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 Utilities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Utilities. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
GOOG Soars past $800 Stocks Lift to New Highs on Light Trade
The market is able to shrug off a dip in homebuilder sentiment and move into new highs on the year. Small caps continue to lift despite ultra light volume in the IWM tracking ETF. Volume on the day was below Friday’s option inflated volume. NYSE composite came in second adding 73 basis points boosted by Oil and Gas sector followed by Utilities. High gas prices and higher payroll taxes appear, for now have yet to cause any impacts to consumer spending despite WMT internal memo leaked on Friday. Our uptrend remains and we are going to continue to stick to it until we see evidence to suggest we are going switch gears.
Volatility continues to be compressed as this market continues to push to the upside. Fears of any shock in the market have subsided as we have yet to see any major hurdles arise. We have our exit strategy in place so we do not fear any move to the downside. However, it is interesting to see how much volatility has compressed since this market has pushed higher. There isn’t any fear out there. Whether that translates to further upside or not remains to be seen. We have our uptrend and are operating as such. Until we see distribution piling up and leading stocks breaking down then we’ll switch gears.
Tomorrow we’ll get the FOMC meeting minutes. The central bank has its work cut out for it trying to navigate the QE waters. Ben Bernanke has committed to an accommodative monetary policy for the United States. The Fed has pumped trillions of dollars into the market and trying to exit this strategy will be extraordinary difficult. How do you remove an addict from its preferred drug without causing the maximum pain? Perhaps we should accept the pain as temporary? Very interesting to see how this all plays out. For us Trend Followers price action will dictate how we react.
Distribution remains elusive and with the market continuing to make new highs without any institutional selling is not a recipe to sell. We’ll let the market come to us rather than predicting where it will go next.
Short-term Trends
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 153.25 0.75%
IWM UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 92.55 0.88%
QQQ UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 68.24 0.72%
USO DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 34.96 0.69%
UNG DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 18.30 2.92%
GLD DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 155.33 -0.28%
SLV DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 28.44 -1.35%
DBC UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 28.24 -0.39%
FXY DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 104.77 -0.02%
FXE DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 132.81 0.19%
TLT DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/19/2013 116.5 -0.50%
Labels:
Ben Bernanke,
Central Bank,
FOMC,
Homebuilder Sentiment,
IWM,
NYSE,
Oil and Gas,
Payroll Taxes,
QE,
Small Caps,
Utilities,
Volatility,
WMT
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
NYSE Posts Second Day of Distribution as Reid Signals Congress Still Can’t Get its Act Together
For the second day in a row the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and the NYSE Composite posted another day of distribution. It is an ominous sign for a newly developed rally to post back to back days of distribution after a follow-through day. Positive economic news from Durable goods to housing did very little to help this market today. Sellers jumped aboard just before the 10am hour, but were held back by another intraday rally like Monday’s session. It appeared as if the NASDAQ and others were ready to bolt to higher ground before Harry Reid and Mitch McConnel spoke about the Fiscal Cliff talks. The market couldn’t rebound and ended near the lows of the session as volume jumped. This rally has a negative tint to it and the next move on volume will spell out the direction we’ll head in the short-term.
Friday’s supposed follow-through day kicked off a new rally and the one thing you do not want to see is distribution within the first few days after the follow-through day. Unfortunately for this new rally is we have had back-to-back days of distribution. Monday’s intraday action was bullish, but still put the NYSE composite, S&P 500, and Dow into distribution camp. Today’s action was clear distribution and is not questionable. Distribution following a new confirmed market rally spells trouble for the rally attempt. I’d expect to see this rally fail shortly and we’ll be on the hunt for a new uptrend. If we move higher on strong move we’ll change our tune, but for now distribution is spelling trouble for this rally attempt.
Financials rolled over today with the XLF rejected at its 50 day moving average. Retail (XRT) still is having trouble with its 50 day moving average despite the media’s attention on how good Black Friday sales were. Oil and Gas was the biggest drag on the S&P 500 followed by financials. A sign the market is on shaky ground is from the only sector higher on the session being the Utilities. If we don’t see the market improve here look for utilities to show strength while the rest of the market heads lower.
If you jumped into the market yesterday or today remember to have an exit strategy. It will mean the difference when it comes down to your returns! Buying is the easy part.
Labels:
black Friday,
DJIA,
Durable Goods,
Fiscal Cliff,
Harry Reid,
Mitch McConnel,
Nasdaq,
NYSE,
SP 500,
Utilities,
XLF,
XRT
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Markets Resume Trading after Sandy Ripped Through the East Coast
Two days of trading were lost due to the storm, but the aftermath for many remains a daunting task. We at Big Wave Trading hope those who were affected by Sandy return to a sense of normalcy soon.
The Russell 2000 led all market gains today, but was the lone bright spot in the market. AAPL’s management shake up weighed heavily on the stock as it dragged down the technology heavy NASDAQ with it. At the open stocks enjoyed a lift, but it was a negative Chicago PMI figure that soured the mood of the market. PMI figures showed a contraction for the first time since late 2008 as many continue to fear the fiscal cliff. Big Wave Trading is still under a sell signal and today’s market did very little to help reverse our course of action. Price and volume are not favorable here and until it improves we’ll continue to operate under our sell signal.
All eyes will be on the ADP and jobless claims report tomorrow. Friday’s non-farm payroll figure is set to be released and it will be an important to Romney and Obama. Gary Johnson the Libertarian candidate can too use this to show under freedom and his leadership we would be able to build a more stable system. For Romney and Obama it will be a fight over the same system we have in place today. Of course, the mainstream media will do its best to spin it positively for Obama while Fox News will do the same for Romney. In the end, we care about our leading stocks and market direction. As the market goes we shall go too.
The leading sectors today were the utilities, consumer goods, and financials. Oil and gas along with Technology stocks were the groups weighing on the S&P 500. Financials continue to be the stocks leading this market and we aren’t surprised. How can you not do well when you have a buyer willing to pay top dollar for a junk asset? Continue to keep an eye out for emerging winners because this market can snap back on a dime.
It is good to be back in the saddle. Cut your losses short.
Labels:
AAPL,
ADP,
Barack Obama,
Chicago PMI,
CNN,
Consumer Goods,
DIA,
Fox News,
Gary Johnson,
IWM,
Jobless Claims,
Mitt Romney,
Nasdaq,
non-farm payroll,
QQQ,
Russell 2000,
SPY,
Utilities
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