By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis
The S&P 500 finished Wednesday up as the relative calm in the bond market continues.
Bond investors are not fundamentally any different than stock investors. They are humans that feel the same tugs of greed and fear and are equally prone to overreacting to a selloff.
Chances are good a big portion of this latest runup in bond yields was triggered by a wave of contagious herd selling that got carried away. And that is the way equity investors are treating this as they buy last week’s dip.
The thing to remember in both stocks and bonds is most owners would rather keep holding than sell what they have. These episodes of runaway selling are triggered by fear. But after several days of calm, that fear dissipates and investors are able to make more rational trading decisions. And those rational decisions almost always include continuing to hold.
For the time being, the S&P 500 is acting well and there is only one way to trade this. Keep holding for higher prices with stops in the lower 3,800s. The advantage of buying the dip early is now we have a profit margin to protect us if the selloff resumes. Move your stops up to your entry points and see where this goes.
Silliness is returning to GME and the stock was up $100 Wednesday afternoon. That was until it fell $175 in a few short minutes. The size of the collapse was spectacular and shows just how thin the buying is in this stock. While most GME owners are “holding with diamond hands”, there are not many fools left willing to pay $300 for a $20 stock. All it takes is a few owners to start locking in their profits and this will get real ugly, real quick.
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By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis
The S&P 500 continues bouncing between big gains and losses depending on what is going on in the bond market that day. Treasury yields fell Tuesday and that sent stocks sharply higher as equity investors let out a sigh of relief.
The S&P 500 is trading really well and extending last week’s decisive capitulation and rebound. I love the way stocks are behaving but I have far less conviction about what is going in the bond market. That makes it hard to have a lot of confidence in the sustainability of this equity bounce because it is built entirely on the bond market keeping its cool.
But as I often write, the best trades always have uncertain starts. By the time we get more clarity, the discounts will have long since disappeared. And that means we have to get in before it feels safe.
I’m not convinced this is the last we’ve heard from the bond market. In fact, I believe higher rates will be responsible for the next recession and bear market. But this is a 6-12 months story, not a right now story. At least for the time being, equity investors are feeling better and there is a good chance this week’s bounce will stick.
Without a doubt I could be wrong, but for that to happen, we need to make a lower-low. Last week’s dip set a fresh low mark around 3,750 and as long as we remain above this level, everything is progressing well enough. While I’d love to see a new higher-high, at this point, avoiding another down wave is far more important.
That makes Wednesday a critical day for the market. Extend the rebound and all is good. Violate 3,800 support and lower-lows are in our immediate future.
The best part of being aggressive and buying the bounce early is that gives us a nice margin to play with. We should have already moved our stops up to our entry points. Few things are better than free trades and even if buying this bounce turns out to be a mistake, it won’t cost us much, if anything at all.
That said, I’m still expecting higher. Hold it together Wednesday and everything is setting up for a move to fresh highs.
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By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis
The S&P 500 started Monday with nice gains and it looked like we were finally shaking off the Treasury yield blues. Unfortunately, those early gains fizzled and the index ended with the eleventh loss in three weeks.
While eleven down days out of fourteen trading sessions sound absolutely dreadful, amazingly, the index is little more than 2% from all-time highs. How does that happen???
As much as bears are trying to hype the inflation fear-mongering, most owners are not falling for it and are sticking with their favorite stocks.
While market folklore frequently warns of complacency, the thing most people forget to mention is just how long complacency lasts before the fall. Quite simply, when confident owners refuse to sell, prices remain stubbornly resilient.
How much longer can this complacency last? Well, if there is one thing we know about brutal selloffs, they are shockingly quick. At the rate this pullback is moving, the market is dropping an average of 0.14% per day. That qualifies as many things, but shockingly fast is not one of them.
As long as the index remains above 3,800 support, there is nothing to do but continue giving this market the benefit of doubt.
While this bull market shrugged off dozens of bearish headlines over the last year, maybe this interest rate story is the one that finally takes us down. But if yields are going to take us down, the first thing that needs to happen is for the index to fall under 3,800 support. Until that happens, keep trading this from the long side.
If there is one thing that gives me pause about this bull market, it is the absolutely dreadful price action from the FAANG highfliers. FB, AMZN, AAPL, NFLX, and GOOGL, none of these stocks can get out of their own way and most are down more than 15% from recent highs. If something takes this market down, it will be a lack of leadership from these best-of-the-best companies.
On the other hand, if this bull market can hold it together for a little bit longer, these 15%+ discounts in these bluechip stocks will prove to be a great opportunity to buy more.
At this point, there are only two ways this plays out. Either the FAANG stocks catch up. Or they take everything down with them. I’m giving the index the benefit of doubt, but if the FAANG stocks continue lagging, I will have to reevaluate my outlook.
(As poorly as the FAANG stocks are doing, TSLA is in an entirely different category and I’ll cover this former darling Tuesday evening.)
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By Jani Ziedins | Weekly Analysis
Friday was another choppy session for the S&P 500 with the index traversing more than 150-points throughout the day.
The morning started off well enough with a nice opening gap that pushed the index back to 3,800 support. Unfortunately, those gains evaporated and turned red within a couple of hours. 10-year Treasury yields flared up again that that unleashed another wave of selling in the equity markets. But not long after the index challenged Thursday’s lows, the selling capitulated and stocks bounced hard, rallying 100-points from the intraday lows and closing up nearly 2%.
When it was all said and done, this choppy week crashed through 3,800 support and it still managed to close 0.8% in the green. As hopeless as things felt Thursday afternoon, we actually finished the week in pretty good shape.
As I wrote previously, equity investors are not afraid of 1.5% Treasury yields. It wasn’t all that long ago when 1.5% was a record low. And in fact, most equity investors would be thrilled if 1.5% rates were our new reality. But that’s not what investors are afraid of. They worry this jump to 1.5% will continue to 3%, which is a much different proposition when it comes to interest rates and stock valuations.
While I was cautious following Thursday’s collapse under 3,800 support, I also warned readers the bounce could be just around the corner:
I have no idea how much further this selloff will go, but chances are it will only last a few days and that means shorts need to be ready to lock-in profits quickly. Fight the urge to get greedy. Remember, this is still a bull market and these things bounce hard and fast. Hold a little too long and all of your short profits will evaporate.
It turns out my estimation of “a few days” was overly generous and in reality, we could have measured this violation of 3,800 support in hours.
I’m impressed with Friday afternoon’s bounce. Thursday’s violation undercut recent lows and could easily turn into this pullback’s capitulation point. In more normal times, I’d be embracing Friday’s bounce with open arms.
The problem is this time equity investors are not trading stocks, they are reacting to the bond market. Was Friday afternoon’s stabilization in Treasury yields the real deal? If so, all the lights around us are green. But if the bond market continues to struggle, the index will tumble even lower next week.
While I love the way stocks responded Friday afternoon, I have a lot less confidence in the bond market. But that’s the way this usually goes. Most of our best trades have very questionable beginnings.
At this point, as long as the S&P 500 remains above 3,800, stocks are ownable. If yields flare up again next week and the index retreats back under 3,800 support, lower prices are ahead.
Given how volatile things have been lately, we should have our answer pretty quickly on Monday. If prices retreat, sell. If the bond market calms down over the weekend and stocks rally Monday, buy. 3,800 is the tipping point and we should follow the market whichever way it goes next week.
While I’m cautiously optimistic about the indexes, it is a lot harder to find nice things to say about TSLA. At the depths of Friday’s collapse, the stock was down 40% from the highs of only a few weeks ago. Easy come easy go. If $600 doesn’t hold, unfortunately, $400 is the next logical support level.
TSLA’s bounce is buyable as long as the stock remains above $600. But all bets are off if prices violate $600 support again. At that point, it’s best to step aside and wait for the dust to clear.
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By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis
Thursday was another bad session for the S&P 500. Not only was this the third loss in a row, but the previously rock-solid 3,800 support crumbled before our eyes.
As bad as this sounds, putting this pullback in perspective, today’s 3,768 close would have been a record high less than two months ago. This latest selloff only looks bad when compared to where we were a few weeks ago.
That said, it feels like sentiment flipped from half-full to half-empty following this latest runup in interest rates. As I wrote yesterday:
Even if this rise in yields is nothing more than another false alarm, the only thing that matters over the near-term is if equity investors believe this is the real deal. If they want to abandon the market and sell their favorite stocks at steep discounts, no one can stop them.
And that’s exactly what happened Thursday as the index crashed through support. This violation of 3,800 was shortable with a stop just above this level. At this point, proactive shorts should be moving their stops to at least their entry point, making this a free trade.
I have no idea how much further this selloff will go, but chances are it will only last a few days and that means shorts need to be ready to lock-in profits quickly. Fight the urge to get greedy. Remember, this is still a bull market and these things bounce hard and fast. Hold a little too long and all of your short profits will evaporate.
Jumping from the frying pan and into the fire, the S&P 500’s 5% loss pales in comparison to TSLA‘s 30% collapse. Back in mid-February, I warned TSLA owners to get defensive if the stock retreated under $800 support. And here we are a few weeks later, testing $600. And before anyone starts thinking the worst is behind us, a dip under $600 could easily fall all the way back to $400. I don’t think anyone needs to be told holding through a 50% pullback is an awful pill to swallow.
Savvy traders lock-in profits when everyone else is overcome with greed. And those same savvy traders are there to pick up the pieces when the crowd gets terrified and starts selling their stocks at steep discounts.
If a person locked-in profits back at $800, no doubt they are hoping TSLA tumbles all the way back to $400. I’m not sure this falls that far, but it will definitely get worse before it gets better.
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By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis
Everything seemed so promising for the S&P 500 Monday afternoon following the biggest up-day in nine months. Fast forward two sessions and everything feels different.
While the index hasn’t violated last week’s lows, retesting support so soon after bouncing off of it is never a good sign. We want to see a surge of relief buying carry us higher, not waves of nervous selling knock us back down.
And while I count myself as one of the bulls, I recognized this retreat was a real possibility. As I wrote Monday evening:
All of this uncertainty stems from equity investors’ newfound obsession with 10-year Treasury yields. Yields go up, stocks go down. It doesn’t get any more complicated than that.
As I wrote last week, I don’t think this rise in yields is the real deal. Unfortunately, the market never once asked me what I think. Even if this rise in yields is nothing more than another false alarm, the only thing that matters over the near-term is if equity investors believe this is the real deal. If they want to abandon the market and sell their favorite stocks at steep discounts, no one can stop them.
I continue to believe this rise in rates is not the real deal and further, major bull markets do not turn off like a light switch. That said, even if this latest wobble ultimately resolves to the upside, things could get fairly bumpy over the near-term if nervous traders continue overreacting to these interest rate headlines.
If the S&P 500 undercuts 3,800 support, expect stock owners to start panicking as if the end is coming. That frenzied selling will likely last for a few days. But once it dies off, those of us that practice safe trading and sold at much higher levels have the cash to start snapping up all of those attractive discounts.
Speaking of safe trading strategies, by now most people who were following this rally higher with a sensible trailing stop have locked in their profits and are waiting for what comes next. Get ready because the bounce is coming. We just don’t know if this will bounce off of 3,800 again (boring!) or something much lower. (I’m hoping for much, much lower!)
Either way, be ready to put your cash to work. As always, wait for the bounce, start small, keep a near-by stop, and only add to a trade that is working. If the first bounce fizzles, no big deal, pull the plug and wait for the next one.
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By Jani Ziedins | End of Day Analysis
On Monday the S&P 500 produced its biggest gain since last summer. On Tuesday it gave back a chunk of those gains. Two steps forward, one step back.
There is nothing wrong with a minor step back following such a large up-day. The key is hanging on to what’s left. Stay above 3,850 and everything is fine. Falling under 3,800 so soon after bouncing off this key support level tells us there is a serious demand problem and the selling is only just getting started.
This bull market deserves the benefit of doubt because it hasn’t let us down yet. Until we experience a more material breakdown, expect every dip to bounce within days, if not hours. If this market was fragile and overbought, it would have collapsed a long time ago. (Pro-tip for all the cynics out there, weak fragile don’t keep setting record highs.)
But enough about the indexes. One of the most noteworthy stock performances of the day came from ZM. It announced blowout quarterly results Monday after the close and the stock popped Tuesday morning. Unfortunately, that was as good as it got. Within hours, that impressive 8% opening gain turned into a dreadful -9% closing loss. That’s a 17% swing from the highs to the lows.
There are few things in the stock market that look worse than this. In fact, I cannot think of anything worse than such an epic midday collapse. Rather than cheer the news, most owners did their best impersonation of rats abandoning a sinking ship.
A stock that cannot go up on good news is in desperate shape and destined to keep going lower. ZM is a strong short as long as it remains below $400.
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