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 hefeiddd 2009-05-11

Thursday, April 12, 2007

B.T.D. or ABC?

The debate raging around U.S. equities these days seems to fall into two camps (for technicians, at least). Whether the current strategy should be what I would refer to as B.T.D. (Buy The Dips) or ABC (as in Elliott Wave Theory). The latter would fall into the bearish camp, and the former are permabulls.

For those who follow the comments section of this blog - - and I'm addicted to it - - you can see quite a few people point to action like yesterday's as simply another buying opportunity. (Sort of like how Realtors are always saying there has never been a better time to buy a house). In other words, the market will, by and large, go up until the end of time, so buying when stocks go "on sale" is the way to go.

That has worked very well so far. Those who have bought on the dips over the past three or four years have done terrific. So it's beguiling to just keep doing the same thing in perpetuity.

But let's look at the ABC point-of-view. Here's the classic notion of Elliott Wave price action: the 1/2/3/4/5 series shows the bullish phase, whereas the A/B/C shows the bearish phase. (Please note I pride myself on being an accomplished chartist, but I only know enough about Elliott Wave to hurt myself; so I may be a little off the mark in some of this terminology).


As an example of this kind of behavior, let's take a look at the Russell 2000 index from late 2004 until mid 2006. I've drawn some lines here and noted the various phases. As you can see, things line up pretty nicely. I've also drawn a big solid circle indicating the completion of the "b" wave, which is the retracement within a bearish phase. (Newbies: click the image to see a much bigger chart).


Now here is the more recent Russell 2000, going up to the present day. I will say straightaway that the pattern is not nearly as clean and clear. But, as the big circle indicates, the possibility I have been asserting is that all this bullish action over the past six weeks has been a "b" wave retracement. What we bears are (sick and tired of...) waiting for is for "c" to kick in.


I wrote a few days ago about my bullish disposition toward energy stocks. This morning I bought - yep, bought - SLB and SWN based on this point of view. Both of these moved up handsomely. As you can see by OIH, below, there seems to be a nice breakout for these stocks based on an inverted H&S pattern.


Let's see if Friday the 13th (tomorrow) gives the bulls the kind of bad luck we've been waiting for. But today's strength was disconcerting. A push tomorrow above the highs of April 10th would be just another nail in the bearish coffin.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Eight is Enough

Well, the octet of upswings in the market met a welcome halt today. Between the real estate market going down the toilet and the Fed gritting their teeth and confessing that the economy is starting to weaken, the market got the kind of one-two punch in the face it needed.

One catalyst for the drop in late February was the carry-forward trade. The NZD/USD nicely captured this (shown in green). As you can see, this FX has been pushing higher and higher (in spite of staying obediently below the broken trendline). A weakening here would portend good fortune.


Much of the indices resemble the NASDAQ 100 ($NDX), shown below - - basically, a slip from the huge upswing we've seen over the past six weeks (which I consider a retracement that will precede a much bigger drop).


My favorite index puts - the Russell 2000 - had a pretty good day. I've adjusted the stop to 816.13 on these.


And here's the S&P 500 ($SPX). Check out the RSI and Slow Stochastic indicators.


Gold & Silver ($XAU) seems to have reached the top of its descending channel. I've got a big block of puts on this index now too.


One of the most resilient indexes, the American Stock Exchange Major Market Index ($XMI), may have double-topped. I hope so, at least. God can't hate me that much.


A high-risk bullish play might be found with - believe it or not - some of the battered sub-prime lenders. Check out Fremont (FMT). The monster volume and triple bottom might mean a nice bounce higher. Of course, you could also wake up one morning and find one of these companies has declared bankruptcy, a la NEW. That's why I'm not going to touch it myself.


General Growth Properties (GGP) finally took a tumble on some very sizable volume. Lots of room left before it hits that trendline.


Tired old has-been Microsoft (MSFT) seems to have a nice H&S pattern.


NutriSystem (NTRI), favorite stock of departed commenter hurricane5, is again in my portfolio. No surprise here, folks - I've got puts on it. Another nice H&S pattern, in my opinion.


PSB continues to shape up nicely. I'm jumping the gun a bit on the pattern, but as long as it's shaping up as roughly drawn here, I'm a happy fella.


Reynolds (RAI) is finally started to sink. It's about flippin' time.


Someone commented that getting a long series of modestly down days would be better than one whammo day like we had on February 27th. I'm inclined to agree. But cruel fortune doesn't care. We simply have to take it a day at a time.

The Fed Gives Honesty a Try

Well, even the rah-rah bull cheerleaders of Ben Bernanke and company are starting to acknowledge that the economy is weakening. The Dow is off about a hundred points now, although there's 90 minutes left in the market day and who knows where it'll wind up.

The other good thing happening right now is that it's finally snowing outside. So I'm heading to the slopes for a bit. Just wanted to say hello and let you know a post will be coming later this evening.

I imagine the bulls who read this blog figure this is a rare opportunity for us bears to get out with our skin intact before the next 5,000 point rally. Whatever.

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