How wrong was I when I placed a 2.50 buy bid last night thinking the FTSE 100 wouldn’t open 100 points lower? It turns out I was very, very wrong. Last night Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae drove US shares down (Dow was up 250 and down 250 at various points, amazing) and today it’s the turn of European shares to take an ass kicking. The new concerns are that the two banks will need to raise 75 billion because of accounting changes.

From an Irish point of view the ISEQ is currently down 5% with Bank of Ireland down 12.25% at 4.44 and AIB is down 8.85% at 8.17. Now that’s some drop. The thought of cherry picking the bottom is well out of my mind as we whiz down lower and lower. The truth is who knows 25%, 40% or 50% correction its all just academic and back are the days when your friendly taxi driver gives you his best guess at a market bottom.

As this is the beginning of the earning season could this be the straw that breaks the camels back. I really hope so as we badly need the moment of capitulation that seems to be the word of the day or the big flush out as I like to call it. One big drop of 500 – 600 points and we can get moving onwards, maybe not to the old levels but to new levels more appropriate to our new market conditions.

The big one to look out for this week is General Electric on Friday which could see a big drop if the market doesn’t like what it hears. Unfortunately at moments like these the markets recently seem to become resilient to bad news and ignore it in favour of a rally. I wonder will this happen again or could we truly hit new lows.

No positions open but I will be watching events closely.