Randomly continuing where we left off yesterday, besides the put/call showing a little of fear coming back into it even with some indexes higher. One index continues to print what should be considered bearish numbers. That is the VIX. The VIX closed at 16.47 Friday and intraday on Wednesday hit 16.10. That was the lowest reading since October right before the November top.
I know I am very bullish on this market, even without volume, due to all the setups and charts that are already breaking out out there. But don't question if I would turn, if we got like three major distribution days in-a-row. If that was the case and there was no bounce here, then you have plenty of reasons to get bearish and top calling. But as long as we have stocks like EXM DRYS, and even CNQR showing up, I think I will hold off on top calling. For all I know it will take the put/call to hit .40 and the VIX to hit sub-10 before stocks finally top off this current run.
People that have already sold all of their holdings that they started buying in March, just like the people that told me to bottom fish in March, are just not at the level they need to be at. Nobody, should be out of any DGLY, GFA, or any of the other recent longs like PWRD ISYS and OTEX which have not acting perfectly since going long (that is unless you are a newbie then you should lock in anywhere from 10% to 20% on DGLY, VISN, or anything else up 50% since we went long the past few months). However, they are not acting like GENC and it is a great thing. FEED, even before the recent selling, gave us plenty of time to take some off the table; I took 50% off before the move down. Did you?
Why did I do that? Because look at the chemical stocks. They all look like they are near a major top and the fact that they have not topped yet is SHOCKING to me as the chart patterns have set themselves up more than once in becoming perfect tops and thus good shorts later on. But when I look at MOS, POT, CF, and TNH, I know that not only have I take a 300% and 500% gain in TNH and MOS respectively but that I am in the right place by being on the sidelines as the current chart patterns are LOADED with flaws and the EASY money has CLEARLY already been made in these chemical stocks. If you are focused on them now, I ask you, where in the heck were you in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, or 2007?? You are a little late buying up here for a big position play. I am looking for a top.
And hopefully when that group tops, the market will shrug it off and actually take off, as a rotation from commodities to technology could almost be done and waiting for that group to top before blasting off. We will see. At the same time this rotation is occurring it is obvious that money is not coming out of the energy/oil&gas sectors of the stock market. Those two groups continue to show extremely bullish action and there is no reason to think they are done when solar stocks are only now starting to blast-off. I also do not see any oil&gas stocks making clear climax tops. That means that the run is not over and the way they are dominating the top of the IBD industry groups, only a fool would bet against these stocks here. But I take it a lot of people are or else there would not be a near-fourteen day NYSE short interest. Amazing.
If you look at the top 20 industry groups based on six-month price performance, eight of them are energy related, three are transportation related, and three are metals related. What is even more bullish for these stocks is that the transportation-shipping group has gone from #133 to #15 the past three weeks. Stocks like TBSI DSX EXM and DRYS are all setting up in BEAUTIFUL bases. I want them all, when they breakout or bounce off key support, now that the charts are right.
If I was undisciplined I would just buy them now. However, I know my game and my game makes me a lot of money. I know either buying too early or doing the worst investing mistake and chasing a breakout too far past the appropriate pivot point is not the right thing to do. So I simply do not do it. It is that simple. Don't break rules that have been PROVEN to work. How so many people can have the CANSLIM system handed to them and they simply do not take the time to learn how it works properly is STUNNING to me. It is stunning those few seconds of the month when I waste my time and watch CNBC and see so many that subscribe to IBD NEVER talk about anything the paper preaches. Especially Cramer.
How can you know that history has been mapped and chartered to show us how the best stocks work and yet you tell us to double down on NXY, IMA, or SHLD back in the day POST-top? Horrible. Patience pays off. If you daytraders would look at how much easier your life would be by making one buy and a few partial sells before a big final sell and without paying constant commissions would really improve your returns and open up your day to more free-time. There are always a few who do better being more active but I doubt those people were long my LMLP, TASR, IST, FMDAY, AFSI, or HRZ for some nice easy-to-handle big gains.
I don't like being active as I know the big money is made in the holding. If you like being active, GREAT! However, if you are active and are not happy with your results, I must recommend that you read and study my Past Big Winners. If those, and the list and list of stocks in all of the O'Neil, Weinstein, Boik, Loeb, and Livermore books, don't convince you, I have no idea how you are going to last in this game. Especially as returns vanish with a low VIX and a market FULL OF THOSE HORRIBLE ETFs which now receive money that used to go into REAL stocks. The money in ETFs could be added fuel to the fire of DGLY. But instead a QQQQ or SPY will do. Oy.
Getting back to the market's performance the past week, I have to say while I am looking for a short-term top that could lead to a shallow pullback, I am not going to convince myself that it is a given that it will happen. If this market wants to continue to run that is fine with me. The stocks I am long are going to have to show me blowoff topping signals, reversal signals, or straight up fail before I will sell a market that has this many high-quality stocks moving higher. Even with volume below average on the NYSE and only a few days of above average volume on the market. At least those days are either up or have bullish reversals.
What clearly makes me bullish here (but remember I am ALWAYS ready to sell, if I have to) is that leading stocks and the exciting tech stocks are taking a clear lead. Last week, the SOX led everything with an incredibly impressive 5.8% gain and the IBD 100 was right behind the SOX with a 4.2% gain for the week. Both indexes did much better than even the strongest mainstream index. The SP 400 gained 3.5%, the Nassy/SP 600 3.4%, and the worst of them all was the DJIA with a 1.9% gain.
This to me clearly tells me that this is a market I want to be interested in. I am interested in all markets but when I see technology stocks AND leading stocks taking the reigns as we move higher, I have to support that. Low volume or not. Do I want to see volume return soon to the upside? You better believe it. Will I be OK with a low volume rally? FOR SURE!
Right now there are too many stocks extended or they have come off the lows too fast and need to base out. Stocks like FSYS, FSIN, HMA, and MVL would all make GREAT longs in my portfolio. But there is no way I will buy these until they calm down, setup, and breakout again. Just like my CLR long. Everyone seems to want to buy it now. I am NOT touching it again until it touches that 50 DMA. Better safe, than risky and sorry.
Other stocks I would like to get long at some point with a good entry would be SNHY, BUCY, WBD, HRS, ESV, EXM, DRYS, DSX, DO, UPL, and about another 100 oil&gas stocks. Chasing just isn't my game. Patience is.
I don't have much else to say other than without options expiration volume probably would have been lower on the Nasdaq. So I guess volume was kind of lame on even Friday's move. Not that it is important or anything. I just thought I would throw that in there to illustrate that a low volume rally is what this is.
That means that sentiment dominates. Since the big boys are not putting a ton of new money to work and the volume is real low, you would think the market would be going nowhere. But the old maxim is to "never short a dull market." Yet with all this low volume that is what knuckleheads are doing. The negative news that I have discussed earlier, the negative polls with another one being released Tuesday, and the SP 500 having the worst earnings, dropping 25.9%, slump since 2001, going three q's in-a-row down are all the perfect backdrop to continue to have that NYSE short interest ratio rise and to see the put/call climb higher. Right now, the media is a growth investor's best friend. Their lies and BLATANT exaggerations make this possible.
Every message board or blog comments section I read has at least a handful of doom-and-gloomers and if you guys did not have the pleasure to listen to the comments coming from the yahoo message boards posters the day BSC collapsed then you have no clue how negative it is out there. People are simply disconnected from reality and the poor continue to get more poor due to policies they THINK is helping them but is in fact making it worse. Ignorance and being uneducated is a horrible mixture. Along with being easily manipulated. Combine those three traits and you have the politicians favorite targets.
I am going to do a post later on tonight that will focus on the strong stocks in strong sectors. I recommend, while this market is moving up, that you focus on these areas of the market in the upcoming weeks. It will be beneficial to your bank account.
Aloha from a beautiful and gorgeous Maui "where every little thing is going to be alright." I hope you all got to watch the Penguins win and watch the Celtics win. If you did not, you seriously need to get a Tivo. And if you do not like sports...you are a nerd and are probably the donkey that decides to come to Maui and "learn to surf" then you paddle out to our breaks and get in our ways and almost kill someone. What a great year for playoffs in the NHL and NBA, we have the Yankees and Mets tonight, and this year's ASP has been incredible so far. Get off your butts and get to the gym!!!!!!! :) ALOOOOOOOOHAAAAA!!!!!!
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 money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label money. Show all posts
Monday, May 19, 2008
Saturday, July 07, 2007
Fourth Of July Holiday-Shortened Week Goes Out With A Bang; Shorts Continue To Feel The Squeezing Pain Of The Bulls
A positive employment report, positive revisions to past reports along with the unemployment rate holding steady at 4.5%, and acquisition news that EYE raised the offer from a previous company to buy BOL for $75 a share helped stock indexes rise steadily higher all day long in a nice stair step fashion. By the closing bell, all indexes ended in the green, with big-cap tech leading. All of this came despite another increase in oil to $72.81 a barrel-highest close since September. This market continues to move higher despite the highs in oil, confirming that this is the greatest market story never told. (this refers to the severely biased media that REFUSES to acknowledge how INCREDIBLE this rally from October 2002 is).
The NYSE led the way, closing at an all-time high, with a .5% gain and the Nasdaq and Nasdaq 100 gained .4%, hitting 6 1/2 year highs. The DJIA and SP 500 closed slightly higher with a .3% gain and the SP 600 gain was even smaller with a .1% gain. The great news, once again, was that leading stocks trumped the general market indexes, with a 1.2% gain. This is the picture perfect action that you want to see in a bull market. When leading stocks are leading the general indexes, there are much larger gains being made in top growth stocks than value stocks.
Volume was lower than the day before, as it appeared traders started the weekend and/or their vacations early. The lower volume does help alleviate fears that if volume on the downside shows up soon that it will not be that heavy. As it stands now, the NYSE has five distribution days (many weak distro days) and the Nasdaq only has one, signaling that the market is still very healthy up here hitting new highs despite the lower volume.
With the lower volume, however, we did get good breadth confirming the gains today. The other positive is that the breadth improved as the rally continued throughout the day. Advancers beat decliners by a 5-to-3 margin on the NYSE and by a 3-to-2 margin on the Nasdaq. New 52-week highs beat new 52-week lows by 527 to 83, clearly showing the strength of this market after four days of strong price action.
For the week, the Nasdaq led the way with a 2.4% gain, the NYSE followed with an impressive 2%, the SP 500 and SP 600 rallied 1.8%, and the DJIA gained a solid 1.5%. The clear obvious winner this week was the IBD 100 index and my account. The IBD 100 rallied 5.2% and my account rallied 7.3%. This week reversed my poor showing from last week and continued the trend of my account well outperforming the market for the past sixteen weeks (the length of this rally from the March lows).
It has been a powerful four days of low volume gains for the market but I would not be surprised if we get a pullback here as it seems we have worked off the oversold condition and turned some bears into bulls the past week. Some of the key numbers comes from the realmoney.com poll this weekend. It shows that those surveyed lean bullish with 70% expecting price gains for the upcoming week. There are only 13% registering as bears. This also comes with the McClellan and other overbought/oversold indicators get overbought after the past week of price gains. The VIX has also worked off its bullish higher volatility from late June, signaling that the easy money has been made.
However, despite this, the NYSE short interest ratio rose again to near all-time highs closing at 7.66 on Friday. That and the put/call ratio is still around the level it was at the beginning of the week with it closing at .76. This clearly states that despite what people say, traders did not make bullish bets and in fact continued to take the opposite side of the clear trend. The other slightly bullish sentiment news is that bullishness from the Investors Intelligence survey fell to 49.4%. But, bearishness fell also to very low levels of 18%.
The other sentiment index that I noticed giving a signal that the market might be tired here is the ISEE Options put/call index. This index hit 186% on Thursday which is a level where the market normally does not do very well in the short-term following this reading. Combine this with some of the events above, the fact that new buys are starting to get a little difficult to find in top stocks, and the new buys that do show up are in low-float small cap stocks with mixed/poor fundamentals and we just shouldn’t be surprised if we get a pullback. Now a severe pullback–that is something I just don’t see in the cards with this much negativity pouring out of our nightly news.
Another clear reason why I don’t see a top happening anytime soon is that leading stocks with top fundamentals are simply not topping. And history shows that the leaders top BEFORE the market tops. So as long as AAPL, RIMM, BIDU, GOOG, and Chemical stocks are making new highs and are not churning, putting in heavy volume selloffs, or cutting their 50 day moving averages, there is absolutely NO reason to even think of trying to call a top. Once you see these four horseman top and reverse and then can look at the major indexes and see a clear downtrend, on heavy distribution, with lower highs and closes below the 50 day moving average then, and only then, will I listen to the bears.
Until then, the bears are just filled with nothing but pure crap and lies. And their opinions are worth the equivalent of the returns you have received as a bear this year: NOTHING! Pure worthless opinions that do NOT agree with the facts on the ground. This is why trend followers will ALWAYS outperform the top and bottom callers. They will NEVER return what the greatest traders of all-time returned by simply following and listening to top stocks and the general direction of the market.
Now, like I have said before, and like I keep listing on my forums, there are a lot of charts starting parabolic runs. But that is just it: they are starting them or in the middle of them. Very few appear to be in the late stages of runs seen in other parabolic runs in stocks like ERS in 2006 and tech stocks in the 2000 market. Even RevShark sees this, confirming what I have been seeing for weeks and weeks now. Still, until they top, there is no reason to predict when the run will end.
There is even evidence, in the Semiconductor index, that many large big-cap tech stocks are ready to run there. Many are at new 52-week highs and a lot of the sub-components of the Semiconductor/Electronics group have made big moves in the IBD 197 industry group list. It is very good to see the Semi’s join the market as this appears to be very bullish and should help turn some of those bears into the bulls camp, since they always say that it isn’t a real bull market unless the Semi’s are moving. Maybe I am stuck in years gone by, with this statement, but I still have heard plenty of people tell me that this rally (FOR THE PAST FOUR YEARS MIND YOU) is not that great of a rally because Semi stocks never led. Uhm, who said they had to lead? It is much better just seeing stocks like INTC, NVEC, NVDA, ADM, etc. making solid consistent gains. And that is what they are doing. The whole sector looks great. Of course, the best looking one recently has been SMTX. Those who subscribe at the gold level are well familiar with that very very pretty chart.
With a lot of the bullish leanings you are reading in this weekends post, you must also realize that I am no idiot. I have been partial selling many stocks that are in climax/parabolic type runs. Many, not all, of the stocks you see listed below have recently had 10-25% sold via the basic trading necessity of locking in profits. Holding your whole load as the stock continues to race up the charts in an exponential matter is not smart as sudden reversals become more and more likely. Small and smart selling based on either new highs with low volume, new highs with little price change and huge volume, or major reversals where the stock is up a lot on the day but then reverses to close lower are clear places to selloff 10%-20% of your big winners. Locking in some gains and then holding on for a possible climax run is just what the smart traders of yesteryear did and the smart traders of today do. One thing we definitely don’t do (not saying I am great, btw. Trust me I am FAR from it) is call tops. And that is one thing you will not see me do as long as we are moving higher and hitting new all-time and six-and-a-half year highs.
We have earnings season officially kicking off on Monday, with AA releasing earnings after the close. During the week we have numbers from stocks like INFY, PBG, DNA, MAR, YUM, and CTAS, and to close the week off we have GE. After that the fireworks really get going when the earnings really start pounding the table. Isn’t it funny how fast this time of the year can sneak up on you? Besides that there are, like always, economic numbers to digest. But nothing this week should impact the market like earnings will.
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room where you can guarantee we are ALWAYS on the right side of the market.
top holdings up this week - purchase date
TRCR 463% - 1/12
MA 223% - 8/2
OMTR 185% - 9/15
IHS 146% - 12/21/05
CPA 133% - 9/15
KHD 130% - 5/30/06
TTEC 128% - 8/25
ULTR 125% - 10/27
DECK 120% - 9/13
CXW 96% - 5/19/06
HURN 95% - 9/13
CNH 94% - 11/2
CRY 90% - 1/10
VDSI 89% - 1/14
EVEP 89% - 11/16
ZNH 84% - 12/26
APLX 84% - 9/28
AFSI 83% - 4/12
CKSW 69% - 10/11
LFL 68% - 12/13
HURC 66% - 12/18
VSNT 64% - 2/5
ATX 62% - 12/12
IMA 61% - 8/2
NAVI 59% - 12/19
TESO 58% - 2/16
XRA 58% - 5/24
KMGB 57% - 6/1
CRNT 54% - 5/21
TTG 54% - 11/30
CCC 53% - 3/26
FSLR 50% - 5/22
NTLS 50% - 1/30
Market Commentary At Big Wave Trading Bronze Level One
New Swing Longs: Silver Level Two
New Swing Shorts: Silver Level Two
Stocks On My Watchlist: Gold Level Three
Complete Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
Partial Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Forums: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Chat Room: Gold Level Three
Longs Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
Shorts Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
The NYSE led the way, closing at an all-time high, with a .5% gain and the Nasdaq and Nasdaq 100 gained .4%, hitting 6 1/2 year highs. The DJIA and SP 500 closed slightly higher with a .3% gain and the SP 600 gain was even smaller with a .1% gain. The great news, once again, was that leading stocks trumped the general market indexes, with a 1.2% gain. This is the picture perfect action that you want to see in a bull market. When leading stocks are leading the general indexes, there are much larger gains being made in top growth stocks than value stocks.
Volume was lower than the day before, as it appeared traders started the weekend and/or their vacations early. The lower volume does help alleviate fears that if volume on the downside shows up soon that it will not be that heavy. As it stands now, the NYSE has five distribution days (many weak distro days) and the Nasdaq only has one, signaling that the market is still very healthy up here hitting new highs despite the lower volume.
With the lower volume, however, we did get good breadth confirming the gains today. The other positive is that the breadth improved as the rally continued throughout the day. Advancers beat decliners by a 5-to-3 margin on the NYSE and by a 3-to-2 margin on the Nasdaq. New 52-week highs beat new 52-week lows by 527 to 83, clearly showing the strength of this market after four days of strong price action.
For the week, the Nasdaq led the way with a 2.4% gain, the NYSE followed with an impressive 2%, the SP 500 and SP 600 rallied 1.8%, and the DJIA gained a solid 1.5%. The clear obvious winner this week was the IBD 100 index and my account. The IBD 100 rallied 5.2% and my account rallied 7.3%. This week reversed my poor showing from last week and continued the trend of my account well outperforming the market for the past sixteen weeks (the length of this rally from the March lows).
It has been a powerful four days of low volume gains for the market but I would not be surprised if we get a pullback here as it seems we have worked off the oversold condition and turned some bears into bulls the past week. Some of the key numbers comes from the realmoney.com poll this weekend. It shows that those surveyed lean bullish with 70% expecting price gains for the upcoming week. There are only 13% registering as bears. This also comes with the McClellan and other overbought/oversold indicators get overbought after the past week of price gains. The VIX has also worked off its bullish higher volatility from late June, signaling that the easy money has been made.
However, despite this, the NYSE short interest ratio rose again to near all-time highs closing at 7.66 on Friday. That and the put/call ratio is still around the level it was at the beginning of the week with it closing at .76. This clearly states that despite what people say, traders did not make bullish bets and in fact continued to take the opposite side of the clear trend. The other slightly bullish sentiment news is that bullishness from the Investors Intelligence survey fell to 49.4%. But, bearishness fell also to very low levels of 18%.
The other sentiment index that I noticed giving a signal that the market might be tired here is the ISEE Options put/call index. This index hit 186% on Thursday which is a level where the market normally does not do very well in the short-term following this reading. Combine this with some of the events above, the fact that new buys are starting to get a little difficult to find in top stocks, and the new buys that do show up are in low-float small cap stocks with mixed/poor fundamentals and we just shouldn’t be surprised if we get a pullback. Now a severe pullback–that is something I just don’t see in the cards with this much negativity pouring out of our nightly news.
Another clear reason why I don’t see a top happening anytime soon is that leading stocks with top fundamentals are simply not topping. And history shows that the leaders top BEFORE the market tops. So as long as AAPL, RIMM, BIDU, GOOG, and Chemical stocks are making new highs and are not churning, putting in heavy volume selloffs, or cutting their 50 day moving averages, there is absolutely NO reason to even think of trying to call a top. Once you see these four horseman top and reverse and then can look at the major indexes and see a clear downtrend, on heavy distribution, with lower highs and closes below the 50 day moving average then, and only then, will I listen to the bears.
Until then, the bears are just filled with nothing but pure crap and lies. And their opinions are worth the equivalent of the returns you have received as a bear this year: NOTHING! Pure worthless opinions that do NOT agree with the facts on the ground. This is why trend followers will ALWAYS outperform the top and bottom callers. They will NEVER return what the greatest traders of all-time returned by simply following and listening to top stocks and the general direction of the market.
Now, like I have said before, and like I keep listing on my forums, there are a lot of charts starting parabolic runs. But that is just it: they are starting them or in the middle of them. Very few appear to be in the late stages of runs seen in other parabolic runs in stocks like ERS in 2006 and tech stocks in the 2000 market. Even RevShark sees this, confirming what I have been seeing for weeks and weeks now. Still, until they top, there is no reason to predict when the run will end.
There is even evidence, in the Semiconductor index, that many large big-cap tech stocks are ready to run there. Many are at new 52-week highs and a lot of the sub-components of the Semiconductor/Electronics group have made big moves in the IBD 197 industry group list. It is very good to see the Semi’s join the market as this appears to be very bullish and should help turn some of those bears into the bulls camp, since they always say that it isn’t a real bull market unless the Semi’s are moving. Maybe I am stuck in years gone by, with this statement, but I still have heard plenty of people tell me that this rally (FOR THE PAST FOUR YEARS MIND YOU) is not that great of a rally because Semi stocks never led. Uhm, who said they had to lead? It is much better just seeing stocks like INTC, NVEC, NVDA, ADM, etc. making solid consistent gains. And that is what they are doing. The whole sector looks great. Of course, the best looking one recently has been SMTX. Those who subscribe at the gold level are well familiar with that very very pretty chart.
With a lot of the bullish leanings you are reading in this weekends post, you must also realize that I am no idiot. I have been partial selling many stocks that are in climax/parabolic type runs. Many, not all, of the stocks you see listed below have recently had 10-25% sold via the basic trading necessity of locking in profits. Holding your whole load as the stock continues to race up the charts in an exponential matter is not smart as sudden reversals become more and more likely. Small and smart selling based on either new highs with low volume, new highs with little price change and huge volume, or major reversals where the stock is up a lot on the day but then reverses to close lower are clear places to selloff 10%-20% of your big winners. Locking in some gains and then holding on for a possible climax run is just what the smart traders of yesteryear did and the smart traders of today do. One thing we definitely don’t do (not saying I am great, btw. Trust me I am FAR from it) is call tops. And that is one thing you will not see me do as long as we are moving higher and hitting new all-time and six-and-a-half year highs.
We have earnings season officially kicking off on Monday, with AA releasing earnings after the close. During the week we have numbers from stocks like INFY, PBG, DNA, MAR, YUM, and CTAS, and to close the week off we have GE. After that the fireworks really get going when the earnings really start pounding the table. Isn’t it funny how fast this time of the year can sneak up on you? Besides that there are, like always, economic numbers to digest. But nothing this week should impact the market like earnings will.
Aloha and I will see you in the chat room where you can guarantee we are ALWAYS on the right side of the market.
top holdings up this week - purchase date
TRCR 463% - 1/12
MA 223% - 8/2
OMTR 185% - 9/15
IHS 146% - 12/21/05
CPA 133% - 9/15
KHD 130% - 5/30/06
TTEC 128% - 8/25
ULTR 125% - 10/27
DECK 120% - 9/13
CXW 96% - 5/19/06
HURN 95% - 9/13
CNH 94% - 11/2
CRY 90% - 1/10
VDSI 89% - 1/14
EVEP 89% - 11/16
ZNH 84% - 12/26
APLX 84% - 9/28
AFSI 83% - 4/12
CKSW 69% - 10/11
LFL 68% - 12/13
HURC 66% - 12/18
VSNT 64% - 2/5
ATX 62% - 12/12
IMA 61% - 8/2
NAVI 59% - 12/19
TESO 58% - 2/16
XRA 58% - 5/24
KMGB 57% - 6/1
CRNT 54% - 5/21
TTG 54% - 11/30
CCC 53% - 3/26
FSLR 50% - 5/22
NTLS 50% - 1/30
Market Commentary At Big Wave Trading Bronze Level One
New Swing Longs: Silver Level Two
New Swing Shorts: Silver Level Two
Stocks On My Watchlist: Gold Level Three
Complete Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
Partial Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Forums: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Chat Room: Gold Level Three
Longs Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
Shorts Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
Labels:
big winners,
leading stocks,
money,
semiconductor,
short squeeze,
top stocks
Saturday, June 02, 2007
Leading Stocks Lead The Way As A Very Bullish Week Comes To A Close; NYSE Short Interest At Five-Year Highs
A lot of strong economic data helped stocks finish higher, on Friday, but they were off from their early morning highs. However, the closes were still impressive and the DJIA even had a very strong final hour, even with the Shanghai market falling another 2.7% (still up 50% this year). At the close the SP 600 hit an all-time high rallying .8%, the NYSE hit an all time high rallying .6%, the SP 500 hit an all-time closing high rallying .4%, the Nasdaq hit 6 1/2 year highs rallying .4%, and the DJIA rallied .3% hitting another all-time high.
The most important action, came in the form of leading stocks. The IBD 100 gained 1%, marking the fifth session in a row that the IBD 100 has outperformed the broad market. Leading stocks leading the market tells you that this rally is strong and should have some real legs behind it. It has taken a long time for these stocks to establish a dominate role in this market, since the March 2003 - May 2006 period, but now they are taking the lead from the DJIA. Let’s hope this continues.
Volume was 19% lower on the Nasdaq and 11% lower on the NYSE, which kind of puts a damper on the gains. But the figures for the week confirm the markets strength. The SP 600 was the strongest performer with a 2.8% gain, the Nasdaq followed with a 2.2% gain, the NYSE gained 1.7%, the SP 500 rallied 1.4%, and the DJIA gained 1.2%. The IBD 100 blew away the competition, with a 3.9% gain. This is what you want to see. This is something we really have not seen since the bottom last July/August. Welcome back leading stocks!
There were two advancers for every stock that declined on the NYSE and there were three winners for every two losers on the Nasdaq. New highs finally picked up, with an impressive 799 new 52-week highs. This kind of expansion should give the doubters of this rally some reason to turn a bit more bullish. If that doesn’t work, they have the put/call ratio still up there around the .75 area. That is not high but it is not low either. The most important and telling internal is the amount of short sellers out there.
The NYSE short interest ratio is at its highest level in more than five years at 7.74. This shows major pessimism amongst short sellers and this should keep the market bullish. It is not a given but the high short interest ratio with a higher put/call ratio shows that the crowd is still on the wrong side, despite some surveys.
The AAII survey has come out with 45% bears and only 33% bulls, confirming that the retail crowd is shorting the upticks. One of the most dangerous, arrogant, and ego-driven trade you can possibly make in such a strong tape. Most of these traders are trying to “outsmart” the market. A play that has a very low success rate.
Other surveys, however, show the opposite. The Investors Intelligence survey still shows a very high amount of bulls and the realmoney.com most recent weekend poll is showing 57% of the readers bullish. However, by looking at the post on Rev Shark’s blog, it doesn’t seem that many are bullish on this tape. A lot of the realmoney.com readers leave much to the imagination, anyways. I don’t see too much talent around there.
The other clear fact that the actual trading is not bullish for the retail crowd is the fact that equity ETF’s saw outflows this week. You don’t see that at tops. You see extreme inflows into mutual funds and ETF’s. This shows that the crowd is skeptical on the current rise. Being emotional in the market and betting against the trend is an even worse double whammy that is sure to keep you from beating the market in the long run. If I wasn’t on margin I wouldn’t be beating the market this year. That tells me exactly how rough the current uptrend really is. It is not as easy as it looks–unless you are a daytrader, then I assume it is safe to say “it is easy.” Let’s see how long that last.
What does seem to not be lasting is the weak economy. On one of the busiest weeks I can remember this year, economic data came rolling in confirming what I have been saying all year long–this economy is on FIRE!!! Yes, GDP did come in at its lowest level in five years but it appears to be a short-term thing as the numbers this week confirmed that everything appears to be fine with the economy. That is confirmed by the banks finally getting a bid this week.
The strong economic data on Friday came from the payroll figures as jobs grew 157,000 in May above expectations. The core inflation reading came in at only .1% which was below expectations also. Overall a good report. Then the ISM manufacturing index climbed to 55 in May, showing expansion from April. A reading over 50 is bullish. These kind of economic numbers is why this market never goes down. The DJIA and SP 500 are now up 8 out of the last 9 weeks. An unbelievable run, to say the least.
This unbelievable run is allowing for a TON TON TON of breakouts. Everywhere I scan, I can find breakouts. So that confirms in my mind that this bull still has room to run. If we do reverse now, I can tell you it would be very significant because this many stocks breaking out of fresh bases should mean that the market is going to run. A reversal would be a fakeout breakout and would trap many longs. If I could, and if I was a billionaire or even a millionaire (I am still young and live on Maui, don’t forget that), I would be long 500 stocks right now. There are just that many nice charts. They are not all green and pretty but they are still there. Stocks like TLVT are easily passed with all the nice charts out there. However, a gain of 15% in three days shows that every breakout seems to be working here.
This market does require a lot of work to keep up with the gains in the NYSE, compared to other bull markets. This is in direct correlation with the VIX. Remember, a low VIX, means lower volatility and when stocks rise they will not go up as much when the VIX is at 12 than if the VIX was at 32. All the stocks you see up 100% would be up 300%, if this rally came right after a horrible bear market like the March 2003 was. Even though the gains aren’t as much, the duration is a lot longer. This makes it hard work and can really put a drain on you. I know it is me. I really want a pullback, I really need a pullback, and I just want some time to relax. I doubt I am going to get that.
What also confirms that I doubt I am going to get that? Well after eight out of nine weeks of gains, why should I expect anything else. And the 10-year yield is now confirming what I have been saying all year. The 10-year is now at its highest level in nine months, at 4.94%. The odds of a Fed cut this year fell to 16% from 100% a month ago. Remember, in the world of stocks it is the opposite of what you would think would work. A Fed raising rates tells us that the economy is on fire and they need to slow it down. A Fed cutting rates tells us the economy is in trouble and they need to fill it with cash. With the odds increasing of no rate cut, you can rest assure that this economy is doing just fine. This should be bullish for stocks.
To finish this weekends analysis off I want to state that I don’t think the USA is in a bubble AT ALL. China may be in a bubble but if anyone has IBD and can remember the chart comparing the seven year run-up to the DJIA 29 and Nassy 00 top, you can clearly see China could have a long way to run. Especially since the Nasdaq had a P/E over 200. I believe China is around 45-50.
I did see some bubble action in a lot of stocks last month. But they have either fallen and that money moved into other leaders or they are still holding up. Two personal longs that I saw go into OBVIOUS climax runs (TNH and ONT) were both sold and since then the move has looked like the correct one. TNH is still holding but ONT looks done. Either way those charts had climax runs. There aren’t too many out there like that. Heck, I can’t even find stocks to sell. I only had two partial sales and zero complete sells out of 240 longs (70 are major holdings, the rest are for rent money and fun). The day before there were also no complete sales. Stunning. Normally, even in bull markets, there is always one or two that needs to be cut. Not in this market.
Enjoy the rest of your weekend. Go Anaheim!!! Go Cleveland!!! Aloha and I will see you in the chat room.
http://mauitrader.blogspot.com
top holdings up this week - purchase date
KNOL 365% - 1/12/06
TRCR 350% - 1/12
PTT 240% - 11/16
MA 202% - 8/2
CCOI 152% - 9/27
TTEC 146% - 8/25
ULTR 122% - 10/27
HRZ 115% - 9/27
MFW 115% - 1/29
MEH 113% - 8/30
KHDH 108% - 5/30/06
IHS 106% - 12/21/05
CPA 104% - 9/15
MOS 104% - 10/12
CRY 103% - 1/10
NEXC 101% - 10/25
PRGX 96% - 1/12
CXW 92% - 5/19/06
IGLD 91% - 10/26
DECK 86% - 9/13
EVEP 83% - 11/16
JSDA 80% - 12/20
CNH 79% - 11/2
VDSI 78% - 1/4
APLX 77% - 9/28
HURN 77% - 9/13
MVIS 76% - 12/21
MCZ 74% - 3/27
IMMU 73% - 12/19
FTEK 67% - 10/6
TTG 64% - 11/30
NSH 61% - 12/19
LFL 61% - 12/13
BMA 56% - 10/24
TESO 54% - 2/16
NTL 50% - 4/13
SCI 50% - 10/10
Market Commentary At Big Wave Trading Bronze Level One
New Swing Longs: Silver Level Two
New Swing Shorts: Silver Level Two
Stocks On My Watchlist: Gold Level Three
Complete Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
Partial Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Forums: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Chat Room: Gold Level Three
Longs Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
Shorts Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
The most important action, came in the form of leading stocks. The IBD 100 gained 1%, marking the fifth session in a row that the IBD 100 has outperformed the broad market. Leading stocks leading the market tells you that this rally is strong and should have some real legs behind it. It has taken a long time for these stocks to establish a dominate role in this market, since the March 2003 - May 2006 period, but now they are taking the lead from the DJIA. Let’s hope this continues.
Volume was 19% lower on the Nasdaq and 11% lower on the NYSE, which kind of puts a damper on the gains. But the figures for the week confirm the markets strength. The SP 600 was the strongest performer with a 2.8% gain, the Nasdaq followed with a 2.2% gain, the NYSE gained 1.7%, the SP 500 rallied 1.4%, and the DJIA gained 1.2%. The IBD 100 blew away the competition, with a 3.9% gain. This is what you want to see. This is something we really have not seen since the bottom last July/August. Welcome back leading stocks!
There were two advancers for every stock that declined on the NYSE and there were three winners for every two losers on the Nasdaq. New highs finally picked up, with an impressive 799 new 52-week highs. This kind of expansion should give the doubters of this rally some reason to turn a bit more bullish. If that doesn’t work, they have the put/call ratio still up there around the .75 area. That is not high but it is not low either. The most important and telling internal is the amount of short sellers out there.
The NYSE short interest ratio is at its highest level in more than five years at 7.74. This shows major pessimism amongst short sellers and this should keep the market bullish. It is not a given but the high short interest ratio with a higher put/call ratio shows that the crowd is still on the wrong side, despite some surveys.
The AAII survey has come out with 45% bears and only 33% bulls, confirming that the retail crowd is shorting the upticks. One of the most dangerous, arrogant, and ego-driven trade you can possibly make in such a strong tape. Most of these traders are trying to “outsmart” the market. A play that has a very low success rate.
Other surveys, however, show the opposite. The Investors Intelligence survey still shows a very high amount of bulls and the realmoney.com most recent weekend poll is showing 57% of the readers bullish. However, by looking at the post on Rev Shark’s blog, it doesn’t seem that many are bullish on this tape. A lot of the realmoney.com readers leave much to the imagination, anyways. I don’t see too much talent around there.
The other clear fact that the actual trading is not bullish for the retail crowd is the fact that equity ETF’s saw outflows this week. You don’t see that at tops. You see extreme inflows into mutual funds and ETF’s. This shows that the crowd is skeptical on the current rise. Being emotional in the market and betting against the trend is an even worse double whammy that is sure to keep you from beating the market in the long run. If I wasn’t on margin I wouldn’t be beating the market this year. That tells me exactly how rough the current uptrend really is. It is not as easy as it looks–unless you are a daytrader, then I assume it is safe to say “it is easy.” Let’s see how long that last.
What does seem to not be lasting is the weak economy. On one of the busiest weeks I can remember this year, economic data came rolling in confirming what I have been saying all year long–this economy is on FIRE!!! Yes, GDP did come in at its lowest level in five years but it appears to be a short-term thing as the numbers this week confirmed that everything appears to be fine with the economy. That is confirmed by the banks finally getting a bid this week.
The strong economic data on Friday came from the payroll figures as jobs grew 157,000 in May above expectations. The core inflation reading came in at only .1% which was below expectations also. Overall a good report. Then the ISM manufacturing index climbed to 55 in May, showing expansion from April. A reading over 50 is bullish. These kind of economic numbers is why this market never goes down. The DJIA and SP 500 are now up 8 out of the last 9 weeks. An unbelievable run, to say the least.
This unbelievable run is allowing for a TON TON TON of breakouts. Everywhere I scan, I can find breakouts. So that confirms in my mind that this bull still has room to run. If we do reverse now, I can tell you it would be very significant because this many stocks breaking out of fresh bases should mean that the market is going to run. A reversal would be a fakeout breakout and would trap many longs. If I could, and if I was a billionaire or even a millionaire (I am still young and live on Maui, don’t forget that), I would be long 500 stocks right now. There are just that many nice charts. They are not all green and pretty but they are still there. Stocks like TLVT are easily passed with all the nice charts out there. However, a gain of 15% in three days shows that every breakout seems to be working here.
This market does require a lot of work to keep up with the gains in the NYSE, compared to other bull markets. This is in direct correlation with the VIX. Remember, a low VIX, means lower volatility and when stocks rise they will not go up as much when the VIX is at 12 than if the VIX was at 32. All the stocks you see up 100% would be up 300%, if this rally came right after a horrible bear market like the March 2003 was. Even though the gains aren’t as much, the duration is a lot longer. This makes it hard work and can really put a drain on you. I know it is me. I really want a pullback, I really need a pullback, and I just want some time to relax. I doubt I am going to get that.
What also confirms that I doubt I am going to get that? Well after eight out of nine weeks of gains, why should I expect anything else. And the 10-year yield is now confirming what I have been saying all year. The 10-year is now at its highest level in nine months, at 4.94%. The odds of a Fed cut this year fell to 16% from 100% a month ago. Remember, in the world of stocks it is the opposite of what you would think would work. A Fed raising rates tells us that the economy is on fire and they need to slow it down. A Fed cutting rates tells us the economy is in trouble and they need to fill it with cash. With the odds increasing of no rate cut, you can rest assure that this economy is doing just fine. This should be bullish for stocks.
To finish this weekends analysis off I want to state that I don’t think the USA is in a bubble AT ALL. China may be in a bubble but if anyone has IBD and can remember the chart comparing the seven year run-up to the DJIA 29 and Nassy 00 top, you can clearly see China could have a long way to run. Especially since the Nasdaq had a P/E over 200. I believe China is around 45-50.
I did see some bubble action in a lot of stocks last month. But they have either fallen and that money moved into other leaders or they are still holding up. Two personal longs that I saw go into OBVIOUS climax runs (TNH and ONT) were both sold and since then the move has looked like the correct one. TNH is still holding but ONT looks done. Either way those charts had climax runs. There aren’t too many out there like that. Heck, I can’t even find stocks to sell. I only had two partial sales and zero complete sells out of 240 longs (70 are major holdings, the rest are for rent money and fun). The day before there were also no complete sales. Stunning. Normally, even in bull markets, there is always one or two that needs to be cut. Not in this market.
Enjoy the rest of your weekend. Go Anaheim!!! Go Cleveland!!! Aloha and I will see you in the chat room.
http://mauitrader.blogspot.com
top holdings up this week - purchase date
KNOL 365% - 1/12/06
TRCR 350% - 1/12
PTT 240% - 11/16
MA 202% - 8/2
CCOI 152% - 9/27
TTEC 146% - 8/25
ULTR 122% - 10/27
HRZ 115% - 9/27
MFW 115% - 1/29
MEH 113% - 8/30
KHDH 108% - 5/30/06
IHS 106% - 12/21/05
CPA 104% - 9/15
MOS 104% - 10/12
CRY 103% - 1/10
NEXC 101% - 10/25
PRGX 96% - 1/12
CXW 92% - 5/19/06
IGLD 91% - 10/26
DECK 86% - 9/13
EVEP 83% - 11/16
JSDA 80% - 12/20
CNH 79% - 11/2
VDSI 78% - 1/4
APLX 77% - 9/28
HURN 77% - 9/13
MVIS 76% - 12/21
MCZ 74% - 3/27
IMMU 73% - 12/19
FTEK 67% - 10/6
TTG 64% - 11/30
NSH 61% - 12/19
LFL 61% - 12/13
BMA 56% - 10/24
TESO 54% - 2/16
NTL 50% - 4/13
SCI 50% - 10/10
Market Commentary At Big Wave Trading Bronze Level One
New Swing Longs: Silver Level Two
New Swing Shorts: Silver Level Two
Stocks On My Watchlist: Gold Level Three
Complete Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
Partial Profits/Losses: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Forums: Gold Level Three
MauiTrader Chat Room: Gold Level Three
Longs Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
Shorts Up On The Day: Gold Level Three
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