Big Wave Trading incorporates a Mechanical Disciplined Signal Generated System and uses a Market Model system to invest profitably in the stock and futures markets. Big Wave Trading also incorporates a strict risk management system and cuts losses immediately if a new purchase does not work in our favored direction right away.
Showing posts with label GOOG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOOG. Show all posts
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Stocks Gain, but Tech Disappoints in After-Hours
Better economic data hit the tape helping push the S&P 500 to new highs. The Philly Fed manufacturing index came in well above expectations. Jobless claims fell week over week. It was certainly good news from the economic front and the market pushed higher. Volume rose over Wednesday’s trade but just was about average. Summer time trade tends to be light and today’s volume is not surprising. We remain in an uptrend, but given the after-hours reaction to earnings tomorrow will certainly be a fun day. We only have one day of distribution and see no reason to call a top.
INTC and EBAY struggled after earnings putting pressure on the NASDAQ today. Tomorrow the NASDAQ will have even more pressure delivered by GOOG and MSFT. Both stocks missed earnings in a big way and both were getting hit hard in the after-hours session. GOOG and MSFT had been stars of this most recent rally from December. The NASDAQ can thank these two stocks for its rise in 2013.
Sentiment check: we saw the AAII Bulls drop slightly to 47%. Bears did get back above 20% to 21%! NAAIM sentiment climbed over 60%, but overly bullish bets weren’t being placed. Sentiment still isn’t at an extreme point, but it is high. Combine sentiment readings with the percentage of stocks over their respective moving averages is a possible sign we could see at least some consolidation over the next few trading sessions. It is best to stick with the program and know anything can happen.
GOOG and MSFT will at least make tomorrow somewhat interesting. Combine the crazy earnings action with options expiry should excite those who watch the market tick by tick. Have a great weekend.
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Volume Jumps and Stocks Fall Ending the Market’s Uptrend
The NASDAQ Composite loses its 50 day moving average on heavy volume. AAPL and GOOG lead the NASDAQ 100 lower as the big cap technology closed down 1.99%. Commodities followed stocks lower with copper and other metals leading the charge lower. The Federal Reserve’s Beige book showed moderate growth due to autos and housing but did very little to lift the market further off its lows. Blue chips continued their outperformance with help from JNJ and HD. The action as of late is certainly along with volume has thrown our uptrend out the window. We will act accordingly to our rules.
Economic news has not been good across the globe and up until this week the market has ignored them. This morning BAC released disappointing results and CSX CEO stated this economy would only grow 1-2%. Two percent growth is simply not good enough and anything less than 2% would cause big impacts. Many estimates from the public to private sector are counting on growth to solve our problems. If growth doesn’t show up it will cause significant impacts to bottom lines.
Earnings will continue to pour in and while there was quite a bit of optimism heading into this earnings season it is how the market reacts is what is important to us. We do not pretend to even think we could predict the future like many pundits on CNBC and Bloomberg. Our focus is on our trend following process to set ourselves apart and obtain superior performance. Focus on price action and using our rules to know when to get in and out is how we drive superior results.
Tomorrow we’ll get our weekly look at Jobless claims. It is anyone’s guess how the number will turn out, but it is sure to get a good rant out of Rick Santelli! Who doesn’t love a good rant every once in a while.
Perhaps we have our correction that every bear has been calling for at our doorstep. We simply won’t know until it is over. Stick with Big Wave Trading and we’ll get you to a higher level of trading. Cut those losses and ride your winners.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Bernanke Presses on with QE, but Volume Drops as Stocks Close Higher
Another Federal Reserve meeting and the central bank vows to continue to print billions of dollars a month until the Unemployment rate drops to acceptable rates. Cyprus fears seem to die down as it appears Russia will protect its own and give a bailout to the small island nation. Banks will not reopen to next Tuesday, but the situation begs the question will the next EU country who needs a bailout and is not involved with Russian Oligarchs will be required to confiscate bank deposits? Philosophical question, but we digress. Price action continues to indicate this uptrend will continue higher. Volume was lower on the day despite the Fed’s Chief promise to keep the printing presses pumping liquidity. How high and how far we’ll go is anyone’s guess, but we’ll continue to operate in an uptrend.
Two blemishes on the day were HPQ and FDX. These two stocks have been leading this market higher, but both today turned lower. HPQ appears to have run out of steam after doubling since its November lows. FDX earnings release disappointed the market. Falling more than 7 points on the highest volume since 2010 it blew through its 50 day moving average. FDX had been leading the Transports to new heights, but after today it places a blemish on the current uptrend.
Perhaps a bigger earnings story is what happened to ORCL in after-hours trading. When all was said in down in the after-hours session the stock fell more than 7% from today’s close. The stock missed its earnings expectations and was punished. ORCL has been pushing higher and leading the NASDAQ higher along with GOOG. We’ll see how the stock reacts in tomorrow’s session, but the drop in after-hours is quite telling.
Now with the Federal Reserve out of the way it will be interesting to see if the market can continue to remain elevated. Time will tell and price will guide our trading.
Wednesday, March 06, 2013
Dow and S&P 500 End Higher for the Fourth Consecutive Day
A positive reading from the ADP employment survey helped fuel stocks early pushing the Dow further into all-time high territory. BAC helped push the Dow as the stock aims to hit new highs on strong volume. By mid-day the markets were off their highs awaiting the Federal Reserve’s Beige book. The Federal Reserve noted growth in the economy due to gains in housing. Initially pushing stocks off their lows it appeared the Beige Book would send the stocks into new highs on the day. The rally would stall out just after 3pm. A late day small push off the lows by the bulls kept the major indexes from closing on their lows. It was good to see the market avoid distribution just after hitting new highs.
GOOG and AAPL were drags on the NASDAQ today. AAPL continues to act poorly while GOOG pulls back after two big sessions. Both companies are fighting over the smart phone universe and both stocks are heading in different directions. A key point in both stocks is their relative strength. Focus on stocks with high relative strength and in the case of GOOG and AAPL is demonstrates the importance of relative strength.
A few IPOs continue to act well. Our Platinum members were alerted to EOPN Monday morning to its potential. When IPOs act well you can bet the market is healthy. We’d love to see stocks like EOPN and EVER continue their moves higher.
There is a lot of chatter about how far this market rally can go. Does it really matter where it ends when you focus on your exits? Sure, we’d love for this uptrend to never end and we go up every day. However, we know this is simply will not occur. No one knows how far or how long this will last. Therefore, we must have exits we know maximize our potential to take the maximum gain possible from the market. Otherwise, we’ll be leaving gains on the table and we strong dislike leaving gains on the table. Stick to your game plan.
Let your winners fly and cut those losses.
Labels:
AAPL,
ADP employment survey,
BAC,
DIA,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
EOPN,
EVER,
Federal Reserve Beige Book,
GOOG,
IWM,
Nasdaq,
QQQ,
Russell 2000,
SP 500,
SPY
Monday, March 04, 2013
GOOG and AMZN lead the Market higher Despite Light Volume
Stocks moved higher despite the Shanghai dropping 3.65% as the country tries to solve its real estate issues. Intraday volatility continued, but stocks were able to find their footing after the lunch hour. Lows were set just after noon time and did not look back. Volume throughout the day ran well under Friday’s levels. We aren’t surprised volume was running lower as we have seen Mondays have been low volume days. GOOG and AMZN lead the NASDAQ along with YHOO while AAPL continued to lag. Today’s price action is bullish, but we still remain in Neutral mode and looking for a follow-through day.
AAPL continues to remain weak and we are not surprised one bit as the stock has been in a downtrend for quite some time. We can point to many different reasons for the stock’s decline. Does it matter what reason we pick? Not one bit. At this point you will have many trying to pick a bottom in the stock and will fail miserably. The stock does have a pivotal point of 435 and a move above that would be a buy signal. We can’t predict moves and can only react to how the stock moves.
GOOG broke out to new highs on big volume today showing the big cap technology stock continues to see accumulation. Perhaps GOOG Glass will be a big product break through adding to GOOG’s bottom line or not. The action in this stock while not ideal is quite bullish. At this point, you are chasing the stock if you are thinking of buying it here. If we get more stocks acting like this we’ll see this market push to new highs.
Tomorrow’s economic release will be from the ISM Non-Manufacturing. Later in the week we’ll get the Fed’s beige book. While these will provide an excuse for the market to move and we’ll be ready to react.
Short-term Trends
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 152.92 0.53%
IWM DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 91.13 0.26%
QQQ DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 67.68 0.45%
USO DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 32.40 -1.04%
UNG UPTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 19.45 1.99%
GLD DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 152.30 -0.09%
SLV DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 27.60 -0.07%
DBC DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 26.84 -0.37%
FXY UPTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 104.86 0.10%
FXE DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 129.13 -0.03%
TLT UPTREND NO CHANGE 3/4/2013 118.9 -0.53%
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Volume Jumps after the Fed releases its Meeting Minutes
Building permits and housing starts failed to inspire the market, but the selling didn’t start ramping until the FOMC meeting minutes. Volume for much of the day was running lower than Tuesday’s level as traders were waiting on the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting minutes. Upon the release it was clear from the release the Central Bank is at least talking about ending the or at least curbing the latest round of asset buying. The minutes also revealed the Fed is a bit more optimistic about the state of the economy and therefore could reduce the size of their purchases. Sellers didn’t need much more than that to take stocks below last week’s low in heavy trade. One day doesn’t make a trend, but today we finally saw some heavy volume selling. Our uptrend is on shaky ground and it is a prudent move to make sure you have your exit strategy in place.
AAPL continues to weigh on the overall market, but today sellers took to the entire market. GOOG dropped back below $800. Crude oil fell more than two points with Gold and Silver falling hard on the day. One day doesn’t make a trend, but it is these types of days where you stand up and take notice. When indexes and leading stocks get hit hard you have to take notice and adjust. Know where your exits are and make sure you stick to your plan.
It will be important for this market to find its footing to keep the uptrend alive. Selling in bunches like today are a big red flag for the market. Your stocks will let you know what is going on and if you are noticing your stocks are quickly hitting your exits it is a good sign the broader market is about to head lower. We are in caution mode and will need to see this market shake off today’s selling.
Know your exits!
Short-term Trends:
No changes for today, but any further selling we are likely to see SPY, IWM, and QQQ flip to downtrends.
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 151.34 -1.25%
IWM UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 90.83 -1.86%
QQQ UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 67.19 -1.54%
USO DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 34.17 -2.26%
UNG DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 18.32 0.11%
GLD DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 151.44 -2.50%
SLV DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 27.59 -2.99%
DBC UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 27.92 -1.13%
FXY DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 104.82 0.05%
FXE DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 131.68 -0.85%
TLT DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/20/2013 115.92 0.30%
Labels:
AAPL,
Building Permits,
Crude Oil,
DIA,
Fed,
FOMC meeting minutes,
gold,
GOOG,
Housing Starts,
IWM,
QQQ,
silver,
SPY
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
S&P 500 trades higher for the 6th Consecutive Day as Volume Eases
Attention on the day was aimed at earning’s releases at the close of the day. Stocks were dealt a blow with the IMF cutting its global forecast to 3.5% from 3.6%. While not a big blow to a forecast, but the IMF pointed to Europe and its inability to grow as a primary concern. IBM and GOOG helped boost the tech sector on the day. IBM added 66 points to the Dow accounting for majority of the index gains. GOOG broke out during the session, but was unable to hold its pivot at the close. Volume was lower across the board as the market moved higher, but this has been a growing theme as price continues to be the primary indicator. One negative on the session was the inability for Small Caps to lead the session, but one day does not make a trend. Our uptrend continues to remain in place and we’ll continue to look for higher prices.
During the after-hours session NFLX blew the doors off its earnings report. More importantly the company guided higher than its dismal estimates. The stock jumped another 30% in the after-hours session making any entry almost impossible. The stock has been beaten up, but has been trying to make its way back to the spotlight. A jump of 30% seems a bit extreme and will offer an exit for those who are long to book some gains. Will it go higher is anyone’s guess, but a 28% gap to the upside is a gift worth taking.
AAPL earnings disappointed the market as revenues were light and guidance was below expectations. The stock printed a 480 handle during the after-hours session but has spent most of its time down 5%. AAPL has been the black eye for the market, but many tend to forget it accounted for 50% of NASDAQ’s gain early last year. The stock simply has run into the law of large numbers and the stock is simply over owned. Plenty of people will be in the stock looking to catch a bottom, but for now we’ll stay away unless we see a buy signal. For now the stock is dead to us on the long side.
As of last night the companies reporting earnings 70% of them have lowered first quarter outlooks. Looking at profits for the fourth quarter stands at 3% against expectations of 11% which will certainly weigh on those relying on fundamental models. AAPL and banks accounted for the majority of earnings growth during the past 12 months and with only 3% growth in place with banks reporting should hint at what is to come for the first quarter of this year. It is anyone’s best guess what multiple the market will trade at, but if growth continues to slow in the names that have been the engine of profits the market will reprice.
AAPL will certainly put a lot of pressure on the NASDAQ tomorrow. Stick to your trading plan and let the noise from Wall Street fall on deaf ears.
Short term trends:
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 149.37 0.16%
IWM UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 89.00 -0.24%
QQQ UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 67.59 0.61%
USO UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 34.61 -1.14%
UNG UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 20.00 0.15%
GLD UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 163.21 -0.28%
SLV UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 31.19 0.22%
DBC UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 28.09 0.11%
FXY DOWNTRENDNO CHANGE 1/23/2013 110.53 0.04%
FXE UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/23/2013 132.16 0.01%
TLT DOWNTRENDNO CHANGE 1/23/2013 120.27 -0.15%
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Stocks Climb off the lows of the Session and Closed in the Green ahead of GOOG Earnings
The market was able to push higher despite disappointing news from existing home sales as well as data from the Richmond Fed manufacturing index. Existing home sales were expected to rise 1.2% but fell 1% and last month’s big number was revised from 5.9% to 4.8%. Richmond Fed manufacturing index fell to -12 while the market expected a reading of +5. Despite the disappointing economic headlines the market was able to push higher. Volume could not match Friday’s option expiry inflated figures. GOOG kicked off big tech earnings season with AAPL set to report tomorrow. The trend continues for stocks and until we have price action suggesting otherwise we’ll stay on this wave.
Key ETFs and their short term trends:
TICKER ST TREND DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND 1/22/2013 149.13 0.54%
IWM UPTREND 1/22/2013 89.21 0.72%
QQQ UPTREND 1/22/2013 67.18 0.16%
USO UPTREND 1/22/2013 35.01 0.69%
GLD UPTREND 1/22/2013 163.67 0.36%
SLV UPTREND 1/22/2013 31.12 1.01%
DBC UPTREND 1/22/2013 28.06 0.29%
FXY DOWNTREND 1/22/2013 110.49 1.48%
FXE UPTREND 1/22/2013 132.15 -0.03%
TLT DOWNTREND 1/22/2013 120.04 0.19%
IBM, GOOG, CREE, and ISRG catapulted higher in the after-hour session as Traders cheered their earnings report. TXN did not fare well as the stock is currently lower by 72bps, but completely overshadowed by other reports. The QQQs were trading 45 basis points higher while SPYs were trading 9 basis points higher. GOOG has yet to trigger a buy signal, but if it can break above its pivot would be a breakout candidate. Given the earnings and volume following earnings releases volume should be well above average tomorrow.
Last night in our Gold forums we posted regarding the sentiment situation. Sentiment across the board is bullish, but not at extremes just yet. Perhaps with today’s move we’ll see a change in sentiment, but for now we aren’t at extremes. On the other hand, the number of stocks above their 50 day moving average is at highs suggesting there is a higher probability we’ll see stocks take a breather, after all the Dow is up 8 days out of 9 and the S&P 500 up 5 days in a row. Know one knows when this party will end or if it will ever end, but we have our exit plan and when we get our exit signals we’ll take them. There have been very few stocks showing sell signals suggesting we can go higher.
Commodities continue to be very interesting with USO and DBC inching higher. Crude oil ended the day with a 96 handle and is poised to continue its recent uptrend. No doubt will higher crude prices continue to put upward pressure on prices. The endless QE the Federal Reserve has embarked on will likely impact prices of every day goods and services. Pain at the pump will soon rise as a concern again, but for now prices are headed higher.
Have a great week.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Big Wave Trading Portfolio Update And Top Current Holdings
The Big Wave Trading portfolio remains under a NEUTRAL signal. However, we did switch to a BUY signal for 2 days before switching back to NEUTRAL. Fortunately for us, we have already closed shop on our model for the year. After the final and barely successful SELL signal it was decided that with the current price/volume pattern in the overall market, the upcoming Fiscal Cliff drama, and the news driven nature of the current market that shutting it down for 2012 was the right thing to do. This past week proves that point.
The past week saw a very noisy intraday nature to the market with a ton of stocks showing erratic to abnormal price action. Rather it was stocks like GMCR, FB, FSLR, AMCC, or RIMM going up almost every day non-stop or the reversal in price breakouts lower in stocks like SWHC, ARIA, QCOM, CNC, or ASPS that scripted what was an odd overall market. Even the big boys like PCLN and GOOG are showing erratic trading. This is a clear sign to us that trend following and stock picking the U.S. markets remain a very futile effort for anything other than a very short-term time frame. If your time frame is going to be weeks to months, on a position, we recommend waiting for better price and volume relationship to develop in this market. At this point for us we are very happy being heavily invested in cash and on the sidelines in our top systems.
Short-term daytrading methodologies and very long-term methodlogies in world ETFs with wide volatility/ATR stops are the only two systems working for us now. The world ETF market has been the one very bright spot in all of this. The moves in VNM, DXJ, EWH, EWS, and EWA have been very welcome during a time when the U.S. markets are behaving so poorly. We continue to believe that over the longer-term more capital and bigger position sizes are going to be needed in these markets to return outside normal returns in the future.
We are sure one day the stock market will trend in one direction or another for a period of time that will allow old trend following momentum methodologies in high quality stocks to work very well again. Until then, however, other markets should be where investors continue to look to into the future. That is unless we can get a change in the zero-interest-rate-policy, the Quantitative Easing environment, and extremely divided electorate some time soon. I wouldn’t place on hard bets on that happening for a while.
Aloha and have a wonderful weekend!
Current Top Holdings – Percent Return – Date of Signal
NTE long – 118% – 8/17/12
VRNM short – 54% – 4/10/12
CAMP long – 48% – 4/26/12
CSU long – 37% – 9/4/12
ASTM short – 25% – 8/2/12Q
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Stocks Stage a Big Rally, but Hit Some Resistance
The S&P 500 and Russell 2000 found very little resistance at last week’s high as the NASDAQ backed away from its high of last week. Volume was strong, but the market could not find enough buyers to clinch a true follow-through day. We continue to operate without a follow-through day, but with the NASDAQ and the rest of the indexes above their respective 50 day moving averages we are back in buy mode. The move at the end of the day does bring a bit of caution and only did a few buyers at the end of the day save the rally. Tomorrow’s reaction to the FOMC rate announcement and Bernanke’s press conference will tell us a great deal about where this market is headed. We are in buy mode despite the sluggish end of day action and will look for this trend to continue.
We simply cannot ignore the move in small caps today with the index lagging only the NASDAQ today. Breaking out of a small consolidation area the group pushed higher and continues to look quite solid. It is very hard to ignore the relatively strength displayed by the group and we are going with it. Focusing in on price action IWM looks poised to continue its move higher. Of course, we have an exit plan and if this move fails we’ll simply exit and move on. There is no need to guess what may or may not happen here, but for now small caps look poised to lead this market higher.
AAPL continues to be the talk of the town, but it too found resistance at its highs. GOOG did manage to get above its 50 day moving average during the trading session. However, by the close the stock was unable to close above it. Bad news for the stock as it is doing a lot of work well below the mid-point of its most recent sell-off. On the bright side of things CRM was able to punch through and breakout on very strong volume. We’ll see once again if this breakout can hold. QIHU, SSYS, DDD continue to struggle after breaking out.
Tomorrow brings on the Fed and the potential for a fiscal deal. It will be fun watching the market dance to the sound of Ben Bernanke’s voice.
Labels:
AAPL,
Ben Bernanke,
CRM,
DDD,
Fiscal Cliff,
FOMC,
GOOG,
Nasdaq,
QIHU,
Russell 2000,
SP 500,
SSYS
Thursday, October 04, 2012
A Lackluster Final Hour as Stocks Settle in Prior to Friday’s Non-Farm Payrolls
Stocks got a positive boost off the first Presidential debate, but for technology stocks it wouldn’t’ be enough. Financials continue to be leading stocks in this market and today once again the group leads the market. But, once again the market is looking ahead to Friday’s job market. In the final hour buyers stepped up and began to push the market above the morning lows. Unfortunately for longs it wouldn’t last as stocks pulled back into the close. Tomorrow’s Non-Farm Payrolls will be the talk of the town and how the market reacts will be what we’ll be focused on.
Volume ended the day mixed with volume on the NASDAQ coming in lower. Technology stocks continue to lag the broader market despite GOOG hitting another fresh new high. Banks have been the leading stocks as they will be the greatest beneficiary from the Federal Reserve’s mortgage-backed security purchase program. The Federal Reserve will be purchasing less than high quality securities from Banks improving the quality of assets on balance sheets. It is almost a no-brainer these stocks will benefit from the program. While we would love for the NASDAQ to lead this market given the situation we’ll more than likely to see the S&P 500 as our leader. Stick on leadership and leave the laggards for the birds.
Tomorrow will likely be a big day for the markets. Let the fireworks begin at 8:30am EST! Have a great weekend.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Monday’s Continue to be Tough on Stocks as the Market Close in the Red
The story of this uptrend has been Mondays closing lower. Volume was lower today, but even with Friday’s volume today’s trade was quite light. On the face of it we do have a market continuing to consolidate its Fed induced rally. Friday’s session saw sellers knock down the early rally and they were able to continue their operations today. Growth stocks as well as technology stocks saw the brunt of the sellers operation. GOOG escaped their wrath, but on the whole growth stocks were the ones under quite a bit of pressure. We continue to escape distribution, but we haven’t seen the push from growth stocks we normally see here. Many are close to breakouts, but as time progresses we’ll need to see them lead the market higher.
There is still quite a bit of talk over the fiscal cliff and continued European worries. Europe’s woes will not be solved here any time soon. Deleveraging takes time if the masses are not able to withstand the pain needed for a quick recovery. The same goes for the United States. With Obama in the lead and the Democrats looking like they’ll take the senate it appears we won’t see any resolutions to our debt woes in the near future. Democrats if they continue with control will undoubtedly raise taxes and cancel and reduction in spending. While raising taxes may or may not raise revenues not cutting spending is what will add to the deficit. Now the real question will be how will stocks react? It is anyone’s guess, but if you stick with leading stocks and price you will not lose.
The last week of September and it is hard to believe Fall is here. All of the gains in the month have come on only central banking days! It would be nice if the market could get some gains without the help from central bankers. In addition, it would be nice if High Frequency Trading was outlawed and stopped from distorting price and volume on our stocks. Mark Cuban said it best: “High Frequency Trading simply adds volume not liquidity.” Even with High Frequency Trading we still have an advantage and that being price and focusing on a leading stocks.
Another week in this uptrend starts lower and with very little distribution we can’t help to think this uptrend will continue to march on. Cut those losses short.
Labels:
Deficit,
Deleveraging,
DIA,
Europe,
Fiscal Cliff,
GOOG,
High Frequency Trading,
IWM,
Obama,
QQQ,
SPY,
Taxes,
United States
Monday, August 13, 2012
NASDAQ Closes in the Green as Stocks Find Support at Friday’s Lows
It was another quiet Monday trading session, as AAPL and GOOG lead the NASDAQ higher closing just off the highs of the session. Volume was once again lower on the day, as we proceed through the dog days of summer. Commodities traded lower on the day, as gas at the pumps has rebounded higher putting pressure on consumers. When the market hit its lows, after the 11 o’clock hour, buyers began to show up supporting the market. While volume wasn’t highe–showing institutions piling back into the market–the price action was considerably bullish.
There is quite a bit of economic news set to hit the market the rest of the week and we’ll certainly see the market move. PPI data out tomorrow and CPI data out Wednesday will certainly spark debate regarding Federal Reserve policy. The more we see deflation the more folks will make a case for another round of quantitative easing. To us it is noise in regards to our trading, but for a cocktail party (a boring one) it makes for good banter. Price matters most and although debating Fed policy is fun for some it is not useful for our trading.
Today was overall is a bullish day, but boy was it a boring day. Europe was mostly lower and we failed to get any rumors from central banks. Boring days are good when you do not get epic failures from leaders. Leadership remains thin here and cash is king, but we have seen stranger things from this market. The next big thing from the US Central Bank is the Jackson Hole summit at the end of this month. All eyes will be on Ben Bernanke to see if he hints at or lays out the plans for another easing program. Up until then, I’d expect very little from the Fed. Rumors will always be present, but price always gives the clue.
Remember the most important part of trading is knowing entries and exits. Cutting losses is most important piece to your trading!
Monday, June 11, 2012
Markets Say No to Spailout, Stage Big reversal
The EU bailout of Spanish banks was received well when the futures market first opened Sunday evening. Sellers dominated the day as the markets sniffed out and disapproved of the Spailout. US equity markets did enjoy a good start, but selling was unforgiving and relentless heading into the close. Volume was higher than Friday’s dismal showing. At this time, volume is not going to matter as price action is clearly on the negative side. Price action says it all and it is not saying good things about this market.
Not helping matters was AAPL’s big reversal despite its annual June meeting. AAPL did not announce any new amazing new product like apple TV or a new iPhone. The stock now appears to be failing at its key 50 day moving average suggesting May’s lows may be the next target of the stock. GOOG has already had a head start on AAPL as the stock put in an ugly reversal day. Both tech giants do not look healthy at this point and will continue to put tremendous pressure on the NASDAQ if selling continues.
Volatility kicked it up a notch today getting support as the market digested the news out of Europe. The VIX jumped right off its 50 day moving average today and certainly shows a bit of a fear coming back into the market. At May’s lows the market failed to produce any sort of capitulation. The VIX never made it above 30 a key level where panic enters the market. Until panic enters the market we’ll likely continue to see lower lows and lower highs in this market.
Adding to the mess we call a market will be options expiry. Greek elections are being held on Sunday and combining the elections with Spailout options expiry will certainly add layer of complexity. It is crucial we stick to price action of the market rather than guessing what might happen if the Greek elections go one way or another. After today it is pretty clear the bias is still negative.
Stick to your stops and cut your losing positions. Your long term success in the market depends on it.
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Stocks Fall Again As FOMC Meeting Minutes Fail to Inspire
Once again stocks were able to find footing in the middle part of the day, but fail to hold the highs. A few more FOMC members are open to more quantitative easing it wasn’t enough to help the market push back into the highs. Of course we still have the mess going on in Europe, but the market was looking for QE3 to hit the market. The Fed knows any further QE will result in very high commodity prices squeezing the poor even further. We cannot have this situation and given the situation in the Europe and here at home puts the United States Central Bank in a precarious situation. The market remains weak and while we may see a one or two day bounce the trend is still down.
If one had to guess just by looking at a chart of the NASDAQ it is quite easy to see the 200 day moving average is a logical next step for the index. Yes, we are oversold and sentiment is getting quite negative we have yet to see any real panic set into the market. The VIX, a measure of fear has yet to signal real fear in this market. Perhaps a move above 30 would signal enough fear, but it has yet to eclipse the 30 level. Talk of another flash crash is always imminent given the even happened only two years ago. For now we have a market creeping lower and lower and even with FB coming public on Thursday there is very little that can save this market from the inevitable.
The United States has been on a war path regarding spending. Wars, social security, medicare, prescription drug coverage, etc are a big drag on the government budget. Unfortunately, Washington DC will not tell the American public the truth. Spending needs to be lowered end of story. The Buffett tax is only estimated to bring in a few billion dollars a year extra! We have a 1.5T yearly hole at the moment that Obama feels quite comfortable with. This is nuts! The only fix is to overhaul the tax code into a one page simple code and reduce spending. However, the media and Obama administration do a great job distracting the public from the facts. If anything, the United States fiscal cliff is far more dangerous than a Greece leaving the EURO.
As a reminder, this week is options expiry and Friday should be a fun day. Tomorrow will more than likely be a bit more entertaining with FB coming public. We are not planning on participating in the IPO nor trading it on the first day. We’ll sit back and wait for it to base much like EBAY and GOOG did after their debuts. We’ll be patient.
Execute you trading plan and cut those losses short.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Stocks Rebound in a Big Way as Volume Slides
AAPL reversed its course pushing higher bringing the rest of the technology sector and NASDAQ higher. Volume was lower on the day suggesting the appetite to get back into stocks was not a top priority for institutional traders. It is true High Frequency Trading (HFT), Federal Reserve, and the lack of retail investors has skewed volume. We simply look at relative volume and ignore the noise. At the end of the trading session sellers took to INTC who was reporting after the close. The selling took some nice gains off the table. It would have been bullish if the market would have been able to close at the highs with volume surging. We’ll need to see the market confirm a new rally here shortly if we have any chance of notching new highs.
Economic news was somewhat mixed this morning. Housing starts dropped disappointing the market, but building permits jumped. Economic figures do make for good discussion points during cocktail parties or at the office water cooler. They should not be used for trading. Price is the ultimate indicator followed by volume. If you want to have an argument about the current state of the economy, go right ahead and pull the most recent jobless claims figure. However, it should be left aside when you are trading.
This week happens to be options ex (OPEX) and always lends itself to crazy moves during the week. One interesting area to watch for is AAPL and how it reacts around its $600 dollar market. Round numbers have always fascinated the financial media and during OPEX it will quite fun to see how the stock reacts. This is not to trade off of, but merely an observation of what is going on. Keep an eye on AAPL along with GOOG, PCLN, INTC, and AMZN this week. They make up a great portion of the NASDAQ and will have a heavy influence on how it trades.
This week has started off with a lot of fireworks and it should continue throughout the week. Sit back and enjoy! Cut your losses and remain disciplined!
Economic news was somewhat mixed this morning. Housing starts dropped disappointing the market, but building permits jumped. Economic figures do make for good discussion points during cocktail parties or at the office water cooler. They should not be used for trading. Price is the ultimate indicator followed by volume. If you want to have an argument about the current state of the economy, go right ahead and pull the most recent jobless claims figure. However, it should be left aside when you are trading.
This week happens to be options ex (OPEX) and always lends itself to crazy moves during the week. One interesting area to watch for is AAPL and how it reacts around its $600 dollar market. Round numbers have always fascinated the financial media and during OPEX it will quite fun to see how the stock reacts. This is not to trade off of, but merely an observation of what is going on. Keep an eye on AAPL along with GOOG, PCLN, INTC, and AMZN this week. They make up a great portion of the NASDAQ and will have a heavy influence on how it trades.
This week has started off with a lot of fireworks and it should continue throughout the week. Sit back and enjoy! Cut your losses and remain disciplined!
Saturday, December 08, 2007
SP 500 And Nasdaq Pullback In A Calm Fashion On Lower Volume, While The DJIA And IBD Indexes Continue To Rally
SP 500 And Nasdaq Pullback In A Calm Fashion On Lower Volume, While The DJIA And IBD Indexes Continue To Rally; Where Is The Volume And Where Are The New Leading Stocks?
December 7, 2007
Overall, it was a pretty choppy and inconsistent day on Friday, but it was still a good day when we take it and consider that we continue to hold well in the face of all the bad news from the subprime area of the economy.
I heard many complain that we did not finish higher today on the Nasdaq. I, however, disagree with them and find it more bullish that we finished a tad lower. That shows me that we are consolidating the gains, since the November 28th follow-through day from the IBD indexes, quite well. If we would have sold off today on heavier volume, then I wouldn’t consider the days action bullish. But the fact the we sold off a little and the volume was lower is exactly how you want to see the market pullback after adding on some solid gains.
Don’t forget that the DJIA finished higher, even though volume was extremely low, and that the IBD 100 and IBD 85-85 indexes finished higher. The big caps and leading stocks seemed to hold up well on a day of profit taking. So the people that were not happy with the Nasdaq do not have to look too far to find some other positives in the market.
The fact that we have not sold off at all since the follow-through day has to be taken as a great sign for the bulls, considering that the market was starting to look like it was read to fall apart. Even though we have not had an up day where volume was just simply huge, the market is still offering up enough stocks with solid fundamentals that the rally is working. Obviously, if there was more volume, the gains would be bigger and the longs would be more interesting. Right now, there are very few longs that look beautiful. Instead most only bring a little smile to my face. I still do not see anything out there that makes me want to jump up and down full of joy.
This market, this year, has taught us all something very important that I am not sure many appreciate. The market this year has looked like it is going to top multiple times and every time that it looks like the market is about ready to break wide open it almost always goes on to rally. During the years of 2004-2006 I had to convince people over and over that the market was not done rallying. Every time we would start to selloff, everyone would tell me that “this is it, it is all over.” But every time we would selloff, I would see many new top stocks with pretty bases setup.
That continued until this year. When stocks started selling off in February, very few fresh new longs showed up. Instead it took a while but eventually the market got its legs together and then some new longs showed up. The exact same thing happened in August except the lows in August were decently easy to spot since sentiment got so poor and there were a lot of charts holding up well into the selling. The rally that came off those lows, as many subscribers know, produced many quick big gains from top stocks that took off immediately. All the laggards however were quick to rollover.
So when the selling started in November it appeared that the top was finally in as all our leading four-horseman stocks started selling off on heavy volume for the first time. There was no time before when all these leaders sold off on heavy volume. However, as soon as these stocks started selling off, the stocks that were breaking down started to hammer out short-term lows putting a floor in this market which then turned the leaders around and now have them back into high ground or near high ground. If this hasn’t just been amazing to everyone, then it is obvious you have not been watching the market close enough.
Those that have been watching this market know that the constant rallies in the face of this strong distribution is just amazing. However, the new highs in the leading stocks are coming this time without something: volume. Where is the volume? Where is the accumulation? There is none. What we have instead is a market that seems to have been so oversold that a rally had to happen.
The past few weeks I went out of my way to show you the sentiment in the market on almost a daily basis. Well I do that during bad markets because it is very important to follow. When a real bottom is put in there are a lot of sentiment indicators that hit certain levels that confirm the price and volume that a market has probably put in a low. Well if we use the August lows as the bottom, then the market is still in a period to continue to rally. But if we count the selloff from November as negating the August rally, which is what I believe we have to do when you look at the SP 600 and Russell 2000, then we simply have not had the bearish or fear needed to put in a bottom.
Instead we have put in a short-term bottom due to the market being extremely oversold. If that is the case, then the low volume on this rally makes perfect sense. If this rally was on huge volume, I am sure I would have a lot of pretty green BOP filled charts that work (like RICK) instead of charts that are working but that don’t look at hot (like ELMG and its yellow BOP). So the fact that there are so few hot charts and new leaders breaking out from sound bases and that the current leaders off the 2003 lows (GOOG RIMM BIDU AAPL AMZN) that are now hitting new highs with negative divergences in almost every technical indicator including overall volume.
The first stock we can look at is GOOG. If you notice that GOOG is very close to its November highs but look at the bottom part of your charts. Where is the volume on this rally? Now look at the RS. Do you notice that it is well below the old highs? Then look at the moneystream. Notice its negative divergence. Now look at the BOP. Notice the negative divergence? This is just one example.
The next weak past winner I am watching is RIMM. I technically should be short a little of this stock but my luck on the short side has been iffy recently and almost all of my nicer looking longs have been producing solid gains during the market’s uptrend. As long as the market continues to drift higher, I have to stay away from shorting RIMM until it sets up in a picture perfect historically high odd trade.
Right now, the stock is weaker than all the others as it put in a lower high at the end of November with the RS line coming in well below the old high in early November. That high came with four days of distribution that has been followed by a few days of a low volume rally. If the stock fails again, I might begin to poke a little and try another round of shorting this former leader. However, it would probably be wiser to wait for the 200 day moving average to catch up more to price before getting too big on a short in this stock. If you look at the moneystream you can see that it is making new lows well below the early November s lows. This, despite the price being above the November lows. Also the BOP is red and ugly still just like it was when it started selling off. So it is obvious there is not a lot of accumulating interest in this stock anymore. A weekly chart shows three weeks of distribution the past four which clearly tells you what is going on with RIMM.
BIDU is another leader that is at the old highs in early November but yet nothing else about the stock is. There are negative divergences in almost every indicator with the RS well below the early November highs and moneystream is even in worse shape. The only thing going for it is that BOP is turning green but with the rally coming on lower and lower volume BIDU appears to be headed the same fate RIMM and GOOG are headed for soon.
The strongest leader relative to the market is AAPL with its RS line well into new high ground. While the RS line is deeper into new high ground than price it isn’t by much and then the moneystream is still no where near new highs. That line is still well below the old highs in November. The BOP has also turned negative to where it was still dancing around the zero line early in November.
The point of this is to show you that the leaders that everyone is still talking about as the for sure thing that is a safe haven in any market are all starting to weaken. This is the first time they have sold off on heavy volume and rallied on lower volume to such extremes with all the technical divergence. This action in the leading stocks along with the weak rally in the market with few hot new longs is what continues to keep my mind cautious on the rally. However, even though I am cautious and I expect this thing to fail it sure doesn’t mean that I am just going to ignore the long side and miss gains in stocks that can rally fast in a short period of time.
Sure there are not a lot of RICK stocks out there but there are plenty of EGN stocks out there. And being long EGN is a lot safer than being short stocks that are not moving down. I know a lot of people shorting banks, home builders, and mortgage stocks down here. It is just shocking because most of these stocks have been destroyed and have no chance of going to zero. However, what is obvious to everyone usually no longer works and I think those short sellers are in that situation. Not only are they in that situation but those that continue to believe that AAPL, RIMM, BIDU, and GOOG will always be a safe place to put money to continue to rack up gains are also in that situation.
The best bet is to keep bets small, keep them focused on the long side in the top stocks in leading industries until we get some real distribution in this market, cut your losses fast if they don’t move up immediately, and do not focus on the short side just yet. There are markets that are meant to be traded and then there are market that can be traded but shouldn’t. That is what this market is to newbies. This is not the market where we are going to get a TASR or TZOO. We are not going to get those until we have a serious selloff in equities.
I know some think that we have had a real selloff already. But no real selloff is under 20% and no real selloff comes with a bottom without fear. Where is the fear? It sure seems pretty darn complacent to me. As long as the complacency continues to reward the longs I will be complacent and ride the trend up with my friends like EGN RICK FFH and OTEX. Now if only the speculative former max green stocks like AGX would move like the other slow safe Utilities, Telco, Soap, and Insurance stocks. Then we could have some fun. Instead we must be happy with a 25% gain in all the stocks that give us that. We will not be getting many 100% to 300% gains in this choppy market. Enjoy what you can get when you can get it. This is not the type of market to be on full margin. The 2005 lows was the last one that had enough fear to produce a gain like 550% in six months in ERS. Since then, there has been nothing.
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room where I will do my best to find the next TASR. Just don’t expect me to find it until after we have a real bear market. ALOHA!!!
top current holdings: ICOC 88% YGE 70% FSLR 262% MTL 92% MA 322% MOS 343% ATRO 55% CNH 138% ZIXI 181% RICK 97%
December 7, 2007
Overall, it was a pretty choppy and inconsistent day on Friday, but it was still a good day when we take it and consider that we continue to hold well in the face of all the bad news from the subprime area of the economy.
I heard many complain that we did not finish higher today on the Nasdaq. I, however, disagree with them and find it more bullish that we finished a tad lower. That shows me that we are consolidating the gains, since the November 28th follow-through day from the IBD indexes, quite well. If we would have sold off today on heavier volume, then I wouldn’t consider the days action bullish. But the fact the we sold off a little and the volume was lower is exactly how you want to see the market pullback after adding on some solid gains.
Don’t forget that the DJIA finished higher, even though volume was extremely low, and that the IBD 100 and IBD 85-85 indexes finished higher. The big caps and leading stocks seemed to hold up well on a day of profit taking. So the people that were not happy with the Nasdaq do not have to look too far to find some other positives in the market.
The fact that we have not sold off at all since the follow-through day has to be taken as a great sign for the bulls, considering that the market was starting to look like it was read to fall apart. Even though we have not had an up day where volume was just simply huge, the market is still offering up enough stocks with solid fundamentals that the rally is working. Obviously, if there was more volume, the gains would be bigger and the longs would be more interesting. Right now, there are very few longs that look beautiful. Instead most only bring a little smile to my face. I still do not see anything out there that makes me want to jump up and down full of joy.
This market, this year, has taught us all something very important that I am not sure many appreciate. The market this year has looked like it is going to top multiple times and every time that it looks like the market is about ready to break wide open it almost always goes on to rally. During the years of 2004-2006 I had to convince people over and over that the market was not done rallying. Every time we would start to selloff, everyone would tell me that “this is it, it is all over.” But every time we would selloff, I would see many new top stocks with pretty bases setup.
That continued until this year. When stocks started selling off in February, very few fresh new longs showed up. Instead it took a while but eventually the market got its legs together and then some new longs showed up. The exact same thing happened in August except the lows in August were decently easy to spot since sentiment got so poor and there were a lot of charts holding up well into the selling. The rally that came off those lows, as many subscribers know, produced many quick big gains from top stocks that took off immediately. All the laggards however were quick to rollover.
So when the selling started in November it appeared that the top was finally in as all our leading four-horseman stocks started selling off on heavy volume for the first time. There was no time before when all these leaders sold off on heavy volume. However, as soon as these stocks started selling off, the stocks that were breaking down started to hammer out short-term lows putting a floor in this market which then turned the leaders around and now have them back into high ground or near high ground. If this hasn’t just been amazing to everyone, then it is obvious you have not been watching the market close enough.
Those that have been watching this market know that the constant rallies in the face of this strong distribution is just amazing. However, the new highs in the leading stocks are coming this time without something: volume. Where is the volume? Where is the accumulation? There is none. What we have instead is a market that seems to have been so oversold that a rally had to happen.
The past few weeks I went out of my way to show you the sentiment in the market on almost a daily basis. Well I do that during bad markets because it is very important to follow. When a real bottom is put in there are a lot of sentiment indicators that hit certain levels that confirm the price and volume that a market has probably put in a low. Well if we use the August lows as the bottom, then the market is still in a period to continue to rally. But if we count the selloff from November as negating the August rally, which is what I believe we have to do when you look at the SP 600 and Russell 2000, then we simply have not had the bearish or fear needed to put in a bottom.
Instead we have put in a short-term bottom due to the market being extremely oversold. If that is the case, then the low volume on this rally makes perfect sense. If this rally was on huge volume, I am sure I would have a lot of pretty green BOP filled charts that work (like RICK) instead of charts that are working but that don’t look at hot (like ELMG and its yellow BOP). So the fact that there are so few hot charts and new leaders breaking out from sound bases and that the current leaders off the 2003 lows (GOOG RIMM BIDU AAPL AMZN) that are now hitting new highs with negative divergences in almost every technical indicator including overall volume.
The first stock we can look at is GOOG. If you notice that GOOG is very close to its November highs but look at the bottom part of your charts. Where is the volume on this rally? Now look at the RS. Do you notice that it is well below the old highs? Then look at the moneystream. Notice its negative divergence. Now look at the BOP. Notice the negative divergence? This is just one example.
The next weak past winner I am watching is RIMM. I technically should be short a little of this stock but my luck on the short side has been iffy recently and almost all of my nicer looking longs have been producing solid gains during the market’s uptrend. As long as the market continues to drift higher, I have to stay away from shorting RIMM until it sets up in a picture perfect historically high odd trade.
Right now, the stock is weaker than all the others as it put in a lower high at the end of November with the RS line coming in well below the old high in early November. That high came with four days of distribution that has been followed by a few days of a low volume rally. If the stock fails again, I might begin to poke a little and try another round of shorting this former leader. However, it would probably be wiser to wait for the 200 day moving average to catch up more to price before getting too big on a short in this stock. If you look at the moneystream you can see that it is making new lows well below the early November s lows. This, despite the price being above the November lows. Also the BOP is red and ugly still just like it was when it started selling off. So it is obvious there is not a lot of accumulating interest in this stock anymore. A weekly chart shows three weeks of distribution the past four which clearly tells you what is going on with RIMM.
BIDU is another leader that is at the old highs in early November but yet nothing else about the stock is. There are negative divergences in almost every indicator with the RS well below the early November highs and moneystream is even in worse shape. The only thing going for it is that BOP is turning green but with the rally coming on lower and lower volume BIDU appears to be headed the same fate RIMM and GOOG are headed for soon.
The strongest leader relative to the market is AAPL with its RS line well into new high ground. While the RS line is deeper into new high ground than price it isn’t by much and then the moneystream is still no where near new highs. That line is still well below the old highs in November. The BOP has also turned negative to where it was still dancing around the zero line early in November.
The point of this is to show you that the leaders that everyone is still talking about as the for sure thing that is a safe haven in any market are all starting to weaken. This is the first time they have sold off on heavy volume and rallied on lower volume to such extremes with all the technical divergence. This action in the leading stocks along with the weak rally in the market with few hot new longs is what continues to keep my mind cautious on the rally. However, even though I am cautious and I expect this thing to fail it sure doesn’t mean that I am just going to ignore the long side and miss gains in stocks that can rally fast in a short period of time.
Sure there are not a lot of RICK stocks out there but there are plenty of EGN stocks out there. And being long EGN is a lot safer than being short stocks that are not moving down. I know a lot of people shorting banks, home builders, and mortgage stocks down here. It is just shocking because most of these stocks have been destroyed and have no chance of going to zero. However, what is obvious to everyone usually no longer works and I think those short sellers are in that situation. Not only are they in that situation but those that continue to believe that AAPL, RIMM, BIDU, and GOOG will always be a safe place to put money to continue to rack up gains are also in that situation.
The best bet is to keep bets small, keep them focused on the long side in the top stocks in leading industries until we get some real distribution in this market, cut your losses fast if they don’t move up immediately, and do not focus on the short side just yet. There are markets that are meant to be traded and then there are market that can be traded but shouldn’t. That is what this market is to newbies. This is not the market where we are going to get a TASR or TZOO. We are not going to get those until we have a serious selloff in equities.
I know some think that we have had a real selloff already. But no real selloff is under 20% and no real selloff comes with a bottom without fear. Where is the fear? It sure seems pretty darn complacent to me. As long as the complacency continues to reward the longs I will be complacent and ride the trend up with my friends like EGN RICK FFH and OTEX. Now if only the speculative former max green stocks like AGX would move like the other slow safe Utilities, Telco, Soap, and Insurance stocks. Then we could have some fun. Instead we must be happy with a 25% gain in all the stocks that give us that. We will not be getting many 100% to 300% gains in this choppy market. Enjoy what you can get when you can get it. This is not the type of market to be on full margin. The 2005 lows was the last one that had enough fear to produce a gain like 550% in six months in ERS. Since then, there has been nothing.
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room where I will do my best to find the next TASR. Just don’t expect me to find it until after we have a real bear market. ALOHA!!!
top current holdings: ICOC 88% YGE 70% FSLR 262% MTL 92% MA 322% MOS 343% ATRO 55% CNH 138% ZIXI 181% RICK 97%
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Another Selloff Helps Stocks Put In One Of Their Worst Weeks In Five Years; The Time To Be Long Has Passed
Subscribers to this site definitely were not caught by surprise when it comes to the selloff we have had the past three days. After Tuesday's market session I ended up with a TON of strong CANSLIM quality longs that appeared to signal that the market was ready for another leg up. However, the very next day, stocks reversed hard on heavier volume and many of the new buys were left looking quite mediocre. That particular action was very bearish to me and caused me to pen this right after the closing bell on Wednesday:
Screw This Market; Nasty Selloff After Such A Strong Day Is A Clear Topping Signal
November 7, 2007
I am losing my bullish bias. All my hard work yesterday was rewarded with this!!! Screw this market. Sell all laggards, cut your losses in stocks not working, take in some profits, and raise cash. This market is in for some rough times. Even if it turns around I don’t care anymore. The easy money is being made on the short side now. It is time to get rid of the bullish bias. This is the most confusing market I have EVER seen. Since 1996 I have never seen a market so screwy. Get out of your new longs and take profits. It is time to start selling. If there is nothing wrong with your longs, keep holding.
What makes all of this worse is that today I just loaded up on FNDT in my IRA. This is now the third buy in a row I have made in my IRA that has been a loser (SNDA, BLL, and now FNDT). Right now, I freaking suck, so it is best to not follow my trades unless you really like them. The easy money off the August lows has come and gone. I don’t know what the market is going to do next (probably goes lower) and with all of this volatility I do not want to be a part of it.
I have never seen such a freaking crazy market. The 2000 top has NOTHING on this wild action. If we are not topping, then damn it I really have lost all ability to read the market. Right now, it is unreadable. Anyone bullish or bearish is just asking to get punched in the face. I will continue to take both longs and shorts and will keep everything 1% or smaller of my initial equity.
I am so upset words can not even express how upset I am. Screw this market!!! Have a great evening. Aloha!
I was upset at the time because I felt like it was possible the market was going to rally hard the very next day offering up new longs. Thankfully, the caution that I suggested was rewarded as the Nasdaq sold off 4.4% the past two days. For those that listened to me and took money off the table, way to go. We missed out on some major carnage.
Now my style now forces me to hold at least 10-20% of a long all the way until it closes below the 200 dma (that is why I am still long ZNH even though I KNOW it has topped). The reason I do that is because I have been stopped out of a TON of big winners by not waiting for this event to happen. I am bringing this up because even though I am still long over 100 stocks, it is only because they are above key support and the 200 day moving average. There are about 25% of stocks in my portfolio that if I traded my old style would be complete sells. It would save me money to cut them now, I am sure. But like I just said, I guarantee, my returns would not be as strong if I did not adhere to this rule. I would have been out of MA, IHS, and many other stocks that I am instead enjoying large gains in. I have missed out on too many huge winners to not adhere by this rule.
But, if you are in a stock that no longer posses a green chart with a strong uptrend, you should probably get out of it. This market has definitely changed and this selloff is MUCH different than the rest. This is the first selloff where there is no safe haven. They have finally gotten to ALL of the leaders. There was only one group, come Friday, that did not suffer any selling, and thanks to the exhaustion gap following great earnings (earnings always look the BEST AT THE TOP) FSLR put in, it is probably safe to say that group is done. When I look at the angle of ascent of FSLR, JASO, and SPWR and then see the island reversals in all three stocks it becomes clear that these stocks now look like they have topped.
JASO is the best example of this. After a large uptrend the stock makes its biggest one day move on Thursday by putting in an exhaustion gap off of FSLR earnings. Then the very next day, it gaps lower on its largest volume ever, losing more than it gained on the gap higher, and BOP went red. This is very ugly action after such a bullish previous day. This was the last sub-sector that was holding up in the market. Now they have gotten these too.
The day before was the first day we officially saw all four leading stocks of this five-year bull market all selloff on strong volume the same day. When you look at the strong volume of the selling in all of these stocks, you can see that there have been very few days where we have seen back-to-back days of selling like this in all of our leaders. What makes this even more evident that the leaders are topping is the fact that the fifth and sixth horseman have problems too (GRMN and FSLR).
FSLR's action the past three days confirms the poor action in the leaders with everything I just listed above with the solars. But the first official leader of the bull market that started October 2002 was GRMN. Anyone who has been following GRMN recently knows that the stock has more than likely put in a real top and if you are still holding on to any shares I hope it is only 20% or less as the volume and follow-through selling after a five year bull market simply can't be ignored. This stock has topped. All of our leaders have topped. Now the next step is waiting for an area to short.
Before I go over where I want to short these leaders, first I think it is important for you all to understand why these stocks may be topping. If you look at a chart of BIDU going back to 2005 on an arithmetic chart, you will notice that the stock has pretty much been a very tight stock trending higher until early/mid October where it had its first huge volume selloff. That was the first warning that real dumping was occurring. Then after an extreme rally, the stock has rolled over on heavy volume the past two days. What this stock currently has going for it is that the stock is still above the 50 day moving average. But by looking at the recent distribution in the chart and noticing the very wide trading range recently appearing, it appears the stock is done. With the market already under distribution it isn't going to shock me when this leader falls.
RIMM is the same way since the 2002 lows as it has been in a steady uptrend. Around June this year, the uptrend starting to move at a more exponential slope and along the way RIMM did an excessive 3 for 1 split. After that, the stock rallied on lower volume (not bullish) and then had a breakout (could be exhaustion) gap on huge volume. Since the gap in June was the breakout, this is possibly an exhaustion. The rally that followed the gap was also on lower volume and now the past two days the stock has sold off on heavy volume. The two day decline of 14% on large volume is the most severe selling the stock has seen since its rally started and is a clear sign that there is not much left in this former leader. The good news, like BIDU is that it is above the 50 day moving average. So if you are long there is no reason to sell all of it but if you have not locked in any profits you better do so.
The worst looking of the leaders on the short term is GOOG. GOOG's 9% drop the past two days has come on very large volume and when you combine the two days of selling it is the heaviest volume since March 2006. If you look at a two day chart on an arithmetic scale you can see the drop is the most severe drop the stock has seen since it started trading and the drop looks very nasty on the chart. The long uptrend line from September has now been broken on huge volume which is a clear profit taking signal. Just like the other leaders this stock remains above the 50 day moving average but it too is so weak in the short term that it would not surprise me if we go right through that line. However, if you are still long some, keep holding. Until the 200 day moving average is broken there is no reason to get out of all your GOOG long.
The last leader that is holding up is AAPL. Once again, a two day chart shows the severity of the 11% drop the past two days as the candlestick bar is much longer than anything else you can see on this chart. This stock started to get roughed up in August as it had a LOT of selling hit the stock but back then the stock found strong intraday support on most of the days that the heavy selling hit it. That caused it to rally off the lows to the November highs. The problem with the rally is that the majority of it was done on lower volume. That indicated that the retail crowd was the only crowd interest in buying it up here. That low volume rally has now been met by heavy volume selling, just like most low volume rallies are. This stock is resting on the 50 day moving average and looks the weakest out of all the leaders. If you have not taken profits on this stock, you better take some profits on this one. However, until it closes below the 200 dma, I don't think you should sell all of it.
The only leader that has broken is GRMN. I am using GRMN as an example for the rest of the leaders in what I want to see before I go short. Because shorting leading stocks before they are ready to be shorted leaves you in massive pain. Just ask all the short sellers of these leading stocks in February and August. I am sure they are still feeling that pain. I know many traders who shorted some of these leaders both in February and July/August. Both times they felt it. Some think shorting GRMN right here is the right play now. I still don't think that is the case. GRMN still hasn't failed the 200 day moving average so it is still possible it could bounce here and break through the 50 day moving average and go on to new highs. While I doubt that will happen, I will tell you what I would like to see happen so that I can short this stock.
I would like to see GRMN touch the 200 day moving average and begin a rally to the downtrending 50 day moving average (if you look at the average, you will see it has turned lower). I would then like to see it bounce around the 50 day moving average for a while and/or rally above it and break back down below it. Then I will wait for a high volume selloff around the 50 and 200 day moving average. If you look at the stock DNB, you will see what I would love to see GRMN do. If GRMN breaks down just like DNB did in the middle of October, I will load up in GRMN. The other reason that I would load up is that if GRMN ends up looking like DNB, we can guarantee that the market will be still selling off like it has been recently. There has been a ton of distribution in the stock market the past few months and if the leaders start selling off I truly doubt volume will be low.
Even though I was getting bearish on Wednesday, I have to admit I still wasn't ready to abandon the bull case, as I know that it is hard to stop bullish momentum. But there were two stocks on Thursday that gave me "hope" that the bull was going to continue. One was the stock you read about earlier called FNDT. The other one was EXLS.
FNDT was not a perfect chart at all as the stock did not have two straight months of max BOP. But it did the second best thing which is to bounce off the 50 day moving average, put in a very bullish intraday reversal, breakout to or near recent highs on extremely strong volume, and do it with BOP going max green. Well FNDT did the latter and three days later was looking great as the stock was breaking out to new highs and closing at its HOD with BOP still max green. So obviously the stock deserved to be in my IRA. I only put what I consider the best looking charts in there. I have to admit I normally want a lot more max green BOP but I was getting very trigger happy in this market as the lack of perfect charts was driving me crazy.
But the stock market slapped me right in my face the very next day as it slammed FNDT almost 3%. That was enough to officially kill the beautiful chart. Well it was still beautiful but the chances of failure rose. And sure enough come Friday the stock closed below the 50 day moving average on heavy volume a clear signal to sell almost all of it. I am now holding 25% in my regular accounts since I went long on 11/1. But the buy in my IRA on 11/6 has been completely sold. So that now makes the last three longs in my IRA all losers. And with FNDT failing (it had such a nice chart and extremely strong fundies with good estimates) it was one of my last hopes that this bull market was not over finally being destroyed. As this five year bull market appears to be ending, I am slowly coming to the acceptance that it is over.
My final hope that the bull market was not over yet came on Thursday night as I did my scans. I happened to come across a stock that had a 99 EPS rating and had some great fundamentals overall once I started to delve deeper into this stocks story. Not only were the fundamentals incredible for EXLS the chart was very long and the right side seemed very sound with the slight accumulation and green BOP spread about. The best thing about the chart seemed to be that the RS line was leading the price into new high grounds by such a great margin that if the market was putting in lows (which I was not sure if it was or not because the leaders were just cracking and I was not sure a short-term oversold rally was going to happen or not) this stock would explode higher. So I even went long quite a bit despite the weak market because this stock looked so good.
But proving once and for all that being long is now completely wrong, the stock gapped slightly and sold off all day long ending just slightly off its LOD. Just like FNDT, this was a complete sale as it immediately reversed the breakout. Now since I follow my rules hardcore, I still own 20% of this long for my accounts and 25% in the Conservative CANSLIM port on our website since it did not close below the 50 day moving average/24.71 level. But back in the old days I would definitely have sold it all by now and I recommend that if you have a smaller portfolio that you sell all of it. This stock was so pretty on Thursday, despite the nasty market selloff. If this stock would have rallied off of an oversold bounce the gains would have been great and might have produced a great stock. In a bull market this chart pattern in a stock with this kind of fundamental power in EPS and sales growth would produce 80% plus gains (80% is the move off the closing lows in July to the highs in November). However, a stock that fails this kind of super strong nice pattern is definitely in the wrong market environment. Sadly, for the stock, it takes a perfectly amazing pattern that would have rocked in a bull market and throws it the ground and kicks it in the gut. How rude!!
Is it possible that the market could put in a huge bullish reversal on Monday and then give us a follow-through day four days later? Of course it is. Anything can happen in the stock market. That is why you must never marry the bullish or bearish side. You must always stay flexible. I will tell you this though, if we do get a follow through in the next five days, it is going to take months to produce hot charts. There are very few charts that look like NYX. And before NYX becomes a new long it is going to need to move sideways to slightly higher a bit longer as it is still too deep in its basing pattern from the November 2006 highs.
Some of the reasons why I personally think that we will not bottom any time too soon is because no matter how many people say that there is fear out there I do not see it. I did see that the AAII bear ratio hit 50% which is high but I have seen the Investors Intelligence numbers recently and I believe that is at 22% right now. At the lows in August it was 35% bears and 45% bulls. With the bulls also at 55% right now, I doubt we are at the lows right here. Even at the February lows the bears hit 30% so I am not sure how there can be too much fear in the market right now. On the realmoney.com site I see 35% are bullish and 41% are bearish. In August the bears hit 60% and the bulls hit less than 25% so this bull/bear survey is off the bottom mark too.
But the most important sentiment indicators, imo, are the ones where actual money is put on the line. In that case, the put/call ratio is always one of my favorites to look at. One of the most interesting things I saw this week was that on Wednesday when the market sold off the put/call went from .96 to .90 CLEARLY signaling that there was absolutely no panic put buying during the selloff. That was another bearish warning that something bad was coming. Well on Thursday the ratio spiked up to 1.10. But then on Friday with the Nasdaq falling 2.5% and the IBD 100 falling 3.2% the put/call ratio actually fell from 1.10 to 1.03!! It is simply stunning that an index can selloff 2.5% and the options players bet against the trend and buy the dips since that is what they have been used to since October 2002. The put/call ratio dropping two of three down days this week despite the selloff is the most clear indication that there is no fear out there in actual market players.
The last place to look for fear is the VIX index. The VIX did increase 33% the past three days and that is a major development but just as there was no real fear in the selling in February there is no real fear in this selling right now either. The lows in August were put in once VIX got over 35. What proves my point that the big money is made with a high VIX, the rally that followed produced many brand new longs that made 25-100% gains in three months or less. If the VIX would have gotten over 50, we would have had a ton of 50%-200% gainers. That is how the VIX works. The higher the VIX the more money we make in our longs. The higher the VIX the worse the selloff is to give us fewer stocks to focus on. The few stocks that produce hot pretty green charts always become our new longs that give us huge fast gains.
Right now, the VIX is at 28.50 and until the VIX gets to 35 there is no way that we can even begin to talk about a market that is too oversold and needs to bounce because the market has gotten too bearish too fast. No matter what the talking fundamentalist blind-traders say on CNBC, you must follow your charts and listen to their silent voices. The charts speak louder and more truth than any analyst on TV or on the radio ever will. Those who told me to buy banks all the way down the past few months could have saved their clients a bunch of money if they would have learned to use charts. God bless Don Worden and his TC2007. I don't know what I would do without it. Without it, I wonder if there even would be any stock market commentary by me. This is the greatest way to make a living. Definitely one of the hardest. But still one of the best ways to make an honest dollar!
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room where no matter what market direction we are in we always stay in control and make money (except for this week--it sure was painful; ouch!). ALOHA!!!!
Screw This Market; Nasty Selloff After Such A Strong Day Is A Clear Topping Signal
November 7, 2007
I am losing my bullish bias. All my hard work yesterday was rewarded with this!!! Screw this market. Sell all laggards, cut your losses in stocks not working, take in some profits, and raise cash. This market is in for some rough times. Even if it turns around I don’t care anymore. The easy money is being made on the short side now. It is time to get rid of the bullish bias. This is the most confusing market I have EVER seen. Since 1996 I have never seen a market so screwy. Get out of your new longs and take profits. It is time to start selling. If there is nothing wrong with your longs, keep holding.
What makes all of this worse is that today I just loaded up on FNDT in my IRA. This is now the third buy in a row I have made in my IRA that has been a loser (SNDA, BLL, and now FNDT). Right now, I freaking suck, so it is best to not follow my trades unless you really like them. The easy money off the August lows has come and gone. I don’t know what the market is going to do next (probably goes lower) and with all of this volatility I do not want to be a part of it.
I have never seen such a freaking crazy market. The 2000 top has NOTHING on this wild action. If we are not topping, then damn it I really have lost all ability to read the market. Right now, it is unreadable. Anyone bullish or bearish is just asking to get punched in the face. I will continue to take both longs and shorts and will keep everything 1% or smaller of my initial equity.
I am so upset words can not even express how upset I am. Screw this market!!! Have a great evening. Aloha!
I was upset at the time because I felt like it was possible the market was going to rally hard the very next day offering up new longs. Thankfully, the caution that I suggested was rewarded as the Nasdaq sold off 4.4% the past two days. For those that listened to me and took money off the table, way to go. We missed out on some major carnage.
Now my style now forces me to hold at least 10-20% of a long all the way until it closes below the 200 dma (that is why I am still long ZNH even though I KNOW it has topped). The reason I do that is because I have been stopped out of a TON of big winners by not waiting for this event to happen. I am bringing this up because even though I am still long over 100 stocks, it is only because they are above key support and the 200 day moving average. There are about 25% of stocks in my portfolio that if I traded my old style would be complete sells. It would save me money to cut them now, I am sure. But like I just said, I guarantee, my returns would not be as strong if I did not adhere to this rule. I would have been out of MA, IHS, and many other stocks that I am instead enjoying large gains in. I have missed out on too many huge winners to not adhere by this rule.
But, if you are in a stock that no longer posses a green chart with a strong uptrend, you should probably get out of it. This market has definitely changed and this selloff is MUCH different than the rest. This is the first selloff where there is no safe haven. They have finally gotten to ALL of the leaders. There was only one group, come Friday, that did not suffer any selling, and thanks to the exhaustion gap following great earnings (earnings always look the BEST AT THE TOP) FSLR put in, it is probably safe to say that group is done. When I look at the angle of ascent of FSLR, JASO, and SPWR and then see the island reversals in all three stocks it becomes clear that these stocks now look like they have topped.
JASO is the best example of this. After a large uptrend the stock makes its biggest one day move on Thursday by putting in an exhaustion gap off of FSLR earnings. Then the very next day, it gaps lower on its largest volume ever, losing more than it gained on the gap higher, and BOP went red. This is very ugly action after such a bullish previous day. This was the last sub-sector that was holding up in the market. Now they have gotten these too.
The day before was the first day we officially saw all four leading stocks of this five-year bull market all selloff on strong volume the same day. When you look at the strong volume of the selling in all of these stocks, you can see that there have been very few days where we have seen back-to-back days of selling like this in all of our leaders. What makes this even more evident that the leaders are topping is the fact that the fifth and sixth horseman have problems too (GRMN and FSLR).
FSLR's action the past three days confirms the poor action in the leaders with everything I just listed above with the solars. But the first official leader of the bull market that started October 2002 was GRMN. Anyone who has been following GRMN recently knows that the stock has more than likely put in a real top and if you are still holding on to any shares I hope it is only 20% or less as the volume and follow-through selling after a five year bull market simply can't be ignored. This stock has topped. All of our leaders have topped. Now the next step is waiting for an area to short.
Before I go over where I want to short these leaders, first I think it is important for you all to understand why these stocks may be topping. If you look at a chart of BIDU going back to 2005 on an arithmetic chart, you will notice that the stock has pretty much been a very tight stock trending higher until early/mid October where it had its first huge volume selloff. That was the first warning that real dumping was occurring. Then after an extreme rally, the stock has rolled over on heavy volume the past two days. What this stock currently has going for it is that the stock is still above the 50 day moving average. But by looking at the recent distribution in the chart and noticing the very wide trading range recently appearing, it appears the stock is done. With the market already under distribution it isn't going to shock me when this leader falls.
RIMM is the same way since the 2002 lows as it has been in a steady uptrend. Around June this year, the uptrend starting to move at a more exponential slope and along the way RIMM did an excessive 3 for 1 split. After that, the stock rallied on lower volume (not bullish) and then had a breakout (could be exhaustion) gap on huge volume. Since the gap in June was the breakout, this is possibly an exhaustion. The rally that followed the gap was also on lower volume and now the past two days the stock has sold off on heavy volume. The two day decline of 14% on large volume is the most severe selling the stock has seen since its rally started and is a clear sign that there is not much left in this former leader. The good news, like BIDU is that it is above the 50 day moving average. So if you are long there is no reason to sell all of it but if you have not locked in any profits you better do so.
The worst looking of the leaders on the short term is GOOG. GOOG's 9% drop the past two days has come on very large volume and when you combine the two days of selling it is the heaviest volume since March 2006. If you look at a two day chart on an arithmetic scale you can see the drop is the most severe drop the stock has seen since it started trading and the drop looks very nasty on the chart. The long uptrend line from September has now been broken on huge volume which is a clear profit taking signal. Just like the other leaders this stock remains above the 50 day moving average but it too is so weak in the short term that it would not surprise me if we go right through that line. However, if you are still long some, keep holding. Until the 200 day moving average is broken there is no reason to get out of all your GOOG long.
The last leader that is holding up is AAPL. Once again, a two day chart shows the severity of the 11% drop the past two days as the candlestick bar is much longer than anything else you can see on this chart. This stock started to get roughed up in August as it had a LOT of selling hit the stock but back then the stock found strong intraday support on most of the days that the heavy selling hit it. That caused it to rally off the lows to the November highs. The problem with the rally is that the majority of it was done on lower volume. That indicated that the retail crowd was the only crowd interest in buying it up here. That low volume rally has now been met by heavy volume selling, just like most low volume rallies are. This stock is resting on the 50 day moving average and looks the weakest out of all the leaders. If you have not taken profits on this stock, you better take some profits on this one. However, until it closes below the 200 dma, I don't think you should sell all of it.
The only leader that has broken is GRMN. I am using GRMN as an example for the rest of the leaders in what I want to see before I go short. Because shorting leading stocks before they are ready to be shorted leaves you in massive pain. Just ask all the short sellers of these leading stocks in February and August. I am sure they are still feeling that pain. I know many traders who shorted some of these leaders both in February and July/August. Both times they felt it. Some think shorting GRMN right here is the right play now. I still don't think that is the case. GRMN still hasn't failed the 200 day moving average so it is still possible it could bounce here and break through the 50 day moving average and go on to new highs. While I doubt that will happen, I will tell you what I would like to see happen so that I can short this stock.
I would like to see GRMN touch the 200 day moving average and begin a rally to the downtrending 50 day moving average (if you look at the average, you will see it has turned lower). I would then like to see it bounce around the 50 day moving average for a while and/or rally above it and break back down below it. Then I will wait for a high volume selloff around the 50 and 200 day moving average. If you look at the stock DNB, you will see what I would love to see GRMN do. If GRMN breaks down just like DNB did in the middle of October, I will load up in GRMN. The other reason that I would load up is that if GRMN ends up looking like DNB, we can guarantee that the market will be still selling off like it has been recently. There has been a ton of distribution in the stock market the past few months and if the leaders start selling off I truly doubt volume will be low.
Even though I was getting bearish on Wednesday, I have to admit I still wasn't ready to abandon the bull case, as I know that it is hard to stop bullish momentum. But there were two stocks on Thursday that gave me "hope" that the bull was going to continue. One was the stock you read about earlier called FNDT. The other one was EXLS.
FNDT was not a perfect chart at all as the stock did not have two straight months of max BOP. But it did the second best thing which is to bounce off the 50 day moving average, put in a very bullish intraday reversal, breakout to or near recent highs on extremely strong volume, and do it with BOP going max green. Well FNDT did the latter and three days later was looking great as the stock was breaking out to new highs and closing at its HOD with BOP still max green. So obviously the stock deserved to be in my IRA. I only put what I consider the best looking charts in there. I have to admit I normally want a lot more max green BOP but I was getting very trigger happy in this market as the lack of perfect charts was driving me crazy.
But the stock market slapped me right in my face the very next day as it slammed FNDT almost 3%. That was enough to officially kill the beautiful chart. Well it was still beautiful but the chances of failure rose. And sure enough come Friday the stock closed below the 50 day moving average on heavy volume a clear signal to sell almost all of it. I am now holding 25% in my regular accounts since I went long on 11/1. But the buy in my IRA on 11/6 has been completely sold. So that now makes the last three longs in my IRA all losers. And with FNDT failing (it had such a nice chart and extremely strong fundies with good estimates) it was one of my last hopes that this bull market was not over finally being destroyed. As this five year bull market appears to be ending, I am slowly coming to the acceptance that it is over.
My final hope that the bull market was not over yet came on Thursday night as I did my scans. I happened to come across a stock that had a 99 EPS rating and had some great fundamentals overall once I started to delve deeper into this stocks story. Not only were the fundamentals incredible for EXLS the chart was very long and the right side seemed very sound with the slight accumulation and green BOP spread about. The best thing about the chart seemed to be that the RS line was leading the price into new high grounds by such a great margin that if the market was putting in lows (which I was not sure if it was or not because the leaders were just cracking and I was not sure a short-term oversold rally was going to happen or not) this stock would explode higher. So I even went long quite a bit despite the weak market because this stock looked so good.
But proving once and for all that being long is now completely wrong, the stock gapped slightly and sold off all day long ending just slightly off its LOD. Just like FNDT, this was a complete sale as it immediately reversed the breakout. Now since I follow my rules hardcore, I still own 20% of this long for my accounts and 25% in the Conservative CANSLIM port on our website since it did not close below the 50 day moving average/24.71 level. But back in the old days I would definitely have sold it all by now and I recommend that if you have a smaller portfolio that you sell all of it. This stock was so pretty on Thursday, despite the nasty market selloff. If this stock would have rallied off of an oversold bounce the gains would have been great and might have produced a great stock. In a bull market this chart pattern in a stock with this kind of fundamental power in EPS and sales growth would produce 80% plus gains (80% is the move off the closing lows in July to the highs in November). However, a stock that fails this kind of super strong nice pattern is definitely in the wrong market environment. Sadly, for the stock, it takes a perfectly amazing pattern that would have rocked in a bull market and throws it the ground and kicks it in the gut. How rude!!
Is it possible that the market could put in a huge bullish reversal on Monday and then give us a follow-through day four days later? Of course it is. Anything can happen in the stock market. That is why you must never marry the bullish or bearish side. You must always stay flexible. I will tell you this though, if we do get a follow through in the next five days, it is going to take months to produce hot charts. There are very few charts that look like NYX. And before NYX becomes a new long it is going to need to move sideways to slightly higher a bit longer as it is still too deep in its basing pattern from the November 2006 highs.
Some of the reasons why I personally think that we will not bottom any time too soon is because no matter how many people say that there is fear out there I do not see it. I did see that the AAII bear ratio hit 50% which is high but I have seen the Investors Intelligence numbers recently and I believe that is at 22% right now. At the lows in August it was 35% bears and 45% bulls. With the bulls also at 55% right now, I doubt we are at the lows right here. Even at the February lows the bears hit 30% so I am not sure how there can be too much fear in the market right now. On the realmoney.com site I see 35% are bullish and 41% are bearish. In August the bears hit 60% and the bulls hit less than 25% so this bull/bear survey is off the bottom mark too.
But the most important sentiment indicators, imo, are the ones where actual money is put on the line. In that case, the put/call ratio is always one of my favorites to look at. One of the most interesting things I saw this week was that on Wednesday when the market sold off the put/call went from .96 to .90 CLEARLY signaling that there was absolutely no panic put buying during the selloff. That was another bearish warning that something bad was coming. Well on Thursday the ratio spiked up to 1.10. But then on Friday with the Nasdaq falling 2.5% and the IBD 100 falling 3.2% the put/call ratio actually fell from 1.10 to 1.03!! It is simply stunning that an index can selloff 2.5% and the options players bet against the trend and buy the dips since that is what they have been used to since October 2002. The put/call ratio dropping two of three down days this week despite the selloff is the most clear indication that there is no fear out there in actual market players.
The last place to look for fear is the VIX index. The VIX did increase 33% the past three days and that is a major development but just as there was no real fear in the selling in February there is no real fear in this selling right now either. The lows in August were put in once VIX got over 35. What proves my point that the big money is made with a high VIX, the rally that followed produced many brand new longs that made 25-100% gains in three months or less. If the VIX would have gotten over 50, we would have had a ton of 50%-200% gainers. That is how the VIX works. The higher the VIX the more money we make in our longs. The higher the VIX the worse the selloff is to give us fewer stocks to focus on. The few stocks that produce hot pretty green charts always become our new longs that give us huge fast gains.
Right now, the VIX is at 28.50 and until the VIX gets to 35 there is no way that we can even begin to talk about a market that is too oversold and needs to bounce because the market has gotten too bearish too fast. No matter what the talking fundamentalist blind-traders say on CNBC, you must follow your charts and listen to their silent voices. The charts speak louder and more truth than any analyst on TV or on the radio ever will. Those who told me to buy banks all the way down the past few months could have saved their clients a bunch of money if they would have learned to use charts. God bless Don Worden and his TC2007. I don't know what I would do without it. Without it, I wonder if there even would be any stock market commentary by me. This is the greatest way to make a living. Definitely one of the hardest. But still one of the best ways to make an honest dollar!
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room where no matter what market direction we are in we always stay in control and make money (except for this week--it sure was painful; ouch!). ALOHA!!!!
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Monday, October 22, 2007
Anniversary Of The 1987 Crash Sets The Stage For A Mini Stock Market Crash As Stocks Selloff On Higher Volume
Boy oh boy was it ever ugly on Friday, with the whole market selling off leaving no room to hide. When it was all over, every index lost 2% with the Russell 200 leading the way lower with a 3.2% whack. The IBD 100 loaded of leading stocks also fell 3.4%, showing that there was no where to hide. My portfolio took a 5.3% hit but overall when I look at everything I have to admit that most longs continue to look good, 75% pulled back on lower volume, and the stocks I did sell were either cheap POS stocks or were recent longs that were not large buys which saved me from major carnage. So before I go any further into my analysis I have to apologize for not getting irrational and losing my mind by panicking over a one day selloff. I simply can’t lose my cool, when everyone else is.
What made the selling worse and that has to raise our yellow flags is that volume expanded by quite a large margin on the NYSE. But volume was only slightly higher than the volume on Wednesday on the Nasdaq. So the volume was not unbelievable. Also the NYSE volume was still well below all the volume in August. So when we honestly look at the volume situation we have to admit that it was bad in the fact that volume was over the 50 day volume average on the NYSE and the Nasdaq. But with volume on the NYSE lower than the highest levels on the September rally and well below the heavy volume in August, can we really say it was that bad? And just by looking at the Nasdaq, it becomes clear that the volume was not that bad at all. Now, on top of that, remember that is was also monthly options expiration and that added to the volume. If you take out the option volume, the volume would have been either slightly below or above the 50 day volume average. It simply wouldn’t have been real distribution.
About the only commentator I see holding there own right now on CNBC that is not completely bearish is Jim Cramer. I decided to spend a lot of time watching CNBC and I swear to God the mention of 1987 occurred every 30 seconds. The other thing that quickly became apparent on all the programs was that everyone expected stocks to continue to selloff. When I combine that with the sentiment in my chat room and the other rooms I follow, it feel like we are more close to bottom than a top.
I can’t help but think back to those days in NYC in 1999-March 2000 when everything was rosy and everything seemed so perfect (which was obviously not the case-Al Quaida). Nothing was bad and stocks raced higher every day with not a bear in site except the usual perma-bears who missed the whole uptrend. Besides these few everyone wanted to be long stocks and buy them up with no regard to price. Nowadays, it seems everyone is afraid of stocks and I have a ton of subscribers that want to be short here and/or want to sell their longs. It is like they have decided to stop listening to their charts and have instead entered back into a world of amateur “gut feelings.”
Could we selloff more next week? You better believe we can. No doubt about that. But how much more selling can there be in this short amount of time when everyone is saying the market is going lower and that we should sell stocks. Did anyone see the put/call ratio on Friday? It jumped to over the fear level of 1 and closed at 1.08. I prefer to see a 1.25 to 1.5 reading to show extreme panic but the fact that the ratio is back above the 1 level shows that fear is back in the market. The VIX has also rallied from 16 to 22 in a very short period of time indicating that fear has risen very quickly. It is not like 22 is a high number and bullish for the market-it isn’t. But the fact that the VIX moved so much in a short amount of time and the put/call is up here makes it hard to get extremely bearish here.
What I would see to get more bearish would be to see more complacency, not fear. To get me really worried, the put/call would have had to have dropped to the .7 level and the VIX wouldn’t have moved. If that would have happened and the market fell 2-3%, then I would be very worried for stocks. But for now the fear has risen very quickly and just a little bit more selling could put a floor in.
For those that think I am being biased on the bullish side, all I have to say is “you have to be kidding me?” Those that have been reading me for a long time, know that I turn bearish when the trend turns bearish but I will not be a hardcore bear until the real leaders top. Then and only then will I be a “hardcore” bear that looks to short the rallies and cover off the low extremes. This bull market has existed since October 2002 making this a five year bull market. According to history, we don’t have much further to go. But everyone that understands and knows the market knows that the biggest and most powerful gains come at the very end when stocks “blowoff” in one final glory rally before it all ends. Most people are long gone as the pullbacks in February, July, and now October shake them out. Just like at the end of 1999 when the October selloff scared most longs out and had EVERYONE convinced that was the top, they were wrong then and more than likely they are wrong now.
After missing that top call, stocks took off on an amazing rally that sent stocks on their most powerful and quickest advance that rewarded those that listened to their stock charts and not the BIASED opinions of journalist. When stocks took off like that and everyone that top called in October missed out, they came in around February and bought stocks near the top. When the market pulled back THEY REFUSED to cut their loss so they wouldn’t miss out on another rally by being scared out like they were in October. Instead the pullback never bounced and neither did their stocks. I believe this must happen in this market, before we top. Right now, we are not there.
When BIDU, GOOG, and RIMM must be owned. When you are a fool to not be long anything China, solar, or a dry-bulk shipper then it will be a top. Are we there yet? I seriously don’t think so. I just don’t believe you can top when I have this many longs that are holding key support and have beautiful setups and with the public so pessimistic after one hard day of selling.
Something else everyone needs to remember is that the biggest down days for the stock market happen during bull markets. The vise versa is true in bear markets. The stock market has some of its biggest and baddest rallies in bear markets. If people do not understand this, they need to study the year 2001 and see how strong some of the one day gains were in that very bearish year. In 2003, I remember one day in June of 2003 when the markets fell 2% and everyone was sure we topped. I took a look at all my longs and noticed that so many were green and had low volume pullbacks that it was just hard to believe it. The volume was low that day but before that there was a HUGE intraday bearish reversal on HUGE volume a couple of weeks before. That made the 2% selloff look like the final nail on the head.
The other market where everyone was sure we had topped was in October of 2005. That is when I was offered a job in Chicago to run a large amount of money (I turned the job done; Maui no ka oi!!) and the fund manager was giving it up because the market DEFINITELY had topped. It was time to give up, according to him. However, my charts completely disagreed with him as many stocks were setting up in strong bases and there were a lot of charts with a lot of green BOP showing up. This does not happen in a market about ready to “give up.” Now, just like then, seems just like this. My best longs with the best chart patterns look completely fine. Even one of my longs that was a very large position (I have taken 60% of profits already) does not look like it is putting in a “for sure” top. This stock is setting up to be like TNH. TNH appeared to have definitely topped on climax runs in February and May. Yet, there it is, still chugging along but starting to look weaker and weaker. By the way, TNH is one of those stocks I am looking to short in-bulk. It is a former high-flying leader.
All of this is necessary to go over with all of you to remind you to not panic out of good charts. Trust me, if there is nothing wrong with your stock, please, you must follow the rules. You don’t want to lose a position in a stock that has the potential to be another OMTR or any of the other stocks that are listed below. Trust me, missing out on those gains, just because the stock market fell one day, is not the smart thing to do. You don’t want to be the guys in 1999, January 2004, October 2005, August 2006, or August 2007. It isn’t worth missing these kind of gains, just because you are scared of the market.
History, has proven OVER AND OVER that the best time to short stocks is five to seven months AFTER the stock has topped on its chart. The other thing that will happen is that the earnings and sales will look better than they ever have before. At the top everything looks perfect. Right now, everything doesn’t look perfect. Despite the investors intelligence survey, I truly believe by the NYSE short-interest ratio being near an all-time high and the put/call over 1 that the crowd is betting on a fall. The crowd is usually wrong and my charts are usually right. So with the odds in the favor of higher prices, I must remain long.
But, darn it, if you are sitting on any of the gains that I have listed below and have not made any sells, shame on you. That is greedy trading. Like my DRYS example, I have sold off 60%. The rest can ride. But the easy quick money has come and gone. 90% gains in two months is pretty damn good. Same with speculation stocks like ASTI and APPY. If you haven’t taken any profits, you better believe you need to take some. Just in case this is a top, you don’t want to have all your gains slip away.
However, I continue to think the crowd is too bearish and I refuse to join the camp that every other professional non-professional is in. I make my living off my charts. They don’t say it is time to be fearing lower prices. They say it is time to prepare for a possibility of lower prices. But the charts STILL tell me to fear missing more upside. These charts are still setup for more gains. Until they rollover and say “look out below,” there is no way I am jumping the gun and dumping some of these beauties. The stocks that fail quickly, dump them. GET RID OF THEM. The stocks that hold up well and pulled back on low volume with BOP still very max green. YOU HOLD THEM.
Aloha, and I will see you in the chat room, where facts trump opinions in the stock market.
top current holdings up this week: TRCR 327% DRYS 99% GMCR 66% EXM 59% KOP 54% LFL 62% MOS 252% DECK 136% KHD 208% IMA 86% CCC 83% TTG 87% OMTR 346% CRNT 100% FSLR 116% ICOC 104% IHS 224% PRGN 56% HURN 101% SFLY 90% YGE 75% ASTI 109% ANO 264% OIIM 62% BIIB 51% APPY 125%
What made the selling worse and that has to raise our yellow flags is that volume expanded by quite a large margin on the NYSE. But volume was only slightly higher than the volume on Wednesday on the Nasdaq. So the volume was not unbelievable. Also the NYSE volume was still well below all the volume in August. So when we honestly look at the volume situation we have to admit that it was bad in the fact that volume was over the 50 day volume average on the NYSE and the Nasdaq. But with volume on the NYSE lower than the highest levels on the September rally and well below the heavy volume in August, can we really say it was that bad? And just by looking at the Nasdaq, it becomes clear that the volume was not that bad at all. Now, on top of that, remember that is was also monthly options expiration and that added to the volume. If you take out the option volume, the volume would have been either slightly below or above the 50 day volume average. It simply wouldn’t have been real distribution.
About the only commentator I see holding there own right now on CNBC that is not completely bearish is Jim Cramer. I decided to spend a lot of time watching CNBC and I swear to God the mention of 1987 occurred every 30 seconds. The other thing that quickly became apparent on all the programs was that everyone expected stocks to continue to selloff. When I combine that with the sentiment in my chat room and the other rooms I follow, it feel like we are more close to bottom than a top.
I can’t help but think back to those days in NYC in 1999-March 2000 when everything was rosy and everything seemed so perfect (which was obviously not the case-Al Quaida). Nothing was bad and stocks raced higher every day with not a bear in site except the usual perma-bears who missed the whole uptrend. Besides these few everyone wanted to be long stocks and buy them up with no regard to price. Nowadays, it seems everyone is afraid of stocks and I have a ton of subscribers that want to be short here and/or want to sell their longs. It is like they have decided to stop listening to their charts and have instead entered back into a world of amateur “gut feelings.”
Could we selloff more next week? You better believe we can. No doubt about that. But how much more selling can there be in this short amount of time when everyone is saying the market is going lower and that we should sell stocks. Did anyone see the put/call ratio on Friday? It jumped to over the fear level of 1 and closed at 1.08. I prefer to see a 1.25 to 1.5 reading to show extreme panic but the fact that the ratio is back above the 1 level shows that fear is back in the market. The VIX has also rallied from 16 to 22 in a very short period of time indicating that fear has risen very quickly. It is not like 22 is a high number and bullish for the market-it isn’t. But the fact that the VIX moved so much in a short amount of time and the put/call is up here makes it hard to get extremely bearish here.
What I would see to get more bearish would be to see more complacency, not fear. To get me really worried, the put/call would have had to have dropped to the .7 level and the VIX wouldn’t have moved. If that would have happened and the market fell 2-3%, then I would be very worried for stocks. But for now the fear has risen very quickly and just a little bit more selling could put a floor in.
For those that think I am being biased on the bullish side, all I have to say is “you have to be kidding me?” Those that have been reading me for a long time, know that I turn bearish when the trend turns bearish but I will not be a hardcore bear until the real leaders top. Then and only then will I be a “hardcore” bear that looks to short the rallies and cover off the low extremes. This bull market has existed since October 2002 making this a five year bull market. According to history, we don’t have much further to go. But everyone that understands and knows the market knows that the biggest and most powerful gains come at the very end when stocks “blowoff” in one final glory rally before it all ends. Most people are long gone as the pullbacks in February, July, and now October shake them out. Just like at the end of 1999 when the October selloff scared most longs out and had EVERYONE convinced that was the top, they were wrong then and more than likely they are wrong now.
After missing that top call, stocks took off on an amazing rally that sent stocks on their most powerful and quickest advance that rewarded those that listened to their stock charts and not the BIASED opinions of journalist. When stocks took off like that and everyone that top called in October missed out, they came in around February and bought stocks near the top. When the market pulled back THEY REFUSED to cut their loss so they wouldn’t miss out on another rally by being scared out like they were in October. Instead the pullback never bounced and neither did their stocks. I believe this must happen in this market, before we top. Right now, we are not there.
When BIDU, GOOG, and RIMM must be owned. When you are a fool to not be long anything China, solar, or a dry-bulk shipper then it will be a top. Are we there yet? I seriously don’t think so. I just don’t believe you can top when I have this many longs that are holding key support and have beautiful setups and with the public so pessimistic after one hard day of selling.
Something else everyone needs to remember is that the biggest down days for the stock market happen during bull markets. The vise versa is true in bear markets. The stock market has some of its biggest and baddest rallies in bear markets. If people do not understand this, they need to study the year 2001 and see how strong some of the one day gains were in that very bearish year. In 2003, I remember one day in June of 2003 when the markets fell 2% and everyone was sure we topped. I took a look at all my longs and noticed that so many were green and had low volume pullbacks that it was just hard to believe it. The volume was low that day but before that there was a HUGE intraday bearish reversal on HUGE volume a couple of weeks before. That made the 2% selloff look like the final nail on the head.
The other market where everyone was sure we had topped was in October of 2005. That is when I was offered a job in Chicago to run a large amount of money (I turned the job done; Maui no ka oi!!) and the fund manager was giving it up because the market DEFINITELY had topped. It was time to give up, according to him. However, my charts completely disagreed with him as many stocks were setting up in strong bases and there were a lot of charts with a lot of green BOP showing up. This does not happen in a market about ready to “give up.” Now, just like then, seems just like this. My best longs with the best chart patterns look completely fine. Even one of my longs that was a very large position (I have taken 60% of profits already) does not look like it is putting in a “for sure” top. This stock is setting up to be like TNH. TNH appeared to have definitely topped on climax runs in February and May. Yet, there it is, still chugging along but starting to look weaker and weaker. By the way, TNH is one of those stocks I am looking to short in-bulk. It is a former high-flying leader.
All of this is necessary to go over with all of you to remind you to not panic out of good charts. Trust me, if there is nothing wrong with your stock, please, you must follow the rules. You don’t want to lose a position in a stock that has the potential to be another OMTR or any of the other stocks that are listed below. Trust me, missing out on those gains, just because the stock market fell one day, is not the smart thing to do. You don’t want to be the guys in 1999, January 2004, October 2005, August 2006, or August 2007. It isn’t worth missing these kind of gains, just because you are scared of the market.
History, has proven OVER AND OVER that the best time to short stocks is five to seven months AFTER the stock has topped on its chart. The other thing that will happen is that the earnings and sales will look better than they ever have before. At the top everything looks perfect. Right now, everything doesn’t look perfect. Despite the investors intelligence survey, I truly believe by the NYSE short-interest ratio being near an all-time high and the put/call over 1 that the crowd is betting on a fall. The crowd is usually wrong and my charts are usually right. So with the odds in the favor of higher prices, I must remain long.
But, darn it, if you are sitting on any of the gains that I have listed below and have not made any sells, shame on you. That is greedy trading. Like my DRYS example, I have sold off 60%. The rest can ride. But the easy quick money has come and gone. 90% gains in two months is pretty damn good. Same with speculation stocks like ASTI and APPY. If you haven’t taken any profits, you better believe you need to take some. Just in case this is a top, you don’t want to have all your gains slip away.
However, I continue to think the crowd is too bearish and I refuse to join the camp that every other professional non-professional is in. I make my living off my charts. They don’t say it is time to be fearing lower prices. They say it is time to prepare for a possibility of lower prices. But the charts STILL tell me to fear missing more upside. These charts are still setup for more gains. Until they rollover and say “look out below,” there is no way I am jumping the gun and dumping some of these beauties. The stocks that fail quickly, dump them. GET RID OF THEM. The stocks that hold up well and pulled back on low volume with BOP still very max green. YOU HOLD THEM.
Aloha, and I will see you in the chat room, where facts trump opinions in the stock market.
top current holdings up this week: TRCR 327% DRYS 99% GMCR 66% EXM 59% KOP 54% LFL 62% MOS 252% DECK 136% KHD 208% IMA 86% CCC 83% TTG 87% OMTR 346% CRNT 100% FSLR 116% ICOC 104% IHS 224% PRGN 56% HURN 101% SFLY 90% YGE 75% ASTI 109% ANO 264% OIIM 62% BIIB 51% APPY 125%
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Stocks Recover Some Of Thursday’s Losses On Lower Volume; The Week Ends With Leading Stocks Enjoying Big Gains
Friday was not the greatest rebound you could have asked for as volume was lower than the day before and the big cap indexes did not even close up 1% each. But the Nasdaq did rise 1.2%, closing near its HOD, and the IBD 100 almost regained all of its Thursday’s losses with a 1.9% gain. Coming off the losses yesterday, we do have to admit that the action today sure is a lot better than the market to have continued to selloff–like a TON of “smart” people were expecting it to.
The fact that the market did not selloff more was really not a surprise. Even though NONE of us knew that the market was going to rally today, it was a bullish note that few of our top stocks pulled back violently on large volume. Another obvious indication that the selling was not that bad was that the only complete cut losses I had to take were in very low priced stocks with poor fundamentals. There was nothing of quality that got hurt. However, knocking on wood did not help as BLL and NILE took it on the chin today giving us two possible top stocks that have now basically failed.
Technically, both BLL and NILE are still strong longs from the correct buy points. However, in this market, I find it wise to fully concentrate your money on leading stocks that are rising. Since there are so many top stocks making great gains, even though they lack perfectly beautiful green charts, it is wise to move money into stocks moving higher out of stocks that are moving nowhere to down after a long purchase.
In strong markets, like the one we are in now, it just pays to stick with top stocks. One thing I saw a lot of after Thursday’s losses was how sure everyone was that BIDU was done. I am just not going to ever go into that camp as long as this stock remains above the 50 and 200 day moving average. There is no reason and I have no business trying to call a top in this market based on one day of selling in only one top stock. Yes, they did hit the leaders on Thursday. But the fact is that those leaders are all still well above the 50 day moving average that most big boys that have missed the stock are still probably in the bargain hunting mode looking to snatch up these stocks at discounts.
Though I never recommend doing that, it would make sense that dips are still buys here, considering how far this market has run without a real pullback following the August lows. It is amazing how strong and persistent this market is. The bad news about is that the low VIX is really cramping up my style of nailing some huge winners. The other bad part is that no nice consolidation in the indexes leads to no nice pretty max green BOP filled consolidation patterns in stocks. You can’t get a stock to go sideways long enough in this bull market without it becoming a laggard to the market making it prone to reversals and fake-out breakouts. Real long nice bases can only be created during market consolidation periods. That enables the stock to show RS to the market and then on the breakout show the RS line breaking out ahead of price showing the strength of the stock to the market.
Until we get one of these rest, it is going to be tough for me to find a lot of OMTR type of home runs. They simply aren’t there in this five year bull market. From October 2002 to January 2004 it was a lot of fun. Since then, all of my gains has been real work. It sure will be nice when the market actually puts in a top and I can operate on the bear side setting me up for some huge 1999 and 2003 gains from the next bull market. However, as long as we have all the usual top leading stocks cracking the 100, 150, 200, 300, and 500 levels we are not going lower any time soon.
Which is all the more reason it is funny that so many are trying to top call. Yes ZNH appears to have topped and, yes, JRJC appears it MIGHT have topped. But until GOOG, BIDU, FWLT, CME, RIMM, AAPL, and all the other favorites of mine show the same pattern as ERS last year and ZNH now on an arithmetic daily chart, there is no way I am going bearish on this market any time soon. Especially with this wall-of-worry that the newspaper and cable tv news media is providing. Oh yeah, and the nightly news. Sheesh, if I didn’t actually make a living off the stock market and dealt with facts ALL DAY LONG, I might actually believe the pile of shit the moron journalist on these network shows spew. However, God blessed with me with wisdom so I ignore their crap and go on with what my charts tell me. THANK GOD FOR MY CHARTS!!
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room! By the way, what a great day of college football! And how about that Indians vs Redsox game?!!! Amazing. I can’t wait to see what the NFL has for us. I hope I go 6-0-0 after tomorrow in my Fantasy Football league. That would cap off a great end to a great week…..minus BLL. I always hate to see a nice chart fail like that. ALOHA!!!
winners: OMTR 323% ZNH 289% APPY 101% ICOC 111% BCSI 118% DRYS 92% IHS 224% VDSI 224% FSLR 106% HURN 100% CNH 128% MOS 243% TTG 73% KOP 52% GTLS 68% APFC 67% RVBD 52% SFLY 84% PSMT 56% IMA 80% SXE 55% NTLS 59% MA 226% LFL 62% GMCR 59% KHD 173% DECK 134% EBIX 51% SXC 50% YGE 72% VMW 50% WRLS 117%
The fact that the market did not selloff more was really not a surprise. Even though NONE of us knew that the market was going to rally today, it was a bullish note that few of our top stocks pulled back violently on large volume. Another obvious indication that the selling was not that bad was that the only complete cut losses I had to take were in very low priced stocks with poor fundamentals. There was nothing of quality that got hurt. However, knocking on wood did not help as BLL and NILE took it on the chin today giving us two possible top stocks that have now basically failed.
Technically, both BLL and NILE are still strong longs from the correct buy points. However, in this market, I find it wise to fully concentrate your money on leading stocks that are rising. Since there are so many top stocks making great gains, even though they lack perfectly beautiful green charts, it is wise to move money into stocks moving higher out of stocks that are moving nowhere to down after a long purchase.
In strong markets, like the one we are in now, it just pays to stick with top stocks. One thing I saw a lot of after Thursday’s losses was how sure everyone was that BIDU was done. I am just not going to ever go into that camp as long as this stock remains above the 50 and 200 day moving average. There is no reason and I have no business trying to call a top in this market based on one day of selling in only one top stock. Yes, they did hit the leaders on Thursday. But the fact is that those leaders are all still well above the 50 day moving average that most big boys that have missed the stock are still probably in the bargain hunting mode looking to snatch up these stocks at discounts.
Though I never recommend doing that, it would make sense that dips are still buys here, considering how far this market has run without a real pullback following the August lows. It is amazing how strong and persistent this market is. The bad news about is that the low VIX is really cramping up my style of nailing some huge winners. The other bad part is that no nice consolidation in the indexes leads to no nice pretty max green BOP filled consolidation patterns in stocks. You can’t get a stock to go sideways long enough in this bull market without it becoming a laggard to the market making it prone to reversals and fake-out breakouts. Real long nice bases can only be created during market consolidation periods. That enables the stock to show RS to the market and then on the breakout show the RS line breaking out ahead of price showing the strength of the stock to the market.
Until we get one of these rest, it is going to be tough for me to find a lot of OMTR type of home runs. They simply aren’t there in this five year bull market. From October 2002 to January 2004 it was a lot of fun. Since then, all of my gains has been real work. It sure will be nice when the market actually puts in a top and I can operate on the bear side setting me up for some huge 1999 and 2003 gains from the next bull market. However, as long as we have all the usual top leading stocks cracking the 100, 150, 200, 300, and 500 levels we are not going lower any time soon.
Which is all the more reason it is funny that so many are trying to top call. Yes ZNH appears to have topped and, yes, JRJC appears it MIGHT have topped. But until GOOG, BIDU, FWLT, CME, RIMM, AAPL, and all the other favorites of mine show the same pattern as ERS last year and ZNH now on an arithmetic daily chart, there is no way I am going bearish on this market any time soon. Especially with this wall-of-worry that the newspaper and cable tv news media is providing. Oh yeah, and the nightly news. Sheesh, if I didn’t actually make a living off the stock market and dealt with facts ALL DAY LONG, I might actually believe the pile of shit the moron journalist on these network shows spew. However, God blessed with me with wisdom so I ignore their crap and go on with what my charts tell me. THANK GOD FOR MY CHARTS!!
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room! By the way, what a great day of college football! And how about that Indians vs Redsox game?!!! Amazing. I can’t wait to see what the NFL has for us. I hope I go 6-0-0 after tomorrow in my Fantasy Football league. That would cap off a great end to a great week…..minus BLL. I always hate to see a nice chart fail like that. ALOHA!!!
winners: OMTR 323% ZNH 289% APPY 101% ICOC 111% BCSI 118% DRYS 92% IHS 224% VDSI 224% FSLR 106% HURN 100% CNH 128% MOS 243% TTG 73% KOP 52% GTLS 68% APFC 67% RVBD 52% SFLY 84% PSMT 56% IMA 80% SXE 55% NTLS 59% MA 226% LFL 62% GMCR 59% KHD 173% DECK 134% EBIX 51% SXC 50% YGE 72% VMW 50% WRLS 117%
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