Charting School is officially here! This is everything I've learned over the past 2 decades from both my own experiences and from the best Technicians in the business!
I've prepared 7 Technical Analysis lessons that I believe will help you for the rest of your career, whether you're an individual trader, Financial Advisor, Portfolio Manager, or you work for a family office, trust or any other institution. If you're just getting started as a trader or you're a 30-yr market veteran, I'm confident you'll find ...
In the latest All Star Charts Monthly Conference Call, JC laid out a number of bullish trades. In the week or so since that call, a number of the stocks mentioned have since pulled back. Does that mean the trades are dead?
Not necessarily.
Nothing goes up in a straight line. And if you're a believer that our current pullback is just a result of sector rotation and a reload for a later resumption higher, then you've got to be a lover (as I am) of opportunities to enter the strongest stocks as they pause and/or pull back a bit.
With that in mind, we're putting a trade on in a Pharma stock that has the wind in it's sails.
The market remains a hot mess where we're preferring market-neutral trades, however, some absolute trades are appropriate when the reward/risk is skewed heavily in our favor.
We outlined some favorable longs and shorts earlier today.
Another way of skewing the reward/risk in our favor is by looking for "big bases."
The way we learned it is the bigger the base, the higher in space and this is certainly a big base. And the reason we like looking for base breakouts in this environment is two-fold.
First off, big bases take time to form because they are caused by steady institutional accumulation. Mom and pop investors aren’t the ones creating this type of pattern, so we know that there’s underlying demand that will support prices if they do move lower.
Because prices have memory and the base has taken a significant period of time to build, there’s likely been more trading at each price level...
One of our six charts to watch this week is the Nifty Bank Index, so today we want to look at two stocks showing symptoms of the underlying problem in the sector.
Don't fight the tape. The markets are moving higher, whether we agree with it or not.
That said, we want to be long the strongest stocks. This is trendfollowing 101.
Last week, Steve Strazza put up a bunch of ideas in semiconductors which have been leading the way. Many are now breaking out so we're going to put on an options trade to take a jump into this trend.
For those new to the exercise, we take a chart of interest and remove the x/y-axes and any other labels that would help identify it. The chart can be any security in any asset class on any timeframe on an absolute or relative basis. Maybe it’s a custom index or inverted, who knows!
We do all this to put aside the biases we have associated with this specific security/the market and come to a conclusion based solely on price.
You can guess what it is if you must, but the real value comes from sharing what you would do right now. Buy,Sell, or Do Nothing?
Every weekend we publish performance tables for a variety of different asset classes and categories along with commentary on each.
This week’s main theme is risk-on action from beaten-down areas which we'll highlight in our US Index and Factor ETF tables, below.
We're putting a lot of emphasis on risk-appetite measures right now in order to provide insight into how the recent rangebound activity in Equity and Bond markets is likely to resolve itself.
The most basic way to assess risk-tolerance is to compare the performance of risk-on vs risk-off assets. As such, this post will focus on how the offensive vs defensive areas of various markets are acting right now.
Click table to enlarge view.
This week we saw some more mean-reversion in the laggards in our US Index ETF table. The most risk-on areas such as Transports (DJT) and the Mid/Small/Micro-Cap segments have been long-term underperformers, yet...
We've been using our "Five Bull Market Barometers" to measure the long-term health of the market and remain in the camp that risk in Equities remains elevated.
In this post, we're going to outline several charts we think will set the tone for the broader market through the rest of the quarter.
First, and most importantly, is the Nifty Bank Index which made new relative lows this week. On an absolute basis, prices are nearing their March lows of 16,100 after failing to reclaim their 2015-2016 highs in April.
Click on chart to enlarge view.
What we're watching is how prices react to those March lows. Is there any meaningful demand at that level? or does the trap door open and we see a quick move towards 13,500?
A lot of longs are using those lows as a stop or point of reference for their positions...not just in the Nifty Bank Index, but in most indices/stocks that bottomed around the same time. And if the largest sector of...
Why does Technical Analysis work? Because markets trend. No one can argue that. I don't care who you are. And what do we do as technicians? We look for trends!
I was recently a guest on the Trends With Benefits show. It's the perfect name for a podcast about the stock market, especially when you invite someone like myself, who is constantly looking to benefit from underlying trends in the market.
In this conversation, we talk about our Top/Down approach to the stock market. Ed asks me about why we were selling stocks and buying bonds weeks before the stock market crashed. So I tried to explain the things we saw, both from a breadth deterioration standpoint and all the intermarket relationships that had been pointing to...
Lots of charts are being shared showing the exponential growth in trading activity, new accounts, and anything else that might paint a story of euphoria at retail and discount brokerages since the pandemic broke out.
Here is some personal background only to provide context for what I’m about to discuss.
I live on an island. It is tiny, about 4 square miles. In fact, I live on an obscure island just above Key West which is technically much smaller than that. As a “Census Designated Place” it’s really just a collection of roads and canals, a village of about 4,400 people.
It’s nice, but it comes at the cost of an economy that relies almost entirely on Tourism. The people who live here are more or less fishermen or workers at the many hotels, bars, and restaurants in what’s generally a booming downtown area. Since shutting down our borders months ago, the local unemployment rate has spiked to an estimated 50%.