Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Is the Hot Money Leaving PALM for Verizon?

Doesn’t Verizon have that new Android rolling out?
Or maybe it is the risk aversion trade going on right now as Institutions sell risk and buy Large Cap Value.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Available Credit

Credit peaked last year and has been falling since. By now we all know that the US Economy is driven by credit. Falling credit either means falling consumption or it means that the Government has to print more money to keep consumption up.


Available Credit for business loans has contracted at the fastest rate on record. This tells you that banks aren’t lending and money available for buy bonds has flowed into Mortgages and Government Issued Debt.


Europe
It is not just in the US. Here is the headline today from Euroland –

“Bank lending to companies operating in the Eurozone fell in September for the first time on record, according to the European Central Bank.”

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8327809.stm

The US Government
In an effort to make up for tightening credit at banks, the Fed has been pumping money into the system to try and prop up the system. The Monetary Base is at a new all time high, so does it surprise you that Gold hit an all time high and Oil is rallying again?


Here is a visual example at what is occurring in the lending markets. The US Government (Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) have gone from originating about 55% of all mortgages in 2007 to over 90% in 2009. Banks and private lenders simply aren’t willing to lend money (or can’t lend) at these low interest rates.


http://www.pimco.com/LeftNav/Featured+Market+Commentary/IO/2009/Midnight+Candles+Gross+November.htm

Why do we need all of this cheap money? Bill Gross at PIMCO describes it like this –

“(A)lmost all assets appear to be overvalued on a long-term basis, and, therefore, policymakers need to maintain artificially low interest rates and supportive easing measures in order to keep economies on the ‘right side of the grass.’”

Let me know if what Mr. Gross says next sounds familiar –

“Let me start out by summarizing a long-standing PIMCO thesis: The U.S. and most other G-7 economies have been significantly and artificially influenced by asset price appreciation for decades. Stock and home prices went up – then consumers liquefied and spent the capital gains either by borrowing against them or selling outright. Growth, in other words, was influenced on the upside by leverage, securitization, and the belief that wealth creation was a function of asset appreciation as opposed to the production of goods and services.”

This is probably the most important thing Bill Gross will write over the rest of my career –

“Asset prices are embedded not only in our psyche, but the actual growth rate of our economy. If they don’t go up – economies don’t do well, and when they go down, the economy can be horrid.”

Asset Price Appreciation as a policy tool…

“Asset appreciation in U.S. and other G-7 economies has been artificially elevated for years. In order to prevent prices sinking even lower than recent downtrends averaging 30% for stocks, homes, commercial real estate, and certain high yield bonds, central banks must keep policy rates historically low for an extended period of time. If policy rates are artificially low then bond investors should recognize that artificial buyers of notes and bonds (quantitative easing programs and Chinese currency fixing) have compressed almost all interest rates.”

“(The Fed, the Treasury, the FDIC) recognize… that asset prices must be supported in order to generate positive future nominal GDP growth somewhere close to historical norms. The virus has infected far too many parts of the economy’s body, for far too long, to go cold turkey.”

“That support, of course, comes in numerous ways. Financial system guarantees, TARP recapitalization of banks, TAFs, TALFs, PPIFs – and in Europe and the UK, low interest rate term financing, semi-bank nationalizations, and asset purchase programs similar to the United States. In the case of the U.S., the amount of the implicit and explicit financial support given by policymakers totals perhaps as much as $5 trillion, which goes part way to support the $15 trillion overvaluation of assets theoretically calculated in the PIMCO model (100% of nominal GDP).”

“At the center of U.S. policy support, however, rests the “extraordinarily low” or 0% policy rate. How long the Fed remains there is dependent on the pace of the recovery of nominal GDP as well as the mix of that nominal rate between real growth and inflation.”

Any way you slice it, the name of the game is for the Government to use newly printed money to buy stuff from those who are looking to sell and deleverage.

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Market Narrows

For the first time in a while, I am seeing sectors starting to top and roll over. The Market is narrowing. The Summation Index fell to 960 today, after breaking the key 1,140 level late last week. The Bullish Percent Index has put in its first lower high since early June.

Transportation
Airlines



Real Estate Related
Mortgage Finance



Home Construction


Healthcare
Biotech



Health Care Providers

Saturday, October 24, 2009

All the Pieces Were There to Move The Markets Higher

Friday morning I fired up the computer at 5:30 am, knowing the following 2 facts –

Microsoft had blown away their earnings estimates, with the accompanying CNBC buy everything that moves fan faire

The Markets were extended and brushing right up against significant resistance

My only question was who would win Friday’s trading – buyers or sellers? It was strange to see the Futures for the NASDAQ up big, but the Futures of the Dow and S&P 500 only marginally up. I also noted that many stocks were trading down big in the pre-market trading.

Buying Bad News is Bullish and selling Good News is Bullish. Today the Good News was sold.

Leader Agruim (AGU) really caught my eye, because it was down over -4% before trading started. So I figured that maybe Tech would try and be strong, but Commodities would weigh on things. Agrium gapped down hard on the day and ultimately got smoked for -7.05%!


But in the big picture, all Agruim did was pull back to its breakout point and near it rising 50-day (Black Line). I will be watching this leader closely to see when to buy it.


I’ve have known for over a week that the markets were stretched and that a pullback was highly probable, so I have been taking money off the table. I have missed some things, but the markets have seen a lot of selling from the Big Boys and I would rather sell into some strength and capture a lot of the gains, then sell into weakness and take my chances. I am now flush with cash to buy the likes of Agruim…

Juniper (JNPR) gapped up big and then was immediately sold off hard. While doing my homework on Thursday night, I noticed the chart of Juniper and listed $28.30 as a stop buy. However, knowing the position of the market relative to resistance, I chose to not enter the order right away and see how things traded in the early going.


For those who wonder why charts are used to better time entries, Juniper is a perfect example of how the Big Boys trade off of key levels. When you pull up a chart, it is a blank slate. You are responsible for adding the lines that show the important data. In the last 19 years, I have read a lot and figured out what levels and indicators are important.

The chart you pull up on CNBC or Yahoo Finance would look something like this. About the only information you can take from this chart is that Juniper is trading above its 50-day and it was sold off a big volume today.


Here is the chart I have created. You can see that on each of Juniper’s the four pullbacks in October, the -1 Standard Deviation Band has served as support (Red Arrows). You can also see that the +2 Standard Deviation Band has served as resistance (Green Arrows). It isn’t mom and pop moving JNPR off of these levels, it is the big boys pumping through 20 million shares of volume today. They have certain indicators that they use and you need to know what they are.


The Summation Index has broken below 1,140 and now sits at 1,032. The Accumulation / Distribution reading from Investors Business Daily has fallen to the grade of “C” – which means that the big boys are no longer net buyers.

Transportation stocks got smoked today. That is never a good thing. I am nearly certain that the printing of money will cause the price of Oil to get so high that it will strangle the economy. That will lead to the next Bear Market. I don’t think that we are there just yet.


My list of leaders in bases is starting to get long again. My > ADX(15) List is now up to 390 names, where as two weeks ago it only had 40 names. So corrective work has been taking place under the surface, while the markets have held up. Normally you see the markets play catch up to the downside, as they make violent moves lower during the last part of the correction. We’ll see how this one plays out.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Wedging into a Ceiling?

Here is another big chart. Sorry, but there is a lot going on and I want to point a few things out.

The 50% retracement (Black Line and Arrow) of the Bear Market sits right above here at 1,120 (versus today’s 1,091 close). That is a key technical level and may lead some traders to lock in some profits.

Over the last few weeks I have been pointing out how moves tend to be over when price jumps up through the Upper Channel Line (Green Line). If the line holds again, then the next move down to the 50-day (Purple Line) will be a critical test for the uptrend.

As if that weren’t enough, $SPX is now 20% above the 200-day (Red Line). The markets have only been this “overbought” 6 times over something ridiculous like the last 30 or 50 years. I forget which, but the point is that this is a rare occurrence…

So you have a Market that is historically overbought, compressed up against a critical Fibonacci Level and its upper trendline.

But it gets better still. You also have a divergence between Price and two critical indicators of overall Market health – Bullish Percent ($BPSPX) and The Summation Index ($NYSI). That means that as Price is going to higher highs, fewer stocks are powering the market higher.


The rally off the March lows has seen virtually everything go up – over 92% of stocks are now above their 200-day. You are starting to see deterioration in the Technicals and some divergences between Price and key Indicators.

Summation Index ($NYSI) is essentially a longer-term method for measuring the Accumulation and Distribution of stocks. Bull Markets have historically topped out when the indicator gets near 1,600. You can see that 1,140 is a key level for $NYSI. A break below 1140 on the Summation Index would probably be a pretty Bearish event.

Momentum (RSI14) continues to diverge with Price.



As the Bull Market matures over the next few months, I expect to see fewer companies leading the markets higher – I will refer to this as the rally “narrowing”. That will mean fewer sectors going up and fewer stocks leading things higher. Stock and Sector selection will become more and more important as the Bull Market matures and fewer Sectors and Stocks are going up.

Emerging Market Currencies versus the US Dollar
Brazil rocked the markets today, when they announced that they will start taxing new Foreign Capital flowing into Brazil at a rate of 2%. It is a pretty novel idea. The issue Brazil, and the rest of Emerging Markets have, is that they need to raise Interest Rates to slow down their economies. But they know that when they raise Rates, that hot money will flow into their economies, creating Asset Bubbles.

This is the old Carry Trade, where you borrow in US Dollars at effectively 0% and lever up to buy Brazilian Bonds at a substantially higher yield than 0%. Money pours into the economy with higher rates, chasing Yield and sending Asset Prices vertical.

I think this new tax is pretty smart. It gives Brazil the ability to raise Interest Rates by at least 2%, without the threat of a bunch of hot money flowing into the economy overnight.

The ETF for Brazil (EWZ) was down on gigantic volume today (Red Box). Today’s tax appears to be a game changer for Brazil, at these for the near term. Huge volume down days, late in a trend, are often very bearish signs. Hot money will probably now look elsewhere – maybe China, or Australia.

My understanding is that there are a lot of bets right now for Emerging Market Currencies and against the US Dollar. That could be unwound in a hurry. I will continue to watch the Dollar closely for a potential bottom.

All of that said, there are still potentially Bullish setups. I will continue to sell extended and buy breakouts, with tight stops.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

You’d Better Know How to Play Defense Real Soon

I have a feeling that there is some pretty significant pain coming in the not too distant future. I haven’t seen much of anything actually break down yet, but it has been a heck of a rally since the lows and prices are approaching key technical levels.

Upper Channel Line
“You should sell if a stock goes though its up channel line after a huge run-up.” How to Make Money in Stocks 4th Edition, page 264 (William O’Neil). A number of Indexes are breaking out above the tops of their trading channels.

Emerging Markets (EEM) broke out today.

The S&P 500 (SPY) broke out a few weeks ago and then failed hard (Red Arrow). It is now trying to break out again.

The S&P 500 Equal-Weight Index (RSP) is breaking out above the Channel Line again and is also breaking out above a four-week trading range. I probably should have bought it today…

I wrote the following when the indexes were breaking above their Channel Lines in September –

“Moves through the top of the trading channel are often the final blow off moves before an extended consolidation. Note how I wrote consolidation and not Bear Market or Crash. The breakout above the channel in 2003 extended to a 9% rally over the next 5 weeks. Price then sat around for 9 months.

I would expect the next consolidation to last a couple months and be more of a period of rotation from former leaders into new leaders rather than a Market Top and selloff. I’ll let you know if things change, but for now there simply isn’t much that is breaking down.”

That said, the major indexes are fast approaching critical resistance levels and the consolidation could take the form of a 15% correction –

Dow Jones ($INDU) – It is great that the Dow has recaptured 10,000. Now it only has to rally another 44% to get back to it old highs… There is significant resistance at 10,350

The S&P 500 ($SPX) has significant resistance at 1,122

I started taking some money off the table today (Buy points were where price crossed above the Blue Lines)–

VMW broke out of a one-month consolidation and is getting extended.

STAR was bought out by Cisco yesterday for $35 per share in cash! I missed the breakout at $26, but bought it at $28.

FFIV also broke out of a 1-month consolidation and it has gone parabolic on the hourly chart.

There are several others that I am watching closely –

Canadian Dollar (FXC)
I bought the breakout for more conservative accounts and expect FXC to hit resistance soon.

CREE has been one of the stronger Technology stocks. It is now in day 3 of its consolidation above its recent breakout.

I have been patient with ASIA, having held it through the recent market consolidation. Today the buyers showed up and I got paid!

CEO broke out this week, stopping me in and it is now pulling away from the breakout. This is about as bullish of a chart as you can hope to see.

China (FXI) broke support (Red Circle), then gapped up and after running for about 13%, has now broken out of it recent trading range. I told you that they big boys could ramp Chinese stocks if they chose not to crack them in September.

Singapore (EWS) has been in a boring trading range for many weeks and finally broke out today.

Intel (INTC) broke out of a nice base and beat earnings estimates last night. If Intel cracks in the next few days, then you know that the big boys are selling the news and you will need to be cautious.

I have been adding to my positions in Gold (GLD) for many months. Here are two entry points. The break above $100 was a major breakout from an 18-month consolidation.

To recap, there is a lot of stuff breaking out of bases and a lot of other stuff that is getting extended. The markets are within a few percentage points of obvious, significant resistance.

The markets are still being driven by a cratering US Dollar, and I figured that the Dollar would bottom about the same time that stocks topped. I am very concerned about the $SPX 1,122 area and am watching the US Dollar closely in here! I would not be surprised to see a meaningful bottom in the Dollar, accompanied by a correction in Stocks, Gold and Commodities.

The flip side of that thesis is that the Dollar cracks and foreigners run for the hills, forcing asset prices down as well. There doesn’t seem to be much for the argument of prices going much higher from here after this current rally plays itself out. I can change very quickly if the big boys keep buying, but that is my thesis for now.

You had better know how to play defense. If you are thinking about moving accounts to those who understand how to defend your money, then get off your ass and get the paperwork in, before you are making decisions under duress.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Deconstructing the CREE Trade

Lots of people refer to Technical Analysis as “voodoo” or worse…

For me, Technical Analysis is about reading pictures of historical price and volume patterns. Charts are series of trends and consolidations. There are a fairly small number of chart patterns that consolidations will follow. The key then is to identify where to buy as the stock is attempting to break out of the consolidation – within the context of whether or not volume is confirming the breakout.

Here is a chart of Cree Research (CREE). Cree has been a leading stock with strong Earnings Growth. The pattern in the Blue Circle is a classic pullback. Cree broke out of the pattern on two big days. It then sat around at the previous high ($33-ish) for a few days, before gapping up and running to $39.

The current consolidation looks identical to the one in the Blue Circle. I had stops in to buy it at $37 - $37.10 (Green Arrow). The buyers showed up on Friday and Cree pooped +5.36%! It may now sit around at the old highs again before deciding what to do after earnings are released.

Here is how CREE looked on the 1-minute chart. Look at the move it made in the first few minutes of trading on Friday! I wish every trade worked so well…

Charts aren’t voodoo. They are used to better time entries and identify support levels.