We've already had some great trades come out of this Small-Cap focused column since we launched it late last year and started rotating it with our flagship bottoms-up scan, "Under The Hood."
Ultimately, to make the cut for our Minor Leagues list, you must have a market cap between $1 and $2B. There are also price and liquidity filters.
Then, we simply sort by proximity to new highs in order to focus on the best players only.
The idea is to catch the strongest names while they're still small and have serious upside potential. If any of these stocks ever climb up the ranks to the big leagues, just imagine the returns. We're looking at 5-10x moves just to break into large-cap land!
And what better time than now to launch a small-cap-focused column?...
This week we're looking at two long setups in the Pharma sector. With Nifty Pharma breaking out above its resistance of 13,500, a couple of stocks that we've been tracking for quite some time now have also followed through with a breakout.
Let's take a look at these names and track their levels going forward.
We retired our "Five Bull Market Barometers" in mid-July to make room for a new weekly post that's focused on the three most important charts for the week ahead.
This is that post, so let's jump into this week's edition.
Every month we get a fresh batch of Monthly Candlesticks. It only happens 12 times a year.
I promise you guys from the bottom of my heart that there is no other part of my entire process that provides as much value and information as my monthly chart review. Premium Members can access the Chartbook here.
In the meantime, my friend Josh Brown and I have been doing these short monthly videos since last summer.
On this latest episode we talk about how the market is behaving like it normally does in Year 2 of Bull Market cycles. Choppy, messy, and with a much different profile than the prior year. And, not only is that normal, but anything else would be historically abnormal.
Defensive areas like Consumer Staples, Gold, Bonds and Japanese Yen have been shining. We didn't see that in Year 1. It was the exact opposite.
We like shorting the Nasdaq here and being very picky when looking for Value stocks to buy.
The story of Value stocks continuing to be the leaders is something we absolutely cannot ignore.
But have you noticed? Many investors are ignoring it, particularly in the United States. "I'm a Growth Investor", is what they tell me lol. What even is that?
You can really see this rotation taking place in the ratio between the Nasdaq100 and the NYSE Composite:
Dividend aristocrats are easily some of the most desirable investments on Wall Street. These are the names that have increased dividends for at least 25 years, providing steadily increasing income to longer-term minded shareholders.
As you can imagine, the companies making up this prestigious list are some of the most recognizable brands in the world. Coca-Cola, Walmart, and Johnson & Johnson are just a few of the household names making the cut.
Here at All Star Charts, we like to stay ahead of the curve. That’s why we’re turning our attention to the future aristocrats. In an effort to seek out the next generation of the cream-of-the-crop dividend plays, we’re curating a list of stocks that have raised their payouts every year for 5-9 years.
We call them the Young Aristocrats, and the idea is that these are “stocks that pay you to make money”. Imagine if years of consistent dividend growth and high momentum & relative strength had a baby, leaving you with the best of the emerging dividend giants that are outperforming the averages.
Copper is breaking out to new all-time highs. Soybean Oil is trading at its highest levels in over a decade. These moves come as Grains, Lumber, and Base Metals have resumed their near-vertical ascent over the past couple of weeks.
But risk assets hitting our price objectives or running into logical levels of supply are key themes playing out across the market right now.
As many commodities approach key levels of potential resistance, it raises an important question…
The headlines this week focused on the, for lack of better word, carnage in some of the most speculative areas of the stock market. While late week rally attempts have taken some of the sting out of those declines, many of the hottest areas from 2020 are seeing more breakdowns than breakouts. While maybe not as exciting as SPAC’s and Innovative Tech companies, I’m paying attention to what’s going on in the Financials sector. The sector made new highs this week (as did Materials and Industrials), and its new high list expanded as well. The 75% of stocks in the sector making new 52-week highs is the highest in the decade’s worth of data we have available. Maybe I’m old-school, but leadership and broad support from Financials is not usually evidence of an overall market that is on the cusp of trouble.
Fortunes change. We've seen it time and time again, where once-prominent companies -- even entire industries -- fade away to shadows of their former selves or worse -- fade to oblivion. To the trash heap of has-beens.
But, occasionally we see these companies then reinvent themselves and rise like a Phoenix from the ashes.
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley.
We held our May Monthly Strategy Session Monday night which Premium Members can access and rewatch here.
For these calls, we really take a step back and put things in the context of their structural trends by focusing only on Monthly charts. This is easily one of our most valuable exercises.
In this post, we’ll provide a summary of the call by highlighting three of the most important charts and topics we covered along with commentary on each.
Anybody who has been tracking the market closely has noticed that the one sector which has been displaying the most strength off late is Metals. The sector-specific stocks have generated handsome returns in a short span of time and don't seem to be slowing down as well.
So for those who missed this rally, or those who are already invested, what are the levels to track going forward? We've got you covered.
Here is a comprehensive list of the best stocks from the sector. Some of these are actionable and some are price targets to track.