EDF units involved were almost entirely ethnically Somali (officers and men), and yet acted decisively to quash the Somalian forces fighting them.

Fighting around July 12, 2010, in the el-Dibir area of the Somaliland-Ethiopian border was largely credited in the media with being an EDF attack on civilians, but in fact it involved a clash with Islamist forces that were routed by the EDF, which seized 120 of the Islamists' trucks and took them to the Ethiopian city of Jijiga.

At the core of all of this has been the proxy war waged by Iranian-backed Islamists, supported by the secular governments of Eritrea and Egypt, to keep Ethiopia landlocked. When the Ethiopian Government, some two years ago, began having an inkling that it might soon be in the gas exporting business, it started negotiations to build a pipeline to the Somaliland port of Berbera.

When it became clear that the UDUB Government of Somaliland was not well-prepared to contest the Presidential elections - which resulted in a pan-Somalist Islamist taking power in July 2010 - Ethiopia was forced to turn back to Djibouti as the only available seaport for the export of Ethiopian gas.

This is not an ideal situation for Ethiopia, given that Djibouti has traditionally held Ethiopia to ransom - given that it has, once again, a monopoly on Ethiopian trade imports and exports - but it is nonetheless viable for both countries.

At present, the Petronas plans to be exporting natural gas from the Ethiopian Ogaden basin within five years highlight the reality that Ethiopia will soon be in a position to compete economically against Egypt and Eritrea, which have been struggling to keep Ethiopia landlocked. Egypt's strategic motive, expressed constantly by Cairo, has been to keep Ethiopia - which is vastly more fertile than Egypt and which controls the headwaters of the Blue Nile, which provides Egypt (and Sudan) with most of its water - from posing a strategic threat to Egypt by, potentially, cutting off the flow of Blue Nile waters. In fact, the policy has only served to make the Egyptian fear a reality.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit and Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif, speaking at the African Union summit in Kampala, Uganda, on July 27, 2010, appeared to strike a conciliatory note on the contentious issue of Nile water usage, but Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit slipped into his speech that Egypt sought a "re-unification" of Somalia, bringing Somaliland back into the union with Somalia, something which is clearly tantamount to bringing Somaliland back into civil war and crisis, rather than helping the entire Somali population. Significantly, this was a blow directed directly at Ethiopia and at the West which seeks stability in the Horn of Africa.

Egypt, pointedly, would rather have chaos on the Horn so that it could be the master of the Suez/Red Sea SLOC all the way through the Bab el-Mandeb adjacent to Somaliland, at the entrance to the Indian Ocean. This pointedly, also, meant that Egypt supported constraining Ethiopia from easy access to the Red Sea, which had once been dominated, at its lower reaches, by the Ethiopian Navy. Following the fall of the Dergue control of Ethiopia, Eritrea was encouraged by Ethiopia to declare its independence from Ethiopia in 1993. It did so, taking not only the historical geographic area of Eritrea (the onetime Bar Negus: Kingdom of the North), but also the coastal part of Ethiopia adjacent to Djibouti, and containing the Ethiopian port of Assab, which had never been part of traditional Eritrea, but had been part of the modern administrative zone of Eritrea under the Empire.

The result was that Ethiopia lost its access to the Red Sea, and had anticipated a friendly trading path through "new" Eritrea to the sea, because of the friendly separation of the territories. This was not to be, and Eritrea began making unacceptable demands on Ethiopia, which ultimately led to war, and to the inability of Ethiopia to use the ports of modern Eritrea. The result is that Eritrea is now economically destitute, and Eritrean Pres. Isayas Afawerke is under increasing pressure to see the Ethiopian Government fail.

However, it is also clear that Eritrea can no longer afford to militarily challenge Ethiopia, at least directly. Its military successes against Ethiopia in the 1998-2000 fighting can now not be replicated, given the declining economic fortunes of Eritrea and the rising fortunes of Ethiopia.

Moreover, the prospect of considerable income from gas exports begins to elevate Ethiopia into a new class of military capability. So if Eritrea can no longer directly attack Ethiopia militarily, it must be forced to re-double its proxy warfare, and yet even in this area Ethiopia now seems poised to be able to achieve settlements with the ONLF and OLF, two of the main proxy forces financed by Ethiopia and its allies.

And yet Ethiopia finds itself still restricted in its ability to satisfactorily control its export logistics, other than at the goodwill of Djibouti. Some Ethiopian sources have been saying that should Eritrea again provoke a war, then Ethiopia should sieze back the ports in independent Eritrea which were once Ethiopian ports, particularly Assab, which was never part of "traditional" Eritrea.

Moreover, in the South-Eastern part of modern Eritrea, the area around Assab, there is already great local hostility to being under control of Asmara (the Eritrean capital), and the Eritrean Government of Isayas Afewerke. This hostility takes the form of armed insurrection by ethnic Afars. The Afar Revolutionary Democratic Union (ARDU) has engaged in combat operations since 1993 against the Eritrean Government. They have commanded the attention of brigade-sized Eritrean Government forces, which have unsuccessfully attempted to curb the ARDU. ARDU itself is part of the Alliance of Eritrean National Forces (AENF), an umbrella for opposition groups, mostly Muslim, fighting the Isayas Government.

Ethiopia has, like Eritrea, used proxy forces against its adversarial neighbor. The predominantly Muslim Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) has been based out of Addis Ababa since Eritrean independence, and continues to fight the Isayas Government in Asmara. But the scale of Ethiopian proxy warfare against Eritrea is nothing like Eritrea's use of all available proxy resources against Ethiopia. The radical Islamist forces operating in Somalia have long been supported by Eritrea, along with their support from Iran, Egypt, and Libya, as a means of tying down Ethiopian forces and promoting secessionist moves by ethnic Somalis and Oromos in Ethiopia.

Now, unlike a year or two ago, Eritrea recognizes that it can no longer give Ethiopia a pretext to go to war, because it would lose that conflict. On the other hand, Ethiopia's need for the recovery of its Red Sea access may well have been forced by the combined efforts which recently resulted in, effectively, the loss of access through the Republic of Somaliland, which has succumbed, with broad Eritrean, Iranian, and other aid, to pan-Somalist, Islamist governance. So Ethiopia must bow to whatever demands Djibouti may make on it, in order to use the port of Djibouti, or else Addis Ababa must find a way to take back its territory in the south-eastern, Afar, area of what is the modern Eritrean state.

It would be logical, then, to assume that Addis Ababa would find ways to promote the demands for independence or separation from Eritrea made by ARDU and others. Success, or momentum, by these anti-Isayas forces could eventually trigger Ethiopian military support.

Egypt, however, has been using Eritrea as its own proxy, and such a development might cause Cairo to openly support Eritrea in a military confrontation with Ethiopia, or else face the prospect of a revived Ethiopian naval presence in the Red Sea, and growing Ethiopian wealth and confidence to challenge Egypt and Sudan on the question of the use of Blue Nile waters.

In all of this, the stability of the Red Sea/Suez global SLOC is threatened, and no end is yet to be seen in the anomie - the lawlessness - of Somalia, now being broadened to include Somaliland. As well, the mounting pace of natural gas discovery and exploitation in the region (and more broadly) will - contrary to conventional linear extrapolations of energy market trends - transform global energy markets, and bring about a major shift toward the use of gas, probably to the point of a supply-dominated marketplace causing price falls within a decade.

Momentum Stock: Green Mountain Coffee Roasters

Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (GMCR: 30.58 0.00 0.00%) recently hit a new all-time high of $33.98 on the explosive growth of its home-brewing packets and products. The company has either matched or beaten the Zacks Consensus Estimate in each of the last four quarters.

The recent up draft we have seen in shares of GMCR came on the heels of better than expected Q2 results from late July that included a 5.5% earnings surprise.

Third-Quarter Results

Revenue for the period was up 64% from last year to $190.5 million. Earnings also came in strong at 19 cents per share, 5.5% ahead of the Zacks Consensus Estimate.

The primary driver of the great quarter was the company's K-Cup products, which is basically an individual package of coffee that customers can brew at home, where sales were up 90% from last year to $197 million.

Green Mountain also gained on selling its Kuerig products and accessories that are actually used to brew the coffee, where sales were up 69% to $64 million.

Not only is Green Mountain scoring big on the revenue front, it is also focused on cutting costs, stretching its gross margin to 35.2% from 33.6% last year.

Acquisition Complete

The company also announced that it completed its acquisition of Diedrich Coffee, Inc. during the quarter at a total cost of $300 million.

Balance Sheet Under Pressure

With the Diedrich deal finally closed, the company's balance sheet has been stretched a bit, with cash and short-term investments down to $10 million from $144 million last year.

Estimates

With some solid upward momentum in tow and the company refining its current and next-year guidance, the next-year estimate jumped 17% to $1.17, a bullish 69% growth projection.

Valaution

Although this stock has plenty of upward momentum, it leaves something to be desired on the valuation front, with a forward P/E of 44X against its peers 13X.

2-Year Chart

GMCR has spent most of the last two years trending higher, recently hitting a new all-time at $33.98 before pulling back a bit of general market weakness. Look for support from the long-term trend line on any weakness.

Read the April 19 GMCR article here

GMCR: Watts Water Technology, Inc. > <P ALIGN=

Last Week's Momentum Zacks Rank Buy Stocks

99c Only Stores (NDN: 17.04 0.00 0.00%) continues to perform well in the weak consumer environment, recently hitting a new multi-year high above $18 after reporting a 26% Q1 earnings surprise in early August.

Clearwater Paper Corp. (CLW: 67.47 0.00 0.00%) continues to trade near its multi-year high after reporting an awesome 33% earnings surprise in late July. Estimates have since spiked higher, with the current year up 81 cents in the last month to $5.03, a bullish 229% growth projection from last year.

Amerigroup Corp. (AGP: 38.11 0.00 0.00%) continues to pressure its multi-year high after more than doubling the Zacks Consensus Estimate in its recent Q2 results. The great quarter pushed the current-year estimate 25% higher, now pegged at $3.48, a 44% growth projection.

Renesola Ltd. (SOL: 8.35 0.00 0.00%) is fresh off another great quarter, pushing shares back near the multi-year high at $8.75. Estimates have since spiked higher, with the current year up 28% in the last month.

Growth & Income Stock: Gardner Denver, Inc.

Gardner Denver, Inc. (GDI: 48.11 0.00 0.00%) is seeing what you'd expect in a global recovery: increased demand. The company is expected to grow earnings by an average of 20% over the next 5 years.

Gardner Denver manufactures reciprocating, rotary and vane compressors, liquid ring pumps and blowers for various industrial and transportation applications, pumps used in the petroleum and industrial market segments, and other fluid transfer equipment serving chemical, petroleum, and food industries.

Gardner Denver Surprised by 14% in the Second Quarter

On July 22, Gardner Denver reported second quarter results which saw organic order growth jump 38% compared to the year ago period while revenue rose 3%. The order improvement was across all segments.

"The global demand environment continues to show modest improvements on an organic basis," said Barry L. Pennypacker, President and Chief Executive Officer.

"The improvement continues to be generally broad-based and we have not seen any signs that this recovery is atypical from previous cycles," he said.

"We continue to experience improving demand for OEM products and aftermarket parts and services and are benefiting from accelerating demand for petroleum products and related aftermarket parts and services, primarily due to the investments in well servicing pumps used in fracturing shale formations," he added.

Zacks Consensus Estimates Climb

Gardner Denver expects full year earnings per shape to be in the range of $2.87 to $2.97. Given the earnings guidance, analysts moved to raise estimates after the second quarter results.

The 2010 Zacks Consensus Estimate jumped to $2.95 from $2.81 per share in the last 60 days.

This is earnings growth of about 23%.

Similar earnings growth is expected for 2011 as the Zacks Consensus rose 3 cents in the last 30 days to $3.46 per share. Earnings are forecast to grow another 17.3% in 2011.

Income

Gardner Denver pays a dividend currently yielding 0.4%. That isn't the largest dividend out there but it's bigger than the industry average, which pays, on average, no dividend at all.

Gardner Denver is a Zacks #2 Rank (buy) stock.

Read the May 11, 2010 article.

Update to Previous Growth & Income Zacks Rank Buy Stocks

Service Corporation International (SCI: 8.01 0.00 0.00%), one of the largest deathcare providers, is expected to grow earnings by an average of 10% over the next 5 years. Read the full article.

DDi Corporation (DDIC: 8.18 0.00 0.00%) is expected to grow earnings by over 800% in 2010 as demand remains strong from electronics manufacturers. Read the full article.

Pall Corporation (PLL: 35.15 0.00 0.00%) saw its industrial segment return to profitability last quarter as the global recovery took hold. Will it still see the growth when it reports its fiscal fourth quarter on Sep 14? Read the full article.

TransMontaigne Partners L.P. (TLP: 34.69 0.00 0.00%) is one of the Master Limited Partnerships (MLPs) that has tremendous income, with a distribution yielding 7.3%. Read the full article.

Hindenburg Omen Redux, How Dire Is It Anyway?

The Hindenburg Omen was triggered again last week, as reported by the WSJ MarketBeat. This is the second time this month since its first occurrence on Aug. 12. For those not familiar with the term, the Hindenburg Omen is essentially a combination of four bearish technical indicators on the NYSE occurring on the same day, which would signal increased probability of a stock market crash. 

Wall Street is quite abuzz since the Omen seems to have a pretty good track record as Wikipedia documented the probability of greater than 5% downside after a confirmed Hindenburg Omen was 77% within the next forty days.  But before everyone goes running for the exit, the probability of a major stock market crash was only 24%, and it would also help to take a closer look at the significance of the Hindenburg Omen itself.

Although Jim Miekka, a blind former physics teacher living in Florida, is said to be the creator, the Hindenburg Omen is largely based on Norman G. Fosback's High Low Logic Index (HLLI). In an article dated Aug. 24, Mr. Mark Hulbert at MarketWatch recounted a discussion with Mr. Fosback that HILI mainly focuses on the lower of new 52-week highs and new 52-week lows amounted to at least 5%–vs. the 2.5% applied in the Hindenburg Omen–of the sum traded on the NYSE. Fosback believes "this lower cutoff is way too low to be considered bearish."

Another issue, as pointed out by Hulbert, is that the highs and lows numbers are somewhat distorted because many stocks traded on the NYSE are non-operating companies. Hulbert cited findings from Ned Davis Research that excluding non-common stocks on the NYSE, the Hindenburg Omen would not have been tripped, as the new 52-week highs ratio would have been just 0.4% on Aug. 12. 

There's also lack of clear definition as to how many stocks have to reach their highs and/or lows to qualify as the Omen.  Other critics believe the Hindenburg Omen may simply be a case of data-mining and overfitting of seemingly random criteria.

My take is that the convergence of several bearish technical signals is a manifestation of the current heightened market risks and volatility stemmed primarily from the economic uncertainty after the global financial crisis, instead of a "leading indicator" for some significant market event.  However, since the Hindenburg Omen seems to have many market followers, the typical traders' "trend trading" could make it into a self-fulfilling prophecy, thus potentially reinforcing the Omen.

So, what should investors do with the second rising of the Hindenburg Omen? The advice from the two creators–Fosback and Miekka—could provide some clues.

According to Hulbert,

"[Fosback] said, his reading of the historical data suggests to him that the current new high/new low data are solidly in the "neutral" category. (Because of other indicators entirely, furthermore, Fosback is quite bullish on the stock market right now.)"

As for Miekka, the WSJ reported that he thinks there could be a 20% correction into the fall, and he would be buying at a lower price. Meanwhile, Miekka may look to short NASDAQ stock index futures in the next few weeks, depending on the technicals.

For investors with a longer time horizon and balanced portfolio allocation, I don't believe there's anything wrong with these strategies.