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.

Nov 13

Don’t fight a trade that’s working

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

The S&P 500 finished Monday’s session down a modest 0.1%. More importantly, the index held on to 4,400 after breaking through this key resistance level last Friday.

Economic headlines haven’t changed in a meaningful way in months. Bears are just as bearish as they were last week, last month, and last year. The difference is we ran out of fearful sellers two weeks ago, and stocks popped decisively after supply dried up.

While 5% in one week is a tremendous amount, at this point, the market keeps acting like it wants to go even higher. No one should expect another 5% run over a few sessions, but given Thursday’s and Monday’s failed selloffs, the market is telling us the path of least resistance remains higher.

As I wrote early last week:

Hold near 4,400 resistance for a few more days, and these levels will feel less risky. That’s when some of those left behind last week will find the courage to start buying.

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Holding recent gains was the first step to breaking through 4,400 resistance, and that’s exactly how it played out over the last two sessions.

Of course, the easy gains are behind us, and there will be a lot more back-and-forth going forward, but only fools are fighting this market right now.

Last Friday’s rebound was buyable, and we could add more Monday with stops already lifted up near Monday’s lows. I don’t see a big pile of near-term upside ahead of us, but when we can enter a trade in a low-risk way, we don’t need a lot of profit potential to make it a trade worth making.

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Nov 07

Why smart money is already collecting profits

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

The S&P 500 finished Tuesday up a respectable 0.4% as the widely expected pullback from last week’s unsustainable rebound failed to materialize.

Traders have a natural fear of heights, and that causes buying to dry up after big runs like we saw last week. But demand is only half of the equation. At this point, owners are feeling confident and few are interested in selling this big rebound, keeping supply tight and propping up prices.

This inevitable tapering of buying was obvious and is why I was collecting profits late last week. As I wrote last Thursday evening:

To be clear, I’m not calling this a top, but with a big pile of profits in hand, it would be criminal to allow hubris to turn these profits into losses. Remember, we only make money when we sell our best trades. Nearly 200 points in a 3x ETF is good enough for me. At this point, the rewards ahead of us are far smaller than the risks underneath us.

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Hold near 4,400 resistance for a few more days, and these levels will feel less risky. That’s when some of those left behind last week will find the courage to start buying. Until then, prices will likely remain stalled under 4,400 resistance. (Unless the market starts putting the screws to the bears again, and they are forced to cover again at rapidly rising prices, but this is a less likely outcome.)

I like the market here, but the upside is not big enough to justify the risks underneath us. Give it a few more days, and the risk/reward starts to shift in the other direction. But until then, this is a better time to be more cautious than aggressive.

I collected profits, and I have zero regrets, even if Tuesday’s close is a few points above where I sold. Holding a big move too long risks giving it all back, and it would be criminal to allow greed to let last week’s profits escape.

Momentum definitely favors higher prices over the near to medium term, but the incremental rewards of holding for a few more days are nowhere near big enough to justify the risks.

We only make money when we sell our best trades, and for me, that was peeling off very worthwhile profits late last week. Another trade is coming, but I’m comfortable watching the consolidation of last week’s gains from the sidelines.

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Nov 02

I don’t mind being called a fool when it leads to profits like this

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis: 

The S&P 500 popped another 1.9% Thursday, making this four up-days in a row.

The Fed did exactly what everyone expected on Wednesday, meaning the Fed’s decision didn’t change anyone’s mind. Those that were bearish on Tuesday were still bearish on Thursday. What changed is the market ran out of impulsive sellers last Friday. The resulting oversold condition triggered this capitulation and 200-point rebound over four short trading sessions.

Easy come, easy go, as my dad loved to remind me when I was young.

There are two ways to trade: starting like a fool and ending like a genius, or starting like a genius and ending like a fool.

Without a doubt, I looked foolish last week when I told readers I was getting ready to buy last week’s blood bath as soon as it bounced. Here’s what I wrote in last Wednesday’s free post (Oct 25th):

Remember, stocks top when everything looks great, and they bottom when everything looks terrible. By that measure, this is definitely a good time to be bottom-fishing. To be clear, I am 100% opposed to buying on the way down. But every time we bounce, you will find me jumping in. Start small, get in early, keep a nearby stop, and only add to a position that’s working. Follow those simple rules, and bottom-fishing is extremely profitable.

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There were a lot of greedy bears gleefully criticizing my optimism last week. And without a doubt, they were right initially. But here we are a few days later, and the market has turned all of their profits into big piles of losses.

Luckily, I have no problem playing the fool in front of the crowd if it lets me rack up a pile of 3x ETF profits like this a handful of sessions later.

Of course, I’m not going to let myself fall into the same trap greedy bears were caught by. I am fully cognizant that markets move in waves, and one week’s genius becomes the next week’s fool. Thursday’s nearly 2% up day was the biggest gain of this rebound, and these things usually accelerate right before the end.

To be clear, I’m not calling this a top, but with a big pile of profits in hand, it would be criminal to allow hubris to turn these profits into losses. Remember, we only make money when we sell our best trades. And at this point, nearly 200 points in a 3x ETF is good enough for me. At this point, the rewards ahead of us are far smaller than the risks underneath us.

But now that I’m out of the market and sitting on a huge pile of profits, the very first thing I do is start looking for that next opportunity to get back in. Maybe that is buying the next dip and bounce. Maybe it is buying a huge short squeeze that powers through the 50dma. No matter what it is, I will be ready for it.

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If you find these posts useful, help me out by liking and sharing them!

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What’s a good trade worth to you?
How about avoiding a loss?
For as little as $1.28/day, receive actionable analysis and a trading plan every day during market hours

Follow Jani on Twitter

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