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Thursday, April 30, 2009

Trade Ideas for 05/01/09

The S&P gapped up yet again at the open, running/staggering to new uptrend highs at 889 before dropping into the close at just below breakeven. The move down closed this morning's gap. So far this run has been from 667 to 889, or if you prefer, 666 to 888. (Begging the question, is 777 or 999 next?) Judging from subsequent market action, there's a good chance the high was put in today. First, let's consider the idea that a new high is yet to come. The most straightforward explanation for such a scenario is that an impulsive move is forming.

Under this count, we have today's high as wave 3 of 3, meaning at least two higher highs are to come—(5) of 3, and 5 itself. However, under this count waves (1) and (4) overlap, which is disallowed (strictly speaking, it's strongly discouraged) as mentioned yesterday. The conclusion here is that this is a corrective advance, despite its seeming 5-wave structure.

Above is the simple corrective count, which shows the B wave ending today. It is plausible that the B wave will continue. Such a count would have today's peak labeled as iii and today's lows as iv, in which case another higher high is in store. Continued downward action would (eventually) rule this count out; a strong opening move tomorrow would favor it. Regardless, by either count it appears we are close to the top, if it hasn't passed already.

No trades today.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
DGP 18.68 18.37 -2.2% 17.96 N/A Chart
GOLD 45.56 48.40 +6.2% 46.14 N/A Chart


Tomorrow, more short-side suggestions. We've been burned on the short side the past two weeks as this resilient corrective wave has progressed. However, tomorrow the opportunity is better than it has been thus far. To reiterate, there's a good chance that the high was put in today. I'm going to do something out of the ordinary and provide two different entry prices for tomorrow's ideas. The first, lower, entry price is more aggressive and doesn't rule out the possibility that another high is in store. However, the potential reward is commensurately greater. The second entry price means paying a bit more but would render another higher high unlikely. (But not impossible.) Note that FAZ is intended as a one-day hold; sell by the close.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
SDS (Ultrashort S&P) 64.71 OR 65.61 61.49 N/A Chart
TWM (Ultrashort Russell 2000) 49.84 OR 52.11 46.58 N/A Chart
FAZ (Financial Bear 3x) 8.66 OR 9.01 7.57 N/A Chart
DXD (Ultrashort Dow 30) 53.94 OR 54.81 51.59 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Correction

Trade idea for 04/30/09 is SKF, not SDS. The correction has been made in the table.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/30/09

The S&P ran up at the open, and after the Fed announcement made new uptrend highs at 882 before falling into the close. The new high changes the wave count, potentially on a large scale. Either the market is in "climb the wall of worry" mode and set to take off for new highs, possibly to pull back to this price area as a support level in the future, or this is a double top in the making, the effect of which was to instill complacency in the bulls and slaughter the bears. There are good arguments for both cases.

To me, the two scenarios hinge on how one reads the tape since the prior uptrend high of 4/17. After an intraday low on 4/21, the S&P made its way to new highs today. The chart shows a clear five-wave pattern.

Under the bullish scenario, this move up would be part of the uptrend (presumably as wave 1 of the next advance) and therefore must be interpreted as an impulsive advance. However, waves 1 and 4 overlap, which is not allowed under Elliott Wave Theory except in the case of diagonal triangles. The pattern of this uptrend doesn't fit the description of a triangle: it's more like a regular parallel channel, which suggests that this is a complex corrective 3-wave pattern rather than an impulsive 5-wave. And that would suggest that although new highs were attained, it was nevertheless part of a corrective move. Note, too, the length of time it took to attain marginal new highs: 7 sessions to recover the price lost last Monday. This is not the hallmark of an impulsive move. My count therefore shows that we have completed (or are near completing) the B wave of an expanded flat, with the C wave yet to unfold. This was a count I alluded to in the weekend post when I mentioned the market might like a run to the 880 level, to sweep the remaining bears away. If the market manages to rise impulsively above the new highs before going below S&P 823, it would invalidate this count.

Today's rally certainly swept away our short positions. Gold, however, survived a fast drop.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
DGP 18.68 18.87 +1.0% 17.96 N/A Chart
GOLD 45.56 48.69 +6.9% 46.14 N/A Chart


As easily as the market could drop sharply from here, it could also take off from here, following an impulsive count that reveals itself in hindsight. Either way, the opportunity appears promising. Therefore, I have one long and one short idea for tomorrow.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
URE (Ultra Real Estate) 4.14 3.25 Chart
SKF (Ultrashort Financials) 59.72 55.21 54.42 Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Update 04/29/09

The S&P gapped down on the open, and then immediately rallied. Interestingly, it appears that it didn't actually fill the gap from Friday, leaving an island gap on the way up, but this could just be a bad print from the quote provider. After hitting a high just before the final hour, it closed right about where it closed yesterday. Just a choppy couple of days. Here is one potential count for the action the past two days.

By this count, on Friday we began the C wave, marking the final phase of this sideways correction. For this count to work out, the S&P would need to start sliding within the first couple of hours of tomorrow's open. Tomorrow the Fed announces its interest rate decision at 2:15PM ET, and this has moved markets in the past, both up and down. We bought MZZ near the open today.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
DGP 18.68 18.61 -0.4% 17.96 N/A Chart
GOLD 45.56 47.64 +4.6% 46.14 N/A Chart
DXD 55.67 55.54 -0.2% 53.99 N/A Chart
TWM 53.67 53.14 -1.0% 50.74 N/A Chart
MZZ 46.23 44.95 -2.8% 43.68 N/A Chart


Since tomorrow is a Fed announcement day, no new ideas.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/28/09

The S&P gapped down this morning, tested the 855 level a couple of times, then rallied up to close the opening gap. It managed to get very close to Friday's highs before dropping to new lows, testing the 855 level several more times in a choppy basing pattern. For the first time in a few sessions, there wasn't a notable end of the day move.

A breakdown early tomorrow is possible. The S&P has traced out a potential head-and-shoulders top over the past two sessions and is now just above an unfilled gap. The gap support level has been tested multiple times over the past two sessions, and with increasing frequency. Since the more times support is tested, the weaker it becomes, this action favors breakdown. But the bull has shown great resilience, not missing a step since recovering from last Monday's wide-ranging drop.

We bought both the shorts from the ideas list.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
DGP 18.68 19.17 +2.6% 17.96 N/A Chart
GOLD 45.56 49.15 +7.9% 46.14 N/A Chart
DXD 55.67 55.34 -0.4% 53.99 N/A Chart
TWM 53.67 53.46 -0.4% 50.74 N/A Chart


For tomorrow, more of the same stuff that our portfolio already holds.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
GDX (Gold Miners ETF) 34.87 33.83 N/A Chart
MZZ (Ultrashort Mid Caps) 46.23 43.68 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

More Satisfying Count

The third wave of a flat has 5 subwaves, and while Intermediate B is shaping up as a potential flat, wave b within that B (action from Tuesday-Friday) also looks like a flat. The count pictured above also mirrors the underlying action more faithfully. If it turns out this way, then there shouldn't be another higher high on Monday, and it would be possible to have a repeat of last Monday's drop.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/27/09

Friday marked the second day in a row of careening tape. After a gap up open, the S&P marched to new highs for the week, took a nasty spill after bank stress test information was released, then picked itself up, attaining even higher highs before taking another spill in the final 10 minutes. Whew! Turns out Thursday's end-of-day volatility and short squeeze was but a foretaste of what was to come!

This countertrend B wave appears to be taking on the form of a flat, which is a sideways correction. After months of huge falls and weak rallies, it's as though the tables were turned in March, as these huge rallies have been interspersed with very small corrective waves. Recall that wave b of Primary A was a flat as well. Let's take a look back at how that unfolded:

Back then, what looked like a B wave in progress was really wave 1. If we follow the same script this time, perhaps we're about to embark on another bull run. But there are several problems with this scenario. Principally, the corrective wave that we ought to be in now is of a greater degree. A 45-day rally needs more than the 1-day correction provided last Monday. The next phase of the rally requires a solid base from which to launch. Let's take a closer look at last week's action:

Under the count as pictured, we have wave a equal in length to wave c, and within wave c, wave c twice the length of wave a. These are relationships that make sense, although it's also possible for the S&P to make it up to 880 level, whereupon the ratios become 1.618x and 2.618x respectively. The market might like that, as a break to new uptrend highs would squeeze out a great deal of the remaining shorts. My read is that more basing is needed, so I'd rate as low the chances of such a break heralding the start of the next bull run. The tape Friday was also telling. Look at those knifelike drops in the last couple of hours. Even though new highs occurred, it resembles a distributive pattern as the highs were marginal and the momentum slowed considerably (see the negative divergence in RSI).

Another factor to consider is the number of outstanding gaps that are just below the current price. The market likes to close gaps, and it likes to do so as quickly as it can. In fact, with Friday's late surge, the market closed the gap formed from Monday's early drop. In the chart below, the shaded areas represent outstanding gaps. The market is currently above three stacked gaps formed within the last month. It might want to fill them before moving on.

What's happening now is analogous in terms of price as well as wave structure to the action of mid-January to mid-February, when the market was tracing out countertrend Wave 2 of the final wave down. A 5-7 session walk down from here to the 800-810 level, or even down to the 50-day moving average, would close recent gaps and form a convincing base from which the market could rally, not to mention a kind of price symmetry. But let's first see what happens on Monday.

The above chart also shows how Thursday's "expanding triangle" turned out to be a pretty common snippet of tape the past few weeks: the transition period between waves a, b, and c.

Friday we were stopped out of SDS.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
DGP 18.68 19.48 +4.3% 17.96 N/A Chart
GOLD 45.56 50.22 +10.2% 43.99 N/A Chart


Since we didn't elect either of the short ideas, here they are again.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
DXD (UltraShort Dow) 55.67 53.99 N/A Chart
TWM (UltraShort Russell 2000) 53.67 50.74 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/24/09

Far from abating, the choppiness actually intensified today as the market struggled to fight the widespread expectation that it should go down. Perhaps the short-side setup was too obvious this time, and we had a situation in which too many participants wound up on the same side of the trade. Things got really crazy near the end of the day when the tape painted a very unusual pattern, signaling high emotionality and a market out of control: the expanding triangle.

Note the higher high followed by a lower low followed by another higher high, in quick succession, all on increasing volume. Note also the huge spike in volume right at the close (probably a monster short squeeze!). It seems to me that the market is trying every trick in the book to resist the downward pressure. But until the market clears last Friday's high (and perhaps even then), the bears have the advantage. There's a whiff of desperation to this afternoon's proceedings, but those desperate measures are effective, even if they only end up staving off the inevitable.

Those measures certainly were effective in stopping us out of our SRS position. We also got whipsawed with FAZ—even though it didn't hit its sell-stop, the official rule was to sell by the close. (But if you held, sell-stop is 8.49.) We also bought all the other stocks on yesterday's list. Gold did quite a number this morning, rocketing up in the blink of an eye; but in a gesture of kindness, it did so after the open, allowing us in.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
SDS 69.26 67.19 -3.0% 65.63 N/A Chart
DGP 18.68 19.07 +2.1% 17.96 N/A Chart
GOLD 45.56 46.43 +1.9% 42.38 N/A Chart


Although we've gotten burned so far playing the short side, down is still the direction indicated by Elliott Wave analysis. If anything, the setup now improves (probability-wise) with the late-day capitulation of the shorts and widespread confusion sown by the refusal of this market to fall. So a couple more short ideas for tomorrow.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
DXD (UltraShort Dow) 58.66 56.04 55.19 Chart
TWM (UltraShort Russell 2000) 56.21 53.29 51.13 Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/23/09

The S&P ended yesterday at resistance (850), and after a gap down open, cleared that resistance and managed to stay above it for almost the entire day. The players really pushed the market to the brink, perhaps in an effort to squeeze out the bears and suck in some retail investors. The action after the first hour was very poor: not much momentum and new highs that were barely above prior highs. In fact, the entire upward run of the past two days was a fractal of the run from March 6th through last Friday: strong start, exhaustion finish.

It all came crashing down in the last hour. If you ever need convincing that the market is fiendish and definitely not on your side, today was a perfect capsule of the lengths major players will go to in order to wrong-foot smaller players like us.

At this point, the market looks like it's about to break down. Fortunately we did not get stopped out of our short position.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
SRS 29.63 29.05 -2.0% 26.13 N/A Chart


A couple more shorts for tomorrow. FAZ is a Direxion 3x fund, which I have been advising not to hold overnight. For tomorrow only, if FAZ is elected and closes near its highs tomorrow, then consider holding overnight and selling Friday morning. Also, gold may have completed its correction, so let's give it a shot here.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
FAZ (Financial Bear 3x) 10.11 8.57 8.49 Chart
SDS (Ultrashort S&P) 69.26 65.63 N/A Chart
DGP (Gold Double Long ETN) 18.68 17.81 17.36 Chart
GOLD (Randgold) 45.56 43.16 42.38 Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/22/09

After yesterday's big drop, the market recovered a huge 50% (just shy of 20 points with respect to yesterday's lows) and once again looks vulnerable, overbought at resistance. At this point, the market is acting in character, even with the swift recovery of half of yesterday's losses. However, should the market continue to rise tomorrow (aside from action in the first hour or so), then it would be necessary to re-evaluate the wave count.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
SRS 29.63 27.25 -8.0% 25.74 N/A Chart


Again we had a wide-range day, which doesn't provide great setups. I found a couple that are OK. One thing to consider is buying some of tomorrow's ideas at the market open, risking to the conservative exit ("Exit C"). This is a riskier trade because it's a buy in anticipation of the breakdown, and it's possible my wave count is wrong and there won't be a breakdown. So please adjust your amount risked accordingly.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
QID (Ultrashort Nasdaq-100) 42.66 40.81 39.20 Chart
SDS (Ultrashort S&P) 71.58 67.49 64.15 Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Update 04/21/09

No mistaking that move.

The uptrend has ended. The confluence of technical factors: Elliott Wave, time cycles, negative divergences among oscillators and other indicators, and the general sentiment that the rally had gone on for a bit too long, led to a huge washout today that took out the lower trendline of the rising wedge in a single hourly candle. For the next two weeks, possibly more, the trading mentality should be bearish, shorting rallies and holding short positions through the declines.

By my count, this decline should be a relatively small correction (in wave terms, B of B) that won't go near the March lows. The target range for this correction is S&P 750-800, with a potential time target of May 5th, which marks 60 days after the 667 low (or failing that, May 20th). Andy at PTV Investing has long targeted mid-May as a major cycle turn (one example here), and that lines up well with the potential timing of the C wave of Primary B. But this is to anticipate. For now, let's take off the rose-colored glasses of the past 1-1/2 months and recognize that it might get a bit ugly from here.

Our portfolio went from net long to net short overnight. We sold all our long positions, some of them for less than ideal prices as they gapped down at the open. Happily, all but one (DIG) were sold for gains, and in a couple of cases the profits were handsome. We bought SRS, but missed SDS when it gapped and ran.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
SRS 29.63 33.24 +12.2% 25.74 N/A Chart


Let's let the market settle down for a bit. Ideally we get a consolidation day tomorrow, which will allow us to get in some additional short positions Wednesday or Thursday. You can always enter a short position, risking to Friday's highs, but at this point the risk is so wide that you won't be able to take on many shares, and the downward move so extended that there's a good chance the market rallies 10-20 points from here. Nevertheless, it's a low-risk proposition overall as the uptrend did break definitively. And if you ended up buying some put options at today's open, congratulations. It's difficult because at the time it seems like you're overpaying, but when these downtrends begin, they pick up steam so fast that time is of the essence. The early moves end up being profitable/capital-preserving moves.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/20/09

More uptrend highs Friday as the market continues its slow march upward. This time, the S&P nicked the upper trendline in the rising wedge that I've been tracking:

To me, this signals that Monday is do-or-die. Let me unpack the various exigencies. There are two possible paths the market can take from here, using Elliott Wave counts. Either we are as the graphic above depicts, tracing out the final moments of the C wave, or we are still in Wave 3 (replace 3 and 4 in the above graphic with i and ii to see this), with at least a couple weeks left in the uptrend. Now that the S&P crossed the threshold of the upper trendline, it'll have to tip its hand Monday as to its future direction.

Many signs point to a reversal. We have a context of slowing momentum. Using practically any indicator (RSI, cumulative money flow, volume), it's apparent that each push up has less oomph behind it, less participation with respect to the prior high. These are serious negative divergences that have been building up since the C wave began. There are two remedies for such a situation: the normal course of events is a pullback that "resets" the momentum. But another remedy is for the market to rocket higher. A recent example of this was the huge surge on Monday, March 23rd, the day that changes to mark-to-market accounting were announced.

It's important to reiterate that Monday, April 20th is a known cycle turn date. 45 calendar days from the March 6th low, which marked the end of Primary A. And so far this rally has seen an increase of over 30% in the value of the S&P in a short period of time, with a maximum drawdown of less than 8%. Based upon these factors, there's an expectation—among bloggers, columnists on CNBC, etc.—that the market will suffer a large pullback soon. I believe that Monday is a day when a great deal of money will be won and lost, but I don't know which contingent will be the winners. It might just be the bullish contingent, given that expectations for a pullback are so widespread. But in that case, the rally has to be big and fast: "impulsive" in Elliott-speak. Something like 885+ by Monday's close.

In summary, as I put it in an email to a friend, it really looks like the market topped on Friday (or will do so early Monday). The only thing it can do to convince me otherwise is to really take off on Monday, which it could do.

We have our long portfolio in case of a big rally Monday; in case of a drop, we have tight stops on that portfolio and Monday's trade ideas. I also think there's good risk/reward in spending a small amount on May put options near the open Monday. As for changes in our holdings, we sold TMX for a small profit Friday.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 22.90 +31.7% 22.40 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 8.39 +9.8% 8.09 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.91 +51.5% 4.72 N/A Chart
JEC 44.41 46.60 +4.9% 45.95 N/A Chart
DIG 24.46 24.54 +0.3% 23.96 N/A Chart


If the market does a reversal Monday, SDS is the "conservative" short in that it's inversely related to the S&P. SRS is the aggressive short—it's more beaten down, reflecting the strength of real estate stocks over the course of the rally. Consider buying/adding to these at the close IF the market fails to rocket higher Monday.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
SDS (Ultrashort S&P) 66.46 64.15 N/A Chart
SRS (Ultrashort Real Estate) 29.63 25.74 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Update 04/17/09

New uptrend highs today, and a close just above the prior high in the S&P. That's it for the good news.

Higher highs are encouraging, but each push needs to go substantially higher than the last to sustain price momentum, and to keep alive the possibility that this rally still has much more left in the tank. It could be that today's late-day surge isn't over yet, and we'll get carryover tomorrow. However, the dramatic way price fell in the last half hour doesn't help that case. Here's a close-up of that late-day collapse:

Tomorrow is options expiration day, which can be volatile in either direction. Don't rule out the possibility of a run to 900+, but the only way the market can prove that there's another significant leg up is to wow us with a big jump in price. Until that happens, upside from here appears limited: perhaps another bump up to the upper trendline sometime tomorrow or Monday to complete the pattern. We'll know by Monday in any case.

We bought DIG and JEC today.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 22.40 +28.8% 21.59 N/A Chart
TMX 16.72 17.01 +1.7% 16.86 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 8.41 +10.1% 8.09 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.77 +47.2% 4.42 N/A Chart
JEC 44.41 46.15 +3.9% 42.99 N/A Chart
DIG 24.46 24.15 -1.3% 22.99 N/A Chart


Nothing for tomorrow. Until further notice, the market is telling us to prepare for a reversal.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/16/09

The uptrend rolls on, doing what is now becoming a regular maneuver: the final-hour super-move that encompasses the day's range. Another way to say this is, you could take out all the prices between the opening price and 2:30PM, and you'd still get the same picture on a daily candlestick chart. Today that final-hour move was a 12+ point rise in the S&P, taking us from below 840 to above 850. Today's 2:30PM low is now our line in the sand. This lower low is important for all three of the remaining possibilities: (1) the uptrend ended at the high Monday, and we have been traversing the corrective waves since then. (2) The uptrend is in the final stages, to end around Monday with a price target between 875-880. (3) The uptrend is two weeks or more from being over, with a price objective well above 900. In all three of these scenarios, by the time price falls below today's low (around S&P 840), the uptrend will be over.

A couple weeks ago, I highlighted possibilities for the price target of the uptrend in this post. Back then, it seemed possible to get a C wave that was at least equal to the length of the A wave, meaning a price objective above 900. Given the palpable loss of momentum lately, the difficulty in sustaining the impulsive rises, and the large amount of overhead resistance, it seems unlikely that the C wave could extend much beyond 0.618 times the length of A. This would place a target for the S&P in the mid-high 870s, representing the scenario labeled (2) in the prior paragraph. (Scenario (1) represents a C wave equal to 0.5x wave A, which, though possible, shortchanges the bullish sentiment)

Scenario (2) also seems likely given the following chart, in which the C wave takes the form of a diagonal triangle (a.k.a. rising wedge):

What's remarkable is the number of contacts on the two trendlines that form the wedge. Under this scenario, the next touch of the upper trendline would likely mark the end of the trend. Finally, Andy at PTV Investing notes that next Monday, April 20th, has the potential to be a turning point (in this post). It's conceivable that we see a three-session climb to the upper trendline from here, which would intersect the upper trendline in the mid-high 870s on Monday. This price level would also coincide with the late January high of 877.86.

Or maybe the rally will find its legs and really extend, and we'll get scenario (3). This would require a definitive break of the upper trendline, which could very well happen tomorrow if bullish sentiment is strong enough. A 25+ point rise in the S&P would do the trick. That's a tall order, especially with Friday being options expiration, but tomorrow does feature major economic data (jobless claims, housing starts, Philadelphia FED) and earnings reports (JP Morgan in the AM, Google PM).

So how to play? Well, our existing positions have locked-in gains with respect to today's low, which (recall) is now the sell-stop. You could leave it at that, letting profits run in case scenario (3) materializes and we get much higher prices. Or, you could take partial profits as the market nears the upper trendline (for example, applying a percentage trailing stop once S&P crosses 875, if your broker allows that type of order). And/or, you could sell some shares Monday (or Friday, just in case), anticipating the turn occurring then (perhaps using a percentage trailing stop there, too). Of course, individual stocks don't always follow the market—for example MELI has been much stronger than the broad market, having bottomed in November rather than March—but once wave C ends, it'll take the vast majority of stocks with it.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 22.02 +26.6% 21.59 N/A Chart
TMX 16.72 16.99 +1.6% 16.86 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 8.38 +9.7% 8.09 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.57 +41.0% 4.42 N/A Chart


Under scenario (2), which I find most likely of the three, the risk/reward picture isn't that pretty. Although JEC has a strong chart and could push up a lot in a short amount of time, it'll most likely follow the general market. However, the other three ideas are related to oil and gold, which don't always take the market's cue.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
JEC (Jacobs Engineering) 44.41 42.27 N/A Chart
CEF (Central Fund of Canada) 11.22 10.89 N/A Chart
DXO (Crude Oil Double Long ETN) 3.17 2.89 N/A Chart
DIG (ProShares Ultra Oil & Gas ETF) 24.46 22.99 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Trade Idea for 04/15/09

Today's retail sales number stopped the rally dead in its tracks. Perhaps a dose of reality was dished, and the urgency of the decline, especially in the financial sector, sure makes it seem as though the rally's days are numbered. Until we breach last week's low, however, the market is still in an uptrend. Even if it's an uptrend that's losing momentum, somehow trends find a way to stay alive a bit longer than you'd think. So let's take it slowly, and see what the market comes up with next. Tomorrow, more economic reports before the bell and then throughout the day.

Today we sold CMED and UAUA for profits, and PLD for a loss.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 21.76 +25.1% 20.99 N/A Chart
TMX 16.72 16.96 +1.4% 16.62 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 8.46 +10.7% 7.57 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.52 +39.5% 4.39 N/A Chart


With today's drop, the risk/reward picture has changed such that it's not a great bet at this point to take on new positions. If you do elect the following idea, risk should be on the small side.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
JEC (Jacobs Engineering) 44.41 42.36 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/14/09

Even though we achieved higher highs, today might have been our narrow-range pullback day! At this point it feels like we're in the beginning stages of a blow-off top, as prices defy gravity even as a large contingent strongly protests that they shouldn't go any higher. It's dangerous, because a steep fall typically follows such a top, but there's potential for quick and large profit in the final days of the run. My strategy is to keep stops relatively loose until we rocket higher (should that happen.) Economic reports hit in the hour before tomorrow's open, and this will probably move the market in one direction or another.

We bought TMX today.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 21.63 +24.4% 20.49 N/A Chart
TMX 16.72 16.96 +1.4% 16.39 N/A Chart
CMED 16.64 18.39 +10.5% 17.49 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 8.04 +5.2% 6.84 Consider selling on a close < 7.58 Chart
CLS 3.24 4.59 +41.7% 4.39 N/A Chart
UAUA 5.89 6.76 +14.8% 6.29 N/A Chart
PLD 7.73 8.56 +10.7% 7.41 N/A Chart


Thanks to today's narrow range, low-risk charts for tomorrow.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
EXEL (Exelixis) 5.18 4.87 N/A Chart
ACM (Aecom) 28.67 27.42 N/A Chart
CAKE (Cheesecake Factory) 14.33 13.60 N/A Chart
UA (Under Armour) 19.06 18.19 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/13/09

After a week of coiling, the market sprang up on Thursday, and you have to believe the momentum is with the bulls. There's some stiff overhead resistance up above, though. The plan is to monitor action on Monday and Tuesday; if we get shallow pullbacks followed by panicky buying spurts, this phase of the rally may take us well above 900 on the S&P. If there's resistance to higher prices, then we'll have to dial back the enthusiasm. It's options expiration week, and practically every day will feature a noteworthy economic report. Given that recent reaction to news events has been to upside, there's potential for this week to be big.

We bought UAUA and PLD.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 21.52 +23.7% 20.49 N/A Chart
CMED 16.64 18.11 +8.8% 16.99 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 8.08 +5.7% 6.49 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.68 +44.4% 4.35 N/A Chart
UAUA 5.89 6.56 +11.4% 5.40 N/A Chart
PLD 7.73 7.87 +1.8% 6.49 N/A Chart


After Thursday's explosive rise, I wouldn't be surprised to see a smaller range day Monday. This would set up some good entries on charts. As it is, there aren't many low-risk entries to be had, but here are some that I found.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
TMX (Telefonos de Mexico) 16.72 16.27 15.96 Chart
ACM (Aecom) 28.67 27.16 26.10 Chart
DXO (Ultra Crude Oil ETF) 3.26 3.07 2.82 Chart
TLT (20+ Year Bond Fund) 103.87 101.97 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/09/09

Today was a wild see-saw day that ended with the market green for the first time this week. Between yesterday and today, the S&P tested the 815 level several times, and each time the level held. After five sessions of consolidation, the market may be ready to move. Because this was a relatively long basing period, the follow-on move has the potential to be explosive. A reminder that the market is closed Friday, so this will be the last post this week.

Today we bought CMED and LDK. MET gapped up far above the buy price, thus invalidating the signal, so it isn't counted among the new purchases.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 19.42 +11.7% 17.99 N/A Chart
CMED 16.64 17.59 +5.7% 15.99 N/A Chart
LDK 7.64 7.74 +1.3% 6.49 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.56 +40.7% 4.35 N/A Chart


Let's see if the uptrend from early March is ready to resume.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
UAUA (UAL) 5.89 5.40 N/A Chart
TMX (Telefonos de Mexico) 16.72 16.25 15.96 Chart
UWM (Ultra Russell 2000) 15.11 14.22 N/A Chart
PLD (ProLogis) 7.73 6.49 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/08/09

Short-term prospects for continued upside were dealt a blow today as prices retreated, and the blow may prove mortal should the market fail to advance tomorrow. The major averages failed in their attempts to resist the gap up formed last week. Some averages closed this gap completely, and many formed new ones with this morning's opening gap down. Momentum is to the downside. In addition, the S&P broke down below yesterday's channel. However, the medium-term bullish picture hasn't changed, with the 50-day moving averages flattening and shorter-term averages pointing up. After a week of encouraging, but unfulfilled, action, it may be the case that lower prices are ahead in the next 3-5 days, although the intermediate trend is up and could exert its influence at any time. The SEC debates reinstatement of the uptick rule tomorrow, which could potentially change the rules to the detriment of the bears and move the market. Note that Friday the markets are closed in observance of Good Friday.

No changes in our holdings.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 19.17 +10.2% 17.99 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.40 +35.8% 3.71 Consider selling on a close < 4.25 Chart


A few charts in case the buyers step it up tomorrow.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
MET (Metlife) 25.76 23.99 N/A Chart
CMED (China Medical) 16.64 15.99 15.58 Chart
LDK (LDK Solar) 7.64 6.49 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/07/09

Today's action extended the consolidation to three days, and many, many charts are now set up very nicely for a breakout (should one occur). We did dip a little further into the gap I mentioned in the last post, but rallied solidly off of it. The channel in which the market has been trading should break soon, and while odds favor upside, one can't rule out a break to the downside. The advantage of buying the breakout, rather than in anticipation of the breakout, means the latter case won't cause us to take on new positions.

Sadly, we were stopped out of SOL today by a couple of pennies.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 19.59 +12.7% 17.99 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.35 +34.3% 3.71 Consider selling on a close < 4.05 Chart


The great thing about lengthier consolidations is that a breakout above the consolidation zone has more potential for continuing higher. I think now is as good a time as any to risk a bit more than usual.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
UNM (Unum Group) 13.96 13.11 N/A Chart
UWM (Ultra Russell 2000) 15.89 14.79 N/A Chart
ACI (Arch Coal) 15.06 13.99 N/A Chart
PLD (ProLogis) 8.41 7.42 6.84 Chart
ACM (Aecom) 28.67 27.16 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Correction

In my last post, I stated that Wave 3 was the most powerful of the waves. This is incorrect. While it sometimes feels like this, the actual rule is that Wave 3 is never the shortest out of Waves 1, 3, and 5, on any timeframe. Also, more generally, these past couple of weeks have demonstrated that there are always alternative Elliott Wave counts, and it doesn't pay to be overly reliant on a particular count. So let's take a look at other aspects of the market.

Market action the past few days has certainly been bullish. Watching the tape, I've noticed that buyers have been quick to get in on any pullback. For example, what began as a Friday afternoon selloff at 2:30PM actually ended up as new highs on the day. This suggests that market participants don't want to risk missing out or being caught with short positions over the weekend. Up until now, people didn't want to risk being caught long over the weekend! Meanwhile the drops in the VIX, gold and bonds suggest increased risk appetite. However, among these encouraging signs, one note of caution is the gap between Wednesday's close and Thursday's open: An overwhelming majority of gaps eventually get filled, and most of these get filled immediately. They're like little black holes; it takes great strength to resist the pull. Conversely, the ability to resist the pull implies great strength. I'm impressed by how the gap was defended on Friday; prices dipped a toe into it, but that was it. It's a virtual guarantee that this gap will get filled eventually; in the short term, it puts a bit of pressure on the bulls to forge upward quickly.

PS: Check out that strong 3-day bounce off the 50-day moving average (blue line)!

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/06/09

Had a great powwow today with my mom, the resident Elliott Wave expert in the family. I felt off by a beat in my commentary the past two weeks. A couple Fridays ago I observed that the path to new highs was a slog. When things don't feel right, for example a higher high that feels more like a lower high, my mom explained, one should think B Wave. This past week, when I thought the C wave (within the B wave) was about to unfold, it had in fact already unfolded, and the huge drop at the end of the day Tuesday was actually a Wave 2. Wave 2 is one of the trickier waves, because it can fall very far, very fast, seeming like an A or C wave at first. The key difference is that what follows wave 2 is the most glorious of the waves. OK, enough talk; upshot is, the correction phase is over. For the next week or two, the likely path is up, and that, furiously so. How about a picture: This chart shows an a-b-c correction where the B wave exceeds the top of Wave 5. Such a correction is known as an expanded flat, and it implies great strength in the direction of the B wave, in this case up. Further credibility is lent to this count by the fact that Wave c of the a-b-c was 1.618 times the length of Wave a (the ones labeled in light blue). Yes, there is ideally a Fibonacci relationship between waves A and C; either C tends to equal A, or it tends toward 1.618x, 2.618x, 3.618x, etc the length of A. (1.618 is the golden ratio: the ratio of consecutive numbers in the Fibonacci sequence as the sequence approaches infinity. Check out Wikipedia to find out more about this remarkable irrational number.)

Better yet, based on this count, we find ourselves in the midst of the most powerful of the impulse waves, Wave 3. As such, it's time to be skeptical of pullbacks; they are more likely attempts to shake us out of positions than starts of brutal legs down. Best of all, we can project a potential target area for this counter-trend rally. Based on the rule-of-thumb relationship between Waves A and C, the target range for this move is SPY 93-103 (referring to the labels in red). (As a note of caution, sometimes Wave C equals 0.618 times the length of A. However, this type of situation indicates weakness in the direction of the a-b-c, and so far we have reason to believe quite the opposite; that the move is powerful and deeply supported.)

What this means for my system is looser stops (because we don't want to get stopped out on a fake-out move), and increased risk per trade. But within this pocket of bullishness, it's still important to keep in mind that the prevailing trend is down. It's vital to get out when the market turns south for real, because this rally shall end in horror.

Friday we were stopped out for losses in VIVO and EGO, the latter when gold took a dive.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 19.57 +12.5% 17.99 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 4.15 +28.1% 3.38 N/A Chart
SOL 4.01 3.84 -4.2% 3.59 N/A Chart


Long ideas for Monday. BGU is another Direxion 3x ETF and ought to be sold by the end of the trading day if elected.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
MI (Marshall & Illsey) 6.51 5.79 N/A Chart
ITRI (Itron) 48.61 46.77 45.18 Chart
XHB (S&P Homebuilders ETF) 11.76 11.20 N/A Chart
UWM (Proshares Ultra Russell 2000) 15.89 14.99 12.69 Chart
BGU (Large Cap Bull 3x) 27.23 25.49 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Trade Idea for 04/03/09

Today was interesting; a huge up day where the bulk of the rise came from the overnight gap. After the wild gap, the market managed to make a new uptrend high. It apparently liked the mark-to-market news quite a bit. But now we are sorely due for at least a minor pullback, if not more, and the sooner the better. If the market keeps soaring, it'll ratchet up the pressure on the eventual correction, increasing its potential severity. The other problem is, very few charts look good for low-risk entries.

We bought SOL today. And I'm keeping CLS in the holdings, because the negative close was only a cent in the last few minutes. If you sold today on the negative close, you did the right thing as technically it should've been sold. But it was a close call.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 19.62 +12.8% 17.99 N/A Chart
CLS 3.24 3.73 +15.1% 3.36 Sell on a negative close Chart
EGO 9.01 8.95 -0.6% 8.19 Consider selling on a close < 8.49 Chart
VIVO 18.22 17.95 -1.5% 17.32 N/A Chart
SOL 4.01 3.98 -0.7% 3.59 N/A Chart


Just one chart for tomorrow.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
HW (Headwaters) 3.86 3.39 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Trade Ideas for 04/02/09

Was today April Fool's Day or Groundhog Day? It seemed like today's price action was a repeat of yesterday's, with the exception of the last 30 minutes: S&P started in the 780s, climbed straight up to the 810s, in the last hour suffering a precipitous drop. The difference today was that the market fought back from the brink of collapse, and futures are currently soaring.

I thought yesterday's collapse may have foreshadowed a brutal C wave down, but that turned out not to have been the case. Tomorrow may be an even more volatile day, as the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) meets to review the mark-to-market asset valuation rule. There's buying being done ahead of this news; and what happens afterward is anyone's guess. If it's a "buy the rumor, sell the news" type of event, then that C wave may indeed unfold. Or panic buying could ensue. Or the latter followed by the former! The most important price tomorrow is the closing price, and who knows what path will be taken on the way there.

No changes to our current holdings today. DUG gapped up on the open, and then proceeded to fall into the range of our buy price, then proceeded to trip the sell-stop. Technically, the gap up was too high (over 2% greater than the buy price) and invalidated the buy signal.

Current Holdings
Ticker Basis Closing
Price
Perf. Sell-Stop Additional Exit Guideline Chart
MELI 17.39 18.53 +6.5% 16.86 Sell on a negative close Chart
CLS 3.24 3.74 +15.4% 3.36 Sell on a negative close Chart
EGO 9.01 9.14 +1.4% 8.19 Consider selling on a close < 8.62 Chart
VIVO 18.22 18.10 -0.6% 17.32 N/A Chart


A varied bunch of ideas for tomorrow, to reflect the numerous possibilities. I personally would wait until the market has reacted to any mark-to-market news before taking on new positions. There's no set time, but the announcement could occur as early as the market open.

New Trade Ideas
Ticker Entry Exit A Exit C Chart
SOL (ReneSola) 4.01 3.65 3.19 Chart
CEF (Central Fund of Canada) 12.12 11.94 11.78 Chart
RWM (Short Russell 2000) 74.36 70.23 N/A Chart

Please refer to "How To Trade The Ideas" (right-hand side) to read this table.