Wednesday, September 09, 2009
Bullish..But...
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Friday, August 28, 2009
Stocks Preparing for Next Move
This list needs several iterations. I just see too much possibility right now.
I say next week is down and possibly right after labor day. Which would be a real good shakeout. But we need to be ready if market has other plans.
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Time for a Break
Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Market Needs a Rest
Thanks and Happy Investing!
Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Time To Wade Back In
Thursday, June 11, 2009
A Tale of a Topping Market
06/05/09 | 05/29/09 | 05/22/09 | 05/15/09 | 05/08/09 | |||||||||||||
59 | 49 | 42 | 42 | 39 | |||||||||||||
24 | 40.68% | 16 | 32.65% | 22 | 52.38% | 21 | 50.00% | 22 | 56.41% | ||||||||
4 | 6.78% | 9 | 18.37% | 1 | 2.38% | 3 | 7.14% | 2 | 5.13% | ||||||||
31 | 52.54% | 24 | 48.98% | 19 | 45.24% | 18 | 42.86% | 15 | 38.46% |
Monday, June 01, 2009
Fw: VIX
Here's an updated snapshot of the double top on the VIX I sent out about 2 months ago when the market followed through. It is acting well and trending right along the 20dma and consolidating right near a support area. Another breakdown here could lead to a final leg up for this run. It's probably going to be fast and furious and finally lead us to the long awaited correction, right after the final suck in rally.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Fw: Ugly Looking Market
Monday, March 09, 2009
Ugly Looking Market
Friday, January 09, 2009
1924 - 1942 compared to 1994 - Present
Sunday, January 04, 2009
The market is truly designed to destroy MOST
The market is truly designed to destroy MOST.
I don't mean to sound pessimistic, since I've done well in it, but after an exhaustive study the past month of monster stocks and my own past trades using both CANSLIM and Darvas, I found that unless you're truly willing to hold through alot of early fiddling around and nasty volatility in the middle, trying to hold out for those promised 100's of percent gains is EXTREMELY difficult. I've bagged the triple digit winners in the past, but only because I did not try and trade around corrections and be too precise. I bought the initial pivot, allowed for the initial fiddle, and patiently waited out the week to see if the stock closed above or below the 50dma, unless the break was just enormous and near an already long bull market or the stock went climactic, as it scaled the chart (there are other reasons not to wait, but that's for another time).
In 2006 and 2007 even though I was able to bag some impressive winners (none over 100%, even though there were plenty), I found I did not really maximize the gain for the exact reasons I mentioned, I was trying to be too fine. The precision allowed me to get out near a top of an intermediate correction, but made it difficult to get back in because of the increased volatility as a stock scaled the charts. There are times for this type of precision, but that's too difficult to explain without illustration.
The reason for the title, most look at these monsters and just assume in hindsight that the moves were easy because of the way it looks in it's entirety. Most don't bother to measure the corrections a stock undergoes day to day, week to week. In many monsters, intra-week volatility can exceed 20% without violation in some cases of even short term moving averages (10 and 20). This simple oversight and misunderstanding leads MOST to overtrade, enter at the wrong time, and then in frustration of all the exhaustive non-profitable trading, become long term holders just as the stock is topping FOR GOOD (the laws of gravity eventually get them all, even if it takes decades, GM). Of course losing the majority of what they invested over typically the next few weeks and months.
Moral of the story, the only way to succeed is to study, study, and study some more and then execute your rule book. YOU MUST create your own rule book. No book or mentor can create it for you. They can get you started, guide and keep you on the right path, but in the end, you must understand how the different variables change and interact from year to year by learning it (repetition). Even though it's the same, there's enough of a difference to cost you plenty. YOU MUST write it down, your memory won't hold it or process it all when money is on the line. Your emotions will make your decisions. But if you learn to recognize the change, you won't be fooled because you will have a rule to handle the situation. It will take years to get it right, but the path is worth the trip once you do.
Most of you know this already, but thought it would make for a good new year reminder.
PS
Some have asked about mentoring in the past, if you're still interested please let me know. In some cases I do it on a barter system for help in other areas.
Hope everyone had a nice NEW YEAR and all the best wishes going forward.
Monday, November 03, 2008
Gloomy Market Continues
We went through 900+ stocks yesterday in hopes of finding something, and we found worse then nothing. The market continues to look like one big short setup in development.
The sideways to up consolidation that has been ongoing for about the last 3 weeks should last another few weeks (1 - 5). From there I believe we will take another leg down to, at a minimum, test the lows for a few weeks (5 - 8). Then we get a tradeable rally. The play won't be your traditional bases in most cases, but deep bounces off of MA's or just under MA's. Too far away to try and figure out how long the rally could last. After that rally, the accumulation phase will begin, assuming economically we start to stabilize (meaning that at a minimum the stats stop getting worse). The accumulation phase may last through 2009. So as of now, it's hard to see a real bull market starting to form earlier then the middle of next year if not in 2010.
I looked at some stocks from 1987, after the crash. And even though we never tested the lows, and it seemed like the market sloped up from that point on, it took until 1989 before we got real bases and breakouts and the market managed was able to put together a real rally.
Watching CNBC this morning, Steve Liesman was pointing out statistics and comparing them to the last two recession (90, 01). He was trying to put as much of a positive spin on it as possible, by pointing out that in most, the numbers are near or just better then they were in both those recessions. The intent was to show that the recession is mild and maybe no worse, which would imply we're near a bottom. Now assuming the market has priced in this scenario, I would ask, what happens to the market, if those stats start to make multi decade lows???? Right now, I would also reason, that the market has paused and rallied because historically the market tends to start rallying about midway into a recession. So if we assume that this recession is going to resemble the last two, then this would be the mid point of it. 3 months in the 3Q and now NOV would be the 4th month, and the last two lasted about 6 months (2Q's).
Now anything is possible, but I think that the optimism out there is based on a potentially false hope that everything will fall into place as expected historically. As we've seen and experienced so far, it has been anything but.
Hope everyone had a nice weekend.
Monday, October 06, 2008
Vacation Time
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Ugly Market Update
Here's what I'm thinking:
There's another run at recent highs going into labor day. If that produces bases, in quality stocks, then there is a chance this market can be saved. Otherwise, watch out below in September, if they even can wait that long. But markets have a tendency to be patient before rolling, and who wants to ruin Labor Day!!!
Monday, August 18, 2008
Ugly Market
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Sunday, April 13, 2008
More of Nothing
I spent the entire trying day trying to sway myself to the bullish side. But the harder I tried the more I realized it just wasn't going to happen, at least not this week. The technical's just look horrible whether you're looking at the market, leading stocks, or potential leaders. Add possible economic data confirming a recession and the market could have another breakdown.
The market for one has done what was expected, rally from an oversold condition after confirming the bear market. It has done so on summer like volume, very low (it is April!!!!). The two above average volume up days, including the follow through day, were only above average because of takeovers and options expiration.
Leading stocks, there really aren't too many. It's the same names, fertilizers. Oil has a few, but the rest of the group looks like it's getting ready to rollover. Breakouts in the rest of the market have come on weak volume (typically you should see many breakouts on explosive volume). Then for every breakout there seems to be two that fail immediately. The one's that do manage to hold above the pivot have either made no progress (this includes the fertilizers) or have had volume wane significantly as they've moved higher.
Now I tried to give the market the benefit of the doubt with the first two factors since it could take as much as a month before stocks really start moving. But that's where I ran into the next problem, potential leaders setting up. I had a hard time finding some. Most bases were sloppy, lacked volume as they moved closer to their 52 week highs, and the one's that had a chance of making the cut, had declining fundamentals.
This week the market went right back to reacting negatively to bad news after reacting positively two weeks ago. This is important. If we have been in a recession, we still haven't seen the economic data to confirm it. The initial reaction could lead to a severe break in the market. And of course there is always more subprime news risk (overplayed, but still getting reactions)
This all points to this being nothing more then a bull trap in bear market. I believe that within the next two weeks the market will make a decision. I have a strong belief that it will be as soon as this week. After running this analysis I found that a bad week with distribution or a weak rally on low volume would skew this market even more to the bearish side. This market desperately needs volume to the upside or it risks falling apart. If it does, I would not be surprised if the next stop is NASDAQ 2000 or below. Cash is still the best place for now.
PS
I hate being bearish since most of my money is made on the long side, but I just can't argue with the facts right now.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Get Out Of The Markets Way