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 VIX. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VIX. Show all posts
Monday, June 24, 2013
Shanghai Drops more than 5% sending World Markets Lower
Despite an impressive move off the lows just after the lunch hour the final hour of trading was won by sellers. Closing off the highs of the session major markets with the exception of the Dow were down more than one percent on the day. Volume simply could not compete with Friday’s level due to quadruple witching. VIX enjoyed a volatility day closing up 6.5% to 20.12. Summer time trading has arrived and we expect the volatility to continue and given the increase in volatility we will adjust.
Shanghai dove more than 5% as the liquidity issues continue to evolve in China. One thing is for certain the Shanghai Composite is in a severe downtrend and trying to catch a falling knife is not something one should attempt. Perhaps the index will get a bounce this evening, but it will likely continue to the downside over the longer-term.
2013-06-24_SHANGHAI_COMP_daily
The one saving grace perhaps for our markets will be the 200 day moving average will likely serve as a reasonable spot for the markets to bounce. It is anyone’s guess whether or not it will lead to new market highs, but a logical spot for the market to bounce nonetheless. Volume will be an important key in determining whether or not institutions will come out and support stocks. Today, it was a mix bag with the final hour selling really putting the damper on a sustainable bounce.
A few other items will certainly help give a lift to the markets. Both the RSI and McClellan indicators are near areas where the market has bounced historically. It isn’t a given a market bounce will occur, but if one were to occur it would not come as a surprise to us. We’ll be paying attention to our stocks and will act accordingly if and when signals come our way. Everything else is just noise.
Economic data today was light, but an uptick in the Dallas Manufacturing Survey was better than expected. Tomorrow we’ll get a read on Durable Goods and Wednesday we’ll get a read on GDP.
Not the start to the week bulls wanted even with the intraday rally. Make it a great week. Join the Big Wave Trading team.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Stocks Drop as Volume Soars
The Federal Reserve remained the focus of many traders and pundits arguing over whether or not the Federal Reserve should taper or not. Meanwhile, sellers got to work and pushed the market lower for majority of the session. Even a last second effort by buyers was knocked down at the close. Volume soared across the board as institutions rushed into the market. Homebuilders were hit hard despite the existing home sales came in higher than expected. Gold and Silver went back to September 2010 levels as both precious metals were crushed (despite physical demand for gold continues to move higher). With the major markets having put in a lower high and a lower low a downtrend is certainly here.
There wasn’t much that was spared from the onslaught of selling. The 10 year Treasury note is yielding above 2.4% and the 30 year at 3.51%. Big moves in just over a month for yields, but are they spiking because the economy is getting better? Or is it simply Ben Bernanke will no longer be buying as many bonds? Headlines came out the fed was going to taper to $65 billion a month at the September meeting and end the bond buying program next June. This announcement only threw fuel onto the fire and accelerated the decline further. It is best to step aside when a freight train is headed your way.
Having a sound strategy in times like this will certainly keep you calm. Many will be driven by emotion and make costly errors while we will take advantage.
Here is a screen shot of the Hindenburg Omen. You’ll notice we have gotten 6 signals since the end of May. It almost appears certain we’ll get a correction with this many signals showing up.
Cut your losses and ride your winners. Have a great weekend.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Fed Day Turns Nasty as Stocks Fall on Bernanke’s Policy Decision
What a volatile day it turned out to be with stocks gyrating after the FOMC policy announcement only to close at the lows of the session. Stocks were lower ahead of the announcement as many feared the Fed would inject into the statement regarding tapering bond purchases. In fact, it did not and the market still went lower. Bonds sold off in tremendous fashion with the 10 year yield at 2.333% for the day. Higher yields will not be kind to the US Treasury and the US government cost of servicing debt. Given today’s action and the jump in volume it appears this market wants to head lower with us leaning towards the sell side of the Big Wave Trading model.
Volume kicked into hyper drive after the release of the statement. Intraday volatility did as well and was mostly like due to algos fighting each other. The NASDAQ appeared to have a few 10 point swings in a few seconds. It is very doubtful humans could move as fast causing this type of movement intraday. It is more for our amusement to watch those trying to decipher this type of action. No way could one even begin to interpret and act upon profitably on the type of action we saw today. Avoid those who claim they can at all costs.
The fear index or known as the VIX ended the day slightly higher closing at 16.64. It dipped as low as 15.36, but was able to finish in the green. For such a big move lower the lack of movement to the upside in the VIX is somewhat puzzling. Perhaps traders aren’t as fearful of a taper then the market action is leading on. For now, we have weak price action accompanied by heavy volume and this is throwing out cautionary signals.
There certainly will be pundits who will be claiming the market has exhausted itself and we have topped for good. No one knows the future and while anything is possible nothing is certain. We do see ETFs like HYG and JNK displaying very weak action and it would be easy to conclude this is over. However, in 2011 many claimed this to be over and we are sitting near all time highs. We’ll let price action do our talking and follow it and leave the guesswork to others.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Markets Close in Lower half of the Day’s Range as Volume Jumps
Failure of the Bank of Japan to signal even more stimulus sent the world markets into a selling frenzy. Initially, buyers were able to push the market well off its low and at one point pushing the Dow into positive territory twice! A weak 3 year Treasury note auction sent sellers back into the market pushing the market near the lows of the session by the close. Volume rose across the board suggesting Institutions were in the market selling stocks a negative sign for the market direction in normal markets. At the very least the action we are seeing may simply be foreshadowing further volatility. This market is certainly under pressure and given the rise from November until May a little correction is certainly not a surprise to us. Obey your sell/exit signals as the stock market is certainly on shaky ground.
Following up yesterday’s move lower homebuilders continue to tack onto their losses. LEN continues to be one of the weakest among the group. XHB has seen its fair share of heavy selling since February and is now just finally catching up to the ETF. An even bigger decline has come from the utilities as the 10 year yield has jumped higher. XLU topped out the first of May has slide 9% from its high and has had trouble finding buyers. Higher rates have certainly stung a few industries and it is quite obvious traders aren’t keen on higher rates.
Daily volatility has certainly kicked up with the VIX nearing multi-month highs. The VIX closed at 17.07 up nearly 10% on the day. However, VIX tracking ETFs continue to lag the performance of the VIX overall. For example, the VXX was only up 6.6% today well behind the VIX performance. It certainly doesn’t appear investors are rushing towards volatility to hedge against a market decline. Or it simply could be the inability for these ETF managers to keep pace with the VIX. Something to keep an eye on as this market proceeds.
The positive here is certainly the major market averages remaining above their respective 50 day moving averages. A negative here was the rejection at the 20 day moving average. While the 50 day is certainly a bit more important the rejection at the 20 day is something to take notice. Since the beginning of the year we have been able to jump back up thru the 20 day with ease. Now, we have rejection. Stick with the process and do not try to be a hero.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Stocks Close the Quarter Higher Despite Disappointing Economic Data
The market was hit with disappointing GDP and Jobless claims figures prior to the market open. Then again just after the open with a very disappointing reading from the Chicago PMI. Despite the disappointing economic reports the market as able to find enough buyers to keep stocks in green territory. Small caps lagged the broader market as the S&P 500 led the way. VIX slipped again as buyers continue to remain complacent as fears over a correction are simply non-existent. Our current uptrend remains intact and although we do have a bit of distribution we aren’t going to throw in the towel on this rally just yet.
GDP growth was revised up from .1% to .4%, but still below the expectations of .5%. At this rate, .5% is not going to cut it for the US. Even 2% GDP growth will not improve our situation greatly. Perhaps the size of the US economy is a hindrance, but we need growth in order to pay for all the services we want the government to provide us. It is anyone’s best guess if this translates to higher or lower stock prices. If we were growing like Chile with 5% GDP growth we’d be creating jobs like gangbusters! The economic pie needs to grow and we need policies that aid the growth.
Enough of the economic talk and get back to price action. Gold and silver continue to trade in downtrends while Oil has resumed an uptrend. One commodity in particular, Copper continues to trade in a downtrend. Copper is a decent indicator of economic growth and right now it is not singing the praises of the economy. JJC is an ETF to track Copper and it shows quite clear the commodity is in a downtrend. Natural gas continues to remain in an uptrend even with some high volume down days. It wouldn’t surprise us if the October high is breached. Outside of Crude Oil it doesn’t appear the freshly minted cash from the Federal Reserve is finding its way into commodities.
Enjoy the long weekend. Next week we’ll get a bombardment of Economic data from across the world. It should be a fun time. Cut those losses.
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Volatility Jumps as the Dow closes Green while Small Caps Lag
Positive housing data kicked off the trading day with Building permits jumping higher than expected. However, it was just after the 10 am hour the market dove as CNBC blame worries over the Cyprus bailout. Volume started the day off light despite the positive housing data. Institutions were jumping in the market buying up shares as volume suggested. It wasn’t until the hysteria over Cyprus did volume kick into another gear. The S&P 500 and NASDAQ did notch a distribution day, but they weren’t as bad as they could have been if the market closed at its lows. Volatility measured by the VIX jumped more than 8% as it appears traders and PMs alike are beginning to buy protection. We remain in an uptrend and with the Federal Reserve tomorrow we’d expect activity to pick up after the Fed releases its policy statement.
The Dow continues to be the leader among the major indexes. Today KO led the way for the index, but with the Dow leading it does give us pause if we’ll see this rally continue. At this point we do not have enough to say this rally is over as distribution simply isn’t piling up (YET). Leading stocks aren’t screaming higher suggesting we can continue. However, on the flip side they aren’t breaking down in droves saying we are about to crater. Stay disciplined here and do not rush in to be a hero.
Wednesday’s Federal Reserve meeting will certainly be something the financial media will savior. I am sure Ben Bernanke will try to calm any fears the Federal Reserve will withdraw “support” of the financial markets. We’ll kindly remind everyone the Fed has more than tripled its balance sheet since 2008 and provided Trillions in guarantees to the market. I suppose a few trillion more won’t hurt. We are in an uptrend and while this could change tomorrow there is no telling if it will. Those who tell you they know where it is heading are full of crap. No one can predict the future. Know your exits and let your winners ride!
Labels:
Ben Bernanke,
Building Permits,
CNBC,
Cyprus,
DIA,
Federal Reserve,
IWM,
KO,
QQQ,
SPY,
VIX
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Dow Winning Streak Continues as Volume Expands
Once again the Dow was able to close higher as volume jumped on the day. It was nice to see volume expand above Wednesday’s level. However, volume remained well below its 50 day volume average. We can’t have everything. Jobless claims fell less than expected a sign perhaps the labor market is improving or there just aren’t that many people working to sustain a high level of job losses. Producers prices came in as expected. It appears we have carbon copies of intraday action with this market. We near lows of the session around 2pm EST only to find buyers pushing us back to the highs of the session. Sellers simply cannot find any footing to sustain any pressure. Thus, we have a lack of fear as seen with the VIX hitting another 6 year low. More gains in our uptrend and we aren’t about to argue with the market.
Sentiment has swung back in the favor of the bulls with every sentiment survey showing a healthy amount of bullishness. While we do have quite a bit of bullishness we aren’t at extremes. One extreme we are at is with the II survey showing bears at 52 weeks lows. The reading of 18.8% hasn’t been seen in quite some time. AAII bears register at 32%, but the individuals in this survey typically flip flop and is difficult to get a solid reading of sentiment. On the other hand, the II survey of professionals tends to be a bit more smooth and reliable. NAAIM survey showed the positioning of its members fell a bit, but still well in the bull camp. We aren’t in extreme territory for the bulls, but with II bears in an extreme territory may at the very least signal a short-term top is nearing.
We simply cannot know whether or not today was the high of the year. There are plenty of signs this market can still go higher despite the risks involved with endless QE. Inflation, so far remains tame and we’ll get a reading of CPI tomorrow prior to the market open. If you have gone to the gas station and/or grocery store you know prices have been steadily rising. However, I doubt these price increases make their way into the figure tomorrow. The government uses techniques to distort the truth in the inflation figures. Any hints at a possible early end to the Federal Reserve’s QErever plan may scare the markets. Anything is possible and if you follow price and leading stocks your trading results will be just fine!
Make it a great weekend and as always cut your losses short.
Labels:
AAII Survey,
CPI,
DIA,
Federal Reserve,
Inflation,
IWM,
NAAIM survey,
QE,
QQQ,
SPY,
VIX
Saturday, February 09, 2013
Big Wave Trading Portfolio Update And Top Current Holdings
The Big Wave Trading Portfolio remains under a strong BUY signal from 1/2/13. There remains absolutely zero indications, via price action, that there is anything to do but ride the trend higher here.
Despite the constant discussions of what is wrong with this rally and how extreme it is (we will go over that below), stocks continue to breakout from solid consolidation patterns with other stocks either trending up since breaking out or consolidating in preparation for possible breakouts.
As long as we continue to see high quality stocks setup, consolidate, and breakout, we will remain buyers, despite the “overbought” conditions of the market. And trust me we are extremely aware about them at Big Wave Trading.
While we remain buyers of stocks “up here,” we are being very selective and using appropriate capital for a market so extended. If we had more of our current holdings looking like they were putting in climax or parabolic type runs we would be more worried and would begin to hunt for protective put positions in the indexes. However, our longs continue to act orderly and do not exhibit the patterns seen at a market that is doomed to soon top. It still very well could but the price action in the market and stocks does not suggest that.
We read all the headlines. We see all the news. For instance, 3-month sum mutual fund and ETF inflows are at 10 year highs, weekly mutual fund inflows are at 13 year highs, mutual funds have the least amount of cash on hand in 50 years, the VIX is too low at 13, the bulls are dominating the bears on the II (55 vs. 21) and AAII (43 vs. 30) surveys, and stocks are overbought on short-term oscillating indicators.
That is all fine and well and we definitely take all bit of information into consideration as we prepare for the inevitable pullback. However, until it actually happens, there is no reason to take defensive measures now by selling stocks or eliminating new long positions. Imagine not buying the gap up in LNKD on Friday because you thought the market was too high. It clearly didn’t care what you thought and proceeded to move higher throughout the session.
Therefore, until we get our 3-5 churning or distribution days in the market over a period of 2-4 weeks, we will continue to take long signals but keep the new positions relative to the overall safety of their pattern and the continuation of the overbought market. When the tide changes, we will take our profits when our signals are triggered and will add some protective put positions. Until then, the trend has been our friend throughout 2013 so far and until that changes it is wise to remain its friend.
It will change. That you can be sure of. As of Friday, however, it is still up across all major market averages. Have a great rest of your weekend everyone. I wish you a very profitable upcoming week. Aloha from a very warm and sunny Maui.
TOP CURRENT HOLDINGS – PERCENT RETURN – DATE OF SIGNAL
CSU long – 70% – 9/4/12
CAMP long – 66% – 4/26/12
HEES long – 65% – 9/4/12
FLT long – 48% – 9/6/12
EAC long – 43% – 12/17/12
VRNM short – 43% – 4/10/12
POWR long – 39% – 12/11/12
ASTM short – 32% – 7/17/12
MNTX long – 31% – 1/17/13
AXLL long – 29% – 1/4/13
CPSS long – 25% – 1/31/13
Monday, February 04, 2013
European Fears Renew as Stocks Fall; VIX Jumps
Europe kicked off the selling with Spain and Italy taking on the brunt of the selling. The DAX fell 2.5% as the index fell in heavy volume erasing last week’s gains. Volume on the state side fell, but Monday’s have been light in general. Technology stocks led the decline followed by financials as NFLX bucked the trend and pushed higher. The VIX jumped above the 14 level as the fear index jumped to its highest level since the 3rd of January. Monday’s close didn’t help out the situation as sellers had the upper hand sending the market to the lows of the session. Today is just one day, but we did see a slight change in character as we have seen the market get support in the final 30 minutes. Our uptrend remains, but we are certainly on watch for our exit signals.
It is no surprise Europe is back in the spot light has they have tried to implement protections that are simply band aids rather than real solutions. Iceland is a great example of what should be done, but the Central Banks are in control and would be overrun if Europe went the way of Iceland. Spain and Italy have been pounded by sellers with the DAX finally feeling the heat. In addition, Europe is facing a EURO who has been on a tear against the Yen and US Dollar. Exporters are feeling heat and with the Eurozone needing exports to fuel their economy their currency is not helping. Price action suggests further destruction.
The first week of February has not started off well with today’s move. We were quite overbought after the big move in the market from the morning of December 31st. A rest here would be normal, but with the big declines in Europe a “rest” may be quite volatility. Stick with discipline and your plane and execute!
The debate over the “great rotation” continues amongst market pundits. With the Federal Reserve buying $85bln in bonds a month how will yields go higher? If you aren’t going to fight the Fed in the stock market why would you fight it in the Bond market? Just follow the trend and it will treat you well.
Short term Trends:
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 149.54 -1.12%
IWM UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 89.28 -1.21%
QQQ UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 66.48 -1.74%
USO UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 34.78 -1.61%
UNG DOWNTREND CHANGE 2/4/2013 18.67 0.70%
GLD DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 162.00 0.34%
SLV UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 30.69 -0.29%
DBC UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 28.48 -0.35%
FXY DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 106.24 0.64%
FXE UPTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 134.06 -1.06%
TLT DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 2/4/2013 115.54 1.28%
UNG change in trend. Good news for those who heat their homes with natural gas!
Labels:
Central Banks,
DAX,
Euro,
Europe,
Federal Reserve,
Financials,
Iceland,
Italy,
NFLX,
Spain,
Technology stocks,
US Dollar,
VIX,
Yen
Monday, January 28, 2013
S&P 500 Ends Win Streak as VIX Rises; Some Leaders Stumble
Small losses on the S&P 500 and Dow ended their win streaks as AAPL boosts the NASDAQ to close in the green. Durable goods orders were boosted by BA orders coming in better than expected. Disappointing pending home sales were blamed on low supply, but nonetheless there weren’t as many pending home sales as expected. The VIX was able to hold its mid-point despite the market getting support at the lows. There were a few troubling signs with 3D printers facing heavy volume selling. Recent long signals haven’t been working as well suggesting we may be in for the market to take a rest. Our uptrend is still intact, but we do have a few warning signs of a possible pause in the market rally.
DDD and SSYS faced big losses today as these stocks have moved quite a bit from the 11/16 low in the market. It doesn’t matter if these stocks are the way of the future, for now the heavy volume selling suggests these stocks have further to correct. Today’s action is why we have our exit rules with our stocks. Outside of these stocks we don’t see too many trouble signs other than a few new longs not working immediately. KORS another leading stock had trouble today, but LNKD had no issues breaking out. It is very possible we are rotating into new names and this market will resume closing at highs by week’s end. Stay disciplined.
Tomorrow we’ll get the Case-Shiller index regarding the housing market. The index has shown much improvement since the utter disaster back in 2008 and 2009. However, it will be Wednesday when we get a reading on fourth quarter GDP growth as well as the FOMC rate decision. Federal Reserve days tend to be positive for stocks and Wednesday shouldn’t be any different. Of course we’ll allow our signals guide us via price, but the reaction to the comments by the Fed should be entertaining.
We aren’t about to call a market top or even a correction, but given the extreme sentiment readings last week and a few leaders getting hit the probability of a correction is greater. Stick to your game plan and execute.
Short-Term trends:
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 150.07 -0.12%
IWM UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 90.00 0.07%
QQQ UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 67.15 0.22%
USO UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 34.94 0.46%
UNG UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 18.55 -4.97%
GLD UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 160.29 -0.22%
SLV UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 29.85 -1.19%
DBC UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 28.00 -0.04%
FXY DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 107.97 0.14%
FXE UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 133.5 -0.03%
TLT UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/28/2013 118.03 -0.36%
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Big Wave Trading Portfolio Update And Top Current Holdings
The Big Wave Trading Portfolio remains under BUY signals across the board. There is nothing still to do or think too much about as the trend higher is smooth and has come under very little pressure minus two minor distribution days in the Nasdaq Composite.
Overall, many traders believe that it is time for us to take a rest or pullback. However, traders have been thinking this for a while and until it actually happens trading on that notion is not wise.
On the sentiment front, it is getting very bullish out there for sure. However, nobody said it can’t get more bullish. Who is to say that bulls can not hit 90% on the Investors Intelligence survey? Who is to say it can not hit 90% on the AAII survey? Who is to say that the VIX can’t trade below 5 or hell even below 1? I know that is quite irrational but nothing about what has happened since 2008 has been rational. There is no need to believe it is time to start now.
We would love to see a pullback here as it would most likely lead to a very nice consolidation period in many leading stocks that would make their upcoming next round of breakouts that much more powerful. Our biggest concern with a non-stop uptrend is the possibility of a hard reversal that might lead to a sustained downturn instead of a buying opportunity. However, that being said, it is all talking points at this juncture.
All that matters is price, and sometimes volume (though it hasn’t mattered since 2009), and that is what we will continue to focus on. Set buy stops on your favorite stocks nearing breakouts to make sure you get long at the exact pivot points and you will do fine. If you wait till the EOD to buy breakouts in this market environment, you greatly increase your chances of getting caught in a normal shakeout/pullback in the stock.
Great luck next week everyone. I wish you all a very prosperous week. Aloha.
Top Current Holdings – Percent Return – Date of Signal
CSU long – 71% – 9/4/12
HEES long – 64% – 9/4/12
CAMP long – 48% – 4/26/12
VRNM short – 48% – 4/10/12
FLT long – 35% – 9/6/12
ASTM short – 35% – 7/17/12
GNMK long – 30% – 11/16/12
POWR long – 29% – 12/11/12
EAC long – 27% – 12/17/12
HIMX long – 26% – 12/19/12
Thursday, January 24, 2013
AAPL weighs on the NASDAQ as the S&P 500 Closes in the Green for the 6th day in a Row
AAPL was the talk of the street as the stock took a plunge on fourth quarter earnings. Initial jobless claims came in better than expected helping out on the job front (we’ll forget the surging number of people receiving food stamps and long-term disability). The market appeared poised to continue much higher with the market shaking off AAPL’s move. Just before noon time the NASDAQ had almost erased all of the day’s losses but sellers took over. Sellers dominated into the 2:00 pm EST hour when so when the VIX began to fall back helping the market come off the lows. NYSE and NASDAQ volume were higher giving the NASDAQ a day of distribution and a stall day for the S&P 500. We still have our uptrend and a rest here would make sense. However if this were to turn more sinister we have our exit plan.
Gold and silver took a big hit today while other commodities were able to hold up. Gold and silver have yet to push higher despite the Federal’s Reserve’s desire to print $85 billion a month without an expiration date. Perhaps the medals know something about next week’s Fed meeting that the other market don’t. For now, both remain in their short-term uptrends despite their action today.
Sentiment is at extremes with many surveys at multi-year highs. The AAII survey showed bulls at 53% highest since last February. Hulbert’s Financial Digest reading is at a level not seen since 2000. While this may be an indication upside may be limited we simply cannot trade off of it. The market may very well turn over here and head lower, but it is anyone’s guess and why we have sell rules in place. Stick to your game plan and execute.
Short-term ETF Trends:
TICKER ST TREND TREND CHANGE DATE CLOSE %
SPY UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 149.41 0.03%
IWM UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 66.66 -1.38%
USO UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 34.76 0.43%
UNG UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 19.53 -2.35%
GLD UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 161.42 -1.10%
SLV UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 30.65 -1.73%
DBC UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 28.07 -0.07%
FXY DOWNTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 108.66 -1.69%
FXE UPTREND NO CHANGE 1/24/2013 132.7 0.41%
TLT UPTREND CHANGE 1/24/2013 120.09 -0.35%
TLT signals a change in trend from downtrend to uptrend.
Have a great weekend.
Labels:
AAII Survey,
AAPL,
Commodities,
DBC,
FXE,
FXY,
GLD,
gold,
Initial Jobless Claims,
IWM,
Mark Hulbert,
Sentiment,
silver,
SLV,
SPY,
TLT,
UNG,
USO,
VIX
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Big Wave Trading Portfolio Update And Top Current Holdings
The Big Wave Trading portfolios all remain under a strong BUY signal as stocks tacked on more gains the past week with volume coming in higher than the previous week. Overall, it was another strong week and nothing out there is currently of concern on our radar.
Despite the low VIX, the high amount of bulls in the Investors Intelligence survey, and lack of extremely strong volume when we do rally, we find nothing out there that indicates this rally is in danger of failing any time soon. As long as we continue to see breakouts and stocks setting up in tight consolidation patterns, we will continue to operate from the long side accordingly.
While some stocks like SSYS and DDD are beginning to get ahead of themselves, overall there is still a lot of upside potential left in many high-quality CANSLIM stocks and stocks with low P/E ratios that offer high dividends. As long as they continue to move higher and set up as they are, there is simply no reason to be looking for a top any time soon.
Since there is not much to do but continue to set buy stop orders on stocks nearing breakouts, there is not much to address this weekend. While I do hear some commentators trying to call a top, we believe that price is truth and fresh breakouts from strong consolidation patterns are more important than talking heads. We will become cautious on this rally after we either see stocks go into parabolic price gains on arithmetic charts, see stocks breakout and then reverse (like NTE recently) in mass, or see 5-6 distribution days hit the overall market in 2-3 weeks. Until we see this happen, as previously noted, we will continue to hunt for strong leading stocks setting up in consolidation patterns nearing breakouts and trade accordingly.
Remember, even though the VIX is now below the 13 level, it can go much lower. In 2007 the VIX went below 9. That means that we could still see a substantial rally in US equities, despite the low VIX
Top Current Holdings – Percent Return – Date of Signal
CSU long – 65% – 9/4/12
HEES long – 56% – 9/4/12
CAMP long – 49% – 4/26/12
VRNM short – 44% – 4/10/12
POWR long – 33% – 12/11/12
FLT long – 32% – 9/6/12
ASTM short – 31% – 7/17/12
GNMK long – 28% – 11/16/12
HIMX long – 25% – 12/9/12
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Big Wave Trading Portfolio Update And Top Current Holdings
The Big Wave Trading Portfolio remains under a BUY condition across the board. This past week was further confirmation on the current strong technical condition of the overall market. While it is not perfect and we can argue about volume on the days we do rally, it is what it is and that is a strong current rally favoring all sectors and market cap size across the board.
While this rally is incredibly strong right now with barely any selling able to move the market anything lower than .96% on the Nasdaq, when we do pullback, there are plenty of items out there that could be better. To start off with we hear a lot of chatter about the low VIX. While the VIX is low indeed it is still quite a bit away from the lows it was able to set in 2007 below 9. So to say it is extremely low is a bit of a stretch. However, we do realize that even though individual stocks are creating amazing patterns it sure is not like the amazing patterns we saw in 2003 when the VIX was around the 35 levels. That market had fear in it. This market is very complacent. But it is not an extreme.
Also we note that cyclical stocks with dividends are doing better than growth stocks here on a Relative Strength basis. After four years of a market without a 20% pullback it is safe to say we are long in the tooth and if a final run is occurring it would historically match up with cyclical stocks leading and not growth. We can not predict when the market rally will end, and we certainly will place zero capital on that guess, but we do know that these stocks lead near the end of a long cycle. However, it is QEinfinity, the world is printing, and China is growing like mad with exports up 16% in the most recent report.
Another item we hear talk of is the Investors Intelligence bull/bear survey. Currently the survey shows 51% are bulls compared to 23% that say they are bullish. That is in stark contrast to the powerful rally that started in 2003 when there were around 40% bulls and 55% bears. Once again, not a market full of fear that produces a fresh new bull market. While this is all interesting it is, once again, something you can place no capital on. It is just food for thought, in case everyone thinks that we are in for another 4 years of straight up prices. However, sadly, once again, we might, knowing the insane sociopaths that are in control of the economy and country.
The one last talking point we have heard is that mutual fund inflows were the highest in 13 years right when the market topped back in March 2000. In contrast, mutual fund outflows peaked and continued leading into the 2003 rally. Once again, food for thought, but it is not actionable. Why? Simple, let’s say funds decide to put all that money to work and rally the market 25% before the top. Do you want to miss that 25% rise before “a possible” peak? Of course not.
This is why all that matters right now is price. You set your buy stops and execute them when price breakouts of a trading range or a key moving average. It is that simple. You cut your losses if it does not work and you ride the trend until it ends or a trailing stop is hit.
The key to this market is to not think. Just follow price. When you start running into bad luck, cut back on your trading more and more and more and more until things start working again. Once that happens, then begin to increase size. When you get the “perfect” or “best” or “most opportune” signal (as Jesse Livermore would say picking up a bag of money in the corner just sitting there) then you press. If you have not gotten that signal yet, maybe the market will consolidate and then breakout higher producing that signal. If this is going to be a real rally then we should rally into March, historically speaking.
If this rally has left you behind, you still have plenty of time, if it is real. If it is not, you will be thankful you did not break your rules and chase price. In saying that, a lot of traders that missed YCS and DXJ have been waiting for a pullback. They are still waiting.
Have a great weekend everyone. Aloha.
Top Current Holdings – Percent Gain – Date of Signal
NTE long – 121% – 8/17/12
CSU long – 61% – 9/4/12
VRNM short – 50% – 4/10/12
HEES long – 47% – 9/4/12
CAMP long – 44% – 4/26/12
ASTM short – 31% – 7/17/12
FLT long – 27% – 9/6/12
POWR long – 27% – 12/11/12
V long – 25% – 8/31/12
Labels:
ASTM,
CAMP,
china,
CSU,
Cyclical Stocks,
DXJ,
FLT,
HEES,
Investors Intelligence Survey,
Jesse Livermore,
Mutual Fund Inflows,
Nasdaq,
NTE,
POWR,
QE,
Small Cap Stocks,
V,
VIX,
VRNM,
YCS
Saturday, January 05, 2013
Stocks Rally to Close out the Week despite Lower than Expected Job Growth
The market was able to shake off a disappointing jobs figure on Friday morning failing to print 200,000 jobs. AAPL was another loser on the day slipping more than 2% weighing down the NASDAQ while the S&P lead by banks and energy was able to push higher. Banks continue to do well with the Federal Reserve buying their mortgage portfolios. For the week it was a monster move for stocks and a monster fall for the VIX. This market does not have any fear and traders are positioned for this market to continue to push higher. Small caps continue to dominate hitting new highs and until banks and small caps turn there is not a reason for this market not to push higher.
It was a stellar week for plenty of stocks and there appears to be more gains had. However, since the 11/16 move off the lows (when we were close, but not close to a fiscal cliff deal) we have come a long ways. This is not to say we can’t continue to march along, but there are some things saying this market needs to digest some gains. The number of stocks above their 20 day and 50 day moving averages at least suggest a shorter term pull back. However, the number of stocks above their 200 day says something different. Price will dictate our actions, but it is always prudent to be on your toes.
The VIX has been decimated with fear fleeing the market. VIX is simply an indicator of market position via options. At this point in time the VIX is simply telling us traders are positioned for an upside move. Albeit a crowded trade at this point, but big bets are being made for an upside move after the fiscal cliff deal. Unfortunately for the market crowded trades can work well in the short-term, but not so over the long haul.
Short-term this market appears to have legs and will look for it to move higher. Another debt ceiling showdown coupled with warnings from Rating Agencies of a possible downgrade will be another treat dealt to us by DC. We would not be in this mess if DC only spent what it took in.
Make it a great weekend!
Labels:
AAPL,
banks,
energy,
Federal Reserve,
Fiscal Cliff,
Jobs Report,
Nasdaq,
Small Caps,
SP 500,
VIX,
Washington DC
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Stocks Find Hope in House Returning to the Hill on Sunday
The market was headed for a big fall in the early afternoon with the VIX soaring above 20 points for the first time since July. Then news of the House of Representatives coming back to the hill on Sunday sent the robots into action pushing the market back to breakeven. Any news regarding any action and we mean any action has brought on buyers. US Debt Ceiling is set to hit Monday and the Fiscal Cliff on Tuesday it appears we may get some sort of a deal if one side or another blinks. Market action on the other hand has been only helped by rumor of a deal and not an actual deal. Cash remains king in a headline, rumor driven market.
Yesterday’s market action was not very bullish and while today’s intraday support appears to be good it remains to be seen. Sentiment here is very bullish with the National Association of Active Investment Manager’s survey showed 88% were allocating to equities. Mind you this was a 33% jump since November. AAII bullishness hit a 10 month high! Sentiment is hardly a precise indicator, but with many bullish it only appears “sell the news” event is the only likely scenario. Commitment of Traders tracks how long or short traders are of the S&P 500 and traders are the most long since the beginning of 2007. We have a crowded trade to the long side. We should also point out the number of bears heading into the debt ceiling debate last year rivaled that of 2007 and 2008.
All this antidotal evidence does not translate into actionable ideas, but it does put into context the market environment we are in. Price action will dominate our actions and at the moment we have a very erratic market making it quite difficult to have much conviction in either side of the market. For now, caution continues to be the right course of action until something breaks. Today was close with the VIX popping, but it ultimately failed.
Only two days left of 2012! We are looking forward to 2013. Cut those losses and ride your winners.
Labels:
Debt Ceiling,
Fiscal Cliff,
VIX
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
VIX Jumps 10% as Stocks Pullback in Light Trade
Small caps were able to close in the green, but the major indices were unable to hold their early morning gains. At the end of the day there were some fireworks with sellers showing up and pushing the Dow, S&P 500, and the NASDAQ to the lows of the session. Perhaps the lighter volume on the day allowed sellers to have their way. Overall, a pullback on lighter volume is a good thing for this current uptrend. We’d rather not see the Dow fall 100 points. If we were seeing heavy volume selling we’d be concerned with distribution piling up and additional small caps were relatively unharmed during the late day sell off. One thing to note was the more than 11% move in the VIX showing a bit of fear coming into the market. Today was not a terrible day for the markets as it continues to keep us on our toes.
The market simply cannot go higher in a straight line and pullbacks are to be expected. In our new world of forever QE it does give us pause when we can fall with relatively ease. We have moved quite a bit since last Friday and a pullback is to be expected. At the moment, it appears sellers did not bring volume to the table, but any further big price selling will concern us. It was nice to see the continued leadership from Small Cap stocks as well as the NASDAQ outperforming the S&P 500. We could have done without the end of day shenanigans.
The VIX has been relatively tame since the November turn around on 11/16. We have not seen the fear index above 20 since June of this year. We do have quadruple witching this Friday as well as GDP set to be reported tomorrow morning. Quadruple witching weeks tend to see a big jump in volume as well as volatility. Without distribution piling up it is tough at this point to say today was a turning point for this market rally. Some signs of concern like ISRG getting obliterated by a Citron report and HLF getting hit by Ackman, but overall action was “okay.” A few stocks like KORS ended well off their highs, but this is normal for our current environment. However, any further weakness in leadership will be concerning as for now we are cautiously long.
Tomorrow morning we’ll get our weekly jobless claims as well as 3rd quarter GDP expected to print 2.8% growth. Sadly, this is mostly due to government spending borrowed dollars. Again, price will be everything. Know your exits.
Labels:
Ackman,
Citron,
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
GDP,
HLF,
ISRG,
KORS,
Nasdaq,
Quadruple Witching,
Small Caps,
SP 500,
VIX
Thursday, November 15, 2012
The Market Remains Oversold and Unable to Rally
A late day push helped the market from closing near the lows of the session. Disappointing bottom callers the market was couldn’t rally and close into positive territory. Volume dropped from Wednesday’s level, but at this point we’ll need to see a heavy volume reversal to signal any sort of bottom. Financials helped the S&P 500 from sliding further as the XLF found support at its 200 day moving average. Despite the help from financials the market could not overcome the pressure put on by sellers. Our sell signal has been a big winner for us and we remain in our sell mode.
Tomorrow’s option expiry should bring in volume, but it will be interesting to see how the VIX reacts to options expiring. At this point we have yet to see the VIX jump showing fear has crept into the market. Given we have yet to see capitulation it is hard to fathom we saw any sort of bottom today in the market. It was nice to see financials rally, but it was only one group to rally while the rest of leading stocks took a beating. We could be just around the corner from a bottom, but the real question will be is when we do bottom how deep will it be?
Why trend following works very well is you do not need to know how deep or how high a market can go as an investment decision. A disciplined approach is how we are able to take advantage of the markets. Defined entries and exits takes the guess work out of deciding whether or not if you get in or out of a position. Guessing a bottom in the market is just silly and has yet to prove fruitful. The allure of catching a bottom is simply too much for some, but you’ll notice they never make it long term. Stick with a disciplined approach and Big Wave Trading.
Have a great weekend and remember to cut those losses short.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Stocks Fall Again as Fed Hints at More Asset Purchases Next Year
Despite CSCO and ANF gapping higher the market could not overcome selling. Once again volume jumped on the day as Institutional Investors dumped stock on the market. We did see some movement from the VIX, but the fear index remains tame under 20. Selling picked up steam as Obama stepped up to the microphone after meeting with numerous CEOs. The market clearly didn’t appreciate what he had to say nor what came from the FOMC meeting minutes. More asset purchases were discussed for next year due as if the first three easing programs worked. Our sell signals remains and has kept us on the right side of the market despite the oversold conditions.
There isn’t much this market hasn’t taken to the woodshed. Homebuilders and Financials were the two groups holding up and now they are under tremendous pressure. BAC had been holding up, but it too could not hold up under the tremendous selling pressure. XLF is now just above its 200 day, but all we see is heavy volume selling. It will take some time before XLF will repair itself. XHB sliced through its 50 day today and appears to be headed to its 200 day. We may be oversold, but there isn’t much signaling a short-term bottom. We could bounce into next week, but we aren’t seeing anything ready to support a significant move higher. Perhaps we get a Grand Bargain the market likes, but what we heard from Obama this is simply a pipe dream.
Given the oversold nature of the market it wouldn’t surprise us to see the market try to bounce at these levels. We do not have a crystal ball, but given what we have seen from the market and with a tame VIX it is hard to believe we have found a floor. The June bottom came when the VIX nearly hit 30, but lead to a choppy bottom before we headed higher. Until we get capitulation and a VIX jumping it is very likely we’ll continue lower.
Do not be a hero and try to pick a bottom. Leave that to Jim Cramer.
Labels:
ANF,
Barack Obama,
CSCO,
DIA,
Financials,
Homebuilders,
IWM,
Jim Cramer,
QQQ,
SPY,
VIX,
XHB,
XLF
Thursday, November 08, 2012
For the Second Consecutive Day the Market Closes in the Red
Another day of selling hits the markets, but at least we did not see the high volume Wednesday ushered in. The NASDAQ dove below its 200 day moving average yesterday and the S&P 500 joined the club today. While both indexes appear to be in free fall mode the VIX index closed lower on the day. Fear seems to have sidestepped this market despite the back to back days of big selling. AAPL had an epic day of selling as more than 37.5 million shares were trading with the stock closing just off the lows of the session. This type of action occurs when you have an over-owned stock being sold and it never ends well. Stocks are hinting at worse things to come and despite QE from the Federal Reserve sellers are ruling the day.
Talk over the fiscal cliff is just talk as we’ll likely see the proverbial can kicked down the road. This is what politicians do best is kicking the can down the road. The issue really is how much taxes will rise. You can bet regardless of your income levels you will be paying higher taxes next year. At this point the market is simply trying to price the affect of the fiscal cliff. Spending cuts in the bill are roughly 10% of the budget deficit and not likely to be as devastating as the rise in taxes. We talk about not going over the fiscal cliff, but at some point we’ll have to pay for our debts and the longer we put it off the worse it will be.
It is no surprise to us we remain in a sell signal even if we think a fiscal deal will be struck. Price and volume action remain the key in this market. We aren’t about to stick our necks out and try and pick a bottom. Yesterday’s dip buyers were hit hard today and losses are not something we enjoy seeing. Judging by the McClellan Oscillator we are in extreme oversold territory with a reading -147 for the entire market. It is not THAT extreme, but in an area where the market is capable of snapping back. A bounce here would not surprise us in the least. However, if we are to bounce we’ll need to see this market confirm a new market rally before we operate on the long side.
Guessing when the market will turn would not be a disciplined approach. Perhaps a rumor of a fiscal deal would reverse the trend here, but it is anyone’s guess. We’ll continue to operate in sell mode and stay patient. Have a great weekend!
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