All Posts by Jani Ziedins

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About the Author

Jani Ziedins (pronounced Ya-nee) is a full-time investor and financial analyst that has successfully traded stocks and options for nearly three decades. He has an undergraduate engineering degree from the Colorado School of Mines and two graduate business degrees from the University of Colorado Denver. His prior professional experience includes engineering at Fortune 500 companies, small business consulting, and managing investment real estate. He is now fortunate enough to trade full-time from home, affording him the luxury of spending extra time with his wife and two children.

Feb 12

Holding gains

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 2:26 EDT

S&P500 daily at 2:26 EDT

Intraday Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks are trading sideways and consolidating the recent rebound.  We are still holding the 50dma and recovered the majority of January’s dip.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Nothing calms nerves like rebounding prices.  Previously nervous owners were rewarded for holding this dip, making them even less likely to sell the next round of weakness.  That lack of selling keeps supply tight and makes it easier for the rebound to continue.  More than just tight supply, the selloff flushed many owners out of the market and they are now prospective buyers as they are forced to chase the bounce higher.

While it is human nature to try and assign a cause to everything we see, markets go up and down for no other reason than that’s what markets do.  It is human nature to bid up prices to unsustainable levels and then sell them down to oversold levels.  So far this volatility seems to be little more than these normal and routine fluctuations.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Climbing toward upper bound of an extended trading range
The time to buy the dip was when the crowd was fearful and selling stock at steep discounts.  Buying now is a bit late to the party and if the market is in an 1,750/1,850 trading range, we are approaching the upper bounds and this is a better selling opportunity than buying one.

Alternate Outcome:
Watch for signs of stalling demand, signaling this rebound is nothing but a temporary reprieve.  Likely another round of panic selling requires more spooky headlines, so keep an eye out for anything that could unnerve the market.

Trading Plan:
Buy weakness and sell strength.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Feb 11

Short squeeze continues

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 2:52 EST

S&P500 daily at 2:52 EST

Intraday Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks smashed through the 50dma and came a long way from last week’s 1,740 lows.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Emerging Market fears evaporated as quickly as the came.  What threatened the developed world last week doesn’t even warrant a footnote this week.  Such is the ways of the market.

While everyone knows the market has periodic 5 and 10% pullbacks, they lose sight of that every time we are in the middle of one.  If everyone calmly held through a routine dip, we wouldn’t have one because the market doesn’t pullback without selling.  While in hindsight every 5% dip seems like a great buying opportunity, reality is they are terrifying events to live through.  The only reason a trader sells a 5% pullback is because they are convinced it will turn into a 10 or 20% correction.  Pullbacks work because they convince so many traders this is no ordinary dip.  That was clearly the case last week when many were dumping stocks over fears of Emerging Markets and a US economic slowdown.  But one person’s fear is another’s profit.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
 Inside trading range, headed to upper bound
While we still have a way to go before this weakness proves it is nothing more than a vanilla pullback, it is shaping up that way.  Recent fears over EM and the US economy are fading as quickly as them came.  Nothing calms nerves like a rebound in prices.  But don’t expect the non-stop rally to continue.  Markets trade sideways 60% of the time and we are likely entering a 3 or 6 month consolidation as we digest last year’s big gains.  Buy weakness, sell strength.

Alternate Outcome:
While most owners are feeling better about their positions, few selloffs go in a straight line and they bounce on their way lower.  We could easily be in the process of forming a head-and-shoulders or double top.

Trading Plan:
Trading range or topping pattern?  For practical purposes it doesn’t really matter since we sell strength in both cases.  The bigger question is how high do we let this run before locking in gains.  Sell before the highs, wait for new highs, follow with a trailing stop, or the easiest, buy-and-hold.  It all depends on a traders risk tolerance and time frame.

AAPL daily at 2:52 EST

AAPL daily at 2:52 EST

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
AAPL is close to closing the earnings gap, but that might not be so bullish.  Recent strength follows comments from Tim Cook that he spent a big chunk of his US based cash hoard buying stock over the last couple weeks and hinted at new products.  I saw one enthusiastic analyst suggest a $300 iWatch will sell in similar numbers as iPads.  I don’t know what he is smoking, but I want some.  There are few gadgets as geeky as a computer watch and there is nothing that screams enginerd like a calculator watch.  Countless people I know have iPads, yet I don’t know anyone with a geeky watch.  A more realistic sales projection would expect iWatchs to sell as well as Steve Job’s self-proclaimed Apple TV “hobby”.  The iWatch would be an interesting gadget for the Apple fanatic, but nothing more than a rounding error on the financials.  Since few people would throw out their current $2k flat screen TV for the rumored iTV, it would likely have an even smaller contribution to the bottom line.  And if this new thing is a payment processing solution, expect it to contribute generate as much profit as Google Wallet.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Feb 07

Higher on Jobs

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:17 EST

S&P500 daily at 1:17 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks added to yesterday’s gains and continued bouncing off the 1,740 lows.  These gains pushed the market back into last week’s 1,770 to 1,790 consolidation.

MARKET SENTIMENT
The January Jobs Report came in 75k under expectations, but failed to trigger another leg lower since most of the traders who would have sold the news already bailed out earlier in the week.  When there is no one left to sell, it doesn’t matter what the news is.

We’ve risen an unthinkable 50-points over a couple of days despite many people’s expectation of a larger selloff.  But that is how the market works; convince everyone it is headed one way before snapping back the opposite direction.  This reaction only seems irrational if we focus on why people are buying disappointing employment.  But that is looking at it from the wrong angle.  People aren’t buying the news, they’re simply not selling it.  Often we oversimplify the market by assuming it moves because of buying and selling, but that’s only half the equation.  The other half is traders choosing not to buy or sell.  Over the last couple of weeks, nervous owners sold to more confident buyers willing to hold this volatility and risk.  These new buyers were unmoved by today’s disappointing employment and we bounced on the resulting tight supply when they chose not to sell the news.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:  
Inside extended trading range, moving toward the upper end of the range
If the market wanted to sell off, it had the perfect excuse.  Missing jobs by 75k is a great reason to hit the sell button if that is what traders were inclined to do.  The fact they didn’t demonstrates current owners are not overly concerned by earlier Emerging Market issues and now a continued dip in domestic hiring.  Those lacking conviction sold over the last two weeks, leaving us with a far more calm and confident core group of owners.

Alternate Outcome:
Most of the buying over the last couple of days was driven by short covering.  While buying is buying, motivations matter because it gives us clues into the sustainability of a move.  If buyers of this rebound are bears and don’t believe in this market, that support will be short-lived.  This bounce will only continue if a wider group of buyers is willing to step in and support prices.  If not, then this is just a dead-cat bounce on the way lower.

Trading Plan:
When the market wants to go higher, we have to respect that.  We reclaimed prior support near 1,770 and overhead resistance remains at 1,800.  The market is likely entering a wide trading range as it consolidates 2013’s impressive gains.  Buying weakness and selling strength is likely the best strategy going forward.  After 1,800, the next level of technical resistance is the 50dma and 1,810.

AAPL daily at 1:18 EST

AAPL daily at 1:18 EST

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
Tim Cook announced AAPL just bought $14B in stock over the last two weeks.  While many think this is bullish, to the skeptic, that shows the company is propping up its stock with artificial demand.  If the only reason we are holding $500 is because AAPL is buying stock so aggressively, what happens when they stop?  Without this $14B  buy back, the stock likely would have fallen even further post-earnings.    Chances are the stock will eventually make its way to where the market thinks it should trade once this artificial demand dries up.  Tim Cook was promoted to CEO because of his operational talents, not his stock picking skills.  If he’s buying the dip, he’s likely early.

TSLA is continuing its rebound higher after succumbing to recent broad market weakness.  It is acting like it wants to break $200 in the near future.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Feb 06

Market bounces

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 2:26 EST

S&P500 daily at 2:26 EST

Intraday Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks gapped 10-points higher at the open and climbed another 10-points by midday.  The bounce slowed at prior support near 1,770 where it traded sideways into the afternoon.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Markets are whipping around on obscure economic data.  Monday we plunged on disappointing PMI, today we surged on encouraging weekly jobless claims and comments from the ECB.  While talking heads claim these data points are what moved markets, they were simply the excuse people used to trade their already existing bias.  Over the last couple weeks everyone was looking for an excuse to sell.  Once we ran out of willing sellers, supply dried up and it didn’t take much to trigger a short-squeeze.

While the news is random, the market’s reaction to it is not.  Think of the market like a chained dog, except instead of a chain, we use a rubber band.  When we get to one extreme or the other, it is always possible to keep going in the same direction, but it becomes increasingly difficult and the path of least resistance is to go back the other way.  Markets overshoot and undershoot the “ideal” level as traders overreact to news and price moves.  At least for the time being, selling off to 1,740 appears to be a short-term overreaction.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Modestly bullish – expect the market to stay in trading range.
Everyone is looking forward to Friday’s employment report, but most of the worrywarts sold earlier in the week, while those still holding showed a willingness to hold volatility and risk.  This makes them less likely to jump out the window at the first signs of trouble or price declines.

The market is likely entering a sideways trading range between 1,740 and 1,850.  While we could easily dip under 1,740 and even test the 200dma, we are closer to the end of this selloff than the start.

Alternate Outcome:
While the market has priced in some modest economic weakness, there is still room for dramatic downside if it turns out we are slipping into economic contraction or these Emerging Market issues spill over into developed economies.  While selling took a break, watch for anxiety to flair up again.

Trading Plan:
While we could slip on a disappointing Job’s report, there is far more potential for the market to explode higher in a short squeeze.  If we are in a trading range, buy weakness and sell strength.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Feb 05

Wait and See

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:26 EST

S&P500 daily at 1:26 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks are chopping around between 1,740 and 1,760 as they digest Monday’s plunge.  We remain between the 50dma and 200dma as 1,740 provides near-term support.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Our markets quickly forgot about the Emerging Market Crisis as domestic economic concerns took center stage.  Monday’s plunge was due to lower than expected manufacturing numbers and the market is nervously awaiting Friday’s employment report.  The ADP report this morning was mostly inline with expectations, but it lost a lot of credibility last month when it failed to alert us to the massive miss by the govt’s numbers days later.  While many made excuses for the December employment, it is harder to rationalize away two bad months if we miss a second time on Friday.

While it feels counterintuitive, this is the safest time to own stocks in the last three months.  Risk is proportional to height and falling 100-points from recent highs lowers our exposure.  If we assume this is a routine 10% pullback, anyone who bought the calm and tranquil January highs opened themselves to 10% downside risk.  Now that we’ve fallen 5% from those highs, buying these levels exposes us to the remaining 5% downside.  5% is less than 10%, making this a far safer time to buy than when everyone felt comfortable a couple of weeks ago.  Take comfort in fear and fear comfort.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Modestly bullish – lower end of prolonged trading range.
Traders are taking a wait and see as we trade sideways following Monday’s selloff.  Most of the weak and fearful bailed out as we crashed through recent support levels.  The remaining owners are nervous, but waiting to see if the situation deteriorates further before hitting the sell button.  Prospective buyers are watching the market with interest, but holding back, waiting to see if they can get even better prices.  Current owners would rather not sell and prospective buyers are intrigued by these discounts, creating the potential for a nice rebound once these economic fears turn out less bad than feared.

Alternate Outcome:
Everything is always less bad than feared……except when it isn’t.  Most of the 2013 rally was predicated on a slow but steady economic recovery.  If new data suggest a further slowdown, even contraction, anticipate traders repricing the market based on these lower expectations.  While giving up a bit of last year’s exuberance brought us to more reasonable levels, markets rarely stop at reasonable and continue to overdone levels.

Trading Plan:
Expect the chop to continue for the next few days.  Resist the temptation to buy strength or sell weakness as the market will likely reverse hours later.  This is the time to buy weakness and sell strength.  With the market down 5% from recent highs, this is a more interesting buying opportunity than selling one.  While we could continue lower, that only gives us even more attractive levels to buy.  And above all else, stay calm.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Feb 04

A Little Relief

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:57 EST

S&P500 daily at 1:57 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks bounced back and reclaimed some of Monday’s losses.  We are stuck in no-man’s land between the 50dma and the 200dma.  By midday the market recovered 1,750, which acted as support back in October.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Gone are the days of easy money as this market gives heartburn to anyone paying attention.  Yesterday’s weak manufacturing numbers are making some question the strength of our economy.  These traders lightened up ahead of what they fear could be another bad Jobs Report.  Monday’s dip was the market lowering expectations and ironically enough, reducing the risk of holding through the employment report.  If we selloff ahead of time, there is less selling potential following a disappointing number is release.    Pricing in bad news creates a positive skew where a disappointing, bu less-bad than feared number could lead to a pop.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
Most associate themselves with bulls or bears.  We have a natural tendency to think the market is poised to go one way or the other and trade that outlook.  But most of the time the market goes sideways.  While bears think we are on the verge of a massive selloff and bulls claim this is just another dip on the way higher, where are all the people saying we are entering a six-month trading range?  I don’t remember the source, but I recall someone claiming the market trades sideways 60% of the time. Buy the dip and sell the rebound.

Recent weakness wrung out a lot of the excess that built up in the closing months of 2013.  Pulling back over 5% put fear back in the market and flushed out many owners who envision far steeper declines around the corner.  This selling got rid of many weak owners and replaced them with far more courageous buyers who demonstrated a lack of fear of weakness when they bought the dip.  While no one knows exactly how low we will go, we are closer to the end of this dip than the start.

Alternate Outcome:
While we might bounce any day, not all selloffs go straight down.  The bigger and longer ones step lower with a series of bounces along the way.  If the market bounces watch for weakness following a short-squeeze that pushes us above the 50dma.  And of course the market could plunge on an atrocious jobs number suggests we are in an economic contraction.

Trading Plan:
Expect the market to chop sideways until Friday.  The last couple of weeks of selling lowered expectations, making it easier for the data to come out better than feared.  That will likely lead to a short-squeeze, but if the market is stuck in a trading range, that strength is a better selling opportunity.  But if we miss jobs gains by more than 100k again, look out below.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Feb 03

Another rout

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:15 EST

S&P500 daily at 1:15 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks shattered 1,770 support and tested 1,750 in early trade.  They are at three-month lows and trading at levels not seen since early November.

MARKET SENTIMENT
The market had been chopping around since finding support following the Emerging Market selloff, but took a fresh leg lower this morning on weaker than expected PMI.  This violated widely followed support levels stretching back to November, triggering a wave of automatic stop-loss selling.

Like every market move, there are always two possible outcomes.  Either this weakness is an overreaction and we bounce back, or this hints at more selling to come. It’s not surprising to see the market dip under 1,770.  Market makers, brokers, and HFTs make their living on trading volume.  If markets slip under support levels, it sends off an avalanche of trading and these guys can make next month’s alimony payments.  The big question is what happens after we fall under support.  Does this stop-loss selling exhaust itself as we run out of supply?  Or does weakness shake the resolve of previously confident owners, leading to a fresh round of emotional selling?

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:

By midday, most of the automatic stop-loss selling already occurred, leaving many owners dominated by fear and indecision.  This is a classic “pain trade” and clearly it is having the intended effect.  Two weeks ago we were too bullish and it is hard to say the same about this market.  So far this weakness is shaking free short-term traders and late rally chasers, but for most of the buy-and-hold crowd, this is just another opportunity to load up on stocks at better prices.  There are only so many nervous sellers that can be shaken free.  As long as the slow but steady recovery in the US continues, we are likely near the end of the selling.

Alternate Outcome:
If the market is shifting to a half-empty outlook on the economy and fragile recovery, look for a dramatic re-pricing of stocks as prior enthusiasm gives way to widespread pessimism.  Every dip presents a buying opportunity, it is simply a matter of waiting for the right opportunity to get in.  If the market continues obsessing about negative headlines, then we are not at that point yet.

Trading Plan:
Long-term holders should continue holding because that is what long-term holders do.  Short-term traders can get more aggressive with this dip.  With most of the stop-losses already triggered, bears and short-sellers need emotional selling to accelerate.  More bad news will likely push nervous owners over the edge.  On the other side, dip buyers will have a strong tailwind if a little bit of good news triggers a short squeeze.  After 1750, the next likely level is the 50dma.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 31

Seesaw continues

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:45 EST

S&P500 daily at 1:45 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
US stocks gapped lower at the open on inflamed Emerging Market concerns that sent European markets tumbling.  This gap lower failed to breach 1,770 support and the market bounced off those early lows by midmorning.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Our markets are jumping all over the place on events happening a world away.  The lira, forint, and rand are all under pressure and sending US investors scurrying for cover.  If you don’t know what those are, don’t worry, you are not the only one.  If US politicians shutting down our govt and threatening to default on our debt was nothing more than a blip on the way higher, why are we allowing currency problems in countries smaller than individual US states to weigh so heavily on our markets?

Most investors are not overly concerned about these Emerging Market problems infecting our economy, but they are afraid of other investors being afraid of them.  They are not selling based on a shift in their fundamental outlook, they are selling the expectation that other people are going to sell these headlines.  Selloffs driven by selling because everyone else is selling are dramatic, scary, and fast, but rarely have staying power.  Once the frenzy subsides, everyone wonders how they could have acted so silly.  But we are clan animals and through our innate survival instinct, when the clan is nervous, we are nervous.  Many global markets were at all-time highs and most investors harbor a fear of heights.  They were looking for an excuse to sell and this excuse is as good as any.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Modestly bullish – lower end of expected trading range
Recent volatility shook out most owners who were not committed to their positions.  Those left standing demonstrated comfort holding this risk and volatility.  The more confident the remaining owners are, the less supply we have on the market and the easier it is for prices to rebound.

1,770 is building as a key support level.  If there is one thing we know about support and resistance, markets like to breach them before reversing the other way.  A quick dip under 1,770 would trigger a wave of automatic stop-loss trading.  But unfortunately for those stop-loss sellers, that last dip under support will likely be the final purge before this market overcomes these Emerging Market fears.

Alternate Outcome:
Are we running out of sellers or dip buyers?  Every day the market presents us with two equally compelling scenarios.  The market price is the perfect balance point between these two contrasting outlooks.  Half the market expects us to go higher, the other half thinks we are headed lower.  A dip under 1,770 could do more than trigger one last wave of stop-loss selling, it could trigger another avalanche of emotional selling.

Trading Plan:
The longer we hold these levels, the more likely it is we are near the bottom of this selloff.  While we might dip under support at 1,770, that will likely be a quick lived shakeout that purges any remaining excess and clears the way for another move higher.  But we do have to be careful about these global headlines.  2008 taught us that on rare occasions, things are far worse than markets fear.

AMZN daily at 1:46 EST

AMZN daily at 1:46 EST

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
AAPL is still struggling with $500 and any hopes for a v-bottom are quickly evaporating as value buyers are not impressed with these new discounts.  No doubt Apple is one of the greatest companies in the world and they have unbelievably loyal customers, but with 20% market share in smartphones, they might not deserve to be the largest company in the world.

TSLA  is adding to recent gains as it tries to recover prior highs.  This bounce is demonstrating staying power and the stock will likely breach $200 in coming weeks.

AMZN fell under the 50dma on disappointing earnings.  Is this the top everyone’s been expecting in this high-flying momentum stock, or just another dip along the way.  To see a larger selloff in AMZN, we need to see a fundamental change in the company’s prospects going forward.  AAPL fell on declining market share.  NFLX’s most recent collapse came after subscribers fled the planned split of the DVD and streaming business.  AMZN will bounce back if the original story remains in tact.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 30

Anatomy of a bounce

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 12:54 EST

S&P500 daily at 12:54 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks rebounded from yesterday’s 1,770 lows, shrugging off another overnight Asian bloodbath.  This is the fourth day the market held 1,770 and likely indicates, at least for the time being, the Emerging Market selloff is no longer a major worry for US markets.

MARKET SENTIMENT
With every headline, there are market participants who think it is a big deal and others that are indifferent.  Over the last week, those fearing developments in emerging markets sold, fearing this was the start of something bigger.  Those that bought from the sellers demonstrated a lack of fear of the same headlines.  Anyone holding the dip also showed a willingness to continue owning in the face of these risks.  Eventually we reach a point where everyone who is concerned is out and anyone left is indifferent.  That is the point where selloffs end.

Yesterday’s Fed Taper and last night’s Asian selloff was the perfect invitation for anyone worried about those events to sell.  The fact we didn’t selloff indicates there are few worrywarts left in and most holding stocks are comfortable owning these risks.  As long as those events maintain the same trajectory, we shouldn’t expect our markets to react since these expectation are now priced in.  Obviously if the situation deteriorates, it will trigger another round of selling, but most likely the worst is behind us.  Better yet, if the situation turns out less bad than feared, emotional sellers gave us another profit opportunity.  Their pain is our gain.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Modestly Bullish – buy the dip
The Emerging Market selloff is taking a break and will likely turn into a near-term short-squeeze.  That doesn’t mean the coast is clear and we are coasting to 1,900.  Stay vigilant and look for the market to trade sideways in the 1,770 to 1,850 range for the remainder of the quarter.

Alternate Outcome:
There are still risks abound and this might be nothing more than a technical bounce if the Emerging Market situation flares up or January’s employment shows December’s disappointing numbers were not fluke.  If buying dips were easy, everyone would be rich.

Trading Plan:
Support is buyable for a swing trade.  When the market gets back to the 50dma, we will reevaluate sentiment to determine if this bounce is headed back to the upper end of the 1,850 trading range, or stall and tumble to new lows.

FB daily at 12:55 EST

FB daily at 12:55 EST

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
AAPL slipped under $500 for the first time since October as dip buyers are still shying away from what bulls claiming is a fantastic buying opportunity.  Part of AAPL’s problem is everyone who loves the stock already owns it.  Those not already drunk on the Koolaid are wary of the slowing growth and want to see AAPL reinvent another product category before pushing the stock back toward old highs.  At this point is seems like the best outcome for shareholders AAPL becomes another MSFT and trades sideways for the next decade.  Worst case is it follows the same trajectory as the other hot handset makers, PALM and BBRY.

FB shattered expectations again.  The IPO darling, turned Wall Street joke, turned juggernaut, shows just how emotional traders are toward high-flying stocks.   NFLX is another darling, goat, back to darling story, except this is NFLX’s third trip through the rodeo.  Best advice is sell what everyone loves and buy what everyone hates or is afraid to own.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 29

Down, but holding support

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:16 EST

S&P500 daily at 1:16 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks gapped lower at the open on renewed emerging market concerns, but are off those early lows in midday trade.  This morning’s dip failed to undercut Monday’s lows and continues trading sideways above support.  If we hold this level for a few more days, we might be establishing a wider 1,770 to 1,850 trading range that could last the remainder of the quarter.  Several months of sideways trade would go a long way toward refreshing this aging bull.

MARKET SENTIMENT
The headline everyone is waiting on is the Fed policy statement due at 2pm EST.  I’m not sure what people expect since the Taper policy was explicitly telegraphed last month.  Plan on another $10B taper and holding ultra low-interest rates.  If that catches anyone by surprise, they are clearly not paying attention.  If some are hoping a 3% “crash” in equities or monetary crises in small countries on the other side of the globe will force the Fed to change their carefully laid out plans, they will be disappointed.

Of course fundamentals and sentiment are two very different things and we all know markets trade sentiment in the near-term.  While we will likely put this emerging market turmoil behind us in coming weeks, that doesn’t mean traders won’t react emotionally to the headlines in the present.  It comes down to how upset the market is when Taper marches ahead despite emerging market worries and disappointing December employment.  But often when the market responds emotionally to news, that creates profit opportunities for those willing to take the other side.

Last year we had a “half-full” market that looked at the positive in every data point or headline.  Could these emerging market woes be a sign the market is shifting to a “half-empty” outlook?  If we see a fundamental shift in the market’s outlook and disposition, that could signal a reversal in trend.  For the time being, four days of selling is anything but conclusive, it is simply something to keep an eye on.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Cautiously bullish – buy weakness
Every selloff in history has been a buying opportunity, the only question is how long it takes to show a profit.  This time is no different.  Currently the market is finding support above 1,770 for the third day.  We didn’t get a V-bottom like we’ve seen following other dips recently, but halting the emotional selloff is constructive.  Buyers are demonstrating a willingness to support the market at these levels and we’ve run out of panicked sellers.  The market is likely establishing an extended sideways trading range in order to digest all of 2013’s gains.

Alternate Outcome:
If holding 1,770 is constructive, falling under it is destructive.  Failing to hold support will elevate anxiety all over again and reignite emotional selling.  Be prepared for another leg down if we cannot hold support.

Trading Plan:
Maintaining 1,770 through Thursday is encouraging and suggests we are putting these emerging market fears behind us.  Quarters typically have personalities and ending this selloff likely means this one is finding a bottom and setting up to trade sideways.  Fail to hold support and all bets are off.

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
Buyers have not rushed in to save AAPL and the stock is down modestly following yesterday’s plunge.  Bulls argue that AAPL is a software company not a hardware company, but given the market’s reaction to yesterday’s earnings, Wall Street thinks AAPL is little more than a phone company.  The company exceeded expectations on almost every metric expect phone sales.  Everyone agrees AAPL built an impressive and profitable ecosystem, but at its core is the iPhone.  Take that away and everything else falls down.  Maybe the Street is on to something when it focuses almost exclusively on the iPhone sales.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 28

Relief Rally

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 11:41 EST

S&P500 daily at 11:41 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks took a break from three days of selling and are up modestly in midday trade.  Yesterday we bounced off 1,770 support that comes from October, November, and December trade.

MARKET SENTIMENT
The global rout eased as Asian and European markets finished their sessions flat or higher.  This took pressure off US markets and we are experiencing a modest relief rally.  While it is nice to end the emotional, sell first, ask questions later trade that occurred over the last few days, everyone is wondering if this is just a temporary reprieve before another leg down, or if this is the end of the Emerging Market tantrum.

The slide paused as all those who wanted to sell already sold.  Now bulls and bears are watching intently to see what comes next.  Most weak sellers were purged in the relentless, three-day implosion.  Far more bold traders took their place, buying the dip and through those actions demonstrate little fear of this weakness.  The remaining group of owners we have to worry about are those formerly confident holders who are now riddled with doubt and paralyzed with fear.  This morning’s bounce brings them some relief, but no doubt that anxiety will flare up if prices reverse lower.

The recent slide already undercut most stop-losses, so we don’t need to worry about big waves of automatic selling if the slide continues.  The biggest risk is a continuation of the pain trade where owners cannot bear the thought of losing any more money and manually pull the plug.  While this dip feels dramatic, we must realize anyone holding a widely diversified basket of stocks is most likely still sitting on profits from last year’s monster gains.  While theoretically money is a commodity, many traders have a higher risk tolerance for profits than principle.  That means most of the longer-term holders are still quite comfortable and the only ones experiencing an inordinate amount of pain are short-term traders and late buyers of last year’s rally.  Since both of these groups are relatively small compared to the broad market, their emotional selling can only take us so far.  To continue the selloff, we need to flush out longer-viewed traders sitting on nice gains.  That is harder to do and a large part of the reason the emotional selloff didn’t last more than three-days or push us down much more than 4% from the highs.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Cautiously Bullish – buy weakness
Anytime emotional selling takes a break, it is a good thing.  This gives owners a chance to regroup and evaluate the big picture.  Buyers also often wait for the selling to stall before jumping in and this pause gives them the opportunity to buy at prices we haven’t seen since October.

We typically get a couple 5% pullbacks a year.  10% pullbacks are less common and  happen once a year or less.  20% pullbacks are rare and only happen every few years.  Straight probabilities suggest this weakness is more likely the 5% variety than a 10% or 20% correction.  When in doubt stick with the trend and the high probability trade.  If buying dips were easy, everyone would be rich.

Alternate Outcome:
Through most of 2013, we ricocheted off each dip’s low.  This rebound is taking its time.  Either this is not the actual bottom, or the market’s character is changing.  Both of these are concerns we need to pay attention to.  Markets rarely implode from the highs, instead they step lower.  So while the market might bounce here, we need to be wary of further weakness if the market is unable to make new highs.

Trading Plan:
We only make money by taking risk.  Buying dips when everyone is fearful of continued selling is never an easy trade, but more often than not it is the right trade.  But at the same time, there are no guarantees in the market and we always need a contingency plan.  If the selloff truly stalled and the market is ready to rebound, we should not retest Monday’s lows near 1,772.  Dipping under this level likely means another round of pain is coming.

AAPL daily at 1:42 EST

AAPL daily at 1:42 EST

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
AAPL beat expectations on almost every metric but iPhone sales and the stock is getting crushed for it, down about 8%.  Tim Cook and bulls point to supply constraints and other issues that lead to slower sales, but Wall Street is not buying these excuses.  Most likely investors are frustrated by the lack of innovation.  The biggest risk is AAPL’s sentiment transition from great company with explosive growth to rock solid company with above average growth.  The nuance is minor, but to the market it is the difference between reclaiming $700 and trading sideways for a decade.  Many of the greatest companies in the world traded sideways following epic stock runs.  There is no reason to expect AAPL’s stock will be any different.  At this point we have dividends, buybacks, product refreshes, and China Mobile, but so far nothing is moving the needle.  Wall Street wants another new must have device and the stock will likely trade sideways until AAPL disrupts another product category.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 27

More selling

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:55 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:55 EDT

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks sold off for a third straight day and are testing prior support near 1,770.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Emerging market fears continue embroiling stocks and buyers are unwilling to step in front of this selloff.  This price decline is shaking the resolve of previously confident owners and many are choosing to sell this weakness rather than endure the pain of seeing the market fall any further.

As rational traders, we need to decide if currency issues in Turkey and Argentina will materially affect the US economy and corporate earnings.  In years past we’ve seen our markets tumble over downgrades of US debt and the risks of financial contagion in the Eurozone. Those issues threatened our financial infrastructure and brought flashbacks of the 2008 meltdown.  Obviously we cleared those terrifying hurdles on our way to all time highs last year.  In the big picture current emerging market issues are far less threatening to our economy and will likely pass through the system even quicker.

This selloff is more about sentiment than fundamentals.  We should ignore these relatively minor headlines and instead focus on how other traders are responding to this weakness.  Most traders are not overly concerned about these fundamental issues on the other side of the globe, but there is just enough uncertainty to make them nervous.  Then when they see everyone else panic and run for the exits, it is hard to resist the urge to join the hysteria.  Everyone knows markets go up and down, but it is easy to forget that when we see prices tumble.

The last three days of weakness has flushed out a large chunk of the excess enthusiasm.  Dramatic moves lower chase off most of the holders who are inclined to sell.  Those owners still holding are far more confident in their analysis and not interested in selling no matter what near-term moves the market makes.  It is on the backs of these confident owners that the market will find a bottom and bounce higher.  This periodic purging of weak owners is how markets refresh themselves.  Recent sellers and shorts will eventually push the market higher when they buy back in over coming weeks.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Cautiously bullish – buy weakness
Everyone wants prices to pullback so they can get in at lower levels, but every time the market gives us what we ask for, many are too nervous to take the gift.  Profit opportunities come from volatility and this weakness is exactly what we want to see.  Emotional owners are selling at discounts as compared to what they thought stocks were worth last week and that creates profit opportunities for those willing to take a risk.  We buy their fear and sell their greed.

Alternate Outcome:
Every 20% selloff starts with that first 4%.  While the market could bounce at any time, there nothing more effective at shattering confidence than a relentless selloff.  While these headlines seem unworthy of a large decline, the market rarely does what we expect it to do and if the crowd reaches full-blown hysteria, there is no telling what it could do.

Trading Plan:
Buy weakness and sell strength.  Define your risk and take what other traders are giving away.

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
AAPL earnings are on tap after the close.  The stock is up quite a bit from last year’s lows and it will take impressive results to continue the recovery.  If the company blows away expectations, look for the strength to continue.  If bulls don’t get what they are hoping for, the stock will struggle as it runs out of catalysts to justify high growth expectations.  This earnings will like set the tone for the next three months of trade, so go with the momentum.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 24

Who’s the sucker

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:12 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:12 EST

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks undercut prior support near 1,810 and slipped under the 50dma for the first time since October.  The market is testing the lower bound of the recent trading range after failing to break above it earlier in the week.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Markets are nervous following recent Asian and emerging market weakness and this anxiety is flaring up among short-term traders.  Stocktwits’ SPY sentiment survey has seen bullishness drop from 80% in December to 39% today.  Last week’s AAII sentiment survey showed bullishness dip under 40% for the first time since November.  What was record high levels of bullishness just a few weeks ago has cooled off dramatically and is a healthy sign.

When analyzing sentiment, it is helpful to segregate market participants by timeframe.  We have day-traders, swing-traders, position-traders, and buy-and-hold-forever.  Stocktwits is comprised primarily of active day and swing traders.  This group has clearly grown bearish recently, suggesting many liquidated longs and some have even gone short as sentiment on those boards plunged.  We can largely ignore the buy-and-hold-forever crowd since many of these 401k types don’t follow the market daily and a 3% dip over two days is unlikely to send them running for cover.  That leaves medium-term position traders.  How are these traders positioned and what are they think will go a long way to telling us what will happen next.

Many of position traders are fully invested following 2013’s monster run.  Last year they flinched anytime the market showed weakness, but every dip turned into a buying opportunity and anyone who sold kicked themselves for being so foolish and weak.  After getting burned a couple of times, these position traders learned to hold any and all weakness.  When confident/complacent owners hold the dips, they keep supply off the market, making it easier to bounce.  With fewer people hitting the sell button, markets don’t selloff as much, and as we’ve seen in recent months, volatility decreases.

Source: Stocktwits 1/24/2014

Source: Stocktwits 1/24/2014

The headline roiling global markets is Asian and emerging market weakness.  Most short-term traders have either been shaken out as the market dipped under their stop-losses, or they used the violation of support as a signal to go short.  No doubt a lot of the selling over the last couple days has come from this highly active group of traders.  The buy-and-hold-forever crowd isn’t selling, so we can ignore them.  The million dollar question is if weakness in emerging markets is enough to shake the confidence and resolve of position traders.  These guys held through Shutdown, Debt Ceiling, and Taper as we bounced off those lows.  If those significant headline issues that hit close to home didn’t make them flinch, why would a manufacturing index data point on the other side of the world all of a sudden turn them into scared sellers?  That’s a good question.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES:
Expected Outcome: Bullish – at lower end of trading range
Stocks dipped under support and the 50dma in early trade, triggering many stop-losses in the area and tempting bears to short the weakness.  At this point either the selling accelerates as the weakness shatters the confidence and resolve of a wider pool of owners, or supply dries up as we run out of sellers and the market bounces like it has so many times before.

Who’s the sucker here, nervous sellers or excited dip buyers?  Asian markets have been selling off since December, so why it became big news yesterday is curious.  Most likely this was just an excuse for the nervous to sell and the cooling sentiment is a healthy part of moving forward.  Dips wouldn’t refresh the market if they didn’t convince everyone this time it is real.

Alternate Outcome:
Nothing shatters confidence like a screen filled with red.  It doesn’t matter why the crowd is selling, just seeing other people sell makes us nervous.  This dates back to our days in the wild.  When everyone else started running, those that waited around to see what all the fuss was about quickly became lion food.  It doesn’t matter if these headlines are legitimate or not, price is truth and emotional selling often leads to more emotional selling.

Trading Plan:
If the recent trading range holds and selling doesn’t accelerate, this is clearly a buying opportunity.  Continued carnage in the emerging markets is a real risk, but the best profit opportunities always feel risky.  The conservative trade is to wait another day or two for this trade to play out.  A trader with a higher risk tolerance can try picking a bottom if the selloff stalls this afternoon.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 23

Bouncing around the trading range

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:18 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:18 EDT

Intraday Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks gapped lower at the open and slipped to 1,825 by midday.  The market is still above recent support/prior resistance near 1,810 and well within the 1,810 to 1,850 trading range.  The 50dma continues marching higher and is catching up to 1,810 support.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Headlines claim this weakness is driven by disappointing earnings and manufacturing data out of China, but take those explanations with a grain of salt.  Journalists are paid to come up with a fundamental reason for every gyrations, whether real or imagined, but the truth is markets often move for no discernible fundamental reason.  Over the last few weeks traders have been reluctant to buy new highs and demand dries up each time we approach 1,850.  So far this dip doesn’t appear to be any more than a continuation of that aversion to buying 1,850.

For a material decline to take place, the market needs to become inundated with excess supply.  That means currently complacent owners hitting the sell button.  So far they have proven unwilling to sell and every move lower stalls when supply dries up.  For the last 12-months each dip has been a buying opportunity and owners quickly learned selling weakness is a poor trading decision.  Now they confidently hold any and all weakness, keeping supply tight and making it easy for the market to bounce on modest demand.  To see more meaningful and sustainable selling, we need to shatter the confidence of holders and send them rushing for the exits.  If the recent announcement of Taper didn’t concern owners, I doubt some footnote about manufacturing in China will all of a sudden trigger a wave of emotional selling.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome: Modestly Bullish – Inside Trading Range
Without a fundamental reason for the market to collapse, today’s weakness is likely another buyable dip.  This sideways churn is refreshing the market and setting the stage for the next move higher.  Unsustainable markets rollover quickly and holding this levels for nearly a month suggest higher prices are in our future.  But the market could dip under recent support at 1,810 in coming days, flushing out the last of the weak hands before bouncing higher.

Alternate Outcome:
Sometimes markets rollover before the crowd understand why.  This happens when the market is most bullish and everyone already owns all the stock they can hold.  Without new buyers, prices fall under their own weight.  If we slip far enough, previously confident owners turn into nervous sellers.  Major market tops occur when the crowd is most bullish and is how this one will likely end too.  While it is hard to know when sentiment gets too extreme, price will always let us know with a pattern of lower highs and lower lows.  Since we are less than 2% from all time highs, calls of a market top are clearly premature.

Trading Plan:
As long as the market stays inside the trading range, continue buying weakness and selling strength.  A dip under 1,810 presents an interesting buying opportunity if the market finds support.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 22

Not much going on

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:32 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:32 EDT

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks are trading sideways in a tight range today as we continue consolidating recent gains.  The market remains inside the 1,810 to 1,850 trading range.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Many companies have already reported earnings, but few investors are changing their mind based on what they hear.  Prices only move when people alter their outlook and make adjustments to their portfolios.  So far few traders are buying or selling based on the results companies are posting.  Bulls are staying bullish, bears are staying bearish, and those out of the market remain reluctant to chase.  Even though we are still early in the earnings cycle, enough companies have reported reasonable results that is it unlikely the back half of earnings seasons will bring any macroeconomic surprises.  Obviously there will be big moves in individual companies, but for the most part the fragile recovery is no better or worse than people thought coming into this.

In this case no news is good news.  Stocks have a natural upward bias and without a reason to sell, most owners continue holding.  The resulting tight supply supports prices and makes it more likely the next move will be higher.  The sideways trade is wringing out some of the euphoric bullishness seen in December.  AAII’s sentiment survey shows the percent of Bulls dipped under 40% for the first time since November.  It is also worth nothing that the number of bears is also falling in recent weeks as the percent of Neutrals swelled to the largest level in months.

With the self-identified Bulls and Bears, it is obvious what their outlook is and how their portfolios are likely positioned.  I don’t like the term Neutral because a person can be an underweight Neutral or an overweight Neutral.  When looking for the next market move, it will likely be driven by these Neutrals since the are the most uncommitted and easiest to persuade.  Why it is important to know how they are positioned is because if they are fully invested, there is only one move they can make.  If they are out of the market, then for the average investor, there is only one move they can make.

By itself the Neutral reading doesn’t give us a lot of information directly.  But digging one level down, we see bullishness since Dec decreased 16% and bearishness only increased 3%.  That means most of the growth in Neutral outlook came from former Bulls.  Coming from a bullish bias, that makes me suspect our current crop of Neutrals is more overweight than underweight, especially since we have not seen a gut wrenching selloff trigger a large wave of emotional selling.  Most of these former bulls are less optimistic than they were a month ago, but their portfolios likely still reflect a bullish bias.

Source: AAII.com

Source: AAII.com

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
Cautiously Bullish – Inside Trading Range
Unsustainable markets rollover quickly and holding these levels for nearly a month suggests  a solid foundation under the market.

Alternate Outcome:
While the a move higher is more likely, with such a high level of comfort and complacency in the market, it is vulnerable to a wave of panic of hitting owners, triggering a mad dash for the exits.  So far owners have grown immune to modest selloffs, but be on the watch out for that one event that turns confident owners into nervous sellers.

Trading Plan:
Holding these levels suggests the next move is higher.  Long-term investors can continue holding.  Bears should avoid shorting.  Swing traders can sell strength and buy weakness until we breakout out of this trading range.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 21

Struggling with 1,850 again

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:14 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:14 EDT

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks stalled following an early assault on 1,850, finding themselves down 15-points from those initial highs.  This is the third time the market turned back from 1,850 in recent weeks and this level is quickly transitioning into meaningful resistance.  Support lies back at 1,810 and the market is holding within this range as it consolidates recent gains.

MARKET SENTIMENT
There is a lot of headline chatter about earnings, but so far traders are unmoved by what they see.  Owners keep holding and those out of the market remain reluctant to chase new highs.  The resulting standoff is building a sideways trading range between 1,810 and 1,850.

Bullish sentiment is cooling off as we consolidate recent gains.  Investors are ratcheting back their wildly bullish expectations as the choppy sideways trade gives them second thoughts.  Rallies refresh either by giving up some of the recent gains, or through time.  This market seems to be taking the latter approach.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
Unsustainable markets typically rollover quickly, so holding near record highs for almost a month suggests we are building a foundation for further gains.

Alternate Outcome:
We are one bad headline away from everyone rushing for the exits.  By itself complacency is bullish since confident owners keep supply tight, the risk is if something happens that shatters this confidence.  We can continue holding stocks here, but stand near the exits and be one of the first to get out if fear starts taking hold.

Trading Plan:
Inside trading ranges we sell strength and buy weakness.  Longer viewed investors can continue holding this complacency as it keeps supply tight and props up prices.  Keep a close eye out for that inevitable headline that turns complacency into anxiety.

TSLA daily at 1:14 EDT

TSLA daily at 1:14 EDT

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
TSLA is adding to its recent high volume bounce off the 50dma.  The stock recovered more than half of the recent pullback and is likely headed to new highs.  Things that seem too high often keep going higher.

AAPL keeps flirting with the 50dma and recovered this level on light volume today.  Unless volume picks up dramatically, this bounce is suspicious and not a valid buy point.  No doubt most traders are already looking forward to next week’s earnings and we will likely trade sideways until then.  It will be interesting to see how the refreshed iPad sales fare.  The biggest risk to sales is satisfied customers who see little reason to upgrade from a perfectly usable device.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 17

Stalling shy of 1,850

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:12 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:12 EDT

Intraday Update

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks were down modestly for a second day following Wednesday’s record highs.  1,850 is acting like resistance as the market consolidates recent gains.  The 50dma continues its ascent higher and is over 1,800 for the first time.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Bullish sentiment is cooling off following Monday’s sharp selloff and a fear of heights is creeping in.  A recent Yahoo Finance poll shows 57% expect a major correction and Stocktwit’s SPY sentiment gauge is down 20 points since the December highs.

Even in the face of a shifting outlook, we continue holding near record levels.  Markets refresh one of two ways, through a pullback or alternately sideways churn.  So far sideways churn is doing a reasonable job taming the euphoria.  Nervous owners are selling a fair number of shares as almost every day this year has seen above average volume, but so far there have been plenty of new buyers willing to step in at these levels.  If the market continues higher, expect many of these recent sellers to chase the market and buy back in at higher levels.

Source: Yahoo Finance 1/17/2014

Source: Yahoo Finance 1/17/2014

The one big concern is the lack of concern.  By nature the market is a worrier and since we cleared the Debt Ceiling and Taper fears last fall, there hasn’t been anything to fret over.  Is this the calm before the storm?  With so few worries priced in, the market is vulnerable to a panicked rush for the exit if it gets caught off guard.  Both traders and investors should embrace the selling as an opportunity to buy discounted shares.  It is nice to see our accounts grow every day, but the big profit opportunities come from volatility.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
While most people come to the market with predictions of moves higher or lower, we trade sideways far more often than anything else.  So far the market appears to be establishing a trading range between 1,810 and 1,850.  We will likely bounce around this range until traders get bored.  Only after they stop buying the breakout or selling the breakdown will we get the next move.

Source: Stocktwits 1/17/2014

Source: Stocktwits 1/17/2014

Alternate Outcome:
With the market so happy-go-lucky these days, it is hard to imagine a headline that will trigger a surge higher.  The downside is a far different story.  Complacent owners can turn into panicked sellers at the drop of the hat.  The last time we saw such bullish sentiment was back in 2011 prior to the US Debt downgrade plunge.  Without a doubt we are skating on thin ice and vulnerable to a selloff, but we need that catalyst to break the ice before we fall in.  Until then the party continues.

Trading Plan:
Near the upper end of the trading range, there is not a lot to do.  Those out of the market can wait for an upside breakout, swing traders can lock-in recent profits, and buy-and-hold types keep holding.  Without a doubt we will dip under 1,800 at some point this year, the only question is when and how high we go first.  It is easy to predict the market, but all the money is made in getting the timing right.

TSLA daily at 1:12 EDT

TSLA daily at 1:12 EDT

INDIVIDUAL STOCKS
The China Mobile deal hasn’t been the  catalyst many AAPL bulls expected.  So far it seems more of a buy the rumor, sell the news story.  While the stock is up huge over the $400 lows of last year, last year’s catalysts failed to reignite the growth story.  It is still a great company with a strong balance sheet, but companies like TSLA and GOOG are doing a better job of capturing the imagination of growth investors.

TSLA‘s huge bounce off the 50dma on Tuesday might have created an interesting entry point for the most aggressive momentum investor.  The huge volume suggests a lot of traders are onboard this rebound.  Expect volatility to persist, but if this bounce holds, we will likely break $200 in the not too distant future.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 16

Pausing near all time highs

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:15 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:15 EDT

Intraday Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks paused after setting new highs yesterday.  We are at the upper end of a two-week consolidation that started in the final week of 2013.  Weak markets roll over quickly, so holding these levels for two-weeks suggests the market is not on the verge of collapse.  That leaves us with the two remaining possibilities, breakout to new highs or continue consolidating.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Monday’s selloff flushed out many weak hands.  While not as effective as a bigger selloff, churn like this keeps the rally from overheating.  Breaking under prior support triggered a wave of stop-loss selling from recent buyers and aggressive shorting by bears.  Those sellers will provide fuel for the next leg higher when they buy back in at higher levels.

TRADING PLAN
Expected Outcome:

Holding current levels for a few weeks suggests this market is on solid footing.  Most likely this it will trade sideways for another week or two before continuing higher.  Of course sideways is not a synonym for easy.    Monday’s plunge was part of this sideways trade and consolidations only work if the dips convince many traders a collapse is imminent.

Alternate Outcome:
Without any fear priced into the market, we are vulnerable to an unexpected headline that catches the market off guard.  Markets have a tendency to overreact, so when this unexpected event surprises us, look for the market’s imagination to blow things out of proportion.

Trading Plan:
Bears need a spooky headline to shake the confidence of complacent owners.  Until then expect every bout of selling to stall quickly as confident owners continue holding, keeping a lid on supply.  For bulls, markets never go straight up, so take profits into strength and buy the dip.  Longer viewed owners can continue holding on for higher prices.

Plan your trade; trade your plan

Jan 15

Bouncing back

By Jani Ziedins | Intraday Analysis

S&P500 daily at 1:16 EDT

S&P500 daily at 1:16 EDT

Intraday Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks broke 1,850 for the first time as the market fully recovered Monday’s selloff.

MARKET SENTIMENT
We are in the early days of earnings season and so far traders are happy with what they hear.  The market was spooked on Monday, but that selling appears impulsive since we rebounded so quickly.

As we’ve seen in recent months, complacent owners are not concerned by modest weakness.  Their confidence in the future keeps supply tight and prevents selloffs like we saw on Monday from gaining momentum.  Selling pressure stalls quickly when most owners are not interest in selling.

Contrary to popular opinion, complacency is often bullish.  Running out of new buyers is what we need to fear.  Weakness in the bond market over the last nine months is flushing money out of those securities and they are pumping those funds into equities.  As long as people keep throwing new money at the market, it will continue defying gravity.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
Hard to fight what is working.  The market has been given multiple invitations to breakdown, but every time this weakness fails to trigger wider selling.  This rally is long in the tooth and it is realistic to expect the rate of gains to slow.  The most vocal in the marketplace are debating between big gains or a correction.  More likely the answer lies between these two extremes.

Alternate Outcome:
With little fear left in the market, it is vulnerable to a large wave of selling if complacent owners are spooked by an unexpected bad headline.   While we can continue marching higher on the back of complacency, stay near the exits and get out quickly if it appears like a wave of fear and uncertainty is infecting the market.

Trading Plan:
If the market wants to consolidate recent gains, the best trade is buying weakness and selling strength.

Jan 09

Sideways is constructive

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Analysis

MARKET BEHAVIOR
Stocks closed practically unchanged for the third consecutive day as buyers keep holding the market near all-time highs.  While we ended flat, there have been countless sharp intraday declines that always bounced back nearly as quickly as they came.  No matter how swift the dip, it never picked up momentum and the selling stalled.  Volume has been elevated the last three days, showing a good amount of churn.  Is this smart money getting out, or day traders chasing their tail as they overreact to every head fake the market throws at them?  We will know the answer soon enough.

MARKET SENTIMENT
Friday’s headline event is December’s employment report.  Many expect respectable gains around 200k as the recovery slowly picks up steam.  But to be honest, it’s been years since good or bad employment numbers triggered sustained moves.  Lately we’ve seen near-term volatility immediately after the release, but then the market quickly moves on to other ideas and concerns.  Of course looking back over the last year, no matter what headline or report came out, the market kept marching higher.

While this rally cannot continue forever, seeing the market bounce after every attempted selloff is supportive.  Fragile markets crack easily and this one is extremely resilient with all these bounces off 1,830.  People sell for many reasons, but they only buy for one, because they think prices will continue higher.  No matter how much selling bears and profit-takers throw at the market, buyers soaked up all that supply.  Markets typically roll over quickly and holding 1,830 for 6-days after repeated attempted selloffs is bullish.

TRADING OPPORTUNITIES
Expected Outcome:
While many expect decent employment numbers in the morning, it is only one piece traders are using to evaluate the market and economy.  A little above or below expectations will be a non-issue.  Since Taper is a done deal, the market no longer fears too good, so we don’t need to worry about that.  No matter what numbers we put up, it will remove one more risk factor and uncertainty.  As long as it isn’t horrible, expect the prior trend to continue.

Alternate Outcome:
Recent high-volume trade could be interpreted as distribution.  If smart money is getting out, we could see the market roll over fairly quickly once we run out of “next greater fools”.  Of course the best signal this is happening is declining prices.  As long as we remain near all-time highs, we have a sufficient supply of buyers willing to support the market.

Trading Plan:
Either we coast higher or collapse lower.  Holding 1,830 is supportive and expect new highs.  But if we violate support, especially the 50dma and 1,800, this will turn into the correction people have long been calling for.

Plan your trade; trade your plan