Category Archives for "End of Day Analysis"

Jul 20

The Pause that Refreshes

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&p500 daily

S&p500 daily

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 produced minor gains for a second consecutive day following the impressive, 90-point rebound from the 200dma. We closed just under all-time highs as European and Chinese fears fade from memory.

This calm tells us both sides are happy with their positions and not many participants are changing their mind. Those with stock continue holding for higher prices while those with cash are not interested in chasing a “straight-up” move. That means we trade quietly until one side gives in.

The “end” of the Euro and China crises lead to a sharp recovery that humiliated bears. Their short-covering provided a material portion of the demand that pushed us back to all-time highs. But in recent days the dip buying and short-covering has slowed materially.

Powerful breakouts are built on a surge of traders climbing over each other to avoid being left behind, but that isn’t the case as we approach old highs. Even huge moves in NFLX, AAPL, and GOOGL failed to excite the broad market. Rather than accelerate, gains are slowing even though the news keeps giving us reasons to buy. This tells us demand is falling off. By itself, this is not a reason to be bearish, but it shows there is less upside pop left to this move.

Constructive price-action through Wednesday shows solid support behind these prices, but it wouldn’t be a surprise to see us dip back to 2,100 support and the 50dma. Institutional money hates buying after big moves and feel better if they can get even a modest discount. In a self-fulfilling prophecy, their lack of buying often leads to a dip. But no matter what happens in coming days, the market is poised to breakout into uncharted territory in coming weeks.

Jani

Jul 15

Should We Worry About China?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 traded in a tight range as Greek politicians debated the merits of an oppressive bailout and Janet Yellen testified in front of Congress. Given the magnitude the issues being discussed, it was a fairly benign day for the markets. The calm shows us most of the nervous and emotional selling already happened. The current crop of owners demonstrated a willingness to hold volatility and uncertain headlines over the last several weeks. This confidence keeps supply tight and props up prices.

While rate hikes and Grexits are old news, the situation in China is entirely different. Greece is tiny and most financial institutions long ago insulated themselves against a Greek default. And for the Fed’s rate hikes, going from 0% to 0.25% is trivial in comparison to the 3% historical average.

Problems in China, that is something our market is definitely not prepared to deal with. A recession in the world’s second largest economy would leave a gigantic hole in global growth. That is why traders fretted last week when the Chinese stock market plunged 40% from its recent highs. Luckily their stocks bounced sharply in recent days and this crisis fell off our front pages. That relief allowed our 60-point rebound.

NASDAQ historical chart

NASDAQ historical chart

Should we worry about China? Should we ignore it? What should we do? Let history be our guide. Assume for a moment that China’s stock market is in the later stages of a NASDAQ, dot-com style bubble. If that’s the case, China’s selloff has a long way to go to match the NASDAQ’s 80% plunge. Clearly we should be panicked and sell everything, right?

Not so fast. Markets hate being predictable. When everyone claims the bubble is bursting, what is the market going to do? You guessed it, rally sharply. While it seemed like the dot-com bubble imploded overnight, the NASDAQ actually took three years to find a bottom. That collapse is many things, but fast is not one of them.

More interesting for us is how the NASDAQ plunged nearly 40% from the highs over a couple of weeks. That sounds eerily similar to China’s recent meltdown. So what happened next in the NASDAQ? It rallied 40% and held those early lows for another seven months! Just when everyone knew the bubble was bursting, the market found a bottom. If history were to repeat itself, then at least over the near-term, China found a bottom and we don’t need to worry about it…..for now. Six months from now is when we need to reevaluate, but in the meantime enjoy China’s reprieve.

Jani

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Jul 13

Pausing or Stalling?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

End of Day Update:

It was a good day for the S&P500 as it broke above the two-week old, 2,050 – 2,080 consolidation. It seems reality in Greece and China is less bad than was feared last week. This move leaves us just shy of 2,100 resistance and a declining 50dma.

Our stock market has been flat through the first half of the year. Depending on who you ask, this is either pausing and refreshing, or stalling before rolling over. Technicals are little use in settling this debate because pausing and stalling look the same on a chart. The answer lies in sentiment and supply and demand. More specifically, understanding why the market is flat.

Are we failing to make new highs on good news? This is the classic “overly bullish” top and signals stalling because we are running out of new buyers. Or is our market failing to selloff on bad news? That points to refreshing because bearish headlines flush out weak hands and replaces them with confident owners who keep supply tight.

Everything is debatable on the internet, but for the objective crowd it is hard to claim the market has been showered with bullish headlines. Greece, China, rate hikes, lowered earnings estimates, and all the others. Bears have been feasting on almost universally bad news. If we were not allowed to look at charts and only went by headlines and sentiment, it would be easy to assume we are in the middle of a bear market. Short interest is the highest it’s been since the financial crisis and AAII bullishness is 10-points under historic averages. But yet here we are, two-percent from all-time-highs. What gives?

We could argue headlines and fundamentals don’t support these valuations and the market is on the verge of a collapse. The problem is that is arguing with the market. Right or wrong, the market is far larger than we are and will always win every single argument. In my opinion, it is quite clear. When the market doesn’t sell off on bad news, that is bullish. End of story. No doubt the we will eventually fall into a correction, it might even happen soon, but it won’t happen for all the reasons people are talking about.

Jani

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Jul 09

Do Over

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

End of Day Update:

It was another frustrating day for the S&P500 as early strength faded into the close. We opened 1% higher following a monstrous rebound in the Chinese stock market. But rather than embrace the strength, nervous and regretful owners quickly jumped on the opportunity to sell higher prices. While we didn’t dip under Wednesday’s lows, we came darn close.

Shortly after our markets closed, all of Thursday’s price-action became irrelevant when Greece finally produced a palatable proposal that includes most of the austerity measures European leaders demanded. By itself that was enough to push index futures up three-quarters of a percent. But then the news got even better as China kicked off Friday’s trade with another gangbusters open. That nudged our futures above one percent.

Futures are often misleading and plenty of glitches can occur in China and Greece while the Western Hemisphere sleeps. But for the moment, the situation in China and Europe are looking less bad than was feared in recent days. This is a great example of why we should trade against the herd. Sell when people are confident like they were two weeks ago, and buy when they are fearful like they were today. It is against our natural instinct to go against the crowd, but there is a big difference between the skills that allowed us to thrive in the wild and what it takes to be successful in the markets.

Barring an overnight calamity in the Eastern Hemisphere, we should have another nice open Friday morning. Hopefully it sticks this time. But if sellers take over again, that is not a good sign and it tells us the bottom is not in yet. That doesn’t mean we need to join the panicked selling, but at least be prepared for a little more volatility.

Jani

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Jul 07

Where Did All the Sellers Go?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily

S&P500 daily

End of Day Update:

It was another dramatic day for the S&P500. A brutal morning plunge undercut recent lows, the 200dma, and 2,050. This weakness sliced through most technical stop-losses, triggering a wave of defensive selling. But not long after those waves of autopilot liquidation ran through the market, supply vanished and we launched higher, ultimately closing nearly 2% above those fear-induced intraday lows.

Pundits claim the weakness was driven by this headline and the rebound motivated by that one. But the truth is far simpler than that. The market was acting in a predictable and typical way given sentiment, technicals, and supply & demand. Figuring out what was going to happen wasn’t that hard if we were looking at the right pieces of information.

Sentiment is in the toilet following this weekend’s “No” vote. Most analysts put the probability of a Grexit at far greater than 50/50. Anyone expecting an orderly resolution to this crisis is clearly in the minority these days. But since a Greek departure is now the widely held view, we know most of the defensive selling already happened. It’s common sense that anyone predicting an imminent market collapse is already sitting in the safety of cash. That tells us any bout of fearful selling like we had this morning would be short-lived because there are so few people left to sell these “new” Euro headlines.

Most of today’s weakness was fueled by technical stop-losses that defensive traders place near key price-points and moving averages. Undercutting last week’s lows forced disciplined traders to exit their positions. That selling then pressured others with stop-losses located near the 50dma and 2,050 to bail out not long after. But once we violated all the popular stop-loss levels, we ran out of new supply because only defensive technical traders were selling this dip. Since those that feared the Grexit already left, by default that means anyone still holding doesn’t fear these headlines and was uninterested in joining the herd selling. That’s why supply vanished and we launched higher after undercutting the last stop-loss level.

While today’s outside bullish reversal suggests we are near the bottom of this move, the situation in Greece and China is far from over. We should expect near-term volatility to continue, but this is a better place to be buying weakness than selling the fear.

Jani

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Jul 06

Can we finally buy the dip?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily

S&P500 daily

End of Day Update:

After a “No” vote over the weekend, Greece has never been closer to departing the Euro, yet the S&P500 dipped a modest 0.4% on average volume. Is our market being naive and irrational ahead of Greece’s financial collapse? Or is the Grexit already priced in because everyone who fears it sold a long time ago?

Today’s price-action was constructive. Overnight futures cratered more than 1.5%, but as the sun reached our shores, the panic subsided. While we opened near last week’s lows, almost immediately the selling dried up and we rallied. Supply and demand wise, that tells us it is increasingly difficult to find owners still willing to sell the Greece story. The headlines were as ugly as ever, but few were willing to bail out at steep discounts.

It would have been nice to see prices dip under last week’s lows, the 50dma, and 2,050 before bouncing. This would have flushed out the last of hope and triggered technical stop-loss selling, setting up a traditional double-bottom capitulation. We didn’t get that, but the market never behaves exactly like it is drawn up in the textbooks. Maybe this last leg lower will happen later this week, or maybe supply is so thoroughly exhausted that there isn’t enough left to form a traditional double-bottom. Anyone insisting perfect chart patterns will miss a lot of good trades and so we have to ask ourselves if this is good enough?

The market was hopeful Greece and Europe would kick the can down the road two-weeks ago when it rallied to 2,130. Now that we find ourselves nearly 80-points lower, we can assume the dire headlines have convinced most traders to expect a Grexit. If the worst is already priced in, then this becomes a compelling place to buy because the potential upside far outweighs the remaining downside. While there could easily be a little more left to this dip, this is a far better place to be buying than selling.

Jani

Jun 30

Is it Safe Yet?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily

S&P500 daily

End of Day Update:

Monday’s one-way selloff took a break Tuesday as we bounced modestly off the 200dma. The S&P500 reclaimed 2,070 twice through the day but was unable to hold those gains and closed closer to 2,060. Volume was even higher than Monday’s selloff as waves of nervous owners sold to eager dip-buyers.

Greece continues to dominate headlines, but now some are claiming Puerto Rico is the bigger contagion threat. I don’t see it, but if the extra excuse helps people rationalize their emotional trading decisions, then good for them.

Technically we still find ourselves above 2,050 support and the 200dma. Both levels provided meaningful support since late last year and that was enough for buyers to rush in and buy the dip. The risk is emotional selloffs typically end when we run out of emotional sellers. Today’s modest gains on elevated volume show there is still a decent number of sellers bailing out of this market. More interesting would be a low-volume bounce since that tells us we finally exhausted the supply of available sellers. Conventional wisdom claims we want to see a high-volume rebound, but given all the headline uncertainty, don’t expect aggressive buying to save the day. The way Greek politicians are handling the situation, a rational person wouldn’t expect a compromise since inmates are running the asylum.

The most encouraging trade would be holding 2,070 support over the next couple of days. That period of calm allows traders to make more rational decisions. The risk is if we slip under 2,050 and the 200dma, triggering another wave of reactive selling. I’m not encouraged by today’s high-volume, weak trade and it seems like prices still want to go lower. But even at the risk of further weakness, this is still a better time to be buying than selling. Stay strong and resist the temptation to join the emotional herd of sellers.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple struggles alongside the broad market and it will continue to trade weak until the entire market finds its footing. There is no reason to sell AAPL here, but not much reason to buy it either.

FEYE daily

FEYE daily

$EBAY – Ebay showed resilience around $60 support and the strongly rising 50dma. While all stocks are vulnerable to widespread selling, Ebay’s strength today showed many owners still believe in this story and are not ready to give up on it.

$FEYE – FireEye also found support at its 50dma, but the stock has a larger hill to climb since it finds itself more than 10% off of recent highs. The faster the rise, the harder they fall and clearly that was the case here. It is critical to avoid high-fliers during volatile periods because their drawdowns will be multiples of more conservative stocks, but the reward will be equally impressive once the stock reclaims $50.

$ALGN – Align continues trading well and is acting like it is immune to Greece all the other stories dominating headlines. This is definitely one worth keeping an eye on when the broad market regains its footing.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY $FEYE $ALGN

Jun 29

Is it too late to sell?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 plunged over 2% as Grexit fears launched into overdrive. We smashed through 2,070 support and closed a hair above the 200dma. Volume was elevated, but surprisingly low for such a dramatic move. No doubt the holiday-shortened week contributed to this slower than expected volume. Of course it would be more accurate to state it the other way; our slower than normal week contributed to this outsized volatility. When big money is on vacation, markets are often less stable, especially when spooky headlines get involved.

Two-weeks ago we traded near all-time highs when many investors assumed a Greek compromise was all but signed. This week we crashed to the lowest levels since winter as investors assume the Grexit is all but assured. This is a great example of why smart money trades against the herd. When everyone assumes the deal is done, then it is priced in and there is little upside remaining. That is the perfect opportunity to take profits and wait for the inevitable problems to arise. We’re in this to make money, not own stocks. The only way to beat this game is by taking profits when we are confident and don’t want to sell.

Lets get one thing straight, the Grexit is a non-issue for anyone not living and working in Greece. Our financial system had five years to manage, hedge, and otherwise reduce exposure to a Greek default. Most Greek debt is now held by European governments who can weather these losses. For them it isn’t a big deal because they didn’t enter into these positions expecting a profit, or even their money back. All they were doing is buying stability and time. And given that they delayed the inevitable Greek default by five years, they did a pretty good job. While a few politicians might lose their jobs and damage their legacy over this, the financial system will survive without Greece because of the time they bought us.

As for the markets, they are the most emotional when uncertainty is at its greatest. Many stock owners took a sell first, ask questions later approach to these headlines, offering their stock at a steep discount to anyone willing to take the risk. But as often the case, one person’s loss is another’s gain. The time to sell was two-weeks ago when we didn’t want to sell. Anyone with a longer-term view, today is the wrong time to sell. Resist the temptation to throw your trading plan out of the window and join the emotional herd rushing for the exits. For those lucky enough to be in cash, the best trades are the hardest to make. While we don’t want to recklessly buy every dip, we need to be prepared to jump in when everyone is convinced it will only get worse. That is the point where the last of the holdouts breakdown and hit the sell button. Once the last of the hopeful have given up, we run out of sellers and stop going down.

Individual Stocks:

Everything went down today because there is no safe harbor during an emotional dash for the exits. But once the anxiety passes, like it always does, the resulting price action will reveal which stocks are ready to lead the next leg higher. The stocks that fall the least and rebound the quickest show us who the true market darlings are because they’re stocks traders are most excited to own reluctant to sell. While it is a little early to be buying the dip, look for strong price-action and be ready to buy before everyone else does.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL

Jun 25

Grexit: Should We Care?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

End of Day Update:

The S&P500’s indecisiveness continues as last week’s rebound turns into this week’s selloff. The index slipped back under the 50dma and closed just two points above 2,100 support. Volume was average, but higher than recent lethargic, summer trade.

We received positive economic data and Obamacare news today, but Greece weighed on prices as another drop-dead date came and went without a resolution. The most noteworthy thing is for as fatal as Greek headlines have become, US stocks are proving incredibly resilient. The long feared Grexit has never been closer, yet we stubbornly remain within than two-percent of all-time highs. Hardly panic territory.

There are two ways to explain this complacency. Market participants have grown tired of Chicken Little’s false alarms and are ignoring this round of Grexit fear mongering. Everyone who sold the Grexit Part 1, 2, and 3 came to regret that decision as prices rebounded to new highs not long after. Many of those investors won’t be fooled a fourth time and are holding steady in the face of increasingly ominous headlines because they know a last-minute deal is right around the corner.

The other possibility is the market took a rational look at the risk posed by a Grexit and realized that with five-years of preparations, the fallout will have little impact outside of Greece itself. While I’ve written about the limited impact a Grexit for some time, I’m truly surprised the market is reacting so rational to this uncertainty.

The challenge for the speculator is figuring out which scenarios is driving this complacency because that determines the direction we go when Greece finally defaults. If the market assumes Greece won’t default, the default will trigger a panic selloff. But if prices are holding steady because rational investors realize Greece doesn’t matter, then a Greek default will be old news by lunchtime.

While don’t know what will happen next week, I know stocks are not being sold at a discount, meaning anyone buying this risk is not getting paid for it. As a trader I will happily hold risk for the right price. A few points from the highs is not a meaningful discount and is why I’m passing on this trade.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple’s attempt to reclaim the 50dma failed for a second day as early strength faded into the close. There is no reason for long-term owners to abandon the stock, but it is hard to be excited about this price-action and the weakness will likely persist.

$EBAY – Ebay continues to trade well following its break above $60. While not a big momentum name, the stock is showing constructive strength by moving to multi-year highs ahead of the PayPal spinoff.

$FEYE – FireEye is searching for support following this week’s 7% pullback from last week’s highs. $50 provided minor support in early June and is trying to do the same here. The risk is predatory traders pushing the stock under $50 to flush out all the defensive stops under this obvious stop-loss level. For those looking to get into FEYE, a break under $50 but then quickly reclaiming it could signal the capitulation bottom of this near-term pullback.

$NFLX – Netflix stumbled from all-time highs after Carl Icahn revealed he closed out of his epically profitable trade. Upgrades, downgrades, and gurus hyping and bashing a stock don’t change the fundamentals. These statements are nothing more than one person’s opinion and their impact on a stock’s price is fleeting at best. There are many reasons to avoid NFLX, but what Icahn did with his position is not one of them.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY $FEYE $NFLX

Jun 22

Did Something Change?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 ended in the green as traders anticipate an imminent Greek deal even though the two sides continue to wrangle. This half-full outlook is a material departure from recent crises. Previously the market would devolve into a downward spiral of emotional selling over any headline uncertainty. Greece part 1, 2, and 3. Fiscal Cliffs. Sequester. Taper. Etc. But not this time. Hindsight being 20/20, we know those emotional selloffs were great buying opportunities. It seems traders finally picked up on that trend and are no longer interested in selling the dip for Greece part 4. While that was the right call those other times, is it the right call here?

The reason those other dips were buyable is because the emotional selling priced in the worst-case outcome. When reality turned out less bad than feared, we rallied in relief. But that is clearly not happening here as we rest less than 10-points from all-time highs while the Greek posturing and grandstanding drags on. Clearly this is anything but pricing in the worst-case outcome. What happens if the market assumes a rosy outcome and things turn out less well than expected?

While the market will likely be right this time, sellers are not offering steep discounts to own this risk ahead of a signed deal. That means two things. First, if prices are not repressed, then there is less upside when things turn out okay. Second, what if the market gets this wrong? Limited upside and plenty of downside? Not a trade I want to make and it is best to let other people own this optimism. The more interesting trade will be if this turns into a buy-the-rumor, sell-the-news. Something to watch for in coming days.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple continues to be fairly unimpressive. No reason to sell it, but no reason to buy it either. The big headline is management caved to Taylor Swift’s demand that they pay artists during the Apple Music’s free trial. While that will cut into earnings by some token amount, the free publicity this generates will more than make up for it. While this will build extra awareness for the streaming product, competing with Spotify is a much higher hurdle than Apple’s failed attempt to dethrone Pandora with Apple Radio. People didn’t change from Pandora and they won’t switch from Spotify. We can give Apple credit for trying, but this clearly isn’t the innovation shareholders are hoping for.

ALGN daily

ALGN daily

$ALGN – Align continues to show strength following last week’s dramatic test of support. This is the fourth day the stock held well above $60 support and this is telling us buyers, not sellers are in control. Wednesday’s emotional selloff actually built a bullish setup because it chased off many of the timid owners with tight stops. Anyone still in this name demonstrated that their finger is not anywhere near the sell button.

$EBAY – Ebay is recovering nicely from its test of $60 support. What was previously resistance is now a buying level for larger investors that want to accumulate this stock ahead of the PayPal spinoff. Another example of patience and discipline paying off.

$FEYE – On the other side of the coin, FireEye touched $55 last week, but is down two-and-a-half dollars since then. Those that were riding the easy money wave higher hit a speed bump. There is nothing wrong with the stock or the story, but common sense tells us it is unreasonable to expect a stock to go up day after day. Last week I suggested we were approaching a good time to lock-in some profits and buy back in a little lower. We stalled at $55, now we get to see if the pullback slips under $50 support before bouncing. The great thing about those that locked in profits is it doesn’t matter to them if we find support or not since they are watching this weakness from the sidelines.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $ALGN $EBAY $FEYE

Jun 09

It Gets Worse Before It Gets Better

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 Daily at end of day

S&P500 Daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 finished flat after modest moves lower and higher failed to stick. Volume continues to be below average as we slip further into the summer doldrums.

While economic indicators, corporate earnings, mergers, Fed statements, and other headlines come and go, the market remains stuck in neutral. The biggest item hanging over us is the impending Greek default if a deal cannot be brokered in coming weeks. It seems many with cash are waiting for a resolution before they feel comfortable buying stocks near all-time highs. And so we trade sideways while we wait for the situation to unfold.

A common saying is you never get hit by the bus you see coming, and that clearly applies to this Greek debacle. The Grexit has been in and out of the spotlight for years. While the global financial system was vulnerable early on, most Greek debt has since been absorbed by the ECB and other European nations, leaving the wider private sector largely immune to a Grexit. While stock prices are held back by a fear of the unknown, the Grexit will actually be a bullish catalyst once it turns out far more benign than most fear. But the market trades on perception, not reality, so we should anticipate near-term volatility as this standoff comes to a head over coming days. But when scared owners start offering stocks at steep discounts, that is our opportunity to step in and profit once the storm passes.

Individual Stocks:

$EBAY daily

$EBAY daily

$AAPL – Apple opened weak the day after its developer conference keynote failed to excite investors. But we knew this was coming. Short-term traders can trade around near-term volatility driven by broad market weakness, but the iPhone story remains intact for long-term investors as long as $122 holds. If we slip to this level, we will have to watch the situation more closely and reevaluate.

$EBAY – Ebay is testing the breakout level, giving those that missed the initial move the opportunity to get in. Of course given human psychology, it is far harder to buy the pullback than the breakout even though the real risk is actually reduced as we slip a few points from the highs. The key is holding $58/$59 support. For the breakout or dip buyer with a $60ish entry price, this represents a fairly attractive risk/reward, but for those that chased the stock up near $63, the risk is quite a bit larger.

$FEYE – FireEye is doing a good job holding recent gains, but it is up 10% from the breakout point and anyone tempted to chase only needs to look at EBAY for what can happen if you show up late to the party. Either wait for a pullback, an alternate entry point, or simply look for another trade. There is no need to chase, especially given the recent weakness in the broad market.

$ALGN – Align is also pulling back as the wider market softens. This continues to be an interesting story, but very few stocks can stand up in the face of a weak market. As soon as we get the green light from the market, these individual stocks will start trading strong again.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY $FEYE $ALGN

 

Jun 08

Is it Safe Yet?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The selloff continues as the S&P500 falls for the third consecutive day. This pushed us to 2,080, a level that’s acted as both support and resistance multiple times this year. While not as psychologically important as 2,100, it was meaningful enough to arrest the slide. The question now is if this puts the worst behind us.

Volume was the lightest we’ve seen in weeks, showing the technical weakness didn’t scare many owners and the dip was more due to a lack of demand than a surge in supply. While it is nice to see owners remain confident, capitulation bottoms form when owners panic and dump stock at a steep discount. Clearly that didn’t happen today. That means either we see a slow and methodical rebound from here as tight supply trumps light demand, or we plunge lower and trigger that emotional capitulation bottom. Slow climb higher or sharp selloff lower? The risk/reward seems pretty clear. But in spite of that, I continue to be bullish medium-term for all the reasons I listed in last week’s posts and am looking forward to profiting from a near-term emotional drop in prices. For those with long-term portfolios, don’t let this noise or price-action shake your resolve.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple had their dog and pony show and just as expected, didn’t announce anything all that interesting. Minor updates to OS X and iOS and a music streaming service that will no doubt prove as wildly successful as their two-year old iTunes radio. What? You never tried iTunes radio? Yep, exactly like that. Apple is a handset maker and as long as the iPhone continues to sell well, you can ignore the iPad, iWatch, iTV, iRadio, iStreaming, iMac, iCar, and all the other side projects they have. The stock lives and dies by how many phones they sell. Which is why the most noteworthy development t0day was ATT’s decision to stop offering subsidized phones through the Apple Stores. This will be especially critical if other carriers follow suit. Between the slowing evolution of new must have features and the end of phone subsidies, we could see the phone upgrade cycle stretch from two-years to three-plus as consumers have to pay more and get less in return. Since the global high-end smartphone market is saturated (those who can afford a $600+ phone already have one), a slowing upgrade cycle will be a big headwind once the iPhone 6 upgrade surge runs its course. While not a today story, it is a material concern for long-term owners.

$FEYE daily at end of day

$FEYE daily at end of day

$EBAY – Ebay was smacked down by the broad market and shows why it is risky to chase a stock extended from the breakout. But in spite of today’s nearly 4% dip, the breakout is still intact and isn’t under threat unless we fail to hold $58.

$FEYE – FireEye had a strong open but gave up those gains through the day under the weight of the weak broad market. The breakout still looks good, but with a sky-high valuation it is subject to more volatility if the entire market hits a rough patch.

$ALGN – Everything I said about Ebay equally applies to Align, even coincidentally enough, the $58 price level.

It seems like the broad market and individual stocks could see some near-term weakness, but this will be yet another buyable dip. Those with stock should buckle down and prevent their emotions from getting the better of them. Those with cash should remain patient because we will likely see better prices in coming days.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY $FEYE $ALGN

 

Jun 04

Is it Time to Sell?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The indecisiveness continues as yesterday’s attempted breakout becomes today’s breakdown. Early strength on Wednesday convinced many the market was finally ready rally, but this morning’s dip under 2,100 spins the exact opposite story. Can we believe this is the start of the real selloff, or is it just another head-fake?

Cutting through the 50dma and closing under 2,100 will prove insightful over coming days. Either it triggers an expanding wave of emotional, technical, and stop-loss selling, or it bounces as quickly as Wednesday’s upside breakout fizzled.

The thing to be careful of with these intraday moves is they are primarily driven by the small subset of day-traders. What they lack for in size, they more than make up in volume. But their limited account size prevents them from driving sustainable moves. While they can kick things off, they don’t have deep enough pockets to keep them moving. Only big money managers have the dollars behind them to keep the ball rolling. And so far this year big money hasn’t flinched following these countless breakouts and breakdowns. When the institutional bulls stay bullish and the institutional bears stay bearish, every attempted move fizzles and we quickly return to the status quo.

To answer the original question on if we should believe in this breakdown, it all comes down to how stock owners respond. Is this selloff dramatic enough to spook previously confident bulls that ignored every other attempted breakdown this year? Is there something bigger this time? In my opinion, it really feels like this weakness is more of the same and is just as likely to bounce as all the other failed breakdowns this year. (For those pointing to the imminent collapse of Greece, read yesterday’s blog post for my analysis of that situation.)

While today’s dip didn’t feel like capitulation and we likely have a little more downside left, we should be getting ready to buy the dip, not joining in the herd’s emotional selling.

EBAY daily

EBAY daily

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple’s selloff today was less than the market’s and shows owners want to continue holding ahead of next week’s developer conference. The thing to be wary of is if this turns out to be a buy the rumor, sell the news event. There is no reason for the long-term holder to worry about these minor gyrations, but a more nimble trader could take profits ahead of the conference and buy back in at a discount a few days after.

$EBAY – Ebay’s breakout is on firm ground as it bucked the broad market’s weakness and finished in the green. That strength tells us this breakout is the real deal and we should keep holding.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY

Jun 03

Biggest Bullish Catalyst

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

It was another meaningless day for the market as it remains stuck in neutral. The S&P500 finished inside a 20-point range for the seventh consecutive day. While some claim this is boring, listless trade. Reality is a lot of passion is hiding under the surface. Given the headlines out of Europe, Asia, Fed, and our economy, plus stocks at record levels, there are few traders yawning from boredom. Most are passionately arguing their opinion that this market is either overvalued and on the verge of crashing, or in the early stages of another 90’s style bull run. The market isn’t idling in neutral because nothing interesting is going on, it is stuck because bulls and bear are pulling so hard from both ends.

If we listed of all the reasons this market should selloff, it would take several sheets of paper. But I suspect most would struggle coming up with more than a handful of fundamental drivers for us to continue rallying. Yet here we are at record highs. For many investors, this obvious skew is all the reason they needed to dump their stocks ahead of the imminent correction. But as the contrarian, I’m left wondering why this market is so strong when the news is so obviously bad. The thing most people forget is markets don’t trade news, fundamentals, or technicals, they trade opinions. No matter how bad the news, if we run out of sellers, prices rally. Opposite is true when we run out of buyers. Trade people, not news.

A lot of the reasons we keep stalling above 2,120 is because those with cash are afraid of Greece dropping the Euro. We’ve been conditioned by years of articles about what a disaster that would be. But here’s the thing, markets are only vulnerable to the unknown. Since every wannabe investor hanging out in Starbucks is talking about what’s going on in Greece, we can safely ignore it. That doesn’t mean these events won’t drive near-term volatility, but that we can take comfort in knowing it won’t cause the next market meltdown because there are so few left to sell the “surprise” headline.

I’ve been constructive on this market for a while, but stalling near the highs for over a month is a concern. Those with cash are not in a mood to buy because they are afraid of Greece, rate hikes, and a sluggish economy. But clouds of uncertainty always dissipate and the best time to buy is when everyone is most uneasy. The biggest bullish catalyst in front of us, and yes I said bullish, is Europe finally kicking Greece out of the Euro. By the time traders realize Greece is the catastrophe that never was, it will be too late to buy the dip and all those reluctant buyers will be forced to chase this market higher. Long-term investors should ignore all the noise, but more nimble traders can make money buying discounted shares from panicked owners if prices stumble in the near-term.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Lacking any headlines, AAPL is mirroring the indexes. There is a chance we could see a small pullback next week after Apple fails to announce anything new and exciting at its developers conference. But the disappointment will likely be short-lived.

FEYE weekly

FEYE weekly

$EBAY – It was a flat day for EBAY as it continues digesting the recent breakout. But the longer we hold above the breakout, the more likely it will stick and continue higher once all the new-high profit-taking is behind us.

$ALGN – Added nicely to its recent breakout. The big psychological and technical test will come when it runs up against $65, a level it failed to overcome at the start of the year. While we should expect a pause, or even pullback, as many sell and short the highs, there is no reason to join the selling as long as we stay above the buy-point.

$FEYE – Keeps edging higher, but this one has a longer road to hoe since it is well off the highs. It will continue to encounter selling pressure from regretful owners as it climbs higher, but this recent breakout pushed us clear of the post-IPO consolidation and all those buyers are now sitting on profits. While we are still 50% off the highs, most owners are sitting on profits and more comfortable waiting for higher prices.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY $FEYE $ALGN

 

Jun 02

Another Head-Fake

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

It was another head-fake for the S&P500. Early weakness pushed us down to 2,100 support, a midday rebound challenged 2,120 resistance, but ultimately we finished smack-dab in the middle of the range…again. Option sellers love this mind-numbing trade, but they are the only ones. Buying strength or selling weakness has been a path to financial ruin as every move reverses hours later.

I am encouraged by the continued support at 2,100, but just as concerned by the inability to clear 2,120. Half the market refuses to sell at a discount while the other half refuses to pay a premium. This is nothing more than a battle of wills and whichever side proves more stubborn will ultimately be the victor. While our departure from this overly restrictive trading range is imminent, there is a high probability the first breakout / breakdown will be the most painful head-fake to date. This market brutalizes anyone making directional trades and it isn’t done yet.

Greece is the looming catastrophe everyone is afraid of, but that is exactly why it won’t be a big deal. This will be the market’s Y2K. In the late 90’s there was a real reason to be concerned about computer problems when clocks rolled over to 2000, but that fear drove preparation, and that preparation made it a non-issue. We’ve been talking about a Grexit for so long that most have had enough notice to hedge the risk. And that’s why for the rest of the world, the Grexit will be a non-issue and the market will rally when it finally happens. But until then, the fear of it keeps hanging over us, making it difficult to push to new highs.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple is mirroring the S&P500 and there is no change from yesterday’s analysis. Ignore the Developer’s Conference and AAPL will rally or fall along with the broad market.

$EBAY – Ebay finished in the red, but we are still well above the breakout point and this weakness nothing to worry about. The previous three days were up strongly and it shouldn’t surprise anyone to see this cool off as long-term owners get nervous at these new highs and lock-in profits.

$FEYE – Everything I said about EBAY applies equally to FEYE’s price-action today.

ALGN daily at end of day

ALGN daily at end of day

$ALGN – Align Technology is another breakout worth keeping an eye on. Similar to EBAY, it is challenging multi-year resistance near $60. The Great Recession is quickly fading from memory and many consumers are finally warming up to big-ticket purchases again. Premium teeth straightening systems fall into that category and the stock is challenging the highs as customers who previously lacked job security are finally making those deferred purchases and others are opting for ALGN’s more expensive products. It would be reassuring to see volume pick up in coming day, but as long as the stock holds above $58, the breakout is in good shape.

Jani

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY $FEYE $ALGN

Jun 01

Bringing Back Individual Stocks

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

It was another range-bound day for the S&P500 as we bounced off 2,100 support in early trade, but failed to clear 2,120 resistance. Volume was light, but not all that noteworthy given we are slipping into the slower summer trading season.

Previously I was expecting an upside breakout, but it concerns me that we cannot get the job done. There is a fuzzy line separating a healthy consolidation from far less productive stalling. We’ve been struggling with 2,120 resistance since late April and the market’s inability to build on May’s breakout exposes a material lack of demand every time we creep up to highs. While every selloff bounces because confident owners refuse to sell their stock for a discount, those with cash are proving just as stubborn.

At this point I can easily agree with both the bull’s and bear’s point of view. Meaning this could as easily break one way as the other. Sometimes we have to admit we don’t have an edge and simply wait for the next trade. No doubt this will either surge higher, or plunge lower, but I would be flipping a coin if I tried to predict which one given all the contradictory signals coming from the market. As a trader, sometimes the hardest trade to make is to not trade.

Individual Stocks:

$AAPL – Apple is just as range bound as the S&P500, currently stuck between $125 and $132. While the developer’s conference is right around the corner, it’s been a long time since a big announce hasn’t leaked out ahead of time. Don’t expect headlines to trigger the next breakout/breakdown and AAPL’s destiny largely lies in the hands this broad market consolidation.

EBAY weekly

EBAY weekly

$EBAY – While rumors of a Paypal spinoff have been around forever, we are quickly approaching the day when it will become a reality. Since traders largely expected the spin-off, the acquiesce by management failed to triggered a large upside move, but in recent days the stock finally broke through $60 resistance. It repeatedly stalled at this level over the last two years, and while that could easily happen again, this time feels different. Keep an eye on this one. Ideally it will stay above $60, but all bets are off if it slips under the 50dma.

$FEYE – Cyber security is making a strong case to be the next big thing and is what propelled FireEye near an eye watering $100 last year. But like every other premature, overhyped story, the air quickly came out of this one too. The stock fell nearly 75% as momentum traders threw the baby out with the bath water. While fear drove many to sell at huge discounts, the cyber security story is real and the stock is making a comeback, up nearly 100% from the lows. More recently it cleared a cup with low handle on strong volume. This pattern has a higher failure rate given the larger number of traders praying to get out at breakeven, this presents an interesting opportunity for the courageous trader. Just like EBAY, it would nice to see the stock hold $45, but we really have to question the sustainability of the breakout if it slips under $42. Because of the high beta nature of FEYE, it is way too dangerous to hold it through a market dip. Bail on this trade if the S&P500 starts breaking down. There will be plenty of time to buy back in later.

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Tags: $S&P500 $SPY $SPX $AAPL $EBAY EFEYE

May 27

Trade the Market, Not Common Sense

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 rebounded decisively from Tuesday’s selloff. We opened higher and never looked back, easily reclaiming 2,120 support. Volume was slightly below average and less than yesterday’s downday, but still respectable given this is a holiday shortened week.

Today’s price-action poses a serious threat to the Bearish thesis. Yesterday’s selloff was the crack Bears needed to finally kickoff the long-awaited correction. Nothing shatters confidence like screens filled with red, and we had that in spades Tuesday. But as it turned out, the selling was quite limited as we quickly ran out of owners willing to dump their stocks for a discount. This tightening supply put a floor under the market and the selloff ended as quickly as it started.

If this market was as extended and overbought as many claim, the smallest stumble would trigger cascading wave after wave of selling as panicked sellers rushed for the exits. That’s what happens when markets are unsustainably high, hence describing them as unsustainable. But the perplexing thing is rather than plunge lower, we keep rebounding to the highs. Looking only at the market’s behavior, it is fairly easy to make a compelling argument that this want to go higher, not lower.

The problem many traders have is they spend too much time thinking about what the market should do instead of looking at what it is doing. If the market doesn’t care about rate hikes, employment, inflation, Greece, and all the other jazz, then neither should we. Something will eventually take this rally down, but it will be totally unexpected and not what everyone has been talking about for months.

Jani

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May 21

Stick With It

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

End of Day Update:

Opening weakness in the S&P500 quickly rebounded and turned into a decent gain for the index. Overnight worries about Chinese manufacturing and European weakness faded as soon as we opened. While it was nice to finish in the green, we struggled with 2,130 again as we find ourselves stuck in a very narrow range between 2,120 support and 2,130 resistance.

Headlines have given this market has every excuse to sell off, yet we keep making new highs. Too often the novice contrarian confuses price with sentiment. They assume high prices automatically equate to overly bullish sentiment and is why they want to bet against the trend. But the truth is price and sentiment are completely independent. Just as surprising, the contrarian trade is most often sticking with the trend while every else is convinced it’s gone too far and is about to correct. That is how we find ourself at record high prices while the AAII’s bullish sentiment remains 14% under historic averages and near five-year lows. It seems the crowd developed a fear of heights.

The most compelling signal the market can give us is not doing what everyone thinks it should. When we’re supposed to crash on Greece, weak GDP, rate hikes, and all the others, but we rally instead, that tells us to grab on and enjoy the ride. Don’t fear these headlines, instead fear the day when all the news is good and the market stops going higher

Jani

May 20

Good Enough?

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 ended modestly lower in a day that saw it trade primarily between 2,125 and 2,130. There was an early dip to 2,122 that quickly bounced and a brief jump to 2,135 following the release of the Fed minutes. But neither divergence stuck and we finished inside the day’s range.

The market moved higher following Fed minutes that pointed to a delayed rate hike, but we quickly returned to this morning’s levels once everyone realized we already knew that. For all the build up, the minutes were forgotten barely two hours later.

But this retreat from the highs is giving bears something to crow about. It is surprising how vocal they are on a day that saw us set fresh highs. They complain about bullish optimism, but getting excited over a 0.4% dip is definitely stretching for something to gloat over.

This was the market’s fifth consecutive close above the widely followed 2,120 resistance level that stretches back to February. What was resistance becomes support and that appears to be the case here. Previous attempts at breaking 2,120 saw us retreat days later, so holding these levels for a week is encouraging. It’s not as great as seeing the market surge to new highs, but it shows we are not being overrun by a wave of profit taking since the current crop of owners appear far more content holding on for higher prices. Their conviction keeps supply tight and makes it easier for us to keep going higher.

While this breakout feels different, we need to see it continue making progress. If we close materially under 2,120, that shows the lack of demand is even more powerful than owner’s confidence. Since confidence is so fragile in the face of falling prices, we need to be wary if we cannot hold support. The other risk is if we cannot escape 2,120 and continue trading sideways. The longer we over above support, the more likely it is we will slip under and trigger a wave technical and stop-loss selling.

Jani

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May 15

Let the Melt-Up Begin

By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis

S&P500 daily at end of day

S&P500 daily at end of day

End of Day Update:

The S&P500 finished the week on a positive note. While Friday’s gain was less than 0.1%, it was enough to set another record close. We’re only up 0.3% for the week, but it was impressive because it includes recovering from Tuesday’s test of the 50dma.

A couple of months ago we had a right to be concerned when the market failed to extend a breakout to record highs, and these thoughts were justified as we watched prices retreat from the highs in following sessions. But like everything in this game, sometimes a certain behavior means one thing, while under different circumstances it tells us the exact opposite. This time around, pausing at 2,120 actually feels productive. We saw early distribution, but it was fairly muted and we recovered into the green by the close. Obviously demand remains weak near widely recognized resistance, but we climbed this high because most owners are confidently holding for higher prices. And at least to this point, tight supply trumps weak demand.

The interesting opportunity for bulls comes as we close in on the tipping point where reactive buying will boost demand for stocks. When the widely expected correction instead turns into a breakout, it forces pessimists to decide between buying in or being left behind. And that’s how melt-ups start.

Seeing the market pause, or even pull back modestly here is constructive. What we don’t want is a retest the 50dma so soon after bouncing off of it. Keep holding for higher prices as long as we stay above 2,100. On the other side, be wary of a sharp move higher next week since that signals buying capitulation and leads to exhaustion.

Jani

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