Category Archives for "End of Day Analysis"

Feb 13

The difference between being right and being smart

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

The S&P 500 popped Wednesday morning after word spread Trump was willing to sign Congress’s budget compromise. Avoiding another government shutdown eliminated a major risk in front of us and put traders into a buying mood. Unfortunately, that excitement didn’t carry into the close and prices finished near the intraday lows.

A 0.3% gain is still a 0.3% gain and it allowed us to reclaim the 50dma for the first time in more than two months. But if we wanted to be critical and look at the half-empty side, closing near the intraday lows on a good news day is most definitely noteworthy. One day doesn’t make a trend, but it is something to keep an eye on going forward. Almost every day since the Christmas bottom finished near the intraday highs and this late-day buying frenzy propelled us to these highs. But if that buying is waning, it could be an early indication the rebound is shifting into the next phase of the cycle.

The other reason to be cautious is things didn’t end well the previous three times the market retook the 50dma. While there is no comparison between now and where sentiment was last fall, widely followed technical levels have a tendency to turn into self-fulfilling prophecies. Technical traders expect prices to stall at overhead resistance, so they start taking profits proactively, launching the wave of selling that eventually leads to the dip in prices.

I’ve been warning traders to tread likely after the market rebounded nearly 20% from the December lows. And some people criticize me because prices have continued creeping higher. But I’m okay with that. People also criticized me for saying in December people should be buying those discounts, not selling them. By now hopefully everyone appreciates how that one turned out.

After doing this for so many years, I’ve long since gotten used to going against the crowd and actually find reassurance in the criticism because it means I’m on the right track. Nothing makes me more nervous than when everyone agrees with me.

And just because the market has been creeping higher the last few days and weeks doesn’t mean buying up here was the smart thing to do. Allow me to use a blackjack analogy. If a person hits on 18 and he gets a 3 card. That was a great call and he won the hand. But was that really the smart thing to do? While it worked great this time, how often will hitting on 18 backfire? Traders who last a long time in this business understand the monumental difference between being right on a an individual trade and trading smart. Unless you learn to trade to smart, you won’t last very long.

The market continues to act well and momentum is definitely higher, but anyone buying up here is being just as foolish as the guy hitting on 18. Unfortunately, that is the way most people trade. Those that were selling last December’s dip are now chasing 2019’s rebound. Sell low and buy high rarely works out.

Those with long-term investments should stick with their favorite positions. But those with trading profits should be shifting to a defensive mindset and thinking about taking profits if they haven’t already. This rebound priced in a lot of good news. That means there is far less upside left ahead of us and a lot of air underneath us if things don’t go according to plan.

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Tags: S&P 500 Nasdaq $SPY $SPX $QQQ $IWM

Feb 07

It was inevitable

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

The S&P 500 stumbled Thursday in one of the few misses since the Christmas rebound kicked off. Over the last few days, the index struggled to break through 200dma resistance and has slipped back to the psychologically significant 2,700 level.

While today’s tumble felt abrupt given how calm and steady the climb has been from December’s lows, a down day shouldn’t surprise anyone. As I wrote late last week:

“Everyone knows markets don’t move in straight lines and anyone who expects the market to keep racing higher clearly doesn’t understand how market work. While anything could happen, more often than not, hot markets cool off and pullbacks from overbought levels are a normal and healthy way of consolidating gains.”

We knew this was going to happen, we just didn’t know the when or the why.

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Thursday’s weakness started before the open when European economic data failed to meet expectations. That brought last year’s global growth fears back to the front. The only question is if this is just a single bout of indigestion, or if this will trigger another wave of second-guessing and defensive selling.

The nice thing about today’s dip is we found a bottom before lunchtime and closed well off the early lows. That is the opposite of last year’s dreadful price-action when early weakness triggered runaway selloffs. At least for the time being, investors appear more inclined to buy the dips than pile on the selling. But it takes more than one day to consolidate nearly 400-points of gains, so we have a long way to go before we can waive the all-clear flag.

I want to make one thing clear, I am most definitely not bearish and think the setup over the medium- and long-term looks good. But I am far less optimistic over the near-term. Markets move in waves and the Christmas rebound priced in a lot of good news. Hope that things will be less bad than feared. Unfortunately, the problem with hope is it leaves the door open to disappointment.

The crowd is always filled with emotions that swing between extremes. Last month’s collapse was built on fear of an economic collapse. This rebound started with hope that things were not as bad as feared and quickly morphed into fear of being left behind. And no doubt recent gains leave us vulnerable to another near-term reversal. Two steps forward, one step back. That’s the way the market always worked and there is no reason to expect something different to happen here.

I’m not predicting a crash or anything dramatic like that. Just a cooling off. Maybe that means some sideways trade. Maybe that means a dip back to support. Either way, it is very predictable and shouldn’t catch anyone off guard. But it will. Because it always does.

Everyone knows markets move in waves, but they always forget that fact in the moment. Every dip is seen as the start of something bigger. By rule, it has to. If it didn’t scare people out, then no one would sell and we wouldn’t dip. Even if this is the start of a very normal and routine pullback to support, expect to hear all kinds of people shouting doom-and-gloom and how we better get out now before it is too late.

Smart money buys discounts and sells premiums. It is definitely premature to call a one day dip a discount and we should be prepared for more. But as long as we know it’s coming, then it is a lot easier to maintain our composure and resist the urge to join the hysterical crowd. The market is acting well and there is nothing to do with our favorite long-term investments. But for our short-term swing-trades. This is a good time to get defensive and start taking profits if you haven’t already.

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Tags: S&P 500 Nasdaq $SPY $SPX $QQQ $IWM

Jan 31

Should we buying up here?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

The S&P 500 closed January with a bang, finishing at the highest levels in nearly two months. These gains erased almost all of December’s losses. It’s been a wild ride, but one that wasn’t all that hard to predict.

Back in mid-December, I wrote the following about the market swoon and where prices were headed:

While I like these discounts, the looming Christmas and New Years holidays complicate the situation. What would normally be an attractive buying opportunity might struggle to get off the ground since big money is leaving for vacation. That puts impulsive retail investors in charge and that is rarely a good thing. Luckily, these little guys have small accounts and their emotional buying and selling doesn’t go very far. We saw the emotional selling from Thanksgiving week erased the following week when big money returned to work. And the same could happen here.

And that is exactly what happened. Big money left for vacation and fearful retail investors foolishly abandoned their stocks at steep discounts leading up to the Christmas holiday. But just when things seemed their most dire, retail investors ran out of things to sell and we’ve been bouncing higher ever since.

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But everyone knows it’s been a crazy ride. What readers really want to know is what comes next. And like almost everything in the market, the answer “depends”.

Timing is everything in the market. The only thing that determines whether we make money is when we buy and when we sell. This dependency means timeframe matters more than anything else.

The biggest paradox of the market is both bulls and bears can make money at the same time. A bull buys today while a bear shorts, and they both make money if they time their sales right. A bear with a short-term horizon can make money when prices dip next week, while the bull with a longer-term horizon rides the rebound higher over the next few months. They had opposite outlooks, but they both made money.

We currently find ourselves in that position. The market is acting really well and last month’s fears are quickly fading from memory. Anyone with a long-term investing horizon should have been buying this entire dip. The lower prices go, the better it is for them because they get more stocks for their money. What was true last month, is still true today. Unfortunately, too many investors foolishly listened to their gut and were selling the dip, not buying it.

But things get a little more complicated if we shorten our horizon and try to figure out what will happen next week. Everyone knows markets don’t move in straight lines and anyone who expects the market to keep racing higher clearly doesn’t understand how market work. While anything could happen, more often than not, hot markets cool off and pullbacks from overbought levels are a normal and healthy way of consolidating gains.

While momentum is still higher and we could keep drifting that way, there is a lot of air underneath us and each point higher takes away another point of upside. Increasing risks and decreasing rewards makes this is a better place to be taking short-term profits than adding new short-term money.

And while it sounds great that both bulls and bears can make money at the same time, there is no free lunch in the market and unfortunately, more often than not, both bulls and bears end up losing money because they trade impulsively and react to the market’s head fakes. If a person wants to give away money, follow the crowd by dumping stocks after they go down and buying them after they go up. And most people repeat that until they have nothing left. If you want to make money, don’t follow the crowd.

And just to be clearly, I’m most definitely not bearish here. I just think this rally will cool off and consolidate over the next few weeks and that will give us better prices to get in at.

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Tags: S&P 500 Nasdaq $SPY $SPX $QQQ $IWM

Jan 29

How to interpret and trade the market’s mixed signals

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

On Tuesday, the S&P 500 slipped fractionally, but more importantly, it continues holding this month’s 2,600 breakout.

Over the weekend, Trump and Congress agreed to a temporary budget that allowed government workers to return to work and collect back pay. That was a critical development for Federal workers who missed two paychecks, but the political situation is far from resolved and the market actually declined Monday.

As I wrote last week, the 10% rally from the December lows priced in a lot of optimism the problems triggering last month’s swoon would be resolved. Unfortunately, that also meant any compromise was already largely priced in and stocks actually fell Monday because our politicians only offered a temporary solution.

The other significant development is the U.S. government’s criminal probe into Huawei, one of China’s most important companies. No doubt this escalates trade war tensions between these two economic superpowers.

Both of these events could be interpreted as bearish, and that’s the way the market took it, with declines on Monday and Tuesday, but the silver lining is the losses were relatively restrained. Taken together, the last two days of selling didn’t even trim 1% of value and we are still above the psychologically significant 2,600 level. Based on how volatile the previous three months has been, this week’s dip was barely a tremor.

I like how well the market is holding 2,600 support. Prices tumble from overbought and unsustainable levels quickly. This is our third week above this level and shows real demand for stocks at these prices. If equities were fragile and vulnerable to a tumble, there have been more than enough triggers to send us crashing back to the lows. Instead, the market shrugs the negativity off and continues holding recent gains. This is a dramatic improvement from late last year where even the smallest hint of a problem hiccup would send traders scrambling for the exits.

While the market’s mood has done a 180, its not that investors changed their mind, but that we changed investors. Fearful owners sold their stocks at a steep discount to confident dip buyers willing to hold these risks. After enough turnover takes place, we run out of fearful sellers and confident dip buyers disregard flare-ups of recycled headlines. That’s how we go from 250-point free falls to 300-point rebounds.

The problem with 300-point rebounds is those rate of gains is clearly not sustainable for any length of time. And this two-week consolidation above 2,600 support is proof of that. The market needs a breather and there are two ways this plays out; the dramatic stepback, or a mind numbing sideways grind. One scares weak traders out, the other bores them out.

To this point the market has resisted invitations to pullback. Big money seems more interested in buying these discounts than selling the fear and that is keeping a floor under prices. But at the same time, big money hates chasing prices higher and we can see their reluctance show up in the stalled rebound. In many ways, their reluctance to buy after a big move higher is a self fulfilling prophecy that creates the very dip they are worried about. But given how well the market is trading, most likely any near-term dip will be a buying opportunity.

While there is no reason to abandon our favorite long-term investments, there is also no reason to chase prices higher. Either we dip under 2,600 over the next few days or weeks, or we trade sideways for a while. Neither setup creates a good short-term buy. Instead, we should be patient and wait for a better entry.

If the market fails to rally on good news and finishes at the lows for a few days in a row, that is a bearish signal and an inviting short entry. If prices fall under 2,600 support, but quickly find a bottom, then that is our signal to buy the dip. And if we keep grinding sideways, then we just sit and watch. We only want to hold the risk of owning stocks when we are getting paid for it. If stocks are drifting sideways, we’re not getting paid and should be watching safely from the sidelines. We only want to buy when the risk/reward is stacked in our favor and that is not the case at these levels.


Apple reported its first declining revenue and earnings in more than a decade. But everyone knew this was coming and is why the stock was down nearly 40% from the highs. But the thing about the risks is they were already incorporated into the price. And like most things in the market, it probably even over did it.

If after-hours trade is any indication, AAPL will pop nicely tomorrow as reality turns out less bad than feared. If these gains stick Wednesday, it would put AAPL at the highest levels in over a month and easily erase the early January tumble when Apple lowered its guidance. At this point, it looks that dreadful day when the crowd was rushing for the exits was actually one of the best entry points in over a year.

This is what I told subscribers the day after AAPL lowered guidance and the stock plunged to fresh lows:

“I suspect we have already heard the worst from AAPL and things will only improve from here. Hopefully, Tim Cook was smart enough to lower expectations so far yesterday that it will create an easy beat when they report earnings at the end of the month. With the worst of the bad news already out there, most likely things will start getting better from here. Even AAPL bears should be expecting a near-term bounce from these oversold levels.”

Since then, AAPL is up 15% from those lows.

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Tags: S&P 500 Nasdaq $SPY $SPX $QQQ $IWM $AAPL $AMZN

Jan 24

Why this rebound demands restraint

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

On Thursday, the S&P 500 bounced between modest gains and losses. The gov’t shutdown is dominating headlines and there is no end in sight, but the market doesn’t care and continues holding last week’s 2,600 breakout.

It’s been a wild ride from the Christmas lows, but so far the market is still acting well. Prices tumble from unsustainable levels quickly and holding 2,600 for more than a week is a good sign. Especially in the face of bearish headlines. If prices were grossly overbought, we would have tumbled by now.

That said, the last few weeks priced in a lot of good news in anticipation of breakthroughs with China and the shutdown. The problem with hope is it leaves us vulnerable to disappointment if things don’t go according to plan. While the market is acting well and trading like it wants to keep going higher, as long as we continue hovering near 2,600 support, we always run the risk of violating it. I remain cautiously optimistic, but I reserve the right to change my mind if conditions change.

But just because the market is acting well doesn’t mean this is a good time to add new money. Only a fool chases prices higher after a 10% move in a few short weeks. As I often write, markets move in waves. Understanding that principle in October, November, and December allowed us to profit nicely from sharp bounces on our way lower. And now that the market is recovering, we must acknowledge any rebound will include big drawdowns on our way higher. To expect anything different would going against the very nature of the market.

I don’t see any imminent warning signs of an impending collapse, but that still doesn’t mean this is a good time to be holding a short-term trade. No matter what happens next, the market will do something. Maybe it goes higher, or maybe it goes lower. One side will be right and the other side will be wrong. But just because the market will move doesn’t mean there is a good trade for us.

I buy when the odds are skewed in my favor. When the risks are small and the rewards large. Most of the time this happens when the market dips. Fearful sellers offer stocks at steep discounts. The more the indexes fall, the less risk there is because a big chunk of the downside has already been realized. And the lower we go, the greater the reward we collect when prices rebound.

But right now we have the opposite. The 10% rebound from the Christmas lows consumed a huge chunk of the upside. And now that prices are far more expensive, there is a lot more risk underneath us. Stocks are acting like they want to keep going higher over the near-term, but the limited upside remaining and heightened downside underneath means the risk/reward is now skewed against us.

Stocks are acting well and like they want to keep going higher over the near-term, but I’d rather be taking profits at these levels than adding new money. That said, this outlook only applies to my short-term trading account where my holding period is a few days or weeks. For our favorite buy-and-hold investments (think retirement accounts), there is no reason to sell and in fact, smart savers increased their contributions during this market volatility.

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Tags: S&P 500 Nasdaq $SPY $SPX $QQQ $IWM $AAPL $AMZN

Jan 22

What to make of Tuesday’s dip and how to profit from it

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

The S&P 500 slipped Tuesday, ending a string of four consecutive gains and posting the biggest loss in nearly three weeks.

It’s been a great run since the Christmas lows, with the index surging 10%. But as we know, markets don’t move in straight lines and a down day was inevitable. The question is if this is just one of those step backs before continuing higher, or if today’s weakness marks the end of the rebound.

Stocks have been surging despite December’s negative headlines sticking around. Nothing has been resolved in Trump’s trade war with China. Global growth continues to slow. The Fed is still planning further rate hikes. And the federal government has been shut down for a month with no end in sight.

Hardly seems like rally material, but that is exactly what happened. While the news has most definitely been bearish, it hasn’t been as bad as the crowd feared when they were scrambling for the exits at the end of last year.

Markets are prone to excess and that means oversized moves in both directions. Last summer we went a little too high. Then we fell too far in the fall. And now there is a good chance January’s rebound went a too far and it is time for a well-deserved rest. Even a pullback would be a normal and healthy way to process these gains.

Where we go from here largely depends on what happens next. Last week we reclaimed the widely followed 2,600 support level that propped the market up through October and November. While any near-term weakness will most likely dip under 2,600, how the market responds to such a violation will tell us what mood traders are in.

In December, fearful owners rushed to sell every hint of weakness. But the thing is, eventually we run out of fearful sellers. That’s because every person desperate to bailout ends up selling to a confident dip buyer who is willing to hold the risks. Out with the weak and in with the strong is how these things get turned around.

While bearish headlines are largely the same, and in some respects have even gotten worse, the market stopped caring. And not only has it stopped caring, it is acting as if everything has been getting better. But that is the way the market works. Buy the rumor sell the news. While we don’t have a resolution to any of the problems facing us, the market is assuming a solution is coming and anyone waiting for the confirmation will be too late.

But that assumes things turn out less bad than feared. There is an alternative outcome where the situation turns out worse than feared. And that is what it will take to send this market to fresh lows. But until that happens, expect every dip to bounce.

Having surged 300-points since Christmas, it is clearly too late to be chasing the rebound. Instead, we should be shifting to a defensive mindset and preparing for a consolidation. Savvy short-term traders have been taking profits into this strength. The most aggressive and nimble can try their hand at shorting this weakness. For the less bold, a dip under 2,600 support will likely find a bottom near 2,500 and that would be a great dip buying opportunity. If this market is healthy market, we shouldn’t get anywhere near the lows and retesting 2,400 would be a very bearish sign. Trade accordingly.

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Jan 10

How you could have seen December’s dip and bounce before it happened

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

What a difference a few days makes. Three weeks ago the financial world was collapsing and desperate sellers were scrambling for the exits. This week everything is peachy as the market erased the pre-Christmas bloodbath. But this isn’t a surprise to those of us that have been paying attention.

December 20th, I wrote the following:

“While I like these discounts, the looming holidays complicate the situation. What would normally be an attractive buying opportunity might struggle to get off the ground since big money already left for Aspen. Their absence puts impulsive retail investors in charge and that is rarely a good thing. Luckily, these little guys have small accounts and their emotional buying and selling cannot take us very far.

We saw similar emotional selling knock 100 points off the market during the Thanksgiving week. But a few days after the holiday, the market rallied 170-points when big money returned to work and started snapping up the discounts. No doubt we could see the same thing this time around.”

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The market one-upped the Thanksgiving rebound and recovered 250-points since the Christmas holiday. Those of us that kept our cool enjoyed the ride. Unfortunately, those that panicked are kicking themselves right now. But that is the way the market works. It rewards thoughtful and deliberate decisions while it punishes the impulsive and reactive.

The key to surviving periods like this is selling poor price-action, not fear. By the time fear is running through the herd, it is too late to sell because most of the damage has already been done. In fact, selling fear is often the exact wrong move to make because capitulation and a rebound is usually just around the corner.

So what is the difference between poor price-action and fear? Most of the time poor price-action shows up before the crowd gets nervous. This is the stalling when the market should be going up. But it is so subtle that most in the crowd missed it. We saw this in early December and I pointed it out in my December 13th blog post:

“the last three day’s has seen early gains fizzle and we closed well under the intraday highs. Multiple weak closes is never an encouraging sign. And as usual, the market is giving us conflicting signals. It is up to us to determine what it means.

I really like how decisively the market held support this week. But I’m disappointed we couldn’t add to those gains and these weak closes are a concern. What does this mean for what comes next? Unfortunately, this is one of those situations where we don’t have enough information and we need to see what the market does next.

A decisive rally Friday tells us all is well and we are on our way back up to 2,800. But a fourth weak close means a near-term test of 2,600 is ahead.”

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Everyone knows what happened next. But the thing to remember is the market was flashing these warning signs days before the crash through support. A savvy trader could have bailed out a full 300 points above the eventual bottom.

I will be the first to admit I have been, and continue to be, bullish. But just because I believe in the economy doesn’t mean I need to ride stocks down. The biggest advantage individual traders have is our size allows us dart in and out of the market with ease. We don’t need to ride these waves lower as long as we know what to look for.

But that was then and this is now. What most readers want to know is what comes next. And as I often remind people, the market doesn’t move in a straight line. The rebound from the Christmas lows has been a beautiful thing, but rebounds only go so far before they run out of gas. As expected, the rate of gains has slowed as we approached the prior lows near 2,600. What was once support has now turned into resistance.

I still believe in this market over the medium- and long-term, but things could get a little bumpy over the next few days and weeks. Last month’s fear turned into this month’s hope. Unfortunately, hope leaves us vulnerable to disappointment.

As always, the market can do one of three things; up, down, or sideways. Momentum is clearly higher and the longer we hold near 2,600 resistance, the more likely it is we will break through it. Trump striking a deal with Democrats and the Chinese will send prices surging higher. But if we don’t pause and consolidate recent gains, that breakout will be fragile and vulnerable to a pullback. I would be selling a sharp breakout, not buying it. This would be a buy the rumor, sell the news kind of thing.

Markets consolidate one of two ways. Either they take a step back, or they trade sideways for an extended period of time. Given how volatile the market has been and how much uncertainty there is in the headlines, boring, sideways trade seems highly unlikely. Instead, this market most likely needs to take a step back before continuing its climb higher. Whether that step-back starts Friday or waits until the 2,600 breakout fizzles is anyone’s guess, but at least we know what to expect and that helps us get ready to trade it.

I would rather be taking profits at these levels than adding new money. A near-term dip to 2,500 that bounces would be a great buying opportunity. An unsustainable breakout above 2,600 that fizzles could be an interesting shorting opportunty.

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Dec 20

How even a bull could tell something was wrong

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

Thursday was another brutal session for the S&P 500, and we now find ourselves 16% under the October highs. The latest fears stem from Trump’s threats to shut down the government if Congress doesn’t fund his wall. These headlines pile on the already fragile sentiment brought on by Trump’s trade war and the Fed’s latest round of rate hikes.

October’s stock crash was initially triggered by a spike 10-year Treasury rates. The ironic thing is interest rates have done nothing but tumble since then. But despite the reprieve in rates, the market has not been able to find its footing given the relentless barrage of bad news. In addition to the problems I already mentioned, Trump’s trade war is slowing global growth, and the US had a high profile Chinese executive arrested. Mix in fears the US economy is overheating, contracting, or somehow doing both at the same time and it becomes the perfect cocktail for impulsive herd selling.

I will be the first to admit I never expected the dip to get this carried away. But this isn’t a surprise. The market has a nasty habit of pushing things so much further than what is reasonable. And clearly that is the case here.

But just because I’m bullish doesn’t prevent me from profiting from this dip. While the initial selloff caught me off guard, the subsequent volatility created a rich hunting ground. I told readers in October that too much damage was done to sentiment in the first round of the selloff and we should not expect a quick return to the highs. That told us to greet every rebound with suspicion and be taking profits, not chasing prices higher. And the same applied to each dip, rather than sell the fear, I was buying it. Buy the dip. Sell the rip. Repeat.

I was, and continue to be bullish, so that made me reluctant to short the bounces, but even just buying the dips has been quite profitable and the extreme volatility allowed me to do in hours what it took weeks to achieve in a slower market. But even though I was bullish, I still had key levels I was watching. Last week after the market closed at 2,650, I wrote the post, “What this market needs to do to keep my faith“:

“the last three day’s has seen early gains fizzle and we closed well under the intraday highs. Multiple weak closes is never an encouraging sign. And as usual, the market is giving us conflicting signals. It is up to us to determine what it means.

I really like how decisively the market held support this week. But I’m disappointed we couldn’t add to those gains and these weak closes are a concern. What does this mean for what comes next? Unfortunately, this is one of those situations where we don’t have enough information and we need to see what the market does next.

A decisive rally Friday tells us all is well and we are on our way back up to 2,800. But a fourth weak close means a near-term test of 2,600 is ahead.”

The next day the market gave up early gains and finished flat. That warned us something was wrong and we should avoid the market. A day later, prices stumbled to 2,600 support and it’s been downhill ever since.

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But that was then and this is now. What readers really want to know is what comes next.

While I like these discounts, the looming holidays complicate the situation. What would normally be an attractive buying opportunity might struggle to get off the ground since big money already left for Aspen. Their absence puts impulsive retail investors in charge and that is rarely a good thing. Luckily, these little guys have small accounts and their emotional buying and selling cannot take us very far.

We saw similar emotional selling knock 100 points off the market during the Thanksgiving week. But a few days after the holiday, the market rallied 170-points when big money returned to work and started snapping up the discounts. No doubt we could see the same thing this time around. Unfortunately, January’s reprieve is still a ways off and until then we are subject to the whims of impulsive retail traders. But as I said, the saving graces is retail traders don’t have a lot of money and it won’t take them long to run out of things to sell. Once they’re out, the selling pressure evaporates and prices stabilize.

Or we could run around like chickens with our head cut off. You decide.

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Dec 18

Has anything changed?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

It’s been another rough stretch for the S&P 500 as prices tumbled to the lowest levels of the year. Monday crashed through 2,600 support, triggering an avalanche of defensive selling that didn’t stop until we fell another 50-points. Tuesday was a little bit better since prices closed unchanged, but that disguised the fact early gains didn’t stick and we stumbled back to breakeven. Few things are more disheartening than fizzled rebounds.

Bears want us to run screaming from this market because it is so obviously doomed. Unfortunately for them, they are living in the rearview mirror. They are beating their chest over what has happened. But in the market, we only profit from what is ahead of us. Currently, the market rests 13% under the 2018 highs. The question we need to be asking is if it better to be selling these discounts, or buying them?

A quick history lesson. The S&P 500 has only fallen more than 15% from all-time highs 11 times. The last two times were the dot-com bubble and the 2008 financial crisis. Do current conditions resemble the dot-com bubble where average p/e’s of tech companies were nearly 100? Or the financial crisis where the entire banking sector was so overleveraged it nearly went out of business? Some people think so and clearly they should be selling everything they own and burying it in the backyard. But for the rest of us, do we really believe the economy is on the verge of a collapse that has only been seen a handful of times over the last seven decades???

No doubt bears will crow that I was bullish two months ago in October when the market dipped to 2,600 support, and then again when it fell to the low 2,600s in November. I guess they were right since we now find ourselves under those levels. But the thing to note is it took two full months to fall another 50-points. That’s less than one-point per day. Wow, terrifying stuff!!!

While bulls and bears have been arguing passionately over who is right, I have been quietly grinding out profits riding the waves between these two extremes. I even wrote about it a couple of weeks ago in a post titled “Q: Who is right, Bulls or Bears? A: Neither!

“It is shocking to see the amount of gloating going on every time the market moves to one edge of the trading range or the other. We’ve been bouncing between 2,600 and 2,800 for most of the last two months. Today’s dip and reversal count as the 7th time the market challenged and failed to break out of this range.

But rather than use “common” sense and assume each dip is a great buying opportunity, or rally a time to take profits, these impulsive bulls and bears ignore the evidence and proclaim this is finally the big move they’ve been waiting for. Monday it was the bulls. Today it was the bears. And both sides got it exactly wrong.”

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Has anything changed? No, of course not. Bears are as confident as ever, and bulls are cowering in the corner. This is a mirror image of two weeks ago when the market was challenging 2,800. The last seven times bulls and bears were bragging about their success, the market reversed ran them over. Will this time be any different? No, probably not. But I don’t mind. I will continue betting against the crowd, and so should you.

While I like these discounts, the looming Christmas and New Years holidays complicate the situation. What would normally be an attractive buying opportunity might struggle to get off the ground since big money is leaving for vacation. That puts impulsive retail investors in charge and that is rarely a good thing. Luckily, these little guys have small accounts and their emotional buying and selling doesn’t go very far. We saw the emotional selling from Thanksgiving week erased the following week when big money returned to work. And the same could happen here.

Most likely the market will muddle into year end and the bigger bounce won’t happen until January. That is if nothing significant occurs between now and then. The one big thing that could happen is the Fed backing away from the widely expected rate hike on Wednesday. That would send the market surging higher. But if that doesn’t happen, expect the market to muddle along between 2,500 and 2,600 for the next two weeks. After that, if the financial world doesn’t collapse, expect the market to recover from these oversold levels as reality turn out far less bad than feared.

In my long-term investments, I love buying these discounts and hope prices fall even further so I can buy even more. In my shorter-term trading account, I would rather be buying these discounts than selling them, but I’m not eager to rush in ahead of what could be a volatile holiday.

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Dec 13

What this market needs to do to keep my faith

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

Thursday was a fairly uneventful day for the S&P 500. Early strength gave way to midday losses, but rather than tumble lower, prices recovered and we finished flat. While the price action was fairly “meh”, meh isn’t a bad thing given how dramatic volatility has been. A little bit of nothing helps calm frayed nerves, and that is never a bad thing.

This neutral price action continues what I wrote about on Tuesday:

While the intraday moves have been huge, the directional moves have not. We are still stuck inside the two-month-old trading range between 2,600 and 2,800. The thing to remember about market collapses is they are breathtakingly quick. Markets don’t wait to see how bad things are before they tumble, traders race for the exits at the first hints of trouble. But that isn’t happening here.

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On Monday, the S&P 500 briefly broke under October’s lows. But rather than trigger an avalanche of defensive selling, supply dried up and we bounced 60-points above the intraday lows. That was four days ago and so far the market resisted the invitation to collapse under those lows.

That said, the last three day’s has seen early gains fizzle and we closed well under the intraday highs. Multiple weak closes is never an encouraging sign. And as usual, the market is giving us conflicting signals. It is up to us to determine what it means.

I really like how decisively the market held support this week. But I’m disappointed we couldn’t add to those gains and these weak closes are a concern. What does this mean for what comes next? Unfortunately, this is one of those situations where we don’t have enough information and we need to see what the market does next.

A decisive rally Friday tells us all is well and we are on our way back up to 2,800. But a fourth weak close means a near-term test of 2,600 is ahead. And of course the most frustrating outcome, another indecisive day like Thursday that doesn’t tell us anything.

I continue to give the market the benefit of doubt because Monday’s reversal was so decisive. But my faith isn’t infinite and unless the market starts doing something constructive, we will likely stumble back to 2,600 support. From there, the situation gets more precarious because few things shatter confidence like screens filled with red. But if we withstand that second test without collapsing, the market is generously giving us another dip-buying opportunity.

The headlines have been overwhelmingly bearish lately between arresting a key Chinese executive to Trump threatening to shut down the government. While none of this is good, the pullback in prices means a good chunk of the negativity has already been priced in and these discounts compensate us for taking the risk. Most of the time reality turns out far less bad than feared, and that is probably what will happen this time too. But 2,600 is our line in the sand. Fail to defend that level and things will get worse before they get better.

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Dec 11

Why buying the dip is still the smart move

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

It’s been an incredibly volatile week for the S&P 500. The last five trading sessions produced intraday swings that approached and even exceeded 3%. Tuesday’s price action was no different as a strong open gave way to midday losses, only to see an afternoon bounce push us back into the green, right before a second fizzle left us exactly where we started.

This market is definitely in a hurry, unfortunately, it cannot decide which direction it wants to go. These wild swings are giving both bulls and bears something to crow about, but nothing sticks and strong moves reverse days, if not hours later. This extreme volatility is definitely a concern, but what is it trying to tell us?

I wrote the following last Thursday, and nothing has changed:

It is shocking to see the amount of gloating going on every time the market moves to one edge of the trading range or the other. We’ve been bouncing between 2,600 and 2,800 for most of the last two months. Today’s dip and reversal count as the 7th time the market challenged and failed to break out of this range.

But rather than use “common” sense and assume each dip is a great buying opportunity, or rally a time to take profits, these impulsive bulls and bears ignore the evidence and proclaim this is finally the big move they’ve been waiting for.

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Since I wrote those words, the market again challenged and even briefly violated October’s lows before bouncing decisively off of 2,600 support. And the cycle of bulls and bears yelling at each other and proclaiming they are right continues. All while smart money is making a boatload of money trading against the crowd.

While this volatility is a red flag, even more noteworthy is how resilient this market has been to crashing through support. We had last week’s arrest of a high profile Chinese executive. Then Trump tweets he is perfectly willing to go ahead with his Chinese tariffs. Then today he tells Democrats he would be “proud” to shut down the government.

While the intraday moves have been huge, the directional moves have not. We are still stuck inside the two-month-old trading range between 2,600 and 2,800. The thing to remember about market collapses is they are breathtakingly quick. Markets don’t wait to see how bad things are before they tumble, traders race for the exits at the first hints of trouble. But that isn’t happening here.

Monday’s dip under October’s lows on awful headlines was the perfect setup for bears. But rather than trigger an avalanche of emotional selling, supply dried up and prices bounced 60-points above the morning lows. Rather than sell the weakness, big money is more inclined to buy these discounts. After two months of relentless bad news, it the market chased off most of the weak owners and replaced them with confident dip buyers. That’s why these relentless waves of bad news are failing to dent this market.

Every bottom always feels like things are about to get a lot worse. By rule, it has to. If it didn’t, no one would sell and we wouldn’t dip. At this point, I’m a lot more impressed with the market’s resilience than I am afraid of these fearmongering headlines.

That said, we need to continue respecting support. A dip back under 2,600 support over the next day or two tells us demand is absent and lower prices are ahead of us. But if we hold above the lows for the next few days, the trading range is intact and a run back to 2,800 resistance is in the cards.

Buy weakness. Sell strength. Repeat.

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Dec 06

Q: Who is right, Bulls or Bears? A: Neither!

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

It doesn’t get wilder than Thursday’s crazy ride in S&P 500. Prices plunged at the open after the US had the CFO of a major Chinese tech company arrested for violating Iranian sanctions. That was a significant escalation in Trump’s confrontation with China and it crushed all positive feelings following last weekend’s trade truce.

The selling intensified and by late morning we were down more than 3%. But then something happened. We ran out of sellers. And more than just run out of sellers, the market erased almost all of those losses and closed practically flat. We went from one of the worst days of the year, to a trivial 0.15% loss. Talk about an epic reversal.

A big chunk of the afternoon’s strength was fueled by the Fed’s slowing stance toward future rate hikes. Rather than dole them out at regular intervals like they have been doing, the Fed is quickly shifting to a wait-and-see outlook. A similar ideal launched last week’s 2.3% surge higher and today it erased 3% of losses.

But this market’s resilience shouldn’t surprise readers of this blog. After Tuesday’s 3.24% collapse, I wrote the following:

“I expect global stocks to get hammered Wednesday as the world reacts to the U.S. market collapse. But after that, expect cooler heads to prevail. As I’ve been saying for a while, this is a volatile period for stocks. That means large moves in both directions. But so far these wild gyrations have been consolidating October’s losses, not extending them. There is no reason to think this time is any different.

Trading so close to 2,700 support means there is a good chance we will violate it. But as long as the selling stalls and bounces not long after, that tells us most investors would rather buy these discounts than sell them.”

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I will be completely honest, I expected us to poke our head under 2,700 and bounce. There is no way I could have foreseen those Huawei headlines sending prices cratering nearly all the way to 2,600 and then bouncing. Even I am dumbfounded by today’s resilience. But it still isn’t a complete surprise.

It isn’t controversial to say the majority investors know the stock market trades sideways most of the time. But the paradox is that most of the time, the same people also almost always assume each day’s gyration is the start of the next breakout or breakdown.

It is shocking to see the amount of gloating going on every time the market moves to one edge of the trading range or the other. We’ve been bouncing between 2,600 and 2,800 for most of the last two months. Today’s dip and reversal count as the 7th time the market challenged and failed to break out of this range.

But rather than use “common” sense and assume each dip is a great buying opportunity or rally a time to take profits, these impulsive bulls and bears ignore the evidence and proclaim this is finally the big move they’ve been waiting for. Monday it was the bulls. Today it was the bears. And both sides got it exactly wrong.

The ironic thing is by the time these chronic bulls and bears realize we are stuck in a trading range is right before we break out of it. No one said trading is easy. But it is a lot less hard if we know what to pay attention to.

As for what comes next, the US taking one of China’s top business executives into custody isn’t going to go over well and this story is a long way from being done. We should expect the situation to evolve and that will exacerbate volatility, but as long as investors would rather buy these discounts than sell them, we should be in good shape. The bottom of every market selloff feels like things are about to get a lot worse, and this time won’t be any different.

By this point, most of the Trump’s trade war is already priced in and the only thing that would worry me is we start shooting at each other. Barring that, this is just another buyable dip.

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Dec 04

How to profit from Tuesday’s collapse

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

In the market, a lot can happen in a few days. My last free blog post was last Thursday after the S&P 500 smashed through 2,700 resistance. A buying frenzy pushed prices up to the 200dma after the Fed Chairman suggested interest rates were approaching his neutral target.

But rather than cheer those gains, I cautioned readers in that post from last week:

The market was a great buy Monday and Tuesday. But risk is a function of height and Wednesday’s large gains make buying now a lot less attractive. A big chunk of Wednesday’s buying came from chasing and short-covering. Those are both fleeting phenomena and now that they’ve come and gone, we need another group of buyers to come in and push us higher. Unfortunately, many of those with cash remain nervous, especially following such a large move higher. Their fear of heights will likely keep a lid on prices for a few days. And even a dip back to 2,700 wouldn’t be a surprise. Two steps forward, one step back.

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While I expected this step-back, even I was caught off guard by the speed with which it happened. But even that isn’t a surprise. The market operates in two speeds, infuriatingly slow, or breathtakingly fast. This time the hivemind got together and turned the last few days of frenzied buying into a mad dash for the exits. Easy come, easy go.

While it was nice to see this weakness coming and prepare for it, that was then and this is now. What readers really want to know is what comes next.

Stock prices popped Monday after Trump and China reached an agreement this weekend to de-escalate the trade war. But that relief proved fleeting as traders started analyzing the details. The primary catalyst for Tuesday’s collapse was Trump disclosing the strings attached to his pledge to not increase tariffs on Chinese imports. The shine further wore off when Trump reiterated his pledge to impose tariffs if the Chinese didn’t make substantial concessions. That sent risky stocks tumbling and safe-haven bonds soaring. So much for the relief.

But the thing we have to ask ourselves is if Tuesday’s collapse was lead by rational and thoughtful selling, or if it was nothing more than herd selling because people sold for no other reason than other people were selling.

There are few, if any, 3.25% declines that are led by rational and thoughtful selling. Today was no different. We opened near yesterday’s close and slipped to normal losses by lunchtime, but slipping under Friday’s close triggered an avalanche reactive stop-loss sell orders that didn’t stop until we shed another 60-points. As I wrote previously, 2,700 was a key support level and the market found support and bounced off that critical level in afternoon trade. Unfortunately, the bounce proved fleeting and we closed right back at 2,700 on the nose.

The market is closed Wednesday in observance of a national day of mourning for President George H.W. Bush. No doubt the inability to trade Wednesday caused many would-be dip-buyers to sit on their hands knowing they would be unable to trade for a day and a half. Better safe than sorry. But the other thing this extra day off does is give traders a chance to collect themselves and decide if they really want to be selling these discounts, or if they should be buying them instead.

I expect global stocks to get hammered Wednesday as the world reacts to the U.S. market collapse. But after that, expect cooler heads to prevail. As I’ve been saying for a while, this is a volatile period for stocks. That means we large moves in both directions. But so far those wild gyrations have been consolidating October’s losses, not extending them. There is no reason to think this time is any different.

Trading so close to 2,700 support means there is a good chance we will violate it. But as long as the selling stalls and bounces not long after, that tells us most investors would rather buy these discounts than sell them.

I bought the Thanksgiving massacre and sold the frenzied relief rally up to 2,800. And I will do the same thing again this time. If impulsive traders want to keep giving away free money, I will gladly continue taking it.

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Nov 29

The real reason the market surged

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

Two days ago my free blog post was titled “Why Tuesday was a great day.” Even though the index only finished 0.3% higher, the market’s resilience was impressive given the bearish trade war headlines dominating the financial press.

“There are few things more bullish than a market that fails to go down on bad news. That tells us most of the bearishness has already been priced in. Over the last two months, we have witnessed a ton of selling. But what happens every time a fearful owner bails out? He sells his stocks at a steep discount to a confident dip buyer who is willing to own those risks.

Over time these fearful sellers are replaced by confident buyers and there comes the point in every dip where we run out of fearful sellers. Once everyone who fears the headlines sells, there is no one left to sell and the headlines stop mattering. That is what happened today. Trump threatened to take his trade war nuclear, and the market yawned.”

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While I liked what I saw Tuesday, even I was caught off guard by Wednesday’s explosive surge higher in one of the biggest up-days of the year.

People often claim no one can predict the market, but that isn’t entirely true. I had zero idea the Fed Chairman would soften his stance on rate hikes Wednesday, but I didn’t need to know that to make an intelligent trading decision Tuesday.

I will be the first to admit I cannot predict the news. But the thing to remember is the news doesn’t matter, only the market’s reaction to the news. That one small shift in perspective totally changes how we go about figuring out the market’s next move.

Every day traders are bombarded with both bullish and bearish headlines. As traders, it is our job to decide how to interpret these conflicting signals. Sometimes traders gravitate to one piece of news while totally ignoring another one. But even more important than what traders think, is how they trade. Headlines don’t move markets. Neither does the opinion of traders. Only buying and selling moves markets and that is what we must pay attention to.

Trump’s latest threats to escalate his trade war and tax all Chinese imports at 25% was obviously a very negative headline. A big chunk of October’s correction was based on investors’ fears the trade war was damaging the global economy. There is no dispute Trump fanning those flames this week was bad. And given October’s plunge, clearly traders are worried about the trade war. But given all the negativity, why did the market finish Tuesday  0.3% higher?

It’s not because the news was good. Or because traders don’t fear the fallout of a trade war. It’s because everyone who fears the trade war already sold their stocks and they had nothing left to sell. Once an investor is out of the market, his opinion stops mattering.

We can think of the market like a stalled car on a hill. It takes almost zero effort to push the car downhill, while it takes nearly all of our strength to move it one foot uphill. There are times when the market is similar askew. This time it was nearly impossible for bearish headlines to push us any lower because we exhausted the supply of fearful sellers. But in the opposite direction, it only a few words from the Fed Chairman to launch one of the biggest buying frenzies of the year.

Without a doubt, it is impossible to predict the news, but if we know what to pay attention to, it isn’t hard to figure out which way the market wants to go. Then it simply becomes a matter of waiting for the right story to come along and give us a push.

And going back to what I wrote Tuesday because it is equally relevant today:

“The next most obvious target is reclaiming 2,700 support, and the 200dma after that. We are not out of the woods yet and we should expect volatility to stick around. But the swings are getting smaller and the fear of a collapse are dissipating. We currently find ourselves near the lower end of the trading range and are in a place where the market is brushing off bearish headlines. That tells me the near-term path of least resistance is higher. Things will look different after we run up to the 200dma, but we will discuss what comes after that when we get there.”

Everything played out as expected…..except I certainly didn’t expect to be talking about the market running into 200dma resistance 48 hours later. But here we are.

The market was a great buy Monday and Tuesday. But risk is a function of height and Wednesday’s large gains make buying now a lot less attractive. A big chunk of Wednesday’s buying came from chasing and short-covering. Those are both fleeting phenomena and now that they’ve come and gone, we need another group of buyers to come in and push us higher. Unfortunately, many of those with cash remain nervous, especially following such a large move higher. Their fear of heights will likely keep a lid on prices for a few days. And even a dip back to 2,700 wouldn’t be a surprise. Two steps forward, one step back.

But now that we reclaimed 2,700 support, we need to hold this level. Tumbling under this level tells us buyers have zero confidence in this market and lower prices are still ahead of us. But that is the less likely outcome. Right now things look good because big money would rather buy the discounts than sell the dip. Expect a near-term dip as we digest Wednesday’s huge gains, but after that, expect the rebound to continue up to and above 2,800 over the next few weeks.

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Nov 27

Why Tuesday was a great day

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

Tuesday was a great day for the S&P500. While the index only finished 0.3% higher, the numbers don’t tell the whole story.

Prices slipped at the open after Trump fanned the trade war flames by threatening to tax all Chinese imports at 25%. This isn’t the first time he made these threats, so it didn’t catch anyone by surprise, but it threw cold water on hopes the two sides were moving toward a compromise.

But rather than tumble lower, stocks quickly found a bottom and recovered into the green. This is definitely not the price action we’d expect if the market was fragile and vulnerable.

This resilience made Tuesday the opposite of last week’s fearful selling, but this isn’t a surprise. Last week I told readers:

“While this week’s price action slammed us underneath 2,700 support, the thing we have to keep in mind is this is a holiday-affected week. Big money managers who make millions of dollars a year are on vacation this week with their family, not toiling away in the office. Why this is important is because without big money’s guiding hand, emotional retail investors are running the show. Big money’s absence during holidays often leads to increased volatility, and the market shedding nearly 100-points over two days definitely qualifies as volatility.

But the thing to remember about retail investors is they have small accounts. That means they don’t have the firepower to drive large moves. Only big money can propel directional moves and if they’re not behind today’s selling, then we should expect the weakness to stall and reverse once emotional retail investors run out of things to sell.”

That is precisely what happened and this market finds itself well above last week’s lows. Sign up for Free Email Alerts so you don’t miss profitable insights like these.

Recovering from last week’s dip tells us big money would rather buy these discounts than sell the weakness. That was especially true Tuesday when the market failed to tumble on the ominous trade war headlines.

There are few things more bullish than a market that fails to go down on bad news. That tells us most of the bearishness has already been priced in. Over the last two months, we have witnessed a ton of selling. But what happens every time a fearful owner bails out, he sells his stocks at a steep discount to a confident dip buyer who is willing to own the risks.

Over time these fearful sellers are replaced by confident buyers and there comes the point in every dip where we run out of fearful sellers. Once everyone who fears the headlines sells, there is no one left to sell and the headlines stop mattering. That is what happened today; Trump threatened to take his trade war nuclear and the market yawned.

There comes the point in every dip where things go too far and prices are attractive enough for buyers to start ignoring the headlines. It certainly seems like this market is getting to that point.

The next most obvious target is reclaiming 2,700 support, and the 200dma after that. We are not out of the woods yet and we should expect volatility to stick around. But the swings are getting smaller and the fear of a collapse are dissipating. We currently find ourselves near the lower end of the trading range and are in a place where the market is brushing off bearish headlines. That tells me the near-term path of least resistance is higher. Things will look different after we run up to the 200dma, but we will discuss what comes after that when we get there.


Trump specifically called out Apple when threatening to increase Chinese tariffs to 25%. While that would put a massive hole in AAPL’s earnings, the stock largely shrugged off the news and finished practically flat. That tells us AAPL’s 25% tumble from last month’s highs has already factored in a lot of bad news. If further downside is limited because most of the bad news is already being priced in, that actually makes this a pretty safe time to be buying. While prices could continue slipping, the lower we go, the safer it becomes.

It’s been a while since I wrote about Bitcoin because I’ve been so consistently bearish about it there wasn’t much new to add, but now that prices dipped into the $3k’s, the situation has changed. While I’m still skeptical of Bitcoin’s long-term viability, every collapse includes multiple sharp rallies. Given bitcoins sharp fall, I would rather buy these levels than sell them. It wouldn’t be anything to see prices bounce 25% or 50% from current levels. For the most nimble of traders, that’s good money for a few days of work. The challenge is knowing when we will bounce. Anyone buying the dip better be willing to sit through some dramatic near-term weakness first.

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Nov 20

Who was selling today and why their opinion doesn’t matter

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

Tuesday was another dramatic session for the S&P 500 as prices tumbled nearly 2%. The post-election relief is long forgotten as nervous selling pushed prices back near October’s lows. But as horrific as the headlines sound, we have only slipped back to where we started the year and are just 10% under all-time highs. If a person overreacts to flat years and pullbacks from all-time highs, then the stock market might not be a good fit for them. For the rest of us, this is business as usual.

While this week’s price action slammed us underneath 2,700 support, the thing we have to keep in mind is this is a holiday-affected week. Big money managers who make millions of dollars a year are on vacation this week with their family, not toiling away in the office. Why this is important is because without big money’s guiding hand, emotional retail investors are running the show. Big money’s absence during holidays often leads to increased volatility, and the market shedding nearly 100-points over two days definitely qualifies as volatility.

But the thing to remember about retail investors is they have small accounts. That means they don’t have the firepower to drive large moves. Only big money can propel directional moves and if they’re not behind today’s selling, then we should expect the weakness to stall and reverse once emotional retail investors run out of things to sell.

It is hard to ignore 100-point moves, but if big money is not involved, then it means the price action is not relevant to what comes next. Big money always has, and always will, drive the big moves. Emotional retail investors do little more than provide noise along the way. And unfortunately today, that noise was deafening.

As I started with, if a person cannot stomach a 10% pullback from all-time highs, they shouldn’t be the market. But for those of us that have been around a while, we are thankful these fearful people are willing to abandon stocks at steep discounts. Their loss is our gain.

As for how much further this can go, that is anyone’s guess. Emotional selloffs are the hardest to predict because fearful selling begets fearful selling. While stocks are at attractive levels, that doesn’t mean they cannot get even more attraction. But if I’m buying the dip, I’m not overly worried if I’m buying a 10% discount or a 12% discount. I’ll take every little bit I can get, but I don’t need to be greedy and am more than happy to settle for good enough.

As for the bears, it’s been a good run, but now that prices are into correction territory, they need the economy to get worse for us to keep tumbling. Unfortunately, most of the time reality turns out a lot less bad than feared. Will this time turn out any different, no, probably not. But that won’t stop the cynics from shouting that we should abandon the stock market.

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Nov 15

Should we have seen today’s bounce coming?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Analysis:

On Thursday the S&P 500 gapped lower at the open, undercutting the widely followed 2,700 support level and triggering another wave of defensive selling. But in midmorning trade, supply dried up and by the end of the day, the market surged 50-points above those early lows.

Everyone knows the market moves in waves, but that doesn’t stop people from being surprised every time it moves in waves. Our bullish or bearish bias convince us each gyration higher or lower is the start of a much larger move. Last week bulls were convinced the market was racing back to the highs. This week bears claimed their long-awaited collapse was finally upon us. And you know what, both sides got it wrong. That’s because they forgot the market moves in waves.

In Tuesday’s free blog post, “Don’t fear the normal and routine”, I warned readers:

“Every dip feels real and by rule, it has to. If it didn’t, no one would sell and prices wouldn’t dip. Without a doubt, October’s correction felt real. This week’s collapse feels just as scary. But just because it feels real doesn’t make it real. In fact, all of the selling over the last few weeks makes it even harder for this dip to find new sellers. The longer this drags on, the more people sell, the fewer sellers we have left, and the more solid the market becomes.”

Guess what? Thursday’s early selloff failed because we ran out of sellers. Pundits love to tell us no one can predict the market, but it really isn’t that hard once we realize that the same things keep happening over and over. Sign up for Free Email Alerts so you don’t miss profitable insights like these.

I wish the only thing we needed to know was what comes next. Then making money would be easy. Unfortunately, that’s not how this works. Not only do we need to know what is going to happen, but more importantly, we need to know when it is going to happen. Getting the timing right is where all the money is made.

While no one knows precisely when the market will make its next move, we do know when the odds are on our side. For example, this morning we knew the market was ripe for a bounce. Number one, we remember markets move in waves. Number two, all of the selling over the last few weeks chased off a big chunk of would-be sellers and supply would be tight. While there are no guarantees in the market, seeing the dip under 2,700 support stall because supply was drying up was a great signal this was time to jump in and buy the dip.

If both bulls and bears agree the market moves in waves, then both sides should have seen today’s rebound coming. The main point of contention is what comes next. Bulls say today’s higher-low is a healthy part of the recovery process. Bears claim this bounce only delays the inevitable collapse. But as long as both sides agree we will go higher over the next day or two, there is only one way to trade this.

That said, I definitely fall in the bull camp. As we witnessed in October, crashes are breathtakingly quick. Selling begets selling and cracks turn into gaping holes. But that’s not what is happening here. Wednesday’s dip under 2,700 bounced quickly. As did Thursday’s dip under this critical support level. If the market was fragile and vulnerable, that was the perfect way to launch a tidal wave of defensive selling that knocks us under October’s lows. Is that what happened? Nope. Supply dried up and we bounced. At this point, it is harder to find fearful sellers than confident dip-buyers, and that bodes well for the market’s continued recovery.

But just because the market bounced today and things look good, don’t forget markets move in waves. That means this rebound will inevitably stall and pullback. The longer these consolidations drag on, the more volatility shrinks and the smaller these swings become. We are getting further along in the healing process and that means we shouldn’t expect this rebound to be as sharp as last weeks, or for the next dip to be as dramatic.

Of course, all of this goes out the window if we tumble under 2,700 support Friday and launch a tidal wave of defensive selling. But barring that worst case scenario, things look good and the path of least resistance over the near-, medium-, and long-term is higher.

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Jani

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Nov 13

Don’t fear the normal and routine

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

Tuesday was a back-and-forth session for the S&P 500 as early gains fizzled and we closed modestly in the red. The early strength ran into resistance near the 200dma as last week’s relief turned into this week’s second-guessing.

As I warned readers last week, the sharp rebound from October’s lows was unsustainable and a pullback was coming:

This rebound recovered nearly two-thirds of the October selloff and that is about as far as these things go before they start running out of steam….this is definitely a better place to be taking profits than adding new money. At the very least, expect prices to consolidate for a while as investors warm back up to this market. But more likely, volatility will persist and that means a dip back to 2,700 support would be a normal and healthy part of this recovery.

Three trading sessions after I wrote that, we find ourselves testing 2,700 support. Sign up for Free Email Alerts so you don’t miss profitable insights like these.

People claim no one can predict the market, but it really isn’t that hard once we realize the same things keep happening. A decisive rebound following October’s sharp correction was never in doubt. The same goes for the subsequent rebound stalling and taking a step back. The question isn’t if, but when. The hard part is getting the timing right and that is where all the money is made.

Now that last week’s relief is long gone, we find ourselves questioning this market again. Monday’s collapse under the 200dma was as ominous as it gets and that triggered a wave of defensive selling. Traders who were paralyzed by fear during October’s correction and didn’t bailout were not going to make the same mistake this time.

But the thing to remember is most people can only sell once. Once they’re out, their opinion no longer matters. And in fact, the only thing they can do is buy back in. So while a huge number of people sold over the last several weeks, their pessimism no longer matters. And in fact, their pessimism is actually bullish because they will eventually turn into the buyers that fuel the recovery. Buying high and selling low is a poor trading strategy, but the crowd cannot help itself.

Every dip feels real and by rule, it has to. If it didn’t, no one would sell and prices wouldn’t dip. Without a doubt, October’s correction felt real. This week’s collapse feels just as scary. But just because it feels real doesn’t make it real. In fact, all of the selling over the last few weeks makes it even harder for this dip to find new sellers. The longer this drags on, the more people sell, the fewer sellers we have left, and the more solid the market becomes.

Tuesday’s price action was awful and the longer we hold near 2,700 support, the more likely it is we will violate it. But what matters most is what happens next. Does that violation launch another wave of defensive selling? Or does supply dry up and prices rebound?

I think the worst is already behind us, but there are no guarantees in the market. Traders nerves are frayed and anything could happen if panic sets in. But as long as that doesn’t happen, a dip under 2,700 that stalls and recovers is a great entry point for anyone that wants to get back in. Remember, by the time it feels safe, it will be too late to buy the discounts. But if we drop under 2,700 and trigger another avalanche of contagious selling, expect things to get a lot worse.

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Jani

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Nov 07

Should we trust this rebound?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

The S&P 500 exploded higher Wednesday following the U.S. midterm election that saw Democrats take control of the House and Republicans add to their majority in the Senate. There was a little bit of good news for everyone and that put traders into a buying mood.

These gains erased a big chunk of October’s selloff. Anyone who sold defensively over the last several weeks is coming to regret that hasty decision. But that is the way the market works. Every buyable dip feels like we are on the verge of a much larger collapse. If it didn’t, no one would sell and we wouldn’t dip in the first place.

With the benefit of hindsight, it is easy to look back and see the bounce off of 2,600 support was the obvious bottom. But since this bottom was only a couple of weeks ago, it isn’t hard to recall exactly how hopeless the outlook was when we reached those lows. Traders were not excited to buy the dip, they terrified of the next leg lower. Remember how you felt at that moment and don’t forget it. That is what every buyable dip feels like.

For those of us that have been doing this a while and lived through countless dips like October, we know better than to overreact to periodic bouts of emotional selling. As I wrote on October 23rd:

“Over the last 69 years, only 11 times have prices tumbled more than 15% from the highs. We often think of big crashes like 1987, the Financial Crisis, or the Dot-Com bubble. But those events are exceedingly rare. All the other pullbacks over the last 69 years have been 15% or less. While 15% is a lot, it isn’t terrifying. And even better, all of those under 15% pullbacks were erased within a few months. Small and short. That sounds like something we can live with.”

And so far, that is precisely what happened this time. There was no real substance behind October’s selloff and that is why we recovered so quickly. The only people who lost out were the ones that overreacted to the fearmongering. That said, there is nothing wrong with selling defensively and it can even be profitable. The key is knowing when to get back in.

October 30th, the day after the market bounced off 2,600 support, I wrote a post titled “What Makes Tuesday’s rebound different

“no matter which side of the bear/bull debate you stand on, there is an excellent chance this market is ripe for a sharp move higher.

2,700 is the next most obvious price target. But the market likes symmetry and a rebound to 2,700 doesn’t even come close to matching the intensity of October’s selloff. While we could pause and even retrench a little at 2,700 over the next few days, the most likely target for this rebound is the 200dma/2,800/2,820 region the previous bounce stalled at in mid-October. Even rising up to and above the 50dma and the start of this selloff near 2,870 is on the table.”

That was a bold prediction when prices were in the low 2,600s and it was met with a lot of skepticism, but it doesn’t seem so far-fetched after the market closed at 2,813.

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Predicting the market isn’t hard because it keeps doing the same thing over and over again. The challenge is getting the timing right. While it was nice to see this 200+ point rebound coming before it happened, what readers really want to know is what comes next.

While I’d love to say we will continue surging up to all-time highs, that isn’t how this works. October’s selloff did a lot of damage to investor confidence and it will be a while before people feel comfortable chasing prices back to the highs.

This rebound recovered nearly two-thirds of the October selloff and that is about as far as these things go before they start running out of steam. Momentum could carry us up to the 50dma and even 2,870 where this whole thing started, but we should expect demand to dry up soon.

For short-term traders, this is definitely a better place to be taking profits than adding new money. At the very least, expect prices to consolidate for a while as investors warm back up to this market. But more likely, volatility will persist and that means a dip back to 2,700 support would be a normal and healthy part of this recovery.

Anyone scared out during October’s selloff and looking to get back in, resist the urge to chase prices higher over the next day or two. Instead, wait for the inevitable pullback and consolidation over the next few weeks. Volatility is still high and that means big moves in both directions are ahead of us. But as long as the economic data holds up, the worst is already behind us.

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Jani

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Nov 01

Is this rebound still buyable?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

Free After-Hours Update:

A lot can change in 36-hours. Monday afternoon stocks cratered, shedding more than 100 points from the early highs. There are few things more frightening than a strong open that devolves into a panicked selloff. That plunge shoved us under the prior October lows, triggered another avalanche of reflexive selling.

But just when things were the most hopeless, prices bounced sharply off 2,600 support and the market hasn’t looked back. While it is only three days, prices have reclaimed a big chunk of October’s selloff and the mood has definitely shifted. Panic has given way to cautious optimism. No longer is the crowd fixated on trade wars, Chinese growth, and peak earnings. Instead, traders are remembering the U.S. economy is still in pretty darn good shape.

There comes a point in every emotional selloff when things go too far and are ripe for a snapback. That is exactly what I told readers to expect in Tuesday’s free blog post:

“If there is one thing both bulls and bears can agree on, it is that markets don’t move in straight lines. It has been a brutal October for stocks. At the very least, a near-term bounce is overdue. After definitively undercutting the early October lows and setting off a tidal wave of panicked defensive selling, this is about as good of a double-bottom setup as we will ever see.”

Three days later and 140-points higher, that is precisely what happened. Sign up for Free Email Alerts so you don’t miss profitable insights like these.

So far I’m stating the obvious because everyone already knows what happened. What readers are more interested in is what comes next. And for that, we can also look back at what I wrote on Tuesday because it is still relevant today:

“2,700 is the next most obvious price target. But the market likes symmetry and a rebound to 2,700 doesn’t even come close to matching the intensity of October’s selloff. While we could pause and even retrench a little at 2,700 over the next few days, the most likely target for this rebound is the 200dma/2,800/2,820 region the previous bounce stalled at in mid-October. Even rising up to and above the 50dma and the start of this selloff near 2,870 is on the table.”

We already checked 2,700 off the to-do list, and as expected, the gains slowed a little after we reclaimed this critical support level. But this is just a pause before the next leg higher.

After Thursday’s close, AAPL reported record earnings, but gave a slightly disappointing revenue forecast. Last week the exact same story played out in AMZN and is what contributed to Monday’s collapse. But the thing about headlines is they lose their bite with each retelling. Apple’s disappointment could weight on prices Friday, but it won’t be anywhere near as big of a deal as it was when AMZN told us the same thing. The shock wears off over time and life moves on. That is exactly what is happening in Thursday’s after-hours trade as the S&P 500 only dipped a fraction of a percent following AAPL’s “disappointing” news.

While the next move is still higher, we shouldn’t expect prices to race back to all-time highs. As I wrote earlier, everyone knows markets don’t move in straight lines and that means any rally higher will end in a step-back. Bulls and bears will argue if this will be two-steps forward, one-step back, or one-step forward and two-steps back. At this point, it doesn’t really matter because the next move is higher and the move after that will be a step-back. Once we get there, we can weight the likelihood of higher-lows or lower-highs. But until then, enjoy the (somewhat bumpy) ride higher.

If you found this post useful, Follow Me on Twitter so you don’t miss future updates: 

Jani

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