Wednesday, November 28, 2012

The Other Third


Yesterday I wrote a short post about how the market conditions at that time led me to a scenario in which there is a 66% probability of a sideways to continued down trend and given this the odds were not stacked in my favor. This belief was very much situation specific and not set in granite. I've played enough poker to know that a hand can go from hog to dog on the turn and how a failure to reevaluate can be very costly no matter how good the flopped set looks on what appears to be a blank. It's important to me to pinpoint the nuance between when I waffle in my beliefs and when I am reevaluating my beliefs based upon new information.

Based upon today's action there's reason for me reevaluate the probabilities and prepare a plan of action for becoming more focused upon long opportunities and having a focused watch list for tomorrow. There are a couple of things that happened today, namely that the SPX technically, although not by much, closed with a higher high; also today's low may establish a higher low to compare further chart action against. From a price action perspective this is exactly what I want to see strung together from this point forward.

SPX

Secondly, the main breadth tool that I use had 3 bullish signals today. 

Breadth
This is more significant to me than the action and pattern of an index because these signals are based upon price and volume action of stocks I follow and tells me what stocks as a whole are actually doing. When these signals turn it gives me the green light to begin operations on the long side with greater confidence. From my perspective the odds have increased since yesterday. I'll be selective in my watch list with emphasis on stocks that have made recent year high volume such as BGFV and OSTK.

BGFV
OSTK

One last thing I wanted to document today is the intraday action of the SPX which reminded me of a passage I reread last night from “Hedge Fund Market Wizards”.  I've often come across the view that bullish markets open weak and finish strong while bearish open strong and finish weak, but this section in particular highlights more deeply the psychology behind market participants during these stages.

Excerpt from Hedge Fund Market Wizards


Tuesday, November 27, 2012

SPX and Probable Direction

It's well known there are three directions a market can move: up, down, or sideways.  How it moves and how it gets from point A to point B can have varying behaviors and characteristics and patterns.  Sometimes it's choppy and volatile, and other times smooth and trending, and often in between.  Looking at the SPX today I decided to break down what is now known and what is probable.

The information that is known as of now is that the SPX is in a down trend as defined by a series of lower lows and lower highs.  Additionally it's known that a key pivot low has now held for 6 days and a lower high has now been established as well.  This is basic information that can be witnessed from a chart.  Using this information, the next step is to determine the probable market direction which I admit is somewhat subjective.

The main reason this is subjective is that it's dependent upon one's beliefs of the market and their plan of action.  My prejudice is to trade in an up trending market. This is the market action that I believe gives an edge and is much more judicious when I make mistakes and errors.  So, given that market direction is divisible by 3 and the market is clearly not in an uptrend, I can remove this variable.  It's still too early to tell whether or not there will be a sideways move, but a range bound market can be just as deadly as a down trend --especially in a down trend --so these two stack the odds 66% against.  

SPX
One thing I'm keeping in mind is that if this market breaks to the down side it could renew fast and furious selling.  Each dip has been more severe than the previous and this bounce has brought relief like the last breath before Jaws pulls Chrissie down for good.


Sunday, November 25, 2012

New Highs

In keeping with the all time high database that I've been tallying I've also been keeping a list of stocks making new highs.  I'm not 100% committed to exactly what qualifications for new highs I want to use just yet.  When I started I used the New High feature in TeleChart 2000 on US Common Stocks but found I was getting a number of stocks trading less than 10K shares a day.  Additionally one of the problems is the garbage data in the universe such as HOTR which sneaks in.  On top of that I still need to figure out a way to weed out buy outs which has been skewing some of the results as well as some of the sub-industry "Close End Funds".

One of the significant changes I've made mid-stream is using the Price New High feature which will populate with not only new 52-Week Highs, but also new highs on stocks trading less than a year which I find useful for keeping track of promising IPO candidates.  Additionally, I've been placing a liquidity condition of 100K shares, but even this seems to pass on stocks trading less than this.  Thus far the list begins on 10/26/2012.  At some point I may alter this as well and keep track of highs over different periods.



One of the stocks this process has drawn my attention to is a recent IPO, Restoration Hardware which since its debut has put in 5 new highs.

RH

Another is Burger King which has been showing promising price action and has eclipsed it's IPO high two sessions in a row.

BKW

Which Ever Way the Wind Blows

Some long and short ideas I'm watching should the market direction clarify this week.

LONG:
AVG

BGFV
MYGN
NTE
SPRT
TASR
SHORT:
AMZN
BIDU
LULU
RKT
SLW

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Weekend Review 11/23/12


At times I find it difficult to analyze holiday shortened market weeks. Sometimes I question which analysis should be contextualized to a short week and which should be addressed based upon its own merits. Obviously the most glaring is accessing low volume days and its significance when the indexes are closing up 1%+ on half days. Additionally, most of the major indexes have closed up this week approximately 5% so price is clearly divorced from volume.

One of the easiest things for me to do is flip my opinion, especially on bounces like this; however, being burned enough times on false rally breaks in down trending markets, I've also learned some restraint in altering my views too quickly. One of my expectations coming into last week was to see an increase in volatility. One means I've been measuring this is by the number of 1% close over close or 2% intraday moves on the SPX. There have been 16 trading days so far this month, and 6 of them have exhibited this characteristic and two of them occurred this week. I view this as confirmation.

SPX

I continue to expect some form of retest of the 11/16 low and I am still leaning towards looking for shorting opportunities until the market verifies otherwise. The main verification I am looking for is increased buying stepping in as the first clue and then the indexes beginning to show signs of an renewed uptrend. I perceive the bounce this week as suspect until proven otherwise.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

BGMD Trade Hypothesis

When markets print very high volume, they undergo significant ownership change that exerts lasting influence on price development. -Alan Farley
The above quote is highlighted in my trading journal and one I return to. This concept is what has drawn me to documenting stocks making new year high volume and keeping them in a watch list to observe their price action down the road. This idea also complements the market maxim that volume precedes price. In keeping with this, I decided to take a lottery trade today with a small position in BGMD.

 Normally I shy away from stocks at their 52-Week low, let alone their all time low, however the volume action over the preceding three sessions drew my interest as each day was a new year high. I'm not sure if someone knows something or expects something, but the volume action clearly indicates to me that there is a change occurring here. I also found it notable that this transition happened while price action was in a tight range.

 I position sized so that worse case scenario, I wake up Friday to find the company has gone bust,  my maximum loss is 2% of my total account size. Best case scenario is that there is legitimate demand for this stock and it's being accumulated and I'm positioned early in the move.

BGMD

Monday, November 19, 2012

All Time High

In 'Does Trend Following Work' by Blackstar Funds, they discuss a methodology for trading stocks at all time highs.  Inspired by this I've decided to keep a basket of stocks that are hitting new highs and keep a tally of them by using BarCharts after the close.  The following list is ordered by the most times these stocks have been listed since 10/26/12.  

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Weekend Review 11/16/2012


My use of breadth indicators is not so much to identify the top and bottoms, but rather to avoid the period in between a top and a bottom. There are 2784 of 5813 stocks in the Worden database that meet my liquidity criteria and of those:

Number of Stocks Down % Change as of 09/04
49 -50% or more
258 -25% to -50%
810 -10% to -25%
Number of Stocks Up % Change as of 09/04
12 +50% or more
17 25% to 50%
113 10% to 25%

In total, only 21% of my stock universe has been positive. From a swing trading perspective this  approximates to the Mendoza line and I prefer a slightly better average. By sitting aside and saving capital for opportune moments I can avoid slides like the one the market is currently undergoing and having capital locked up trying to recoup on the next up trend instead of compound.

Market breadth is not so much a script though, as a story board. It's not always an easy fit like insert tab A into slot B as each cycle will have it's unique characteristics, nuances, and vagaries. It is the colloquial merge of science and art as well as herd mentality. We're often told that if something is too good to be true it probably is, and also that the market exhibits maximum pain upon the most participants, so when the market reaches and extreme reading on one breadth indicator is a bounce due, is a bounce due to self-fulfilling prophecy, or is the bounce a set-up to exert max pain upon shorts who covered too early and longs who bought too soon?

Additionally what happens if there is conflict in breadth indicators? Sometimes an order or preference has to be decided as to which is more significant. Bar Charts has the $MTMW which is the number of stocks above their 20 period moving average. WORDEN has their T2108 which is the number of stocks above the 40. StockCharts has the $NAA50R which is the number of stocks above 50. How does one determine conflict resolution in this scenario? Which data is more important and more influential in the current decision making process? Which data set will get one on the correct side of the market on their time fame with the least amount of lag?  


For this post my main focus will be on breadth comparison of the current market conditions to those of April-June.

Index Apr-June 09/04-Current
NYSE -10.29 -5.99
Russell -10.11 -9.69
NASDAQ -9.45 -9.79
SP-500 -7.99 -7.16

The first thing that becomes apparent is that the major indexes I pay attention to have corrected as deeply with the exception of the NYSE.  So while overall there are similarities between three of the indexes, one of these things is not like the other which highlights that tab A is not going to be a clean fit to slot B.

Next, looking at the Primary Indicator that I use, it's clear that from an underlying breadth perspective this correction has not seen similar selling. So even though the indexes have pulled back to a similar percentage at the deepest point of the correction, the underlying selling has not. What this informs me is that while their may be a playable bounce here due to a number of indicators flashing oversold signals, the merits of a bounce will have to be characterized by the subsequent buying interest. Lacking aggressive buying to support a floor here a bounce will merely set up more stocks for shorting opportunities. Again, Tab A, slot B.

Primary

It's rare for markets to establish a V shaped bottom. More often there is a retest establishing a W bottom pattern. Looking again at the previous correction, this W bottom retest and undercut of the low is clearly evident. This is the pattern formation that I'll be paying attention to here and should it unfold the next logical step would be confirmation of a new up trend with a series of higher highs and higher lows. What's also worth noting in these two charts is that from the perspective of the $BPSPX and $BPCOMPQ, the later is much closer to the level of it's previous bottom than the the prior. Thus far what I deduce from this is that the NASDAQ has seen much more selling than the SPX and this is a divergence worth paying attention to. Secondly, if a W pattern is to form, then these two readings should follow suit on the retest which is a positive for a more sustainable move to the up side.  And again, tab A is not a clean fit to slot B.

SPX
COMPQ
If this is the beginning state of a market turn, my expectation going forward is to see an increase in volatility and large swings of buying and selling would verify this this for me. The following graph showing the number of stocks up/down 4% daily will be the model for this price volatility. I'll specifically be looking for the number of 4%+ days to be above 400-600 or more for confirmation of aggressive buying. Currently it's clear that selling has been dominant.

4% Advance/Decline
This buying/selling pressure can be smoothed out using a 10 Day period. In addition to increased buying I'm looking for this to graph to move into positive territory. Staying positive indicates to me periods when it is more conducive for me to trade on my time frame. There will be some lag in the initial stage of the move but I'm looking for confirmation of large buyers coming to fatten up on the bread crumbs and who can't unwind positions on a whim which will allow me to ride on the coattails and let me capture the marbled meat of the move.

10 Day Differential
Right now the only thing I know for certain is that the market is in a confirmed downtrend. Friday's action established a new lower low on the indexes but closed near the high and this type of action can establish a logical pivot for not only a bounce, but a potential bottom as well. It's too early to tell so I'll be looking for evidence that this is so. Nicholas Darvas had a simple technique that he applied to markets that can be condensed as: buy when his candidate list has break outs and step aside when his stocks are breaking down one by one and stopping him out. He noted repeatedly that when he went against this simple premise and pressed during inopportune times his results and account suffered.

What's important to take from his perspective is that regardless of how one goes about analyzing the current condition of the market, what ultimately matters most is paying attention to the stocks themselves which will shed clues much earlier than breadth will indicate. Ultimately set-ups and a focus upon stocks that meet one's criteria as actionable is what matters at turns. It's easy to get swayed and begin to take marginal trades because the level of noise heightens and optimism increases as hope of a bottom takes hold of the herd.  For myself I wish to avoid getting too eager too soon and getting trapped here.  If there is a move to the upside the heavy lifting will be done for me and all I need to do is wait until there are too many set-ups to take.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

SLW Short


Two weeks ago I noted in a post that the ETF, SIL, put in a year high volume bar and that many of the components were setting up nicely and worth keeping on the radar. Originally I had a bullish bias, somewhat reinforced by coming across a number of related mentions elsewhere. One of the immediate thoughts I had afterward was that perhaps I was too optimistic in my view and reminded myself about the standard market wisdom of “Beware of the obvious trade.” This trade was clearly becoming too obvious to too many so I started to temper my enthusiasm quickly.

Of the four charts I listed the first ding happened a week later when CDE gapped down.

CDE
Two days later the second chart got dinged as PAAS gapped down as well.

PAAS

This brought to mind two other market concepts of the cockroach effect and the cousin stock theory.. If these two were taking hits than there was a good probability the other two I had listed, SLW and AG, would be next. So yesterday I took another look at the SIL chart and noted the high tail and close near the lows which  increased my conviction that there was a high probability shorting opportunity to the two components that had held up thus far.

SIL

Armed with this information I felt confident that under the current market conditions and with the prior weakness of the CDE and PAAS that if either AG or SLW gave me a short entry signal I would take it today.  Both did trigger but I prioritized by which had confirmed range expansion first and SLW established a wide range seven bar shortly after the first hour of the trading day so I took this trade.

SLW
AG


Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Salmon Run



The 200 MA is considered to be the den of the bear and the major indexes I follow, the Russell, SPX and COMPQ are swimming in these waters. At times like this the general chorus of the market being oversold and due for a bounce begin to ring loudly. Additionally there's discussion about the market's fear index, the $VIX, being very low considering the extent of the correction thus far. It's worth keeping in mind that fear is not a logical process that can necessarily be modeled exactly, but more of an event. There are two situations where fear can often arise: an event after prolonged anxiety, or suddenly like encountering a bear around a blind bend.

Thus far there hasn't been a singular black swan type event to trigger panic, but there has been plenty of signs of anxiousness. Most traders have a long side bias which makes sense since the market has historically had a long side bias as well and there is more profitability to the long side than short. Through observation of myself I've noted that as markets drop I become more optimistic and begin to look for information to confirm this bias. Through observation of other traders I've noted that trend lines of support tend to drop along with the market, as do the moving averages used to gauge where the next level of market support is.

In anxious markets it's crucial to keep an honest assessment of probable outcomes. It's well documented what occurs to markets after the election of an incumbent president so this drop was not out of the ordinary based upon historical data. In addition we know that breadth has been waning, earnings decelerating, and uncertainty about taxation and policy decisions are effecting mindset and decision making. Healthy markets tend to shrug off bad news, but sickly markets are vulnerable to a sneeze upon a return key that fat fingers a cascade.

One of the benefits of trading in this era is the accessibility to Market Wizards and Turtle Traders who are willing to share their experience. After the market closes I like to go through some of their tweets and see if my analysis is in line with theirs or if they are offering insight from their decades of experience in various market conditions. Today I came across two noteworthy tweets from Mark Minervini worth documenting.


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of SPXU


After the close and before checking the election results I quickly jotted a couple of notes on the SPX and COMPQ.  The general market has been in a down trend since 09/14 with the NASDAQ taking the brunt of it. I've noted a number of times that the SPX has shown relative strength in comparison and that should heavy selling begin to hit the tape this may offer the best risk/reward scenario. The recent bounce and small range offered a lower risk entry by establishing a lower low pivot to trigger entry.

$COMPQ
$SPX

There's three reasons why I looked specifically at shorting the SPX rather than the NASDAQ.

$COMPQ
1) Generally, markets will correct in tandem and since the NASDAQ has lead this down trend my hypothesis is that the SPX will catch up so there is greater reward/risk

2) The $BPSPX is  at 69 while the $BPCOMPQ is at 53 confirming the SPX has held up much better during this correction.

3) The $RHSPX is at 94 in comparison to the $RHCOMPQ which is at 16, so I consider the NASDAQ slightly extended here and more likely to have a counter-trend bounce.

$SPX
At the close of today there were 5 ETFs which put in year high volume giving a clue to current market psychology, the SPXU, SDS, UVXY, VIXY, and VXX. When volatility spikes the corresponding ETFs can break sharply, and during capitulation phases can offer low risk/reward opportunities of 30% to 50% or more.

SPXU
SDS



UVXY
VIXY
VXX