Monthly Archives: May 2021

May 10

How to trade the S&P 500’s latest wobble, plus what the FAANG stocks are telling us

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

Monday started off well enough for the S&P 500 with the index opening near Friday’s record close. Unfortunately, second thoughts overcame traders later in the afternoon and those pushed the index under 4,200 by the close.

Is the top already in? Bears certainly think so. Of course, they’ve been saying the same thing for the last several hundred points so we take everything they say with a huge pile of salt. But like a broken clock, eventually, they will be right. Could this be that time? Without a doubt yes…but in reality, probably not.

The key levels for this market are 4,200 on the upside and 4,120 on the downside. Get back above 4,200 Tuesday and all is forgiven and forgotten. Fall under 4,120 and last week’s bounce is dead and the bears might be on to something.

How do we trade this? Easy, keep holding until our stops get hit. And even if our stops haven’t been hit, there is nothing wrong with lightening up a little until this gets back above 4,200. It is always easier to think more clearly with a partial position and the reduced threat of loss.

While it is tempting to hold through a small dip, the inconvenience of trading around a whipsaw definitely beats the discomfort of holding a through “small dip” that turns out a lot bigger than expected.

But as has been the case all year long, if we get out, always be ready to get back in if/when this wobble proves to be yet another false alarm. Just ask all the people that failed to get back in following the dips at 3,300, 3,500, and 3,700.

This market is buyable above 4,200 and shortable under 4,120. Plan your next trade accordingly.


While the S&P 500’s 1% loss felt uncomfortable, that was quaint compared to the bloodbath taking place in the FAANG stocks. The best FAANG stocks, AAPL and GOOG, “only” lost 2.6%. The rest shed between 3% and 4%. Ouch!

While I’m not overly concerned with the S&P 500’s price action (yet!), the FAANG stocks are a different story. And unfortunately for the broad market, losing the best-of-the-best stocks is enough to take everything else down.

I’m giving the S&P 500 the benefit of the doubt but if this FAANG underperformance continues this week, it is time to get defensive and all bets are off.

If you find these posts useful, please return the favor by liking and sharing them!

Sign up for FREE Email Alerts to get profitable insights like these delivered to your inbox every evening.

What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For less than $1/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter

May 07

Why this bull market just won’t quit, plus what Cryptocurrency history tells us is coming next

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

After a few weeks of flirting with 4,200, the S&P 500 finally smashed through this psychological barrier Friday.

The monthly employment report missed expectations by a country mile Friday morning, but not only did the shockingly poor employment fail to spook the investors, it caused them to flood in and start bidding up prices.

As paradoxical as this seems, this remains a stimulus-fueled bull market and lethargic employment promises to keep the government spigots flowing at full speed.

No doubt there will be consequences for all of this money printing, but that is a problem for another day. Today, let the good times roll.

Stick with what has been working and that is holding for higher prices. As I wrote Monday following a modest bounce :

[T]his mixed day still favors the bulls. If this rally was truly overvalued and fragile, Friday’s selling would have accelerated, not stalled and bounced. Until we see a more compelling warning, keep holding for higher prices and lifting our trailing stops.

More than 100 points later and this is still as true now as it was then.


There is an interesting divergence developing in the Crypto markets. Until recently, Bitcoin was the only place to be. Bitcoin surged from under $10k late last year to more than $60k earlier this year, leaving all of the altcoins for dead. But then a switch flipped as Bitcoin stalled near $60k and all of the copycats started popping, including the most famous meme coin, Dogecoin.

This resurgence of the altcoins has set off a treasure hunt as speculators chase the next Dogecoin.

The problem for Bitcoin (and all the other cryptos) is this rapidly widening net is diluting the money available to drive any individual crypto higher.

Those of us that have been doing this for more than a few months remember Bitcoin’s last peak back in 2017. Coincidentally enough, that top coincided with a similar explosion of altcoins. Fewer dollars chasing more coins means less demand for each individual coin. Less demand = lower prices.

Will this flood of altcoins end any differently? Only time will tell, but only a fool believes “this time is different”.

If you find these posts useful, please return the favor by liking and sharing them!

Sign up for FREE Email Alerts to get profitable insights like these delivered to your inbox every evening.

What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For less than $1/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter

May 06

Why bulls control this market, plus what’s next for $NFLX

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

Thursday was a good session for the S&P 500 with the index reclaiming 4,200 resistance.

Two days ago it looked like the market was breaking down, today it looks like everything is under control. And so goes the swinging pendulum of sentiment.

But this shouldn’t surprise readers of this blog. As I wrote Tuesday:

As bad as this felt midday [Tuesday], the close was robust and showed most institutional investors are not taking profits and still holding for higher prices. How we finish always matters more than how we start and despite [Tuesday’s] red close, this qualifies as a good finish.

Two days later and the index is back near the highs. Blink during these dips and you’ll miss it!

The trend is higher and that gives the advantage to the bulls. Bears are the ones who have to prove something changed and they definitely didn’t get the job done this week.

Bouncing off of support and returning to the highs shows bulls are still in control. Keep doing what has been working, which is holding for higher prices and lifting our trailing stops.

This bull market will die like all of the others that came before it, but this is not that day.


As well as the index has been trading, TSLA appears to be stuck in the mud.

The stock slipped under $700 support on Monday and it has been unable to reclaim this key support level ever since.

TSLA has been underperforming the index all year and that trend continued Thursday as the stock finished in the red on a good day for the rest of the market.

At this point, it looks like the stock is headed back to $600 support. And if that doesn’t hold, then there is a lot of clear air down to $400.

Traders with with profits should be looking to protect them and aggressive traders can short this stock with a stop just above $700.

If you find these posts useful, please return the favor by liking and sharing them!

Sign up for FREE Email Alerts to get profitable insights like these delivered to your inbox every evening.

What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For less than $1/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter

May 05

What a half-full/half-empty day means for the indexes, plus the next $NFLX trade

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis

Wednesday morning the S&P 500 continued Tuesday’s bounce off of 4,120 support, at least initially. Unfortunately, after erasing nearly all of the previous day’s decline in midday trade, the index retreated back to breakeven by the close.

This was definitely one of those half-full, half-empty kinds of days. Bulls are pointing to the stalled selloff and bears are gloating over the weak close.

In situations like this, the tie-breaker always goes with the trend. This is still very much a bull market and that means when everything is equal, the next move typically resolves to the upside.

Tuesday’s dip and bounce gave us a clear line in the sand. Remain above 4,120 support and the bounce is alive and well. Retreat back to support so soon after bouncing off of it and lower prices are ahead. Plan your next trade accordingly.


As expected, NFLX violated $500 support, giving us a nice short entry.

Stocks bounce from oversold levels quickly. Unfortunately, NFLX has been hovering near $500 for a few weeks now. That tells us this pullback following disappointing subscriber growth hasn’t reached oversold levels yet. Something that holds next to support for too long will inevitably violate that support. And that’s exactly what NFLX did today.

NFLX is now a short with a stop just above $500.

That said, trading against the trend is one of the most difficult ways to make money because it requires impeccable timing. This is a good short entry, but we need to remain nimble. Keep a nearby stop and be prepared to take profits quickly. NFLX is still a great company and this dip will bounce hard and fast once it reaches capitulation. Don’t get caught on the wrong side of that bounce.

If you find these posts useful, please return the favor by liking and sharing them!

Sign up for FREE Email Alerts to get profitable insights like these delivered to your inbox every evening.

What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For less than $1/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter

May 04

Why Tuesday’s dip isn’t what bears think, plus the safest way to approach Dogecoin

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

Tuesday was a rocky session for the S&P 500 with the index shedding 60-points intraday. But by the time it was all said and done, the index recovered half of those losses before the close.

As calm as things have been, a return of volatility definitely got people’s attention. But as dramatic as Tuesday felt, it really wasn’t that big of a deal. The index briefly tested the lows from three weeks ago before bouncing. If the bears were are looking to break this bull, they need to do a lot better than a modest test of lows so recent, if they were milk, they’d still be drinkable.

As bad as this felt midday, the close was robust and showed most institutional investors are not taking profits and still holding for higher prices. How we finish always matters more than how we start and despite the red close, this qualifies as a good finish.

These midday lows gave us our new stop levels and the index is ownable as long as it remains above 4,120.

If this dip crossed your stops (like it did mine), we have no choice but to get out. But just because the market dumped us out doesn’t mean we have to give up on this trade.

Most dips are false alarms and that means we always need to be looking for an opportunity to get back in. Sometimes we are lucky and the dip carries on for a bit, allowing us to get in at much lower levels.

Other times we are not as lucky and the bounce is quick, leaving us chasing our tails. But at the end of the day, I always prefer an annoying whipsaw over stubbornly holding through a far more damaging correction.

Savvy traders are willing to take small losses when it allows them to avoid larger ones.

Edit: Corrected to reference Tuesday


Three weeks ago I wrote the following about Dogecoin:

While I don’t have a problem buying something that is going up (meaning Dogecoin is a legitimate trade), but that is only as long as people are trading this and not investing in it. As long as a person is agile and willing to take profits, they can ignore all Dogecoin critics. But if a person believes the hype, good luck with that.

Dogecoin has doubled since then, yet nothing has changed about how I’m approaching this. This trade is a ton of fun.  But if a person doesn’t have a plan to take profits, they will end up giving all of this back and then some. Don’t be the fool left holding the bag.

If you find these posts useful, please return the favor by liking and sharing them!

Sign up for FREE Email Alerts to get profitable insights like these delivered to your inbox every evening.

What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For less than $1/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter

May 03

What Monday’s feeble bounce means for the index, plus a word of warning for $GME holders

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

On Monday, the S&P 500 bounced back from Friday’s dip and recovered 0.27%.

While this green day seems positive enough, bears will point to the index’s inability to hang on to the psychologically significant 4,200 level. The opening strength fizzled and the index ultimately closed nearly the daily lows. That makes this price action “a green day with an asterisk”.

As is usually the case, there are no clear and obvious bullish or bearish trading signals. That would make this easy and as everyone knows trading is anything but easy.

As speculators, we live in a world of shades of gray. Monday was bullish in that Friday’s modest dip didn’t continue. And the resulting bounce had hints of bearishness since the index couldn’t hang on to the early highs. That gives us a mixed bag with both sides having something to crow about.

While this price action seems like a tie, in these situations, we always give the benefit of the doubt to the trend. When all things are equal, we stick with what has been working.

In this case, this mixed day still favors the bulls. If this rally was truly overvalued and fragile, Friday’s selling would have accelerated, not stalled and bounced.

Until we see a more compelling warning, keep holding for higher prices and lifting our trailing stops.


While GME has faded from the headlines, the stock price remains stubbornly high.

The problem for GME bulls is this was always a momentum story. Unfortunately, the public has forgotten about this trade and as a result, momentum has vanished.

That said, this stock is still ridiculously valued (a $20 stock selling for $162). And that means the selloff still has a long, long way to go.

The bounce back to $200 was a fun ride and produced a quick buck for nimble traders. But the subsequent retreat has given us another lower-high and the downtrend is still very much intact.

This party is over and anyone still holding out for $1,000 is deluding themselves. If a person has profits, take them. If a person is stilling on losses, chalk the lesson up as experience and sell while prices are still high. There will always be other trading opportunities (as long as we still have money left to trade!)

If you find these posts useful, please return the favor by liking and sharing them!

Sign up for FREE Email Alerts to get profitable insights like these delivered to your inbox every evening.

What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For less than $1/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter