The best support buys are the ones in which multiple stocks within the same sector hit at the same time. This makes the success rate go up exponentially compared to a singular stock hitting support. Gold a good example today as three of the major stocks in the sector all hit support and bounced today. We think this will be a short term bottom in gold.
ABX BVN AEM all hit major support today.
An educational blog which supplements subscriber service Chart Patterns are nothing but Footprints of the Greenbacks.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
What a base
We're long SHLD in our long term account (1/5 starter from 75.2 which we unfortunately never added to) and we like how it's looking. The pattern is still wide and ideally needs more time but with today's momentum it might not wait too long. Great base that breaks out at 79.
Just last night we wrote in our newsletter:
SHLD very difficult to trade short-term and we prefer to put on a small longer term position as long as pattern is valid and just sit.
Just last night we wrote in our newsletter:
"Our Long Term account still holds 1/5 BRCM SHLD. We thought about selling them today and buying them further down but it's a small starter position and we're just going to sit. If things get ugly we'll probably will add (and post it in newsletter when we do)."
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Market Talk
Two notes: as tweeted this AM sold out of SLW BRCM swing longs in trading account. Trading account now all cash.
As we wrote here yesterday and for our readers last night -- we simply do not have any good set-ups right now which usually is a great indication that we're in for some choppy action. If market is resting we should get longs in a few days. If market is topping we'll start to see shorts soon. But for now it's a good time to relax and let the others fight it out.
A big part of trading successfully is simply knowing when to step on the pedal and be aggressive, and also when to stop, get out of the car and go for coffee.
As we wrote here yesterday and for our readers last night -- we simply do not have any good set-ups right now which usually is a great indication that we're in for some choppy action. If market is resting we should get longs in a few days. If market is topping we'll start to see shorts soon. But for now it's a good time to relax and let the others fight it out.
A big part of trading successfully is simply knowing when to step on the pedal and be aggressive, and also when to stop, get out of the car and go for coffee.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Market Talk
On the bullish side we've had six triggers today from our newsletter and all are green and gave a good trading opportunity (in that they all gave at the very minimum 2 x risk/reward).
As extended as this market is we will only stop looking long when we see two things happen:
1) broad sector/breadth sell-off instead of rotation
2) support buying stops working as dip buyers stop showing up.
However, one note on the cautious side: our best set-ups, one's we have been stalking for many days on the newsletter, all triggered today (MELI CAT ATI CRS CMI AGU). We don't have that many good set-ups left and what this often indicates is that the market is heading towards increased volatility. Because of this we'll only be swinging partials on any trades initiated today and only the ones that give us a comfortable cushion.
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Update: we ended up swinging no positions from any trades that were initiated today (even though ATI CRS were decent candidates we opted to just cash it in and raise cash) and only have left partials on SLW BRCM in our trading account from last week. (BRCM SHLD in LT account).
As extended as this market is we will only stop looking long when we see two things happen:
1) broad sector/breadth sell-off instead of rotation
2) support buying stops working as dip buyers stop showing up.
However, one note on the cautious side: our best set-ups, one's we have been stalking for many days on the newsletter, all triggered today (MELI CAT ATI CRS CMI AGU). We don't have that many good set-ups left and what this often indicates is that the market is heading towards increased volatility. Because of this we'll only be swinging partials on any trades initiated today and only the ones that give us a comfortable cushion.
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Update: we ended up swinging no positions from any trades that were initiated today (even though ATI CRS were decent candidates we opted to just cash it in and raise cash) and only have left partials on SLW BRCM in our trading account from last week. (BRCM SHLD in LT account).
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Longer term charts
For position trader readers here are 3 longer term charts that we absolutely love. We're very confident that all three will trigger their breakout prices (BRCM 50, OXY 100, SHLD 79)-- but we just don't know when!
We already have a 1/5 position in our long term account from 45 in BRCM and will add on any pullback. We love the multi-year base under 50 -- just a matter of time it goes and this year could be the one as smartphone story gains momentum.
OXY 100 has been on our list for a long time and we love the potential of this chart - however we would prefer it to carve out a flattish phase now under 100 to work off the extended nature of the move from late 2010.
SHLD can be a demon to trade on a short-term time-frame but we like it for longer term swing once it tightens the pattern under 79. Very nice base. Started 1/5 position in SHLD at 75.2 to join BRCM in the long term account. Expecting a lot of basing and filling under the 200 SMA/79 resistance but wanted to get involved with starter position.
We already have a 1/5 position in our long term account from 45 in BRCM and will add on any pullback. We love the multi-year base under 50 -- just a matter of time it goes and this year could be the one as smartphone story gains momentum.
OXY 100 has been on our list for a long time and we love the potential of this chart - however we would prefer it to carve out a flattish phase now under 100 to work off the extended nature of the move from late 2010.
SHLD can be a demon to trade on a short-term time-frame but we like it for longer term swing once it tightens the pattern under 79. Very nice base. Started 1/5 position in SHLD at 75.2 to join BRCM in the long term account. Expecting a lot of basing and filling under the 200 SMA/79 resistance but wanted to get involved with starter position.
Monday, January 10, 2011
Market Talk
We aren't too active today with only 2 trades triggering -- both alerts we've had for days in our newsletter. FSLR 136 breakout which didn't do much but was good for a quick trade and NFLX target trade 185 (target trade meaning you enter below the number on a base and break/Indy -- in this case it set up at 184.1 at 11:55AM and take first partial out AT the 185 alert. Anything beyond is bonus).
SPY third test of 126.2 support held again which shows the astounding bid in the market right now. As our readers know we LOVE buying support but as a rule we buy the first test of support and never the second (if short time has lapsed between the tests) and certainly never the third. Nevertheless, it worked like a charm today and dip buyers were again victorious laughing all the way to the bank. No regrets though on missing this one especially since we didn't have any support alerts trigger at the same time.
We had a good question today from a reader who asked us "doesn't support become more valid the more times it tests the number?". The answer is yes and no. If for example stock HCPG has tested 50 support three times in four years then yes this is a very important support that has to be respected. But if a stock keeps banging on support within very short time intervals (and 3 tests in 5 days certainly qualifies as short time interval) then no, the risk-reward of buying support for us becomes too low.
Usually what one sees when stock keeps repeatedely bouncing on support is that the bounce becomes weaker and weaker until it finally bases on support and falls through. However that being said that pattern is a lot easier to trade on stocks than on ETFs (we rarely short breakdowns on ETFs, almost always our shorts on ETFs are resistance shorts, and not breakdown through support shorts).
It's a mixed picture out there and we don't have that many breakout longs nor breakdown shorts. As always, do remember that all talk is just that, talk, and all we do in the end is trade the set-ups.
SPY third test of 126.2 support held again which shows the astounding bid in the market right now. As our readers know we LOVE buying support but as a rule we buy the first test of support and never the second (if short time has lapsed between the tests) and certainly never the third. Nevertheless, it worked like a charm today and dip buyers were again victorious laughing all the way to the bank. No regrets though on missing this one especially since we didn't have any support alerts trigger at the same time.
We had a good question today from a reader who asked us "doesn't support become more valid the more times it tests the number?". The answer is yes and no. If for example stock HCPG has tested 50 support three times in four years then yes this is a very important support that has to be respected. But if a stock keeps banging on support within very short time intervals (and 3 tests in 5 days certainly qualifies as short time interval) then no, the risk-reward of buying support for us becomes too low.
Usually what one sees when stock keeps repeatedely bouncing on support is that the bounce becomes weaker and weaker until it finally bases on support and falls through. However that being said that pattern is a lot easier to trade on stocks than on ETFs (we rarely short breakdowns on ETFs, almost always our shorts on ETFs are resistance shorts, and not breakdown through support shorts).
It's a mixed picture out there and we don't have that many breakout longs nor breakdown shorts. As always, do remember that all talk is just that, talk, and all we do in the end is trade the set-ups.
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Why we hate predictions
Crude is down 5% from its highs earlier this week, gold down 4%, and silver down over 7% and yet the Nasdaq hit a new high today. The Nasdaq being a better comparison than the S&P 500 as it doesn't contain nearly as many commodities and is the "momentum" higher beta index. Financials are not even 1% away from their highs.
This is evidence, thus far, of classic rotation. The big million dollar question of course is IF the commodity sell off accelerates, will the market finally be pulled down? However, attempting to predict the answer, for our type of trading, is completely irrelevant.
This is all we do: everyday after the close we go through a core set of stocks looking for set-ups. We add alerts, put them in newsletter, send it off, and then trade accordingly the next day. If market starts to crack, we'll see it in the set-ups.
Don't worry so much about the big, bad correction. All markets correct, and eventually we'll get one, be it next week, next month, or next quarter. But it won't happen instantly -- you're not going to wake up to a 5% gap down and then see market die for next 3 months. Trends as strong as this one are like giant ships -- it takes a while for them to turn around. Thus far we've had an important red flag and that's the commodity weak price-action. Commodities are often early indicators of corrections, but not always. Basically, as long as there's no contagion to other non-commodity sectors, it cannot be construed as bearish for entire market.
Before getting grizzly bearish we'd want to see financials die, tech leaders such as AAPL GOOG get hit hard, transportation stocks roll over, and most importantly, we'd want to see support buying cease to work. Bear markets don't care about support. They eat them for breakfast. Support buying is our specialty and we'll be the first to know if it ceases to work. Until that (very sad day) occurs in that we get stopped out on our support buys instead of seeing green, we'll be buying the dip on oversold sectors hitting support.
So relax, take it one day at a time, and don't worry about predicting anything. Just watch the price-action, trade your set-ups, take your profits, respect your stops, and trade accordingly. That's it. And leave the market predictions to the CNBC "gurus".
This is evidence, thus far, of classic rotation. The big million dollar question of course is IF the commodity sell off accelerates, will the market finally be pulled down? However, attempting to predict the answer, for our type of trading, is completely irrelevant.
This is all we do: everyday after the close we go through a core set of stocks looking for set-ups. We add alerts, put them in newsletter, send it off, and then trade accordingly the next day. If market starts to crack, we'll see it in the set-ups.
Don't worry so much about the big, bad correction. All markets correct, and eventually we'll get one, be it next week, next month, or next quarter. But it won't happen instantly -- you're not going to wake up to a 5% gap down and then see market die for next 3 months. Trends as strong as this one are like giant ships -- it takes a while for them to turn around. Thus far we've had an important red flag and that's the commodity weak price-action. Commodities are often early indicators of corrections, but not always. Basically, as long as there's no contagion to other non-commodity sectors, it cannot be construed as bearish for entire market.
Before getting grizzly bearish we'd want to see financials die, tech leaders such as AAPL GOOG get hit hard, transportation stocks roll over, and most importantly, we'd want to see support buying cease to work. Bear markets don't care about support. They eat them for breakfast. Support buying is our specialty and we'll be the first to know if it ceases to work. Until that (very sad day) occurs in that we get stopped out on our support buys instead of seeing green, we'll be buying the dip on oversold sectors hitting support.
So relax, take it one day at a time, and don't worry about predicting anything. Just watch the price-action, trade your set-ups, take your profits, respect your stops, and trade accordingly. That's it. And leave the market predictions to the CNBC "gurus".
Tuesday, January 04, 2011
Market Thoughts
Today's big rally decimated our alert list (we had 8 long trades trigger including our best set-ups that we had been stalking for weeks, including NTAP 56, VMW 92). As a rule we never go counter-trend if we have a lot of alerts that still have yet to trigger, i.e. we never go short if our list is full of long alerts that haven't triggered yet. However every once in a while a big rally empties our alert list such as today and when that happens we give ourselves the green light to go counter-trend. We're expecting choppy action going forward (also note the divergence between market and commodities today which printed some exhausted candles) and are in scalp mode with a focus on shorting euphoric spikes up.
However all this being said: even a few days of flattish action would set up a number of new long alerts. Definitely too early to call a top but can't be blind either to signs of a tired, extended market, especially if you have a very short time-frame such as we do. Traders with longer time-frames have less to worry about as the market could simply base before grinding higher.
ANR, one of our favorite trading stocks, a good example of what we're talking about as it printed a gravestone doji today:
When we see exhaustion moves like this then we often go short for daytrades. Not shorting weakness, but shorting euphoric buying as panicked longs chase exhausted moves up.
Huge run on ANR -- and extended from the base at 56.5 (where we had alert on the HCPG newsletter last week).
However all this being said: even a few days of flattish action would set up a number of new long alerts. Definitely too early to call a top but can't be blind either to signs of a tired, extended market, especially if you have a very short time-frame such as we do. Traders with longer time-frames have less to worry about as the market could simply base before grinding higher.
ANR, one of our favorite trading stocks, a good example of what we're talking about as it printed a gravestone doji today:
When we see exhaustion moves like this then we often go short for daytrades. Not shorting weakness, but shorting euphoric buying as panicked longs chase exhausted moves up.
Huge run on ANR -- and extended from the base at 56.5 (where we had alert on the HCPG newsletter last week).
Friday, December 31, 2010
QQQQ 55 talk
From our post on November 05 we wrote how QQQQ 55 would be the target we constantly had our eyes on (and how we wouldn't short in front of it).
Market indeed did go to 55 target and turned around on this significant resistance zone. Any pullback now would be bullish as we are too extended to take out this wall of resistance. The pattern is bullish and it wouldn't surprise us if we based under it for the intermediate term before breaking out into higher territory. As we've preached over the years, the easiest trade is to stay long into the target instead of attempting to buy the breakout. This year we've focused a lot on target trading and that's a theme we're going to run with into 2011.
Market indeed did go to 55 target and turned around on this significant resistance zone. Any pullback now would be bullish as we are too extended to take out this wall of resistance. The pattern is bullish and it wouldn't surprise us if we based under it for the intermediate term before breaking out into higher territory. As we've preached over the years, the easiest trade is to stay long into the target instead of attempting to buy the breakout. This year we've focused a lot on target trading and that's a theme we're going to run with into 2011.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Focus on a few and then hit them hard!
As we wrote in our last blog post, ideas are a dime a dozen. What's key is to be able to hone down the list into an actionable number. There are literally dozens and dozens of "ok" set-ups one can fill one's watchlist with every day. But in our experience the more mediocre set-ups you watch the less money you will make. Focus on only the best and then hit them hard. These are ALL the trades that triggered for us for the last trading week winners and loser complete with the reviews the next day that we wrote for our subscribers. As you can see each day only 2 or 3 trades triggered. Not less, not more.
Last Friday's triggers:
"We had waited for this MON 64 breakout for weeks and had written on Thursday night that it was our best set up going into Friday. We wrote to watch for base and break 50 cents under and indeed that's close to where it set-up. Nice run for over 1.5 points. We're still swing long partial of the daytrade that we did not exit. We had on pretty big size in this trade -- we had waited weeks for this (including an aborted target swing trade), and we would be damned before we missed our MON breakout!"
"DECK we wrote was a "high-end" set-up which means for the most part to hit and run. We wrote on Thursday to watch for base and break between 83.4-84 for a run to 85+. Worked very well at 84 and a lot of you daytraders caught this. Nice. "
"WYNN we wrote needed one more day to set-up at 107 (it was a one day touch on daily). It didn't wait and ruined the spot on Friday. One touch spots have a relatively high failure rate and this one was no exception. Too bad as it could have been a nice spot on a good runner."
Monday's triggers:
"CRM 134 short alert technically worked for a daytrade but it was very extended by the time it hit our alert and was not a good risk-reward entry. If you wanted it short then possible entries were against the 9EMA this morning as it was trending down. Even though 134 short was successful for a quick daytrade that's not the type of trade we'd want you to take."
Tuesday's triggers:
"APA 118 clean set-up at number and travelled 80 cents before reverting back to number. Somewhat boring but we don't expect much from big cap stocks in holiday weeks. " "We liked how GOOG touched the minor spot in the AM -- this was a good type of trade to buy pullback in near the 9 EMA on reversal back from R1. At 603 it was Indy type set-up as stock was riding up the ascending EMA with 603 resistance on top. If you didn't get in before entry was 603 with stop on 20EMA which at that time wasn't even a point (incredible for a 600 dollar stock). However stock didn't do much as it bumped up a few points and closed on the alert. "
"MEE had some news this AM and opened at our number and did nothing all day. "
Wed triggers:
"DVN based at 75 and then had a decent 1.6 point run. "
"SU opened at our old 37 spot and rose for 2%. If you're holding swing prepare for some choppiness in the 38 zone -- long time resistance. "
Thursday (today) triggers:
"We had been watching this CF 130 spot for a long time -- and it really set up for this breakout yesterday. Two days ago we wrote that it still wasn't ready but last night we wrote "Looks good for breakout anytime now". Very nice 4 point rip. "
"GM 35 was an old alert that came back in play yesterday. Very nice little trade here from our spot. "
Remember, focus on the best and then hit them hard!
Happy holidays to all our readers -- stay safe and see you next week.
Monday, December 20, 2010
It's the execution stupid!
There are abundant good money-making ideas running through StockTwits every day. Yet there are also thousands of traders who read these same ideas but just can't seem to work their away above "churn/grind" status (not to mention the number who actually lose money). Why is that?
Because it's the execution of the idea that makes the difference between a profitable trader and a non-profitable trader. Develop an execution methodology and then filter all external ideas from others through that framework; otherwise you'll be lost in the noise. What does this mean?
Basically you have to figure out what kind of trading you want to do before you trade anyone else's ideas. And no one can do that for you -- that's the hard work that many wannabe traders avoid.
We have a very defined methodology that revolves around support and resistance. It's the only thing we do and the only way we've traded for now 13 years. We've taught it to our subscribers for almost 5 years now in the HCPG newsletter. We don't do options, we don't trade gaps, we don't trade small-caps, we don't trade earnings, and we don't trade news. But what we do every day is trade in a very specific way around support and resistance on a small set of stocks (around 200 candidates, with a high percentage in momentum and commodity).
Even though we have opinions on what the market will do they become completely irrelevant once the market opens. We might feel bearish but if our long alerts trigger and set-up well ( conditions being good volume, and set-up under two intraday strategies we've developed, base and break and Indy) we will go long. It really is as simple as that. What we believe and what we do have very little to do with each other. Of course one's bias helps one's conviction but in the end the set-up will always trump everything else in our trading. This is the beauty of having a pre-defined watch-list -- it removes your opinion from the equation.
We keep it very clean and very simple. We focus on very few stocks for each day and all the homework is done the night before. We rarely trade any stock which was not on our watchlist from the night before. We often watch the same stock for days before our we finally pounce as our alert triggers. This gives us conviction in the trade as we have become familiar with the stock's behavior. This is our methodology. What's yours?
Figure it out before you jump on our or anyone else's ideas.
Because it's the execution of the idea that makes the difference between a profitable trader and a non-profitable trader. Develop an execution methodology and then filter all external ideas from others through that framework; otherwise you'll be lost in the noise. What does this mean?
Basically you have to figure out what kind of trading you want to do before you trade anyone else's ideas. And no one can do that for you -- that's the hard work that many wannabe traders avoid.
We have a very defined methodology that revolves around support and resistance. It's the only thing we do and the only way we've traded for now 13 years. We've taught it to our subscribers for almost 5 years now in the HCPG newsletter. We don't do options, we don't trade gaps, we don't trade small-caps, we don't trade earnings, and we don't trade news. But what we do every day is trade in a very specific way around support and resistance on a small set of stocks (around 200 candidates, with a high percentage in momentum and commodity).
Even though we have opinions on what the market will do they become completely irrelevant once the market opens. We might feel bearish but if our long alerts trigger and set-up well ( conditions being good volume, and set-up under two intraday strategies we've developed, base and break and Indy) we will go long. It really is as simple as that. What we believe and what we do have very little to do with each other. Of course one's bias helps one's conviction but in the end the set-up will always trump everything else in our trading. This is the beauty of having a pre-defined watch-list -- it removes your opinion from the equation.
We keep it very clean and very simple. We focus on very few stocks for each day and all the homework is done the night before. We rarely trade any stock which was not on our watchlist from the night before. We often watch the same stock for days before our we finally pounce as our alert triggers. This gives us conviction in the trade as we have become familiar with the stock's behavior. This is our methodology. What's yours?
Figure it out before you jump on our or anyone else's ideas.
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Update
We sold GD NBL for profit and ATPG exit near break-even. We're done with swings here until we enter what we feel is a better risk-reward environment. Back to daytrading.
Monday, December 13, 2010
Swing and Day
Daytrades worked very well today but swings are in a mellow mood.
These are the daytrade alerts that triggered from this weekend's newsletter (CLF AAPL gapped above).
JNPR 36 alert: ripped right from the open.
MA was the nicest set-up of the day and our best trade today -- we wrote to watch 255.7-256 for set-up (alert was 256).
SCCO was target trade for 42.5+.
SCCO another Indy set-up riding up the 9EMA and basing under 47.2. As Indy pattern gets squeezed there comes a "do or die" time -- most of the time it's "do" and no exception here for a nice breakout of 47.2 Stop is always on a reversal of whatever EMA the stock is riding. Other possible entries were along the EMA with stop under.
VECO alert was at 49 -- just like JNPR it ripped right through from the open for a nice move.
We outlined all our swing trades with stops in the newsletter -- ATPG holding well, MON we're not crazy about and sold it today for break-even, GD still holding well but have moved up stop to today's low, NBL we noted in newsletter that we would add near 50SMA which we did -- stop now under 81, and SOHU we wrote in newsletter we'd take the loss on 75 which happened today.
All in all, good day. Very good daytrades and remaining swings (ATPG GD NBL) all have stops nearby and look decent.
These are the daytrade alerts that triggered from this weekend's newsletter (CLF AAPL gapped above).
JNPR 36 alert: ripped right from the open.
MA was the nicest set-up of the day and our best trade today -- we wrote to watch 255.7-256 for set-up (alert was 256).
MA perfect set-up at 256 for a mini Indy (Indy refers to an HCPG strategy discussed often in newsletter and blog) as R1/alert were the upside resistance and stock squeezed by the 9EMA from bottom. Entry was 256 itself with stop under 9EMA, around 1 point with first partials not taken until 260 for 4 point profit. Excellent risk-reward.
SCCO was target trade for 42.5+.
SCCO another Indy set-up riding up the 9EMA and basing under 47.2. As Indy pattern gets squeezed there comes a "do or die" time -- most of the time it's "do" and no exception here for a nice breakout of 47.2 Stop is always on a reversal of whatever EMA the stock is riding. Other possible entries were along the EMA with stop under.
VECO alert was at 49 -- just like JNPR it ripped right through from the open for a nice move.
We outlined all our swing trades with stops in the newsletter -- ATPG holding well, MON we're not crazy about and sold it today for break-even, GD still holding well but have moved up stop to today's low, NBL we noted in newsletter that we would add near 50SMA which we did -- stop now under 81, and SOHU we wrote in newsletter we'd take the loss on 75 which happened today.
All in all, good day. Very good daytrades and remaining swings (ATPG GD NBL) all have stops nearby and look decent.
Friday, December 10, 2010
Our positions
Update:
1.Sold partials on the VMW for just under a point on the breakout test (if we go under we often take some off into target of breakout alert). We now have our stop around breakeven on a move below 88.
2. SWN keeps threatening to stop us out but at the last second moves up and away from our stop. A move through 35.5 today would make us exit.
Everything else looking healthy: we're green in VMW GD ATPG NBL and down 0-1% in SWN SOHU MON. The more extended the market the less "Cowboyish" we are with trades and the tighter our stops.
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Update II:
at 3:50 PM on Friday. Booked the rest of VMW for 1 point gain; bailed on SWN for 20 cent loss and took partials across the board for gains (GD ATPG NBL) and losses (MON SOHU) on this market rip as we're feeling uneasy due to how extended market has become. Still long partials in GD ATPG MON NBL SOHU.
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We're swing long 7 positions now (5 of them we bought lower from selling earlier this week and 2 new ones).
We sold SWN earlier this week near 38 and bought it back on the 50SMA bounce under 35.9. SWN testing 50SMA right now and we might bail on this for 30-40 cent loss on a close under 50SMA.
MON we sold near 63 and picked it up again near 61 on bounce on 20SMA-- has support at 60.5. Close below that would likely take us out.
ATPG we sold near 16.5 resistance on Tuesday and picked up again for 4% lower -- we like how its basing under 16.5 resistance and are just going to sit on this for a while. Our "bail" point would be a loss of the 50SMA.
GD we sold over 69 and picked back up aournd 1% lower -- we like this for a break-out of 70.
NBL we sold Tuesday at the open near 87 and picked up again today at 81.76 just above the 50SMA. If it loses the 50SMA and then 80 support on a closing basis we'd probably take the loss.
SOHU small swing here on today's dip at 77.5 in anticipation of 79 break-out. Smaller size than previous positions because support far away. We'll play this one by ear as there is no real support nearby.
Same thing for VMW. We picked this one up today at 88.07 in anticipation of 89 break-out. Again though, smaller than all the other positions (save SOHU, same size) because no real support nearby. Another one we'll go by feel for stop.
We're less aggressive than last time we put on swings (12 positions, all bigger) as commodities are still weak and we feel more confirmation is needed before we put on more size.
1.Sold partials on the VMW for just under a point on the breakout test (if we go under we often take some off into target of breakout alert). We now have our stop around breakeven on a move below 88.
2. SWN keeps threatening to stop us out but at the last second moves up and away from our stop. A move through 35.5 today would make us exit.
Everything else looking healthy: we're green in VMW GD ATPG NBL and down 0-1% in SWN SOHU MON. The more extended the market the less "Cowboyish" we are with trades and the tighter our stops.
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Update II:
at 3:50 PM on Friday. Booked the rest of VMW for 1 point gain; bailed on SWN for 20 cent loss and took partials across the board for gains (GD ATPG NBL) and losses (MON SOHU) on this market rip as we're feeling uneasy due to how extended market has become. Still long partials in GD ATPG MON NBL SOHU.
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We're swing long 7 positions now (5 of them we bought lower from selling earlier this week and 2 new ones).
We sold SWN earlier this week near 38 and bought it back on the 50SMA bounce under 35.9. SWN testing 50SMA right now and we might bail on this for 30-40 cent loss on a close under 50SMA.
MON we sold near 63 and picked it up again near 61 on bounce on 20SMA-- has support at 60.5. Close below that would likely take us out.
ATPG we sold near 16.5 resistance on Tuesday and picked up again for 4% lower -- we like how its basing under 16.5 resistance and are just going to sit on this for a while. Our "bail" point would be a loss of the 50SMA.
GD we sold over 69 and picked back up aournd 1% lower -- we like this for a break-out of 70.
NBL we sold Tuesday at the open near 87 and picked up again today at 81.76 just above the 50SMA. If it loses the 50SMA and then 80 support on a closing basis we'd probably take the loss.
SOHU small swing here on today's dip at 77.5 in anticipation of 79 break-out. Smaller size than previous positions because support far away. We'll play this one by ear as there is no real support nearby.
Same thing for VMW. We picked this one up today at 88.07 in anticipation of 89 break-out. Again though, smaller than all the other positions (save SOHU, same size) because no real support nearby. Another one we'll go by feel for stop.
We're less aggressive than last time we put on swings (12 positions, all bigger) as commodities are still weak and we feel more confirmation is needed before we put on more size.
Wednesday, December 08, 2010
Market Talk
Market decent action today in almost every non-commodity sector. We bought back 3 positions that we sold yesterday, all for lower prices but all still above support. Bought MON on 20SMA bounce and in anticipation of 64 breakout, bought back ATPG (support farther away there - 50SMA) in anticipation of 16.5 breakout, and GD in anticipation of 70 breakout. Natty is the only commodity acting well -- gold, silver, coal, ag stocks, and oil all were weak on the day. We'd like to buy back our commodity sells from yesterday (including CLF OXY APA NBL which are all significantly lower from our sales) but want to be more patient on these and wait for tests of support.
We'll be going through all our favorite commodity stocks and will list all of our support alerts in tonight's newsletter.
We'll be going through all our favorite commodity stocks and will list all of our support alerts in tonight's newsletter.
Market Talk
A lot of investors/swing traders talk about how utterly wrong it is to try to pick tops and bottoms. Well, we do it all the time. And well -- we've picked short-term tops and bottoms correctly many times in real-time in the last year we've been on Twitter, and archived for our subscribers in the last 4 1/2 years of the HCPG newsletter. It really isn't that hard if you know what to look for. Yesterday we sold all our swings (12 positions including many commodities that have gotten hammered since) near the highs of the day (again, all real-time) after 3 weeks of being long.
Operative word though is short-term. We're not into picking long-term bottoms/tops, which we think is significantly more difficult. Everything we do is based around the short-term, meaning 2-5 day time-frame (or 2-5% in price).
We've taken it easy today, as is our custom on the first day after sentiment change. We like to get active on day 2-3 when decent support candidates pop up but on day 1 there's usually not much to do, for our style of trading anyway.
The only support trade that triggered today from last night's newsletter was OXY on 91 support -- we tried it since risk was so low. Entry was around 91.03 with stop at 90.87 (it's our typical support trade strategy of getting in on reversal on alert with stop under -- many posts in blog on this subject). First partial is always against the 20EMA/5 min chart. Stop for rest is on the higher low trend-line or break-even. First partial profit was for 37 cent profit (not much but risk was only 16 cents). Holding rest to see if we can get through the 20EMA as trade now is risk-free with stop at our entry price.
Operative word though is short-term. We're not into picking long-term bottoms/tops, which we think is significantly more difficult. Everything we do is based around the short-term, meaning 2-5 day time-frame (or 2-5% in price).
We've taken it easy today, as is our custom on the first day after sentiment change. We like to get active on day 2-3 when decent support candidates pop up but on day 1 there's usually not much to do, for our style of trading anyway.
The only support trade that triggered today from last night's newsletter was OXY on 91 support -- we tried it since risk was so low. Entry was around 91.03 with stop at 90.87 (it's our typical support trade strategy of getting in on reversal on alert with stop under -- many posts in blog on this subject). First partial is always against the 20EMA/5 min chart. Stop for rest is on the higher low trend-line or break-even. First partial profit was for 37 cent profit (not much but risk was only 16 cents). Holding rest to see if we can get through the 20EMA as trade now is risk-free with stop at our entry price.
Tuesday, December 07, 2010
Top Talk
We posted on Twitter yesterday that we had started a new set of swings, "almost every set-up in newsletter that hasn't triggered".
Subscribers knew that this meant we went long stocks that had been on our alert list for days: MON DHR NBL CSX STT AIG on top of swings initiated weeks ago CLF UPL OXY ATPG. We knew market was already extended but what gave us confidence to initiate the positions was what we wrote at the end of the newsletter:
We strongly believe that we won't hit any significant intermediate top (not talking short-term 1-2 day pullback) until we lose most of our triggers. In our experience tops have often come into play when a lot of our alerts trigger and then fail on the same day. All we want at this point is for them at least to trigger as that would put us into the green on all our positions (since all the swings are in anticipation/under the alerts).
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In extended markets the safest trade is TO the breakout, not after. As we posted this AM we sold all our old swings near the open, sold partials of new swings into the open, and were finally all out of everything before 10AM. All green, all nicely profitable.
We're all cash now in all accounts. As to the market we think we're heading in for some horizontal movement. We have very few alerts left and a some basing and filling would do wonders for new setups.
It's too early to tell yet but today could be a day that we described last night in which breakouts trigger and fail on same day, representative of an intermediate top.
Subscribers knew that this meant we went long stocks that had been on our alert list for days: MON DHR NBL CSX STT AIG on top of swings initiated weeks ago CLF UPL OXY ATPG. We knew market was already extended but what gave us confidence to initiate the positions was what we wrote at the end of the newsletter:
We strongly believe that we won't hit any significant intermediate top (not talking short-term 1-2 day pullback) until we lose most of our triggers. In our experience tops have often come into play when a lot of our alerts trigger and then fail on the same day. All we want at this point is for them at least to trigger as that would put us into the green on all our positions (since all the swings are in anticipation/under the alerts).
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In extended markets the safest trade is TO the breakout, not after. As we posted this AM we sold all our old swings near the open, sold partials of new swings into the open, and were finally all out of everything before 10AM. All green, all nicely profitable.
We're all cash now in all accounts. As to the market we think we're heading in for some horizontal movement. We have very few alerts left and a some basing and filling would do wonders for new setups.
It's too early to tell yet but today could be a day that we described last night in which breakouts trigger and fail on same day, representative of an intermediate top.
Saturday, December 04, 2010
Usual suspects, support, breakout, and other trading talk
We like focusing on a small number of stocks in a few sectors. We have basically been trading the same stocks for over a decade -- this means that we know the sectors and stocks very well. This helps us trade them well on support and resistance. Let's look at some numbers. We've done two set of big trades in the last 3 weeks. The first one was from our November 16 newsletter which was a list of support alerts. This means we were buying the blood into support.
From our support long alerts that TRIGGERED ( of course not counting ones that never hit our alerts like APA 104 or BTU 55 which would have been oh-so-sweet) from our newsletter for November 16:
SPY is up 4.6% from the bottom of that day on November 16 to today.
Our support longs that triggered are up the following amounts:
WLT 23 %
SLV 17%
XME 14%
X 11%
CNQ 10%
GDX 8%
WFC 7%
RIG 7%
GLD 6%
MOS 6%
DE 5%
MON 4.65%
DO -1%
Versus SPY up 4.6% from the bottom tick of November 16
The second big trade was not support but breakout; it came in late November in which we told our subscribers that we were buying in anticipation of alerts included in the newsletter. We bought significantly below the following spots: CLF 72, UPL 49, OXY 89, BTU 60, APA 111, and UPS 70 because we had conviction that they would all break. One by one every single one broke out.
As we've written repeatedly over the last 4 years in our newsletters and in this blog -- the safest trade is not the breakout but the trade to a magnet area known as the target. We have never had a target trade not reach its target. Sometimes it takes longer than we think (SMH 29 took the longest, 3 months) but they do reach their targets. What happens after the target is reached (i.e. now a break-out) is more complicated. Breakouts often fail, support often falters, but primary targets, in our decade of trading, are always reached.
The big caveat of course is knowing what is a viable target. Basically, the more clear the target the better. Crowded trades are awful if you only get in when they trigger -- they often play games and stop people out or are sold. But the numbers are hit. Let's say stock HCPG is trading at 48 with a very clear breakout level at 50. Everyone on your stream at Stocktwits is talking about the big juicy HCPG breakout at 50 and it's obviously a very crowded trade. If it's a benign tape, and it's a great breakout level in that it has based on the daily and is not extended, and it's a stock you know well (and trust, we don't do this on small-caps for example or any financial save GS), then do not wait for 50 to come, buy it at 48 with conviction that 50 will at least be hit. Once this happens we have 2 points cushion for any possible choppiness/games or failure. The chances of the stock going to the target area are MUCH higher than having the chances of the breakout actually working.
All that being said, it sounds easy but it's not -- many traders see target trades that simply are not there, or are too weak a magnet. After our target trade posts we always get questions like "I'm thinking of buying this stock as it has a target at so and so." We look up the stock and see a higher resistance level but no clear target. Thus the chance of it working are much lower than any type of target trade that we would enter. A good target trade spot basically is on every active trader's screen.
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p.s. and yes, within 3 weeks we nailed both the support and the breakout. :-) As we've said in the past, in easy tapes, we're all geniuses. But it still feels good!
From our support long alerts that TRIGGERED ( of course not counting ones that never hit our alerts like APA 104 or BTU 55 which would have been oh-so-sweet) from our newsletter for November 16:
SPY is up 4.6% from the bottom of that day on November 16 to today.
Our support longs that triggered are up the following amounts:
WLT 23 %
SLV 17%
XME 14%
X 11%
CNQ 10%
GDX 8%
WFC 7%
RIG 7%
GLD 6%
MOS 6%
DE 5%
MON 4.65%
DO -1%
Versus SPY up 4.6% from the bottom tick of November 16
The second big trade was not support but breakout; it came in late November in which we told our subscribers that we were buying in anticipation of alerts included in the newsletter. We bought significantly below the following spots: CLF 72, UPL 49, OXY 89, BTU 60, APA 111, and UPS 70 because we had conviction that they would all break. One by one every single one broke out.
As we've written repeatedly over the last 4 years in our newsletters and in this blog -- the safest trade is not the breakout but the trade to a magnet area known as the target. We have never had a target trade not reach its target. Sometimes it takes longer than we think (SMH 29 took the longest, 3 months) but they do reach their targets. What happens after the target is reached (i.e. now a break-out) is more complicated. Breakouts often fail, support often falters, but primary targets, in our decade of trading, are always reached.
The big caveat of course is knowing what is a viable target. Basically, the more clear the target the better. Crowded trades are awful if you only get in when they trigger -- they often play games and stop people out or are sold. But the numbers are hit. Let's say stock HCPG is trading at 48 with a very clear breakout level at 50. Everyone on your stream at Stocktwits is talking about the big juicy HCPG breakout at 50 and it's obviously a very crowded trade. If it's a benign tape, and it's a great breakout level in that it has based on the daily and is not extended, and it's a stock you know well (and trust, we don't do this on small-caps for example or any financial save GS), then do not wait for 50 to come, buy it at 48 with conviction that 50 will at least be hit. Once this happens we have 2 points cushion for any possible choppiness/games or failure. The chances of the stock going to the target area are MUCH higher than having the chances of the breakout actually working.
All that being said, it sounds easy but it's not -- many traders see target trades that simply are not there, or are too weak a magnet. After our target trade posts we always get questions like "I'm thinking of buying this stock as it has a target at so and so." We look up the stock and see a higher resistance level but no clear target. Thus the chance of it working are much lower than any type of target trade that we would enter. A good target trade spot basically is on every active trader's screen.
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p.s. and yes, within 3 weeks we nailed both the support and the breakout. :-) As we've said in the past, in easy tapes, we're all geniuses. But it still feels good!
Friday, December 03, 2010
Update
We sold the VALE swing, took some off into the ATPG rip but keeping some, and keeping OXY CLF for possible continuation (we already had our targets met as they both broke out). The only stock that hasn't broken out yet is UPL which we've been long since last week.
Long into the weekend four stocks: OXY CLF ATPG UPL.
We've sold a lot into this rally (BTU APA UPS SWN VALE out completely and small partials left in OXY CLF ATPG UPL) and are now back to mostly cash waiting for fresh set-ups. It's been a rewarding week and we're heading out early for the weekend. Have a great one.
Long into the weekend four stocks: OXY CLF ATPG UPL.
We've sold a lot into this rally (BTU APA UPS SWN VALE out completely and small partials left in OXY CLF ATPG UPL) and are now back to mostly cash waiting for fresh set-ups. It's been a rewarding week and we're heading out early for the weekend. Have a great one.
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Goal reached
We started our swings two weeks ago all based on a run to OIH 136 which represents daily resistance, weekly 200SMA, and monthly 50SMA. Well, we're here now and we have completely sold out of some of our commodity positions (APA BTU SWN ) but are still holding what's left of our CLF OXY UPL ATPG commodity positions. The only one we don't have a comfortable cushion on is ATPG with 14.56 average. We'll take the loss there on any close/move under 14.41 (200 SMA which it has repeatedly bounced off of). We'll also be swinging VALE from 33 on a good close, an alert from last night's newsletter.
This whole plan which at some point consisted of having 10 swing positions (a lot for traders who are used to daytrading) was based simply on the target trade strategy. It gave us conviction to hold through all the chop of the recent days.
A few weeks ago we noticed a crop of commodity charts with excellent charts and exact targets. We wrote about these target alerts repeatedly in the newsletter (and which, happily for us, many of our subscribers also got into) of for example APA 111, OXY 89 (and then when it worked quickly, we held for secondary target of 91), CLF 72, BTU 60. All were hit and we sold into it but held onto a last little bit in case of continuation (which we got and finally sold last of APA BTU today).
Our targets in UPL (49) CLF (72) OXY (secondary target 91) still have not been hit and we're happy to sit in what's left of our positions and wait for these to also break-out. Thanks to the early swings we have no multiple point cushions and stops above our entry points.
So now what? We'd like to chop around OIH 136 for a while and digest the gains. If that occurs a fresh new crop of set-ups will emerge and we'll start the game all over again. But for now, we're laying off the gas pedal and chilling. Of course market could keep on ripping higher but for us the edge for trades for new entries has now dulled.
This whole plan which at some point consisted of having 10 swing positions (a lot for traders who are used to daytrading) was based simply on the target trade strategy. It gave us conviction to hold through all the chop of the recent days.
A few weeks ago we noticed a crop of commodity charts with excellent charts and exact targets. We wrote about these target alerts repeatedly in the newsletter (and which, happily for us, many of our subscribers also got into) of for example APA 111, OXY 89 (and then when it worked quickly, we held for secondary target of 91), CLF 72, BTU 60. All were hit and we sold into it but held onto a last little bit in case of continuation (which we got and finally sold last of APA BTU today).
Our targets in UPL (49) CLF (72) OXY (secondary target 91) still have not been hit and we're happy to sit in what's left of our positions and wait for these to also break-out. Thanks to the early swings we have no multiple point cushions and stops above our entry points.
So now what? We'd like to chop around OIH 136 for a while and digest the gains. If that occurs a fresh new crop of set-ups will emerge and we'll start the game all over again. But for now, we're laying off the gas pedal and chilling. Of course market could keep on ripping higher but for us the edge for trades for new entries has now dulled.
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
Update on our positions
As our blog readers know (and as we have posted in our stocktwits account) we bought many positions last week, mostly (but not all) commodities, in anticipation of break-outs. Over this period we already had OXY BTU APA UPS hit our break-out triggers. We took a lot off today but didn't completely sell out of any position. We have however raise our stops on all the swings. As we've been repeatedly discussing in our newsletter in the last few weeks the best strategy right now is anticipating break-outs: buying on dips with stocks with clear targets and selling at least partials into targets and holding rest for possible continuation.
Next big resistance on our screen (for us anyway who are almost fully in commodity stocks) is OIH 136.
As we posted we were sellers into the rip to 1206 resistance. Any basing now around this area would be bullish.
As our readers know we always take profits into resistance when the market travels from support into resistance in one day -- as opposed to starting the day close to resistance in which we would look for breakout of resistance and add into the break rather than sell into the area.
Next big resistance on our screen (for us anyway who are almost fully in commodity stocks) is OIH 136.
As we posted we were sellers into the rip to 1206 resistance. Any basing now around this area would be bullish.
As our readers know we always take profits into resistance when the market travels from support into resistance in one day -- as opposed to starting the day close to resistance in which we would look for breakout of resistance and add into the break rather than sell into the area.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
Cross Currents
The market is bobbing up and down right now according to 3 pieces of news: China inflation-taming tactics, Euro-zone credit crisis contagion, and possible intensification of North Korea situation. The charts also show some ambivalence and we expect the waters to be choppy for a while. As you'll see in the following charts there are valid arguments to be had for both the bears and bulls.
OIH has a weekly resistance level at 136 that we think will ultimately be touched in the intermediate future. Before that happens though we expect some choppiness, including the possibility of the break of the trend-line and 20SMA. Technically a close under 126 would be the daily stop for oil and gas swings.
All updates on our positions including recommended places for stops and adds are included in the newsletter for our subscribers.
The IWM falls in the bull category as it is near its highs and basing under major resistance. Basing here and running higher into year end is definitely a possibility.
One of the biggest red flags in the market right now is the IYR. We drew this trend-line 2 weeks ago -- IYR sat on it, broke it, fell down hard, then found support on the 100SMA and rallied to the 50SMA. Definitely not out of danger here as it could easily reverse back and break the 100SMA. If you want to short focus on this sector.
OIH has a weekly resistance level at 136 that we think will ultimately be touched in the intermediate future. Before that happens though we expect some choppiness, including the possibility of the break of the trend-line and 20SMA. Technically a close under 126 would be the daily stop for oil and gas swings.
A test of the 50SMA on the SPY would not be surprising.
On the bullish side of the equation the USD has rallied hard on the escalation of Europe's credit crisis and is now heading into resistance. If the USD weakens expect our commodity selections to jump. Of course if the situation in Spain worsens expect the USD to keep rallying putting pressure on all commodities.
The champion of the bear case is the XLF which is showing horrible price-action. There is some support at 14.2 -- watch that as tell. The XLF price-action is a very good argument for keeping long swings small.
IYT on the other hand shows good health as Trannies are near their highs (we're long UPS).
All updates on our positions including recommended places for stops and adds are included in the newsletter for our subscribers.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Our positions
We came into today long CLF APA BTU SWN UPL OXY ATPG and initiated a position in UPS this morning. We're basically long everything in anticipation of a breakout. We have some decent profit cushions now and can withstand some chopping around. Crude very nice move today which gives us conviction to hold over the holidays.
We have stocks in the following sector Oil & Gas, Natural Gas producers, Coal, Iron Ore, and Transportation.
We have stocks in the following sector Oil & Gas, Natural Gas producers, Coal, Iron Ore, and Transportation.
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