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Posted by Martin July 19, 2011
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Trade 07/15/2011


Today I have bought 1 August 17 SPY put 131 strike contract expecting the market to decline further down since it broke through 50 day SMA on high volume. I am expecting the market to go further down to the second resistance at 130 points. The market is in sideways overall, but potentially creating a head and shoulders pattern, thus the market should go all the way down to 126-ish point to complete the pattern. There we will see if this head and shoulder pattern will be a trend reversal (further decline, bearish market) or a continuation pattern. Time will show.




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Posted by Martin July 13, 2011
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Indecisive market and today’s disaster

Indecisive market and today's disaster

Will you believe me if I claim that today’s market trend was a disaster? Well, if not take a look at the daily chart. In the morning we gapped up and everything looked bright, but we ended down. Extensively down, compared to the morning’s start.

Change The Way You Trade Forever

Two days ago I tried to explain, why I was shorting the market (SPY) and pointed out three potential scenarios which would happen. I expected the market actually break down through the 50 day SMA. Well it didn’t happen. Let’s see what was moving the market.

I was thinking that European debt would be the weighting factor pushing the market down. At least as long as earnings report season progresses (Thursday, Friday when JP Morgan or Citigroup reports earning). I believed that the earnings can be the only catalyst which can turn the market up.

Well, I was wrong. Comments from FED were enough to push the market higher last two days and prevent it from breaking thru the first resistance (50 day SMA). So what happened yesterday? Ben Bernanke announced a stance of FED adopting a wait-and-see policy and the market jumped up. See the chart.

 

SPY
Click to enlarge

 

When I saw the chart for the first moment I panicked (obviously, I was shorting SPY) and I tried to find the reason, why the market jumped up. When I found, that it was FED’s comment, similar to those we have been hearing for last three years, I calmed down. As you can see, later on the market slumped down and ended lower.

Today’s action wasn’t any better. Huge gap up, strong move up and at around noon the market deteriorated. closed the gap and ended in intraday loss. That’s why I consider today’s trend a failure.

 

SPY
Click to enlarge

 

However, such action of increased volatility and responsiveness to worthless news (such as Chines growth, c’mon, guys, do you really believe in China? Just look at so many fraudulent Chinese companies these days being suspended from trading recently – YUII, RINO etc.), indecisiveness in direction and inability to move lower as I expected, I decided to take my profits of the table and wait what would happen next. I closed my short positions in SPY with nice 63% profit and I will wait for the next move. I still am bearish on this market and think, that it will go down. If that happens and the market shows this weakness to me I will re-enter my short positions. Another reason I decided to close positions was that I was holding naked puts (I typically trade spreads) and these are more dangerous.

There are a few reasons why I think the market will go down. European debt and US economical issues are one of the most important factors which will turn this market down. The only event which can do otherwise is shining earnings. I am still bullish on VIX, because volatility will be increasing these days.

You can see all my holdings here.




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Posted by Martin July 11, 2011
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Market update – Bear correction or new bull?

Market update - Bear correction or new bull?

Today, the market reacted as I expected. After a strong run up in a very short period of time it was imminent that the market will correct. Being bullish near the first resistance or shortly above 50 day SMA was very dangerous. I myself was originally expecting the market bounce back down off of the 50 day SMA and continue down. Instead it broke through and continued up in even stronger bullish trend. Well, there was one “little” problem: volume. The volume was declining as the price was rising up. At the top, the volume was weakest! A great exhaustion sign.

Then the market gapped up. For me it was the point to re-enter my bearish positions (I re-opened those bearish positions which I was stopped out, because I entered too early). So I bought put options on SPY. The very next day (Friday 8th) the market gapped down. A great, nice island reversal signal (during the day SPY closed the gap, but at the end closed well below keeping the gap actually open). And today another gap down!

Is the market a bearish correction or a beginning of a new bullish trend?

I do not know it and we will have to wait for the answer. Right now the market is correcting the previous trend. But what actually is the overall market status? It depends on the perspective you are looking at the market and its trend. If you are a longer term trader (position trading for example) than we are in a sideways move. From that perspective I would stay aside. I cannot say, where the market will go.

SPY
Click to enlarge

As you can see on the chart above, the market changed its move after a nice, long, recovery trend into a sideways move. From a long term perspective, if you want to take a bullish position, you have to wait whether the market breaks up above 137 points level on a high volume or take a bearish position if it breaks down below 126 level on high volume.

However, I like to play this market from a shorter point of view – swing trading. I do not know, where the market will go, but I can analyze what I can see on the chart at this point to get the clue, where we are going. Of course being long or short in a defined trend is a lot easier and less risky than the approach I am taking right now. I know it, but I want to do it and I have defined entry and exit strategy for this particular trade. So I can be playing this sideway trend and use sub-trends for swing trading (highly risky for most of the traders or investors).

So what I can see and what I can expect?

Given the bullish trend we had, island reversal signal I am expecting the market going down. And it actually happened. But how far down it can go? I can see a few targets here:

  1. The market will hit 50 day SMA (see tag #1 on the chart below) and will be bouncing here for some time – if so I will liquidate my short position and take the profit here. However I am not expecting this much as I will try to describe later below.
  2. It will break through 50 day SMA and will go down to first support line to test it (see tag #2) at 130 points level. This is the target I am aiming for.
  3. The market will break through 130 level and will go all the way down to 126 level (see tag #3). If this happens I will open a new short position at break through level.

SPY
Click to enlarge

Well right now I do not know which scenario will happen. Time will show. As I mentioned above, I am expecting the market to test the 130 level support, where I want to sell my put options. Why this level?

  1. This market fall is happening on increasing volume, unlike previous uptrend, which was happening on decreasing volume. That means more selling pressure.
  2. Bollinger bands are widening (see several red crosses on the chart highlighting upper and lower bands – blue thin lines). Well the Bollinger bands won’t tell you where the market will go, but it will tell you what momentum the market has. In other words, how much fear or greed we have. Compare this to another “fear/greed” index VIX. It basically shows similar output. If VIX is low, the market is calm, as it starts rising, the market is more boiling, see the chart below.
  3. We slightly crossed 50 SMA on higher then average volume with gap down. If the market doesn’t close this gap tomorrow or few days later, this downtrend has more selling pressure and will go down.
  4. Stochastic indicator is still in strong overbought range indicating bearish trend reversal.
  5. As I mentioned in my other posts, the European debt is not over and it will come back – it is actually coming back as Italy, Spain and Portugal have problems which were shadowed by Greek’s issues and which weren’t solved yet.
  6. Earnings season – this actually is the only point which can turn the market back on uptrend track. If we get good news in upcoming weeks, all (short) bets may be off.

SPY
Click to enlarge

Pay attention to the market correlation with VIX. If we can state that the market is cyclical, it will repeat this pattern over and over. Of course, there is no guarantee, that it will go exactly as depicted, but all indicators I am looking at are signaling that it will.

And as I said above, there are many things which may change the trend, such as earnings. That is the thing I cannot predict (as well as the whole market of course) and that can change everything. All I can do right now is to react and be prepared to what the market will be doing, take some profits off of the table, buy more puts, or reverse all my trades to bullish. Right now I am still bearish in short term period, shorting SPY, but bullish in VIX (since it acts the right opposite than the market).

Happy trading




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Posted by Martin July 07, 2011
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Stock market overextended

Stock market overextended

Get Access For 14 Days Only .95 Today the market was yet another surprise. S&P 500 gapped up and basically broke through the major resistance level. All happened because of job claims data. When I reviewed them I didn’t consider them that amazing. Apparently good enough to bring another wave of enthusiasm to the market.

But the volume was once again quite low. During summer days it is typical that the volume is lower then during the rest of the year, but we should not see that low volume with such run. In my own view, this market is overdue for a correction.

 

SPY

 

As I mentioned in my previous post, the last week run was too fast and too extended. When comparing the chart to the similar run in nearest history we can see, that we ran up to the same highs within a week. The market typically ran that high for a whole month! Then in March 2011 we had a large correction and then a recovery. At the beginning of April we had another downturn dip and then we continued back up. At the beginning of May 2011 we had a nasty correction and last week and a half we recovered almost all loses. If we believe that the market is cyclical, we are due for a small break.

I am expecting the market to correct back down to either a 50 day SMA or maybe even lower to April’s low.

However, there may be a catch here. This bullish behavior will attract new buyers and we may actually skip the correction! I am still bearish, but cautious. If new positive earnings news enter the market, I will have to change the side of the market.

Happy trading




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Posted by Martin July 06, 2011
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Where is the market heading now? Down?

Where is the market heading now? Down?

That’s a million dollar question investors are probably asking now. I am asking as well. The truth is that last week move upward was impressive. They say, it was the best 5 day move since 1928 (I think). But was this move a bullish reversal or is this a bearish correction? I think, now is the time when this question will be answered.
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Posted by Martin June 29, 2011
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Rally attempt – short lived?


Once again the market rallied as I expected. It came out of the choppiness few days ago and rallying higher. I think it is partially due to the end of the quarter and mutual funds want to improve their results. As I mentioned in my previous post, we may expect the market to rally up to 1300 – 1350 points (S&P 500) and there we will see what will happen next.

As far as the action of the overall market, it was bouncing off of the support at 1260 – 1270 and bounced up. We broke through 1300 resistance and now we may see going up to the 1350 – 1360 resistance.

But will this trend be short lived? I do not know. The market may come to its resistance or it may not even get there, turn back down and then we may expect a nasty decline. We will see when we get there.

Recently I was testing options trading during this period. You may see me taking some trades “live”, some I did paper trading. I am surprised and satisfied with the results. I am planning on testing it little bit more – circa for about 30 more days and then I will employ more of my real money. I will also write about it more when I start “live” trading.

Happy trading




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Posted by Martin June 17, 2011
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Market at the bottom


Yesterday investors panicked enough to push the market at its bottom. We are at the bottom or near it. We may now go sideways or start recovering. How far recovery would go? Nobody knows. It can be a pullback before it will go further down. S&P 500 may recover to somewhere at 1350 points or it can reverse this downtrend and change into bullish trend. We will see when we get to 1300 points or around where the market will go. Right now the market is in Rally Attempt.




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Posted by Martin June 08, 2011
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Is there an investment for volatile market?


Many times investors look for protection and search for “anchor” investments to protect or stabilize their portfolios. During the unstable and volatile market investing in precious metals or natural resources such as natural gas may provide such stability. However, for a new investor it may be difficult to invest properly and some guidance may be needed.

Gordon Brent Pierce is a leader in business development, strategy and investing who may provide required background and help in decision making, research on natural gas and silver outlook and potential investment opportunities.

GordonBrent Pierce presents that the U.S. has a great potential rapid increase of natural gas demand/supply, which may potentially lead to increase of jobs, preserve environment, and also create a great investment opportunity.

Read the rest of the story.




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Posted by Martin June 06, 2011
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How to invest or trade in a weak market?


Today the market ended down again. The S&P 500 lost 1% today and confirmed that we are still in correction. How a small investor shall trade or invest in this market? On the internet you may find a lot of information how to deal with this market. Some say sell or reduce your positions, others buy more, others stay aside and so on. Which way to go?

It depends on your investment in your portfolio and your strategy. All above mentioned strategies are basically correct but they do not apply for every strategy. It is hard to pick the right one, mainly when those advisers do not tell you which strategy they are referring to.

For myself it was confusing a lot to understand what approach to chose. I was afraid of buy & hold strategy when seeing stocks falling down and I was supposed to hold them. And in my first investment child-steps I saw a lot of loses. And timing the market, which I did wrong obviously, didn’t work for me as well.

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So how do you invest in a weak market? Or volatile market like the one we are going through these days? It depends on your strategy you select and stocks you wish to invest in. I will try to review those investments and what approach works for me:

Mutual Funds

If you invest in mutual funds like I do in my ROTH account it almost doesn’t matter what you do during bull or bear market. You can invest all time and select buy & hold strategy. I like falling market, because I can be buying cheaper. I use mutual funds to accumulate money into such level that I can buy stock in larger lots to eliminate cost on purchasing stocks or ETFs. But if you use funds as your major or only investment vehicle then continue buying.

When to sell mutual funds? There are a few reasons when you want to sell funds. Definitely I would wait for bull market unless there is some serious reason or upcoming disaster which forces you to sell. One reason would be that the fund no longer meets your investment criteria. For example I am investing into dividend paying mutual funds. If the fund stops paying dividends it will be a reason to sell. Another reason can be if the fund changes strategy, for example you used the fund as a tool to invest into small caps but later the fund changes its policy and allows investing into large caps. You would want to reduce position to meet you allocation (or even sell the fund and choose another one).

Stocks & ETFs

This is a whole different story. And the most confusing. Buy and hold? Or time the market? And what about leveraging? Will margin calls catch you with pants down? You need to know in what stocks you want to invest. Are the small caps, large caps? How volatile are they? Here is my approach:

Sometime ago I chose to invest majority of my money into dividend paying stocks. Some smaller portion of the account can be invested into small caps and volatile, speculative stocks, options and ETFs. I also chose to use leveraging by buying on margin. I have seen many opponents against leveraging your portfolio, but it works for me so far and later I will try to explain why.

Lets take a look at dividend paying stocks. When you ask yourself what companies pay the dividend, you will see big, international large caps. These companies are so big that they tend to react to market volatility with almost no impact (even though today we can see some large swings too, but these are our friends actually). A great example I would like to use is Johnson & Johnson company. Recently the stock went through many recalls. People on investment forums were predicting the end of the company. And the stock was falling. Partially because of the problems with production, partially because of the market sentiment. However, the company didn’t touch its dividend. A great signal, that all the problems didn’t affect company’s ability to make money. Small company wouldn’t afford anything like this. Thus there was no reason for such panic and thus Mr. Market was our friend and offered us a great price of the stock.

So when the market is weak and falling I wait, save money in my account to make them ready for action. I do not sell the company cuts its dividend. When the price drops down and the market recovers I act and buy. (I call this timing the market).

Even if you are not much into dividend paying stocks and you are just large caps guy, you won’t make it wrong if you take similar approach.

What about small caps? Here, I do the right opposite. When the market shows correction and those small caps or speculative stocks turn down and meet my criteria for selling I sell. An example in my portfolio could be Actuant Corp. Recently, when the market turned down I had two reasons to sell: I wanted to release money for my future investment and second the stock met my sell criteria. It is not a stock which fits my dividend investment criteria and I consider it as speculative, so I sold. When the market gets into rally I will buy speculative stocks which meet my screening criteria (as well as if my allocation and portfolio building strategy allows). I still may buy ATU back when this sell off ends, which no one knows when that happens.

How this works with leveraging?

I selected to use leveraging of my investments. I believe that if managed carefully and not recklessly you may achieve a lot better results when you expose yourself to more stocks than when you invest 100% only. Buying on margin allows me to invest 200%. I found a lot of people being against this strategy as dangerous. But how dangerous it is compared to your mortgage? When buying a house, you come up with 20% down payment and borrow the rest for 30 years. I think there is nothing wrong with stocks when you put down 50% and borrow another 50% from the broker and pay the loan for next 30 years or so.

Of course, you should select equities which are not such volatile such as dividend paying stocks or index funds or ETFs. Over time the market will help you to pay the margin off and as you age, you start de-leveraging your account. But what to do if the market falls down? A common sense would advice to buy more shares, right? If you are fully invested, you should be reducing your positions or as in my case wait and stop adding to your positions. Since I started leveraging recently, rebalancing by selling makes no sense for me otherwise it will be very costly for me. So I took “do-nothing” approach. i am just waiting, sitting aside, and saving money by contributing (paying down my margin loan) into my account. That makes my buying power growing and I do not get caught by a margin call from my broker.

And of course, do not try to leverage your account with small caps! That can kill you.

Oh such volatility

Times changed. Today, investors have access to information from around the world within one mouse click and a few seconds. Markets are volatile like never before. For a long time I had a great issue with this volatility. How to deal with it? How to trade it? i couldn’t find an answer which would work for me. This volatility is the reason why so many investors claim that timing the market doesn’t work. Of course you cannot catch the bottom or top of the trend. No one can do that. But you can do swing trading changing your side based on the trend and be long when the stock grows or be short when it falls. But how to do it and what indicators to select?

Well, if investing into dividend paying behemoths it almost doesn’t matter. You just wait for next dip or fall and add to your positions. But if buying other than dividend stocks the approach should be a bit different.

You can select whatever indicator or oscillator you want (I like StochasticRSI), but to avoid getting in-and-out it is important to use at least two-time-frame perspective and use weekly time frame rather than daily. I used to look on daily charts, but the volatility was so heartbreaking that I had to look at different point of view and adjust my strategy to weekly charts and ignore daily up-downs. Look at an example GT Solar International. A daily chart shows volatile stock. Well if you are a day trader or you have time and account large enough for more frequent trading this chart is your friend. I cannot afford it. I need to hold the stock in longer period of time – at least a couple of months. This chart would kick me out of the stock very often and fees would wipe out my portfolio quickly.

Solar International Daily Chart

But take a look at the same chart in weekly period. See the difference? It is a smooth uptrend. Nothing huge, but uptrend which can provide a peace of mind and forget all the daily craziness on the Wall Street floor. So if you use automated trading to eliminate emotions just adjust your oscillator to weekly trend and continue trading as usually.

Solar International Daily Chart

This morning I have read an article at Yahoo! that the bull rally is dead. I cannot say whether it really is or not, but what I can say is that I welcome it. I can buy cheaper stocks I am interested in. So if it is dead, it won’t be dead forever. It has never been dead for ever. So lets wait, save money and be ready for new bull waiting round the corner.




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Posted by Martin June 01, 2011
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Market in correction


OK, we are back where we were a few days ago… What did we expect from crazy Mr. Market? Nothing much as I wrote yesterday.




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