Posted: July 16th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Afternoon Rally, Assumption, Buy Signals, Cascade, Decline, Employment Report, Final Hour, Free Trial Link, Intermediate Term, Market Timing, Odds, Resistance, Sentiment, Spy, stock market strategies, Stock Market Strategy, Stock Market Timing, Stock Market Updates, Stock Updates, Subscribers, Third Time, Thursday Morning, Trades | No Comments »
Weekly stock market strategy updates that went out to subscribers during June 2010. To receive current weekly update sent to your email, click on the FREE TRIAL link at the top of the page.
Weekly Stock Market Strategy Update 6/5/10
Well my rare but reliable ADX signal is not looking so good. Maybe you were fortunate enough to wait until the final hour of trading on Thursday. If so, you may not have taken the trade. That is usually how I place the trades but since I had back tested this ADX system with a buy stop that is how I placed the trade. Since I suggested this only as a more aggressive trade, hopefully most of you did not take it. I will exit this trade at 104.25 on a stop.
So much for a cascade of buy signals following the ADX buy signal. The buy stop was barely breached on Thursday morning before the selling began. A weak afternoon rally could not even reach the stop level. Friday’s weak employment report was all that was needed to start the sell off. It appears the 104-105 level on the SPY will have to be tested a third time. The more the market sells off the more bullish I am getting. It just becomes a matter of waiting for the market to stabilize and start generating some buy signals. However, just because sentiment has declined and the market has sold off, does not mean we can’t see a prolonged decline.
Weekly Stock Market Strategy Update 6/12/10
The market has found a range that it is comfortable in. Until the SPY has two consecutive closes above 111.50 or below 104.00, it is not entirely possible to no which direction this market will trade in the intermediate term. I think the odds are slightly in favor of a bullish move out of this range. Currently however, it is to early to make a trade based on that assumption. We will have to watch and wait.
Weekly Stock Market Strategy Update 6/20/10
Thursday and Friday the SPY managed to close above 111.50, which I had pegged as resistance. The market is now overbought and looks like it needs to take a breather or sell off a little before it can work its way higher. I have not seen any new buy signals but they could come when the SPY takes out the high of 111.73. There is nothing else to report this week. If signals are generated I will send out a midweek update.
Weekly Stock Market Strategy Update 6/27/10
The SPY traded down Monday thru Thursday. The sell off was a little more than I had anticipated. Now the SPY is oversold and Friday’s consolidating price action indicates that a close above Fridays high could be at least a decent short term buying opportunity. Looking at the charts this week, the possibility of breaking support near 104 on the SPY, needs to be considered. The weekly chart looks as if a Head and Shoulders formation might be in the making. If we do manage multiple closes below support at 104 the target would be around 87. That is quite a sell off from current levels and is by no means what I expect to happen. However since there is such strong support at 104 and the SPY closed near 108, the downside risk is somewhat limited at 4%. If you’re wrong you risked 4%. If you’re right this may be the best buying opportunity for the next three months. This suggestion is based purely on technicals and is not generated by any systems that I watch. For that reason I will not track this as an official buy signal.
Posted: June 25th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Bad Time, Bailout, Bandage, Budget Problems, Budgets, Declines, Djia, Extremes, Imf, Labor Groups, Market Sentiment, Market Stock, Market Timing, Point Decline, Proctor And Gamble, Recession, Scz, Stock Market Strategy, Stock Market Updates, Stock Updates, Tourniquet, Volatility, Wages | No Comments »
Weekly stock market updates that went out to subscribers during May 2010. To receive current weekly update sent to your email, click on the FREE TRIAL link at the top of the page.
Weekly Market Update 5/2/10
Some volatility has found its way back into the market. We have not seen two large down days this close since the decline that lead to the February low. Momentum is waning; the market has basically been flat over the past three weeks. Where it goes from here is anybodies guess but with market sentiment at bullish extremes this is probably not a bad time to tighten stops.
It appears Greece is close to a bailout from the EU and IMF. The question is how will the markets react. Will they see it as bandage when a tourniquet is needed? There is a troubling trend I am starting to see emerge as it is occurring in Greece and here in the U.S. As governments struggle to balance their budgets during this prolonged recession, they are starting to get resistance from labor groups and those reluctant to seeing a cut in wages or benefits. Those with the biggest budget problems could face financing issues just has Greece has.
Midweek Update for 5/6/10
In case you have not heard the market took a serious drop today. At one point the DJIA was down 1000 points, before closing down 347 points, or –3.20%. The jury is still out on what caused the sell off, but two primary factors are the Greece bailout and error in a Proctor and Gamble trade. I am sorry but something is seriously wrong when a trade error can cause a 1000-point decline.
I am glad that I have been 75% cash for the time being but questioning whether I should have had stops on my Quarterly ETF portfolio. I think in the long run the quarterly rotation will keep us out of any prolonged declines, and that is why I am hesitant to place any stops on this portfolio. The portfolio is down 6 percent for the quarter, with most of the damage in SCZ, which is of 10%.
The charts look pretty scary. Today’s price action basically even if it was a result of trade error is a bit bothersome. On more than one occasion I have seen the markets trade back down to the trade error lows. I am not sure why, maybe the markets feel a need to test that level again. Anyway if that happen the DJIA will have to trade down another 600 points before it can stabilize.
Weekly Market Update 5/9/10
Friday came and went and there still does not seem to be a consensus as to what the hell happened on Thursday. In November 2007 the NYSE ended trading curbs, which limited program trading. Prior to that date program sales could not be placed on a down tick if the curbs were in affect. Now only circuit breakers remain and they do not kick in until the DJIA has dropped 10% or 1050 points. Today a lot more trading occurs off the floor of the major exchanges and on the electronic exchanges. There are no consensus rules, between the various exchanges, that handle an event such as the one that occurred on Thursday. In my personal opinion some sort of circuit breaker at -5% and program trading limits at -3% would be more appropriate. Sometimes things happen in the market that no one can explain and, a temporary halt to trading to figure out what is going on, is not a bad idea. Another possibility is that sense market sentiment was so high; there were probably a lot of stops in place that started getting triggered, as the market began its fall. Something like yelling, “fire!” in a crowded theatre. I would like to think that the SEC would come out, before the end of the week, with some safeguards to prevent this from happening again. This is a real blow to the confidence that people have in the markets something will have to be done ASAP.
Until there is some stability to the markets I do not think I will be recommending any trades. The charts are just plain ugly. There is a void between the Friday lows and Thursday lows and it will be hard for me to put faith in any attempts the market makes at forming a bottom until the Thursday lows are tested.
Weekly Market Update 5/16/10
The week came and went and still there is no consensus, on what caused the May 6th sell off. I find that somewhat disturbing. What I find even more disturbing however is, that the SEC has not come up with any plans for trading halts to prevent future declines of a similar magnitude.
From a technical standpoint the averages managed to rally through Wednesday but rolled over on Thursday and Friday. The high this week provide a price level that when breached to the upside will begin to give some comfort to some stabilization in the market. I am not saying that is what I expect. However, until The May 6th lows are tested or the market can make a series of higher highs, we are kind of in a no mans land, with no clear intermediate term direction.
Weekly Market Update 5/23/10
The SEC is still investigating the May 6th “flash crash.” Several factors appear to have contributed to the sell off. The factors appear to be, inconsistent rules among the various exchanges, speculation in the futures market and, the lack of participation by market makers. It appears that the market makers were not able to step in and be the buyer of last resort. Maybe that is because so many went out of business as the electronic exchanges took volume from the physical exchanges.
The markets took another big hit this week. But as I have been saying the last few weekends I felt there was a good chance the May 6th low would need to be revisited. The markets tested that low during Friday’s open then proceed to make a very strong rally to close up 1.5% for the day. If the markets have worked out there issue with the Euro, I think there is a very good chance this is a tradable low. Most of the trading strategies I watch will require a decent bounce from this level before triggering a buy signal. But the more aggressive subscribers could look to go long the SPY if in the final hour of trading the SPY is trading over 110. The market should be able to manage at least a two-week rally from these levels. I will have to wait for more signals to come in before I can get more confident about a longer-term scenario.
Weekly Market Update 5/30/10
A rare but reliable technical signal has set up this week. This signal is 9 for 9 dating back to 2000. Simply put when the 14 period ADX goes over 40 buy at a price of 2 times the 21 day average true range added to the 5 day low, then hold for 15 trade days. The buy price would be 110.90 on the SPY. Keep in mind this is a short-term signal and I would not recommend it for your 401k or retirement account.
We did not get the close over 110 on Monday I was hoping for. As bullish as sentiment was last month it has done almost a complete reversal. This could mean we are getting close to some buy setups. The market has sold off but now it will have to show some strength over a period longer than a couple days. If we have seen the worst of the selling, the ADX signal could start a cascade of buy signals. Only time will tell.
Posted: May 21st, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Allocations, April, Bank Of America, Barron, Brokerage Houses, Entire System, Etf, Ewj, Financial Disaster, Fraud Charges, Goldman Sachs, Hot Button, Ijt, Ishares Msci, Market Stock, Market Timing, Middleman, Msci Japan Index, Quarterly Profits, Refor, Scz, Sentiment Indicators, Small Cap, Stock Market Strategy, Stock Market Updates, Stock Updates | No Comments »
Weekly stock market updates that went out to subscribers during April 2010. To receive current weekly update sent to your email, click on the FREE TRIAL link at the top of the page.
Weekly Market Update 4/4/10
Most of the markets finished up just shy of 1% for the week. Not
much else has changed. I think the upside from her is limited and
risk of entry from this point is to great.
Weekly Market Update 4/11/10
The markets have continued to rise and more sentiment indicators are
reaching extremes. Long entries at this point carry additional risk.
That being said, Barron’s Quarterly mutual fund report is out this
week. So, if you plan on following the Quarterly ETF Strategy, Monday
will be the day to place your trades. Based on the system I sent to
you in the Quarterly ETF Strategy email here is the allocations for
this quarter:
Quarterly ETF Strategy Allocation
25% IJT-iShares S&P Small Cap 600 Growth
25% IJS-iShares S&P Small Cap 600 Value
25%. EWJ-iShares MSCI Japan Index
25% SCZ-iShares MSCI EAFE Small Cap
I am allocating 25% of my total portfolio to this strategy so I will
be putting 1/16 of my total portfolio into each of the four ETF’s
listed above. By the way, as of Fridays close, this strategy was up
5.11% for the first quarter.
Weekly Market Update 4/18/10
The markets finally took a 1% hit on Friday when the SEC brought
fraud charges against Goldman Sachs. I would like to see some of the
Wall Street firms pay for bringing our economy to the brink of
financial disaster. Usually when they make a mistake the damage is
limited. This time they almost brought down the entire system. That
being said it doesn’t sound like the SEC has much of a case.
Brokerage houses quite frequently act as the middleman, and that
seems to be what they were doing this time. The timing of the
charges is quite suspect. Bank of America and Chase both reported
quarterly profits over $3 billion, while the senate is getting ready
to vote on a Financial Reform bill. I think this bill is virtually
guaranteed to pass. Even though all the republicans are apposed to
it, I don’t think this is the hot button topic that Health Care was,
and most Americans are probably not apposed to it.
From a technical perspective this could be the catalyst for at least
a minor retracement in the markets. The markets have been overbought
from both a technical and sentiment perspective for the past few
weeks. It is possible that the profit taking could continue this
week.
Weekly Market Update 4/25/10
Well the Goldman Sachs charges do not appear to be the catalyst I
was hoping they might be. The market shrugged of the news and
performed strongly this week and nothing much else has changed.
Market sentiment is still extremely bullish. The small cap portion
of the quarterly ETF portfolio was up over 4% this week.
Posted: April 13th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Daunting Task, Diversification, Eggs In One Basket, Etf, Free Trial Link, Market Timing, Multiple Systems, Rally, Retracement, Short Covering, Sideline, Sidelines, Spy System, Stock Market Strategy, Stock Market Updates, Stock Updates, Stocks, Subscribers, Target, Updates March, Vix | No Comments »
Weekly stock market updates that went out to subscribers during March 2010. To receive current weekly update sent to your email, click on the FREE TRIAL link at the top of the page.
Weekly Market Update 3/7/10
It was a very good week for the markets. The SPY broke through 111.60
on Monday, and finished the week within 1% of the highs for 2010. As
I said last week once 111.60 was taken out the next logical target
would be the highs made in January. I was surprised the move came as
quickly as it did. It pains me to be on the sideline during a week
like this. I think the upside this week is probably limited. The SPY
is extremely overbought. The VIX has reached a level that has not
been seen since May 2008, shortly before the market peaked. The rally
this week came on lower than average volume. I think the rally this
past week was more likely desperate short covering than aggressive
new buyers.
Weekly Market Update 3/14/10
Another good week for the markets and I am on the sidelines. I got a
buy signal on March 4th. Unfortunately I had gotten used to being
able to get in on a retracement after this particular signal is given.
We have yet to see that retracement. My bad and I am sorry we have
missed this move.
This does bring up a good point regarding diversification. It is
never a good idea to have all your eggs in one basket. We usually
think of diversification in terms of having multiple stocks instead
of just a few. This is why I trade ETF’s like the SPY. It can quickly
become a daunting task trying to keep up with enough stocks to get a
fair amount of diversification. However there is another form of
diversification I want to discuss with you and, that is system
diversification. The SPY system I follow did an excellent job of
being out of the markets when things got ugly. But it is one system
and no one system is right 100% of the time. That is why I think it
is best to diversify with multiple systems that have worked well over
time and are not overly optimized.
I have finished the research on a quarterly ETF system that over the
last 10 years would have doubled your money. I will be adding this at
the end of the quarter for some added diversification.
Not much to say on the markets this week. Unfortunately, I cannot in
good conscience recommend buying the market when it is this overbought.
I will be waiting for something to upset this trend. If congress
manages some resolution on health care reform, that could be the
trigger. I will keep you posted.
Weekly Market Update 3/21/10
Well the market finally ended, on a daily basis, its streak of
consecutive up closes. It was a very impressive run. Bullish market
sentiment has reached a level that should limit any advance from
here. The market should be sideways or down over the next few weeks.
If we get a pullback it could give us a buy setup.
The potential market reaction from any health care reform passed is
the real wild card here. Typically the market seems to know all that
is knowable. The exception would be natural and man-made disasters.
The “buy the rumor sell the fact” saying is what keeps coming to
mind. What I mean is the market has rallied to this point. I think
any sense of finality in regards to the healthcare reform, could be
a turning point.
Weekly Market Update 3/28/10
Well the market continued its climb this week. Not even major
healthcare legislation could stop it. Well if I had not been out of
the market yet I would now be looking for an exit. Momentum has
definitely slowed and we are starting to see technical indicators
set up for a sell signal. The MACD has turned negative for the first
time since February 16th. The RSI indicator is showing a bearish
divergence. More and more sentiment indicators are reaching bullish
extremes. I know last week I said the market should be sideways to
down over the coming weeks. Going into this past week I would have
given the market no more than 2% on the upside. I would be very
surprised if the market is up over 1% at any point this coming week,
and I think we will see negative returns for the week.
Posted: February 15th, 2010 | Author: admin | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: Dilemma, Employment Figures, Entry Signal, Final Hour, Free Trial Link, Fridays, Initial Signal, Lows, March 17, Market Signal, Market Stock, Market Timing, New Highs, New Subscriber, Opportunity, Risk, Spy, Stock Market Updates, Stock Updates, Subscribers, Unemployment Numbers | No Comments »
Weekly stock market updates that went out to subscribers during December 2009 and January 2010. To receive current weekly update sent to your email, click on the FREE TRIAL link at the top of the page.
Weekly Market Update 12/5/09
Friday was definitely an interesting trading day. I thought I might
have to issue a buy signal when the markets jumped higher on the
unemployment numbers. The market traded to new highs for this move
shortly after the open. The party ended rather quickly as new highs
were quickly rejected and the market proceeded to give back those
gains selling off until the final hour of trading.
It is very interesting that the market could not hold onto new highs
after the best employment figures released since December 2007. I
would be very surprised if Fridays high is taken out anytime soon.
The SPY will probably at least test the lower end of its current
range around SPY 108-109.
What should new subscribers do now?
When a new subscriber joins a market signal may have already been
generated. This creates a dilemma for the new subscriber. Here are
your options and my thoughts.
You could jump in now
If market goes up from this point then it would be a good call.
I do not favor this approach because your risk tends to be higher. I
say your risk is higher because the stop level is farther away from
your entry than for the person who got in at the entry signal.
You could wait for the next signal
In this scenario you risk that the market continues in the direction
of the last signal and you missed a nice move in the market. You
don’t risk a financial loss just a lost opportunity.
My safest entry is when my indicators first go from Bearish to
Bullish. That signal was generated on March 17, 2009 at SPY 79.93.
Unfortunately after that initial signal, risk gets bigger with each
consecutive entry. The market has made quite a recovery from the
March ’09 lows and is looking a little weaker with each advance.
I am a risk adverse person. I prefer to enter the market when my
risk is limited. As a trend progresses new support and resistance
levels are defined and become good points of reference for defining
risk. If you are more of a risk taker than I am, you can get in when
you want to get in, in the direction of the existing trade. Your
maximum risk would probably be 10%. I usually keep my stops within
10% of the current market level. So if you are comfortable with 10%
on the downside you could enter in the direction of the existing
trade at any time.
Weekly Market Update 12/13/09
There was some follow through from last Friday into this week.
However by mid-week the market seemed to have decided there had been
enough selling and rallied to finish the week. The only thing I
found interesting this week was the markets muted response to a good
retail sales report released Friday. Had a similar report come out
two months ago it would have been a 200-point day for the DJIA.
Instead the SPY ended exactly where it started the day at 111.11.
We are in a seasonally bullish period and that could be enough to
keep the markets propped up for now.
Weekly Market Update 12/19/09
The market remains in a tight range. There is not much to comment
about this week. It is possible we could be stuck in this range
through the holidays.
Weekly Market Update 12/26/09
The SPY finally broke out of the tight range it has been in for the
last two months. Had this occurred any day other than Christmas Eve,
it would be a significant event. Volume on the 24th was probably the
lowest all year. Therefore I don’t put much faith in this low volume
breakout. The market will have to convince me this breakout is legit.
The market will likely make at least a mild correction going into
the New Year.
Weekly Market Update 1/2/10
The SPY could not follow through on the previous weeks apparent
breakout that closed over 112. Last week had even less volume than
the previous week. This coming week could be more telling with
traders returning to work.
Midweek Update 1/4/10
The SPY has finally broken out to the upside. Volume was not heavy
but it did exceed anything we have seen over the past two weeks. For
this reason I am going to go 40% long the SPY at 113.48 on a stop.
I still have some concerns about the market in the intermediate term.
For this reason I will be keeping a close eye on this position.
However, the market has spoken and I will respect the market in
whatever direction it decides to trade.
Weekly Market Update 1/10/10
I have reservations about the market at this point. Some market
sentiment indicators are at extreme levels. The AAII percent bearish
report for instance, which is a weekly survey of individual investors,
has investor bearishness at a 4-year low. Typically when sentiment
reaches bullish extremes like this the market struggles going forward,
in the 3 to 6 month time frame. For this reason I will be keeping a
close eye on where the markets decide to go from here. Price is the
ultimate barometer of the health of the market and as long as the
market continues to move higher I will respect it and be along for
the ride.
There are some who think market timing is picking tops and bottoms.
That is not my goal. My goal is to get the meat of the move while
missing moves like most of 2008.
Weekly Market Update 1/16/10
Not much has changed this week. The SPY did manage to trade up to
the highs made last Friday. Unfortunately that is all the further
it could get. We did see a sudden drop in the VIX on Monday. There
is some talk that downward spikes like that can lead to a short-term
top. I will be keeping an eye on the markets and let you know if any
action is needed.
Midweek Update 1/21/2010
If you didn’t catch the news today, President Obama announced
proposed legislation to limit the risk that banks can take.
Government policy has the capability to make trends in the market.
You can reference the Up-Tick article on the website to see what
I mean. The announcement of the legislation alone was enough to
start the markets moving down. During the announcement, banks were
used as the sole reason for the market meltdown. As long as our
leaders in Washington refuse to admit any culpability to mess our
economy is in, I can’t help but feel we will be in worse shape at
some point down the road.
I am moving our stop on the SPY to 108.23.
Weekly Market Update 1/23/10
There is nothing like getting blind-sided by an unforeseen
announcement from our President, regarding a change in policy. I
would have liked to have gotten out on Thursday as soon as I heard
the President speak, however I try to avoid knee jerk reactions and
let the market decide when it is time to get out. My uncle point is
very close. One of my favored indicators, a 14-period RSI, closed
below 40. The 40 level usually acts as good support level in a
healthy market. If the market cannot manage to bounce early in the
week, I think it is highly likely that there is further weakness
ahead. Typically the RSI testing the 40 level can be a good spot to
add to existing long positions. It is usually a good spot to add
because the market is oversold and should bounce if it is healthy.
If it is not healthy your risk is minimal to find out. I will keep
you posted this week and let you know if I feel we should add to our
long position, assuming we do not get stopped out on Monday.
Weekly Market Update 1/30/10
Well, the market couldn’t manage much of a bounce early in the week.
That was the first indication lower prices were coming. Apple
reported earnings that handily beat street estimates, couldn’t trade
above resistance at 215, and closed Friday 10% of the high for the
week. On Friday positive, headline grabbing, GDP numbers for the
fourth quarter couldn’t manage much of a rally and late in the day a
sell off ensued. All this negative action indicates to me, the
markets path of least resistance is down for the time being. I do
not like taking a loss, but when the nature of the market changes it
is better to stand aside.
I am not sure what is in store this week. We may see a bounce early
in the week, but I suspect that lower lows will be seen before this
sell off is finished.