Stocks & Equities
Tyler’s has found two stocks, a marijuana stock that after decling for 5 months is ready to move and a powerfully moving biotech stock. He also reveals some more trading rules in this weeks StockScores newsletter. – Robert Zurrer for Money Talks
In this week’s issue:
- Stockscores’ Market Minutes Video – Plan the Trade, Trade the Plan
- Stockscores Trader Training – How to Be a Better Trader
- Stock Features of the Week – Abnormal Breaks
Stockscores Market Minutes – Plan the Trade, Trade the Plan
All traders should approach their trading with a plan for what to do in the different situations that the market may give them. This week, I discuss this, my regular weekly market analysis and the trade of the week on VXX.
Click here to watch on the Stockscores Youtube Channel
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Trader Training – How To Be a Better Trader
I created a new video this week which shows how the system I use for finding my day trades works. I am an algorithmic trader, which means I use logic-based rules to pick the stocks that I will buy or short. I do not use my own judgment when trading, I save the thinking for when I am developing my strategy rules.
You can watch the video on Youtube by clicking here.
The development of my rules is based on data that I collect each day. I have computerized tools which take in the trading data for every stock that I monitor and identifies all of the entry signals and subsequent performance. In this video, I show that data as well as the performance of the strategy since the start of February.
I then compare what I actually do to what I should have done if I was perfect in my execution. I never expect to do as well as the computerized results. There is slippage on getting the trade orders filled, commissions and human error that can all lower my actual performance relative to the ideal. Even though my computer model alerts me instantly when there is a trade that meets my rules, I may still miss it, especially at the open of the trading day when there are a lot of trades to be made. Sometimes this can help as I may miss a trade that ends up being a loser.
One area where collecting trading data is particularly helpful is when I feel like I missed out. Today was a good example because my buy signals suffered a small loss overall today. However, if I had changed one rule, they would have been very profitable today (-4RR vs +38RR where RR is reward for risk. If I risk $100 per trade and lose 4RR, I have lost $400. If I make 38, I have made $3800).
Since changing one rule made a big difference today, it is easy to think that I should make that change going forward. However, I did analysis on how changing that rule would have affected the overall profitability of my strategy since Feb 1 and it cut the average profit per trade down more than 50% overall.
This shows that today was an anomaly and that I should not change my strategy rules. Until I have a large data set that shows a change in my rules produces more profit, I will stick with the rules as they are.
Each week, I go through a process to optimize my trading rules based on the large data set that I have accumulated. I make tweaks to my rules to do what works the best.
I also compare my actual performance to what I should have done if I was perfect. I look for areas where I fall short and try to understand what the cause of the short fall is so I can modify my process and trading plan to be better. This is part of the never-ending process to be a better trader. Data, while time consuming to collect, is extremely valuable toward that goal.
Be sure to watch the video, it will help make this approach make more sense. Click here to view.
This week, I ran the Abnormal Breaks Market Scan strategy on the Canadian market in search of stocks breaking through resistance with abnormal price and volume action. I found two that stood out:
1. V.GENE
V.GENE is a break out of a pennant pattern with strong price action. Volume is higher than normal but not extremely abnormal which is one weakness. I rate this a 7/10. Support at $1.85.
2. V.HEMP
V.HEMP has been in a downward trend for the past five months but broke that downward trend line with abnormal volume today. Rate this an 8/10. Support at $1.
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References
- Get the Stockscore on any of over 20,000 North American stocks.
- Background on the theories used by Stockscores.
- Strategies that can help you find new opportunities.
- Scan the market using extensive filter criteria.
- Build a portfolio of stocks and view a slide show of their charts.
- See which sectors are leading the market, and their components.
Disclaimer
This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Foundation is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of this newsletter may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don’t consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligence.
The market is in the middle of two possible future scenarios. The first a break of the February lows, the latter a break of the January highs in both the S&P and the Dow Industrial Average (Nasdaq 100 has already made new highs above January. With market confidence at extreme fear, analyst Paul Rejczak makes the case for a lower opening followed by a bounce – R. Zurrer for Money Talks
Fed Action Casts Shadow on Bullish Case for Stocks
The main U.S. stock market indexes lost 0.2-0.3% on Wednesday’s following relatively brief rally after the FOMC‘s Rate Decision release. The S&P 500 index continued to fluctuate within its short-term consolidation. It is currently around 5.2% below January 26 record high of 2,872.87. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.2%, and the technology Nasdaq Composite lost 0.3%.
The nearest important level of resistance of the S&P 500 index remains at 2,740-2,750, marked by Monday’s daily gap down of 2,741.38-2,749.97. Yesterday’s daily high of 2,739.14 confirmed the importance of that resistance level. The next resistance level is at around 2,775-2,780, marked by last Wednesday’s daily high. On the other hand, support level is at 2,695-2,700, marked by Monday’s daily low, among others. Potential support level is also at 2,650-2,670, marked by previous local lows.
We can see that stocks reversed their medium-term upward course following whole retracement of January euphoria rally. Then the market bounced off its almost year-long medium-term upward trend line, and it retraced more than 61.8% of the sell-off within a few days of trading. Is this just an upward correction or uptrend leading to new all-time highs? The market is still in the middle of two possible future scenarios. The bearish case leads us to February low or lower after breaking below medium-term upward trend line, and the bullish one means potential double top pattern or breakout above the late January high. Monday’s sell-off made the bearish case more likely again. You should take noticeof a breakdown below potential rising wedge pattern. This over month-long trading range looks like an upward correction following late January – early February sell-off:
Stocks Set to Open Much Lower
Expectations before the opening of today’s trading session are negative, because the index futures contracts trade 0.8-1.3% lower vs. their yesterday’s closing prices. The European stock market indexes have lost 0.7-1.0% so far. Investors will wait for some economic data releases: Initial Claims at 8:30 a.m., Flash Manufacturing PMI, Flash Services PMI numbers at 9:45 a.m., Leading Indicators at 10:00 a.m. The market is back at its Monday’s lows, so the overall sentiment worsened again. Will it break lower? If the S&P 500 index breaks below the support level of 2,700, it could continue towards the above-mentioned 2,650-2,670.
The S&P 500 futures contract trades within an intraday downtrend, as it extends its yesterday’s intraday move down. The nearest important level of support is at around 2,695-2,700, marked by Monday’s local low. The next support level is at 2,680, among others. On the other hand, resistance level is at around 2,710-2,715, marked by recent fluctuations. The resistance level is also at 2,725-2,730. The futures contract trades below its short-term downward trend line, as we can see on the 15-minute chart:
Nasdaq Breaks Below 6,800
The technology Nasdaq 100 futures contract follows a similar path, as it trades within an intraday downtrend. It broke below 6,800 mark this morning. The market gained more than 1,000 points off its February 9 bottom, as it remarkably retraced all of its late January – early February sell-off in one month. Is this just downward correction following record-breaking rally? It still looks like a correction and not some new medium-term downtrend. The nearest important short-term resistance level is at around 6,850, marked by recent local lows and the next level of resistance remains at 6,900-6,950. On the other hand, potential support level is at 6,700-6,750. The Nasdaq futures contract extends its short-term downtrend this morning, as the 15-minute chart shows:
Apple Leads Lower, Facebook Bounces
Let’s take a look at Apple, Inc. stock (AAPL) daily chart (chart courtesy of http://stockcharts.com). The market reached new record last week, but then it reversed the uptrend. We saw negative technical divergences – the most common divergences are between asset’s price and some indicator based on it (for instance the index and RSI or MACD based on the index). In this case, the divergence occurs when price forms a higher high and the indicator forms a lower high. It shows us that even though price reaches new highs, the fuel for the uptrend starts running low. The market formed a negative candlestick chart pattern called “bearish engulfing”. It consists of a smaller white candlestick followed by a black candlestick that “engulfs” the white one. This downward reversal pattern has been confirmed by last week’s Wednesday’s move down. Consequently the market continued its downtrend, as it broke below the upward trend line on Monday. If the price breaks below support level of $170 and then below its previous daily gap up, it could continue towards $150 again:
Now let’s take a look at Facebook, Inc. (FB) daily chart. It fell almost 10% on Monday and Tuesday, as it broke below its medium-term consolidation and potential downward reversal head-and-shoulders pattern. Monday’s daily gap down acts a resistance level now. Overall, the stock remains relatively weaker than technology stocks sector and the whole broad stock market. It bounced off support level at $160-165 again, but the nearest important level of resistance is at around $170:
Dow Jones Remains Below 25,000 Mark
The Dow Jones Industrial Average daily chart shows that blue-chip index was relatively weaker than the broad stock market and much weaker than record-breaking technology stocks recently, as it continued to trade well below late February local high. The market broke below 25,000 mark, as it retraced more of its recent rebound. Possible support level is at around 24,250, marked by previous local low. If the index breaks lower, it could continue towards February 9 panic low. In late February, there was a negative candlestick pattern called Dark Cloud Cover, a pattern in which the uptrend continues with a long white body, and the next day it reverses following higher open and closes below the mid-point between open and close prices of the previous day. It acted as a resistance level. The index trades within an over-week-long consolidation, as we can see on the daily chart:
Concluding, the S&P 500 index will open lower today, as investors’ sentiment worsens after yesterday’s Fed’s interest rate hike. Will it continue below the level of 2,700? For now, it looks like it could bounce here and extend its short-term fluctuations.
Last week’s rally failed to continue following negative political news releases. Was this just quick profit-taking action or more meaningful downward reversal? It’s hard to say right now, but Monday’s sell-off made medium-term bullish case less likely. There is also a negative over-month-long rising wedge pattern. If stocks continue lower from here, then they will probably reach or exceed February panic low.
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Thank you.
Paul Rejczak
Stock Trading Strategist
Wide-reaching corporate tax cuts have stock investors wondering which companies will benefit most. Goldman Sachs has singled out the 16 companies that offer the most reinvestment growth, a characteristic of companies that have historically outperformed the market – R. Zurrer for Money Talks
How does an investor decide which companies are poised to benefit most from sweeping tax cuts that benefit most everyone? Listen to Goldman Sachs, of course.
The firm has developed an index of stocks called the High Growth Investment Ratio Basket, which is designed to include companies whose share prices are most likely to get a boost from tax reform, given their past use of excess capital.
Goldman’s basket includes not just the companies who have most heavily reinvested money into capital expenditures and research & development, but also those set to generate the highest return on it.
For context, the median stock in the index has reinvested 81% of its trailing three years of cash flow from operations, compared with just 13% for the average S&P 500 company, according to Goldman. The firm also forecasts that basket members will offer 18% cash return on capital invested, compared to just 12% for the broader benchmark.
Without further ado, here are the 16 stocks that best fit the bill, arranged in increasing order of three-year growth investment ratio:
Click HERE for Slides 1-16
“The stock market meltup is over”. There is a strong case “that January was the melt-up, or at least the culmination of it,’” says one prominent Wall Street strategist. Michael Wilson, the chief US equity strategist at Morgan Stanley makes his case below. Bear in mind that Martin Armstrong still expects to see Dow 35,000 plus – R. Zurrer for Money Talks
The stock meltup is over, at least that’s the prognosis of one prominent Wall Street strategist who believes the torrid January rally that gave way to a correction may have been the market’s short-term apex. The S&P 500 jumped 7.5% between the end of 2017 and Jan. 26, when it notched the last in a string of record closes at 2,872.87.
“We think January was the top for sentiment, if not prices, for the year. With volatility moving higher we think it will be difficult for institutional clients to gross up to or beyond the January peaks,” said Michael Wilson, chief U.S. equity strategist at Morgan Stanley Institutional Securities, in his weekly note on Monday. “Retail sentiment indicators also look to have peaked in January and we do not see anything on the horizon to get retail investors more bullish than they were following a tax cut.”
As a result, the much-anticipated meltup in stocks that numerous strategists had been forecasting since last year won’t likely happen in 2018, he said.
A meltup is an unexpected rise in asset prices as investors surge into the market on fear of missing out.
“When we look at our internal data combined with industry flows and sentiment, we think there is a strong case that January was the melt-up, or at least the culmination of it,” Wilson added.
One key point in Wilson’s thesis is that gross leverage by Morgan Stanley’s hedge fund clients hit an all-time high in January. Gross leverage, according to the strategist, is a good measure of investor willingness to assume risk.
The record was also set right before the early February “volatility shock” forced investors to scale back their exposure to risk and Wilson does not expect gross leverage to return to January levels any time in the near future.
Wilson’s downbeat comments come as the stock market struggles to move out of correction territory as investors deal with a combination of trade-war jitters and inflation worries even as the economy continues to expand at a steady clip.
Going forward, Wilson expects U.S. stock returns to be mostly driven by increase in earnings estimates.
“If we just roll forward the current bottom-up estimates, the forward earnings per share would be $166 and $170 by June 30 and September 30, respectively. That is approximately 3% and 5% higher than today’s $161. Not exciting, but not very bad either,” he said.
“However, those numbers might need to come down if we start to see some evidence of lower margins since consensus forecasts assume no operating margin degradation. That is another reason why we think the S&P 500 makes its highs for the year this summer. It’s also a wild card that has big idiosyncratic risk at the stock level in our view.”
Wilson has predicted the S&P 500 SPX, +0.03% to close out the year at 2,750. The large cap index closed at 2,712.92 Monday, falling in tandem with the Dow Jones Industrial DJIA, -0.08% and the Nasdaq COMP, +0.18% on the back of a selloff in technology shares sparked by a slump in Facebook Inc. FB, -0.82%
Still bulllish the US Stock Market averages long and short term, Stephen changes his bearish stance to bullish on Oil and the US Dollar. While he does have some concerns about the Stock Market, he’s of the view that it will power up through any problems – R. Zurrer for Money Talks
For 3:00 PM PST Tuesday March 20, 2018
DOW + 116 on 336 net declines
NASDAQ COMP + 20 on 298 net declines
SHORT TERM TREND Bullish
INTERMEDIATE TERM Bullish
STOCKS: We had a bounce, but I wasn’t happy with it. Breadth was atrocious. It can be straightened out, but it needs to happen fairly quickly.
One of the drags may have been Morgan Stanley’s assertion that the melt up in stocks over the past year is over. That could have caused some selling and portfolio readjustments. By the way, we don’t agree. This is a pause not an ending.
Another drag is probably concern over what the Fed will say in it policy statement on Wednesday about interest rate hikes.
GOLD: Gold lost $8. This time a higher dollar.
CHART: The five day moving average of the Composite Gauge is above 12.0. Generally, that is a good sign going forward.
BOTTOM LINE: (Trading)
Our intermediate term system is on a buy.
System 7 We are long the SSO at 115.34. Stay with it on Wednesday.
System 9 We’re on a buy for system 9 from Friday March 19. This suggests that prices two weeks from now will be higher.
NEWS AND FUNDAMENTALS: There were no important economic releases on Tuesday. On Wednesday we get existing home sales and oil inventories.
INTERESTING STUFF: Forbid us something, and that thing we desire. ——–Geoffrey Chaucer
TORONTO EXCHANGE: Toronto gained 41.
BONDS: Bonds took a hit.
THE REST: The dollar moved up nicely. Crude oil surged.
Bonds –Bearish as of March 16.
U.S. dollar – Change to bullish as of March 20.
Euro — Change to bearish as of March 20.
Gold —-Bullish as of March 6.
Silver—- Bullish as of March 6.
Crude oil —-Change to bullish as of March 20.
Toronto Stock Exchange—-Bullish as of Feb. 12.
We are on a long term buy signal for the markets of the U.S., Canada, Britain, Germany and France.
|
Tue. |
Wed. |
Thu. |
Mon. |
Tue. |
Wed. |
Evaluation |
Monetary conditions |
-1 |
-1 |
-1 |
-1 |
-1 |
-1 |
0 |
5 day RSI S&P 500 |
61 |
50 |
49 |
52 |
30 |
34 |
0 |
5 day RSI NASDAQ |
64 |
61 |
57 |
57 |
30 |
35 |
0 |
McClellan Oscillator |
+91 |
+39 |
-8 |
+36 |
-55 |
-66 |
0 |
Composite Gauge |
14 |
15 |
12 |
9 |
15 |
10 |
0 |
Comp. Gauge, 5 day m.a. |
8.6 |
10.0 |
11.0 |
12.0 |
13.0 |
12.2 |
0 |
CBOE Put Call Ratio |
.87 |
1.04 |
.88 |
.96 |
1.02 |
.83 |
0 |
VIX |
16.35 |
17.23 |
16.53 |
15.80 |
19.02 |
18.30 |
|
VIX % change |
+4 |
+5 |
-4 |
-5 |
20 |
-4 |
0 |
VIX % change 5 day m.a. |
-1.8 |
-0.2 |
+0.4 |
+1.6 |
+4 |
+2.4 |
0 |
Adv – Dec 3 day m.a. |
+323 |
-348 |
-712 |
-211 |
-519 |
-369 |
0 |
Supply Demand 5 day m.a. |
.63 |
.49 |
.36 |
.19 |
.23 |
.30 |
+ |
Trading Index (TRIN) |
1.39 |
1.18 |
1.11 |
.74 |
2.01 |
.94 |
0
|
S&P 500
|
2765 |
2749 |
2747 |
2752 |
2713 |
2717 |
Plurality +1 |
INDICATOR PARAMETERS
Monetary conditions (+2 means the Fed is actively dropping rates; +1 means a bias toward easing. 0 means neutral, -1 means a bias toward tightening, -2 means actively raising rates). RSI (30 or below is oversold, 80 or above is overbought). McClellan Oscillator ( minus 100 is oversold. Plus 100 is overbought). Composite Gauge (5 or below is negative, 13 or above is positive). Composite Gauge five day m.a. (8.0 or below is overbought. 12.0 or above is oversold). CBOE Put Call Ratio ( .80 or below is a negative. 1.00 or above is a positive). Volatility Index, VIX (low teens bearish, high twenties bullish), VIX % single day change. + 5 or greater bullish. -5 or less, bearish. VIX % change 5 day m.a. +3.0 or above bullish, -3.0 or below, bearish. Advances minus declines three day m.a.( +500 is bearish. – 500 is bullish). Supply Demand 5 day m.a. (.45 or below is a positive. .80 or above is a negative). Trading Index (TRIN) 1.40 or above bullish. No level for bearish.
No guarantees are made. Traders can and do lose money. The publisher may take positions in recommended securities.