Monthly Archive for March, 2010

Finally

The indexes finally had a down day, not much, but red. The Dow is still up 4% in the first quarter of 2010. Remember yesterday’s blog entry about feeling like a flashback to 1999? Well, the last time the Dow did this good was….drum roll please….1999!

Thursday brings the weekly report on initial jobless claims, February’s construction spending, the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index, automobile sales for March and the nat gas report.

From the Stock Trader’s Almanac — First trading day in April, Dow up 12 of last 15. In 2008 up +3.2%, in 2009 up +2%. Nasdaq up 13 of 15 on the day before Good Friday and 9 straight since 2001.

The day after Easter is the worst “day-after-holiday” day. The S&P down 17 of last 26. What moshes this all up is that the month/quarter end is mixed in with a holiday. We’ll have to see how this gets written up in the history books.

On to the 2nd quarter…..

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Day-Tripper yeah

This morning the markets took me back to 1999…watching some stocks go up for no reason, but this time with no volume. The Nasdaq running up with AAPL going crazy because of a news story…and VZ on its coattails…flashback! It’s just amazing to me that anyone would want to go long any stock here. Certainly correction is imminent….Isn’t it?

AAPL is now bigger than BRKA, GE, PG, JNJ, GOOG and JPM. The only companies larger right now are MSFT, XOM and WMT. But just wait….a few more iSomething-or-others and they’ll be the biggest. :twisted:

I’m not looking to get into any new positions, just looking to get out for the long weekend. I’m looking to get into cash mostly. If I do hold anything it will probably be an inverse ETF or two…..like SDS or BGZ or TZA. Whichever, it will be a small position. I’ve got 2 more days to decide.

We’ve got 4 reports tomorrow that have market moving potential: 1. ADP Employment Change 2. Chicago PMI 3. Factory Orders 4. Crude Inventories. They’re listed not only in the order of announcement, but also in the order of potential movement in the market. It is also the last day of the month and the 1st quarter…..And don’t forget RIMM has an earnings report after the close.

April Fool’s on Thursday. The fool most likely is the Bureau of Labor Statistics, who have decided to announce March’s Non Farm Payroll and Unemployment report on a market holiday Friday…duh!

Dollar strong and futures weak this evening. Looking forward to some selling for the month/quarter end. If we don’t get that, even just a little bit, bears may just have to give it up and let the bulls run. Happy trading!

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Why gold will not make new highs or lows this year

Gold has had some dramatic moves in the last eighteen months and we expect it will have some equally dramatic moves in the future, but not right now.

Watch the Gold video here.

While I recognize that gold is one of the few commodity markets that people are really passionate about; the purpose of this article is not to take sides either with the gold bugs or those who reject the argument that gold is forever. Rather, I want to discuss my interpretation of the markets cycle.

After spot gold made an all-time high against the dollar on December 2 at $1,226.37, gold has been in retreat mode. For the for the past several months gold has been in a broad trading range, seemingly unable to move one way or another. This process has created frustration from bulls and bears alike.

Here is the dirty little secret about the gold market. It can be a horrible investment and here’s why:

Gold first started trading in the 80s while I was on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in Chicago as a member of the International Monetary Market, (IMM) which was at that time a division of the CME now the CME Group. When gold opened up the public clamored to buy into the gold futures market and guess who sold it to them? Thats right it was the pros- the guys who made their living trading. As a result, gold hit an all-time high of around $850 an ounce back then and it took almost 25 years for gold to move over that level, at least in dollar terms. I dont know what your timeline is, but 25 to 30 years is an awful long time to get even again.

So what is really happening in this market?

Everyone is aware of the problems in Europe with Greece, Portugal and a host of yet to be named countries. We all know that the huge amount of money being printed, coupled with the bank failures abroad contribute to the dollars declining value. These events, in conjunction with the American governments actions, also contribute to the devaluation of the dollar. The government claims that this is beneficial to exports, but the bottom line is that the purchasing power of the American dollar continues to erode in world markets.

Based on the declining value of world currency against gold you might ask- why isnt gold trading at $2,000 or even $3,000 an ounce? What is wrong with this market? This is because a great deal of what goes into the gold market is psychological and reacts to cyclic trends driven by both psychological and economic factors.

So what does all this have to do with the price of gold now? It has everything to do with gold and nothing to do with gold.

Here is what I’ve been able to observe in the last several years in gold and seems to be holding true. It is something that you should pay attention to if you’re interested in the next big move in the gold market.

Before gold can move higher it needs to create what I call an “energy field”. The most recent energy fields in gold were between May 12, 2006 and September 20, 2007. This 17 month energy field saw gold prices oscillate between a broad trading range bound by $730.08 (upside) and $541.80 (downside). That energy field produced enough power to propel gold to the new high of $1,012.40 on March 17, 2008. This marked the first time gold exceeded, in dollar terms, the highs set in the early 80s mentioned earlier.

The energy fields I have observed for gold are taking somewhere between 17 and 18 months to complete. If the energy field holds, then the December 3rd 2009 high of $1,226.37 should remain in place for quite some time. If the same cycle remains true then the recent lows that we witnessed, at $1,050, should also remain intact as they represent the 15 to 16 month cycle low.

With the lows in place the next question becomes when is the next cyclical high in gold? Based on the existing cycle, we can expect the next major gold high in 2011.

To summarize: I expect gold to be locked in a broad trading range for the next 12 months bounded by the December 09 highs of 1,226.37 and the lows of $1,050.00. If the gold cycle holds true, we expect that gold tops the $1,226.37 marker by April or May of 2011.

On the on the upside we will also be looking for gold to make a nature cyclic high in October or November of 2011. It’s impossible to predict the future with any degree of accuracy; however when we look at the cycles in gold this reads as a pretty good bet.

No matter what happens we expect gold will offer some great trading opportunities that investors and traders should be able to take advantage of.

Watch the Gold video here.

As I always discuss- in trading one should approach gold or any other market with a game plan and proper money management stops. The key to success in this decade will be an investors willingness to move in and out of asset classes such as gold and be well diversified into more than one asset class. That way you wont be left holding the bag for the next 25 years. Our World Commodity Portfolio is a good example of this approach and one I believe will serve investors well in the coming years.

All the best,
Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub

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Is it time yet?

Y’know…for the market to correct. I’ve been preparing for it, but it never comes. Every time the bears make a play, the bulls trample them. But, the volume of bulls keeps getting lower and lower. Monday continued it habit of a green up day.

Did you notice this morning that the indexes opened up and so did the VIX? Usually one is up and the other down. That got me worried that something was going to happen…but it didn’t. Seems like cash is probably the best position to be in, but I keep nibbling on the short side with QQQQ puts and the inverse ETF TZA. I’m also on the long side with DRYS…so I guess I go both ways. :oops:

After hours trading today was wild. AAPL and VZ busted to the upside when the Wall Street Journal reported AAPL to make an iPhone for the Verizon network. Of course this hurt both RIMM and T which went the other way. Another move was GNVC when they announced a failure of a Phase 3 trial…the stock dove 75%….traders couldn’t get out fast enough. 8O

Tuesday we get the Home Price Index and the Consumer Confidence Index along with a spattering of earnings reports. Let’s see if any of those can get us a turnaround Tuesday….to the downside.

Here’s some reading that should show us the way….
Consequences Of Health Care: Valuations

Massive Deficits, Debt Overhang and Rising Bond Yields

Raise Taxes and Cut Services? Why Not Stop Unnecessary Bailouts, Unnecessary Wars and Unnecessary Interest Costs Instead?

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I digress!

It’s been tough to trade with any technical or fundemental logic at the end of this quarter. Fund managers’ jobs are on the line and there is a lot of window dressing going on. It’s not like there is no news to mix things up….Greece, Portugal, N.Korea. Euro, Dollar, Unemployment, Housing, Interest Rates….yeah, everything is cool, calm and collected…everything points to a higher market! Right? What the $%@&*!

The market has been like that guy in the infomercial for the Slap Chop chopper “you’ll love my nuts!” chop chop chop. Traders are nervous.

In a socialistic state (like the US) it’s good to be unemployed. You can get paid unemployment, you can get your mortgage reduced or paid for, healthcare, education and a whole bunch of benefits. Why would anyone want to work? And just think, all that money you make or save for not working, you can put in the stock market. No wonder we’re still going up. I digress. 8)

Don’t forget London changes her clocks on Sunday night. New York will go back to -5hrs behind London. Is it really necessary to keep switching clocks back and forth?

Here’s some interesting reading in the NY Times….even StockTwits got mentioned. Day Traders 2.0: Wired, Angry and Loving It

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Nice Ride

The day was not at all what I had been expecting….but it sure ended that way! A weak dollar overnight got things rolling. BBY earnings report juiced it, along with QCOM, and then the Jobless claims report was the icing. We gapped up above previous highs, sold off a bit, consolidated then rallied. All morning it was buy the dips. But the buy-on-the-dip crowd was slapped hard by the end of the day. I’m not complaining, but I totally don’t understand today’s action.

I did panic some and sold off some TZA calls for a small loss and some TZA stock for some small gains….ending at breakeven. I continued to hold the remainder and was rewarded by the end of the day. I’m still holding overbight along with VIX calls. I hope Friday morning is better than today. :mrgreen:

And look at that uptick in volume in this 15-minute chart of the SPY. It just repeats what has been happening all month….up moves on low volume and down moves on higher volume.
Advance/decline volume went from 4:1 positive down to -2:1 negative….that’s a wicked drop. The question now is this a precursor to something or just a late afternoon anomaly? This evening futures are down slightly from the close, but they were last night also. We’ll have to wait and see what Asia and Europe has going….and maybe Trichet from the ECB can say something stupid again.

So it’s Friday before a holiday week. We’ve got GDP and Consumer Sentiment reports…not much in earnings reports, although the ORCL report this evening may carry over into the morning putting a damper on the QQQQ. Trade well!

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Bear Time?

After a full bullish day on Tuesday, we had a half bearish day on Wednesday. Portugal on the ropes and new home sales blowing a little stinker, the bulls did not have a leg to stand on. There were many attempts by the bulls to buy on the dips, but today the bears prevailed, taking back half of what they gave the bulls yesterday.

I still have all the positions I had yesterday, although I cashed out some profits in QQQ puts and then got back in when the market went back up. That double top in the SPY did what it said it was going to do today….and I’m still looking for more downside travel….but in this market, you never know.

Asian markets are opening in the green, as are the futures. We are near the end of the month and the quarter….plus next week is a holiday shortened week. Tomorrow we get Initial Jobless Claims and also earnings reports from BBY and ORCL, among others. These markets have me on edge and I hope some sort of “normalcy” returns soon. In the mean time, my stock positions are getting smaller as my cash position gets larger.

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Why is this market climbing?

I don’t know why, but to assign some sort of logic to the market is futile! Remember, after Monday and Tuesday even the calendat says W T F . . .

I got stuck between my longs and my shorts. I didn’t make money in either direction today, so I’m sitting overnite at about 40% long and 60% short….Long via DRYS VG GNVC and short via TZA VIX calls and QQQQ puts. GS wasn’t able to catch a bid all day. Usually you see GS leading the market, but it was divergent today. So will GS catch up to the market or will the market follow GS down?

This double top in the SPY shows some possibilities of a reversal….and there’s still that unfilled gap area from a couple weeks ago. 

Some news coming out tomorrow: Durable Good Orders and New Home Sales along with crude inventories.

Here’s more “good news” that should keep this market going up:
Underemployment Hits in Mid-March

Why the U.S.-China Currency Brawl Puts Global Recovery at Risk

Yes, I’m being facetious. 8)

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Unexpected

I really thought we would have a down day on Monday, but I guess all that down sentiment got used up overnight. Futures slipped all night but started recovery right after the cash gap down open and continued upward all day long.

So Monday continued its green streak….well its 28th out of the last 37 Mondays streak! I’m wondering if turnaround Tuesday will continue also?

I’m still in TZA and VIX calls…although I could have got out near the open with a decent profit, not expecting the hot acceptance of healthcare reform, the positions are underwater…but it’s shallow. I’ll give the market some time to clear its head. :twisted:

Here’s something that should juice the market higher: 2010 Bank Failure Tally Hits 37.

Lightning and thunder around here…..I think I’ll backup the computers!

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Irrational?

The Russell was down but the Nasdaq was up. The Dow was up but the NYSE was down….and the S&P was just a little below breakeven for the day. Not sure what kept this market up today, but it sure as hell wasn’t anything logical.

Tomorrow is OpEx so trading may be a little crazy. I try not to do much trading because things can move quickly in either direction. My inclination though is to continue adding positions in anticipation of a correction next week. I’ve been nibbling on TZA, both the stock and its calls, and VIX calls. TZA is green and VIX is red. I’ll wait until Monday to decide on some stops.

There’s a couple stocks I looked at that show some incinations to move up: ZANE SHIP QYM HLIT. I’ll put thise on my action list for Friday, but it will take a lot to make me play.

Here’s some interesting reading:

What the VIX Really Tells Us

Is China actually bankrupt?

Break Your Trading Routine.

As Keynes famously once said “The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent”. Be careful out there.

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