Monthly Archives: December 2022

Dec 22

The real reason prices crashed Thursday and why we can ignore it

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

The S&P 500 crashed more than 100 points Thursday morning after someone yelled “Fire” and impulsive traders climbed over each other trying to get out.

What was the catalyst for Thursday’s selling? Easy, there wasn’t one. This panic was nothing more than impulsive traders getting spooked by their own shadows and then the herd following them out the door.

But this isn’t a surprise. This was the second to last trading session before the Christmas holiday and institutional investors are already at their vacation chalets. Without big money’s guiding hand, there was no one to keep impulsive retail traders in check, and like irresponsible teenagers given too much responsibility, these retail traders made poor decisions.

Lucky for us, these retail traders have small accounts and quickly ran out of things to sell. By early afternoon, supply dried up and the index rebounded 60 points from those oversold levels, easily reclaiming 3,800 support.

As Forest Gump famously said, “Stupid is as stupid does.” And on Thursday, retail traders proved why they have such a poor reputation.

As for how I traded this, I came into Thursday holding long positions that I bought earlier in the week. Lucky for me, I already had a nice profit cushion and moved my stops above my entry points Wednesday, making this a low-risk trade for me.

As much as I wanted to see Wednesday’s rally continue, it didn’t turn out that way and I got dumped out at my trailing stops. To the cynics, that makes me wrong, but if my mistakes end in modestly profitable trades, I can live with that.

And in fact, after pulling the plug at my stops above 3,800 support, the waves of impulsive selling actually allowed me to rebuy those positions under 3,800 when the market bounced a few hours later. So not only did I get out of my previous trade for a small profit, I was able to get back in at even better prices.

If that’s what being wrong looks like, I don’t mind being wrong.

As for what comes next, a big wave of impulsive traders bailed Thursday morning and are no longer a risk to the market. I really liked Thursday afternoon’s bounce and that means I’m already a buyer.

If the selling resumes Friday, no big deal, I get out at my stops and try again next week. And if I’m really lucky, prices crash hard Friday and I get to buy even lower prices.

Sign up for my FREE email alerts so you don’t miss the market’s next big move

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

Dec 21

Tuesday’s powerful clue that told us Wednesday’s 1.5% pop was coming

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

The S&P 500 surged 1.5% Wednesday, adding an exclamation point on Tuesday’s modest bounce off of 3,800 support.

While a lot of people were caught off guard by Wednesday’s unexpected strength, especially shorts that got run over by this reversal, it really wasn’t that hard to see it coming. As I wrote Tuesday evening:

The S&P 500 finished Tuesday up a measly 0.1% after bouncing off of 3,800 support earlier in the session…

[S]uch a marginal gain would normally be easy to brush off in the face of the more than 200 points of selling since last week’s intraday highs. But Tuesday’s 0.1% gain was anything but normal.

Few trading signals are more powerful than a market that doesn’t do what it is supposed to do [after the Bank of Japan’s suprise move]. Now, we can’t read too much into a few hours of unexpected resilience, but so far the bounce off of 3,800 looks really good…

Well, here we are a day later and instead of crashing through 3,800 support, we are challenging 3,900 resistance. Blink and you missed a really nice trade.

But it was more than just Tuesday’s uncanny resilience that set this trade up. As I wrote last Friday evening:

As for what comes next, if prices bounce Monday morning, I’m closing the remainder of my shorts and even going long if those early gains persist for an hour or two. Starting small and putting a stop under the early lows would be a great, low-risk entry.

While bears were pressing their shorts on Monday and Tuesday, I was taking profits and buying the bounce. Amazing what happens when a trader views this market through an agnostic lens and doesn’t get trapped by bullish and bearish biases.

As for what happens next, the much-delayed Santa Clause rally is finally upon us. Don’t expect a big move, but a modest drift higher through the final week of the year wouldn’t be a surprise, especially if bearish selling capitulated Tuesday morning.

For those playing along, keep holding what we have and lift our stops to at least our entry points if not a little higher, turning this into a low-risk, high-reward trade.

Sign up for my FREE email alerts so you don’t miss the market’s next big move

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

Dec 20

Why Tuesday’s 0.1% gain is far more significant than it seems

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

The S&P 500 finished Tuesday up a measly 0.1% after bouncing off of 3,800 support earlier in the session.

That small gain was enough to snap a four-session losing streak, but such a marginal gain would normally be easy to brush off in the face of the more than 200 points of selling since last week’s intraday highs. But Tuesday’s 0.1% gain was anything but normal.

S&P 500 overnight futures crashed Monday night after the Bank of Japan surprised investors by taking a more hawkish stance and allowing bonds to move to a higher interest rate. That sent Japanese stocks down 2.5%, and it looked like Tuesday was going to be another rough session for U.S. equities.

But not long after the U.S. open, the S&P 500 bounced into the green. Funny how that works. Bad news and stocks actually rally. What’s up with that?

First, it’s been nearly a decade since anything in Japan brought down U.S. stock prices. And even more recently, U.S. equities have been immune to problems in China and Europe, so why should Japan be any different?

U.S. stocks are trading based on U.S. inflation, the U.S. economy, and U.S. Fed rate hikes. Nothing else matters to domestic stocks and it is no surprise headlines out of Japan failed to register once the main trading session opened Tuesday morning.

And Second, if 3,800 support was fragile and stocks were prone to a much larger selloff, the Japanese headlines were more than enough to break this camel’s back. Yet, instead of mirroring the international indexes, U.S. owners shrugged at the bearish headlines and kept holding.

While it is hard to get excited by a 0.1% gain, it sure beats where we were headed when Tuesday’s session opened.

Few trading signals are more powerful than a market that doesn’t do what it is supposed to do. Now, we can’t read too much into a few hours of unexpected resilience, but so far the bounce off of 3,800 looks really good and that won’t change until we fall under Tuesday’s intraday lows.

As I wrote Monday night, I closed my short positions for a very tidy profit and started to go long when the index found support at 3,800 late Monday. I added to those initial long positions when prices bounced Tuesday morning and I will add even more Wednesday if this counter-intuitive strength holds up.

I love trades where the market doesn’t do what it is supposed to be because that means the supply and demand dynamics under the surface are stronger than anything the headlines can throw at it. If the Bank of Japan can’t break this market, imagine what will happen if some good news comes along.

My stops are under Tuesday’s lows and if prices rally Wednesday, I will quickly move my stops up to my entry points, turning this into a low-risk/high-reward trade. And if this one doesn’t work, no big deal, I sell at my stops and try again the next time the market bounces.

Sign up for my FREE email alerts so you don’t miss the market’s next big move

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

Dec 19

Why smart money isn’t pressing their short positions here

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

The S&P 500 fell 0.9% Monday as last week’s post-Fed selloff continues.

Headlines haven’t changed in a meaningful way and that includes last week’s inflation report and the Fed’s rate hikes. Inflation is moderating modestly and the Fed is slowing the pace of rate hikes. Both of these results fall in line with most investors’ expectations and we are not seeing any significant deviations in the fundamental data.

This remains a sentiment-driven trade and the October and November waves of optimism have given way to this latest bout of second thoughts. 3,800 is the next obvious support level and now we get to see if it holds. Either it does or it doesn’t and that binary outcome is the basis for our next trade.

Monday’s late test of 3,800 support held. That was our signal to lock in some very juicy profits on our short positions. And for the most adventurous, test the waters with a small buy and a stop under Monday’s intraday lows.

Odds are good closing our short positions Monday afternoon could be premature, but with over 200 points of profit in this trade, the risks of holding too long far outweigh the reward of squeezing a few more bucks out of this trade.

Remember, we only make money when we sell our winners and this has been a great trade. No reason to get greedy and keep pressing our luck. As easy as it is to buy back in, there is no reason to get stubborn here. Take those profits and get ready for the next trade.

Adding more to a long position Tuesday morning if the bounce off of 3,800 sticks, or switching direction and shorting a break under 3,800. This is as easy as it gets.

Sign up for my FREE email alerts so you don’t miss the market’s next big move

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

1 2 3