Monday, September 26, 2011

Who is Vince?

Over the weekend I started to think about Vince and who he might have been. Perhaps he was of the stoic belief orating next to a pillar outside the Pantheon in Rome, or a cynic orating out side the steps of the cathedral in Florence. Maybe he was a simple farmer outside of Sienna with a desirable daughter. Whoever he was, I imagine a conversation along the lines of this:

I need you to con Vince.
- Why do you want me to con Vince?
I don't pay you to ask questions.
- What do you want me to con Vince of?
Again, I don't pay you to ask questions, but that's an important one so I'll tell you what I want you to con Vince of...

I don't believe this is the etymology of the word convince by any means, but this idea did have the unintended effect of beginning a sequence of thoughts that framed my current state of mindfulness regarding what is transpiring around me and how I have interpreted it. Over the course of the past few months I've patched together a number of concepts from market participants who have directly or indirectly had their thoughts scribed --thoughts that have stood the test of time and market cycles.

Of Livermore, Wyckoff, O'Neal, Weinsten and Zwieg, I have taken a tidbit of wisdom and applied their model and methodology as a template to the market since May. From each I have focused primarily upon changes of market character and trend change from from bullish zones and topping zones to distribution and mark down with some thoughts on the bottoming process as well. What each post did however, was the contrary to the intention and if anything made me more optimistic, but without justification. As I reflect back upon each post I can't not help but acknowledge that I was trying to convince myself of something- but what wasn't apparent until recently.


Over that past few days I've taken to reviewing my daily logs checking for repetition of key words and phrases and noting what actions I did take to address them and which received inaction. It should come as no surprise to me to see the same blocks of writing alerting me to something neglected. Weeks later these would pop up again and sometimes months later as well. This repetition was the clearest sign that I was ignoring vital information pertaining to myself as a market participant. Of one note from February I take particular awareness of now:
There are certain weaknesses that when overcome show more- and that is one of the difficulties of trading- you get over one hump and your digging yourself out of another ditch and it gets tiring after a while and you start to wonder when is this going to change- I got over the fear of entering- I got over the fear of exiting loses- O.K.. Now I have the fear of mismanaging trades- it's a permanent state of anxiety and you become anxious that once you modify the current road block you'll find another you hadn't though of-

Here in lies an astute truth about my market beliefs. What I've come to learn through trading is that a solution today creates a problem tomorrow I may not have even thought about yet. Improving as a trader has a counter-intuitive challenge that as I become better experienced I can also become worse through the pursuit. The more informed and the less ignorant the higher the hurdle to overcome looms. This is why persistence and resiliency are two very important attributes to have in trading because with each step there is a chance of tripping and unless these two characteristics are honed, it might be the last step for many due to sheer frustration.

Sunday, September 18, 2011

What's In Your Tool Box?

Education is hanging around until you've caught on.
Robert Frost
 
Over the past couple of months I've been analyzing sector rotation on a weekend basis. Prior to this I've tried to develop some tools to make better use of sectors and their rotation with limited success. Yet every day I keep plugging in sector information because I know it is important and significant and I also know why it is considered to be important and significant; however that doesn't mean I know how to make use of it for myself.

I kept scratching the surface and figured as long as I continued doing so eventually I'd get to the primer and perhaps deeper still. With time I did begin to peel back some layers and realized there were some severe short comings and limitations to how I was addressing this information. Information is abundant but without a plan to filter and manage -often useless. More information is not necessarily going to lead to better decisions, neither is better information without a process of applying it going to lead to improved decisions.

Once I started digging a little deeper I began to see the limitations of my applying this information and the delusion of knowledge evaporated. I had no realization that many of the Morningstar Industry Groups have 2 or 3 stock attributes so their significance of being in the top 20 becomes negligible, perhaps even lacking relevance at all. Some also have such limited volume that their significance is skewed as well. In acknowledging their limitations, their usefulness became better understood as well and a personalized process of application opened up, too.

Fin Viz uses the same data stream as TeleChart when it comes to its sectors, so it is an easy transition understanding the inherent limitations of this information. One benefit that Fin Viz has is its efficiency in moving back and forth between the sectors and the stocks that they comprise, as well as quick visual glances at the underlying chart formations. There is another tool that can be used with these sectors and that is running them through the stock screen. These two combine into a powerful tool of sector and stock scanning, as well as an idea generator. 

The first step is sorting the Industries by one month performance using Fin Viz
From this list I look at the top 20.

Top 20 from Fin Viz

Now that I have a list of the top 20 the next process is to use the Fin Viz Screener tool. My set up is fairly simple:
  • small cap stocks
  • up over the past half year
  • over $3
  • 100K average volume
  • 10% or less below 52 wk high
 
Then I go through each of the Industries that are listed and check out which stocks meet the requirements. From this list I can now focus on those with charts that are consolidating in anticipation of the next swing up.

Having gone through this scan over the weekend, the main Industry that clearly stands out meeting the screen is the Apparel Industry. 

Apparel Industry
 
As this is the time to begin keeping robust watch lists and looking for the next leaders, this may be one group to keep in mind down the road. There are a number of ways to configure this to one's taste and rapidly generate trade ideas in keeping with one's methodology.


Constructive week, yet...

I trade a market that is uniquely my own. Whereas the methodology I use is in keeping with the spirit of great predecessors and is in no way especially unique, the manner in which I approach and study and interpret market conditions will be greatly influenced by the nuances of my experience and belief. In addition, as my knowledge base grows and compounds with each passing day, what I thought I saw, believed or knew yesterday may be completely different from what I see, believe or know today.

Over this past year I've often envisioned myself as a tree of knowledge, and when approaching concepts that challenge my beliefs I ask myself if in this instance I should remain firm like the trunk, bow like the branches under a heavy wind, or release the idea like an Autumn leaf. Another vision I've had consistently over this year is an accordion which when expanded sucks in information to be processed and when compressed expels the concepts that aren't in keeping with my current understanding like air, while retaining just enough that on the next expansion the remaining ideas can create continuity and narrative with the newer information to process.

In keeping with this spirit, each weekend I sit down and exhale the previous weeks prognostication and approach the upcoming one in this frame of mind. What important changes in character occurred over the past week and how may they carry forth through the upcoming 5 days? One process in which I accomplish this is through a composite of the market, which much like the rudimentary stick-figure animation scribbled into the corner of a grammar school primer unfolds motion over time. In order to achieve some continuity and form from the abstract a consistent skeletal structure is helpful, and my choice of late has been using the $USHL5 and sector rotation.

Last week I held two expectations coming in:
The first was to see the higher low established on the $USHL5 hold and although this indicator fell further establishing a lower higher low pivot from last week, it still has yet to undercut -1015. 

$USHL5 09/15

The second was to see the beginning of more aggressive “riskier” asset classes rotate into the sector mix.
Morningstar Industry Groups 09/15
Both of these events have occurred, so now what? Reviewing this past week, there has been constructive action validating the long point of view with the NASDAQ and SP closing up 5 days in a row and up 6.25% and 5.35% respectively. This past Friday established 67 new highs which is another positive. However, I'm still dancing to the Waltz while the market is dancing Salsa. These moves have been swift and volatility high with index moves of 6% up followed by 8% down followed by 10% etc... and still the range continues. Regardless of how constructive the action has been, I'm still out of cadence and maintaining form and discipline during this stage is the only concern I have.

Granted, I don't trade indexes I trade the underlying stocks themselves, however they as of late having been moving lock step as well with the result of wide and loose price movement. The current underlying pattern structure I look to trade and the time frame for my holding period are not quite in sync with the current environment and I've come to accept that I am not experienced enough to trade this structure and continue to choose patience as my trading vehicle of choice.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Take Me To Your Leaders

Looking at the $USHL5, there was a brief pop positive setting a higher high before dunking again and finishing up the week -640. I'll be looking to see if this firms and establishes a higher low which would indicate that selling is beginning to abate. Considering the state of the market with the major indexes down between 15 to 20 percent, there are two scenarios I am anticipating: one being a bottoming formation, and the second being the precipice of a full blown bear market should all major indexes drop through 20% or more. Regardless of which unfolds, I can begin to prepare for the next cycle by looking at stocks that are holding their own under the weight of this market.

$USHL5
 
There are two freely available tools through FinViz that I looked at this weekend, the first being their list of new 52 week highs:
MFN ARCO STMP VRUS RGLD RIC BAA WPRT NGD NEM EXK AZO AUY CALP TVLT

The second is a screen I use to look at pockets of recent strength. This list is composed of the following:
MITK DY PMC MAKO WPRT EXK ACTG HOTT NXG UAN PAET MLI FCFS EDR DLLR MFN JAZZ OCN CLP EXR AKR CSR JCOM AEC EDU ORI MRGE EBIX UIL DPZ AVA MNRO AKRX EE CNU VGR


Additionally keeping an eye on the changes occurring on a monthly basis in the Morning Star Groups with a focus when more risk oriented sectors emerge should divulge further clues about risk appetite and where the next leadership may emerge.
Sectors by Price % Change 1 Month
 
Arranging this list by price as percent of 52 week high continues to show defensive sectors at the top.
Sectors by Price % 52 Week High


 
Two areas I'll be focusing in on through the remainder of this month is keeping a list of strong relative strength stocks and stalking for when a plethora of bases and set ups emerge As of now, with price jumping around like a flea circus finding low risk high probability swing trades is like shooting guppies in a barrel. Yeah I might hit one or two, but is it worth it?

Saturday, September 10, 2011

One Bad Trade

A trade that violates the trading plan can make money, but it can never be classified as successful.

I find the first hour of the open a grind. I have little problem staying up until 5 AM and functioning well enough, but awaking at 5 AM after 7 hours of sleep feels like walking through a George Romero flick. Try as I might, I've yet to create a recipe for alertness during that first hour and in order to mitigate mistakes I am prone to do during those foggy moments I attempt to keep disciplined and avoid trading. Sometimes I do and sometimes I don't.

Yesterday (09/07 in this context) was one of those moments I didn't and it's a shame because yesterday was one of my better thought out trade ideas and one I was fully prepared to take with the belief that I had a high probability, low risk trade. It was a trade I had spent an entire weekend dreaming about after having a crystallizing experience a few days earlier after a member of Stock Bee shared his methodology. Something about it resonated and I couldn't quite put my finger on it. Turns out, I didn't have to as a glance at my book shelf began to kick in a series of until then random incidents that suddenly joined together with the power of Voltron.

One look at my book shelf and Trade Like an O'Neil Disciple all but called out to me. Picking it up and leafing through the pages and index card was tucked away in Chapter 7. The note was simple: “Look to add a short idea of the Qs when MM turns bearish.” A clue in a book I hadn't picked up in 6 months led me down a train of thought where a few sentences from a video I watched months back echoed across my cranium and a tweet from Stock Twits flashed in front of my eyes as I recalled what I thought at that moment and how suddenly the trade referenced in this context began to make perfect sense. I couldn't sleep and continued to read this chapter 4 times and jot down some ideas to begin to work on over the weekend in preparation.

Going into the week I began to plan out this trade and how it would be executed and managed. I wrote down my notes in preparation:
 Looking to take a position in the QID permitting- looking for a day of increased selling. Not looking to trade an opening gap to the downside as that is the intended direction of this trade- an opening gap to the upside and fade on volume would be the ideal situation as it would offer a better price entry and risk reward situation- looking to trade on the path of least resistance and finding a solid entry is advisable.
Having what I thought was clear cut instructions for an entry signal it simply became a matter of stalking and it was during this stage that things began to unravel. The market did gap up on the morning which was the preferred direction for the trade. I watched the action during the first half hour and was anticipating a fade and simple watched how the action would unfold. Two events would have been a trigger for entry, the QID breaking the opening high, or the Nasdaq fading and breaking its opening low, but neither happened and yet I entered the trade anyways.

QID Order Flow
COMP with journal notes

This is where everything goes south. A successful trade begins first with following the plan devised during the off hours, taking the signal, determining if I am on the correct side of the order flow for my intended time frame and managing the trade accordingly. The main problem is that if the plan is not adhered to from the beginning then nothing else matters. If the entry signal is not taken correctly nothing else matters because it should have never gotten to the point where decisions are made on the fly. I should be fully prepared for the outcome and the follow up is simply the execution of this step. Once I entered this trade, what does having a stop matter anymore because I'm now in the land of improv and this is not a situation I am comfortable with and will likely listen to the cacophony inside my head telling me anything- “get out now and save your risk” or “ahh stay in, you have a stop loss in place as risk management.” While these are true in the context of the plan, they are no longer true once I break the second rule of immediately getting out if I have taken a wrong signal. So not only did I not take the signal, I compounded the error by not rectifying it immediately.

The following day I stopped myself out of the position as I no longer held conviction in the trade and decided it was in my best interest to simply cut out the cancer. I could let the market action after my exiting near the low of the day only to watch price rebound effect me and I could make excuses like, “I knew all along.” However, none of that matters when the trade starts off incorrectly, nothing can go well and nearly everything can be manipulated. Adding salt to the wound, not breaking down the position that night and making key decisions in the off hours about how to handle it and instead waiting until I'm involved during market hours before deciding is unconscionable.

Although the trade was was less than stellar, it s completely up to me to learn from this experience and avoid the repetition. A few keys I've taken from this:
  • Trade execution that is flawed from the get go is flawed through and through-
  • Learn to accept responsibility much quicker for a inadvertent trade-
  • Defined risk does not justify keeping a trade that never triggered the signal.
  • Once a trade is entered mistakenly, protecting risk is no longer about capital, but emotions
  • The plan is to protect myself of the preparation phase from myself during market hours
  • I am capable of convincing myself of anything at any given time in a trade
  • The earlier a mistake is admitted, the easier it is to rectify and diffuse the negative charge building with each moment. 

One aspect of my character is internalization of dialogs.  Keeping my mind quiet is difficult.  This is somewhat detrimental when it comes to my trading, for as an internal discipline my mind makes little distinction between a trade being an occurring event and the numerous fantasy dialogs that bandy about my inner eardrums.  This post therefor is cathartic in that it is concrete and outside of myself and being read by others.  In this context it is easier for me to understand the reality and significance of this event and make improvements in my trading.  Now if I can just quiet down Heckle and Jeckle for a few moments.  

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Exit Stage 4, Right Even

In Stan Weinstein's Secrets for Profiting in Bull and Bear Markets the 30 week moving average is a key determinant of which stage the market is currently in.  Based upon his methodology, a declining 30 week moving average is Stage 4, and regarding stage 4 he states on page 39, "Don't get caught up in the macho game of riding out a decline.  Hanging tough in Stage 4 is a masochistic and costly game."

The weekly chart of the SP clearly shows that the market is in Stage 4.  In order for the market to transition into a new up trend- Stage 2- it must first go through Stage 1, a basing area. As of yet the volatility remains exceptionally high indicating the unlikelihood of a transition in the near future.

Weinstein's Stage 4
  Sometimes deducing a markets character really can be this simple. 

Monday, September 5, 2011

Speechless

I'm finding it hard to string together enough words into a cogent thought as the sun shines outside my window.  However, my commitment to get out at least a post a week for consistency calls.  In keeping with this task I'm simply going to post a few images sans commentary and follow up at the end of the week.

Weekly SP 09/02
Market Monitor 09/02
Morning Star Price Percent Change 30 days
$USHL5 09/02