Saturday, December 25, 2010

Market Outlook 12-27-2010


Sentiment readings were very bullish across a range of indicators this week. To begin, Investors Intelligence Advisor Sentiment had its highest percentage of bulls (58.8) since the October 2007 market top. The American Association of Individual Investors poll had the highest percentage of bulls (63) since October 2004, and the lowest percentage of bears (16) since October 2005. Finally, the National Association of Active Investment Managers (NAAIM) shows that on average they are 81.83% invested. Market Vane posted a 75% bulls for Nasdaq reading last
week the highs since the 2007 top. This is in the high end of the ranges of these surveys and shows that these managers are quite bullish.

The put call levels have run in the 70's for the last three weeks on the CBOE that is extreme also. Volume is very light and open interest is also contracting so not allot of good news on the sentiment front. I have no desire to buy equities right now. It's defense mode selling into the rallies. The clear lack of volume and sentiment is overtly bullish. The market is trying to stay together into the last day of the year. December 31st to January 3rd looks to be the time frame of the short term top. 1230.50 is the massive support area.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

The Market is a bit tired and the next 3-5 weeks will be sloppy (Defense Mode)

HINDENBERG SELL SIGNAL

December 14, 2010: 113 New Lows, 179 New Highs, 3063 Advancers+Decliners, McClellan Oscillator was negative (-5.36), NYSE Composite Index closed at 7855.22 vs 7272.53 50 trading days prior (October 4, 2010), and the 10 week moving average was rising.

Why do I care about it more than last time? Because the set up is the exact opposite of the last signal which was wrong.

Here it may be very right.

Basically, housing is not getting worse-but there is not much improvement either. Looking ahead, not much can be read into the dip in housing permits as the multifamily component is lumpy and volatile on a monthly basis. Until home sales pick up along with household formation (which depends on job growth), starts are going to remain sluggish. But again, the good news is that at least housing appears to have stabilized. Jobless claims improved slightly to an as-expected level of 420,000 in the December 11 week. This extends a run of improvement evidenced by the four-week average which has fallen for six weeks in a row. The average, at 422,750, is down more than 20,000 from a month ago in what is a positive signal for payroll growth. The four-week average for continuing claims, at 4.186 million, has been falling at 150,000 to 200,000 month-to-month clips to also signal payroll strength. Note this is a tricky time of year for adjustments and the Bureau of Labor Statistics warns that unadjusted claims will, starting next week, begin to build to an annual peak in the second week of January. Still, claims data continue to signal improvement in the labor market. NASDAQ futures have completed a five way advance from the November 2008 lows. The weekly RSI on NASDAQ futures has created a bearish divergence. Higher highs reached in the index last week but not in the RSI. The FXI is looking to go to test its 200dma at 41.98. I believe the United States stock market is going to have the same type of decline toward its 200 day moving average in the S&P futures. First comes the 20dma at 1214.00. Below that we work toward the Globex numbers at 1202.25 and 1176.25. The open interest contracted last Friday in the S&P & NASDAQ futures which is a sign of weakness. The 200/60 is 1232.56 currently and under this level pressure will continue on the market. A close under 1229.00 is the key to get the correction started in full force. Monday night is the next full moon and the next inflection point in the market.

Anything can and will happen we are now in MAX DEFENSIVE MODE.

Monday, September 27, 2010

NEXT 3 DAYS IN STOCKS MARKET....


The bears might get a chance to be happy for a very short time. The market right now is trying to get to the end of the month. All I really care about here is closing the month above 1118.75 in the ES futures. The market has no volume no news of any real consequence. The market only traded 128 million shares yesterday which is extremely light. The bond market is up on the week but I don't think it has very far to move on the up side..

I think the next 3 days set up is very sideways to slightly lower. Need to just be patient and wait.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Sentiment, Inflation and the $$$......


The stock market bottomed in a generational low in March of 2009, which was built over the previous nine years. The Secular top came in 2000, in one of the most overbought markets in history. If you were around then, you will remember the press saying, "its different this time". I have heard "it's different this time" so many times, it insults my intelligence. Nothing is ever new in markets. The only thing that changes, are the levels of Fear and Greed, which can go to new extremes. But even at the lows in 2009, the levels in sentiment did not reach the Market Vane Sentiment numbers extremes. Sentiment reached 20% bulls the week of October 14, 2002 when the SPX bottomed at 768.63. The week of March 9, 2009 Market Vane Sentiment reached 32% bulls when the S&P reached its climatic low of 666.79 in the cash SPX. The true sentiment low of the past decade came the week of July 29, 2002 at 17% at 775.68 the lowest weekly reading recorded from Market Vane ever. That set up allowed an easy call for the Macro low in October 14, 2002. The lower low in price and higher low in sentiment was a massive bullish divergence. From the 2002 lows the market rallied in a bear market rally to new highs at 1576.09 the week of October 8, 2007. Sentiment reached 69% into that high, which was a bearish divergence from the 74% attained the week of April 30, 2007. The sentiment reading currently from Market Vane is 48%, which is nowhere near overbought. Best to note these points of reference to allow you to have some idea how much room in sentiment there is for the market to move higher. It could 2 years before sentiment wise the market becomes overbought. If you knew nothing else about the SPX, you could have just used sentiment to get direction. This simple yet effective tool and understanding how divergence's get created will allow you to adjust to the market and position properly.

Is the situation changing for the better or worse on the inflation front? Rates are so low and the Fed has repeatedly said that they wish to error on the side of inflation. Is Gold going to succumb to the pressure of higher rates? Does gold have any reason to rally when the stock market is moving higher and is it a necessary asset class to own at this point? I will give into whatever happens with gold and the CRB chart certainly looks as if the Macro has turned higher.

The dollar chart is in an interesting position. At some point soon, the Fed will move off of zero in the Fed Funds. The economy will start to run better in the fourth quarter and 2011 has all the earmarks of a solid year.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Macro Break out in S&P 500!!



Welcome to the Macro Breakout in the Stock Market....

We are a point where capital should be fully deployed. The structure of the current environment for equities is one of the best macro positions in years. The Secular Bull Market is well intact globally and in the United States. The leadership is coming from the lead commodity, Copper. The banking sector is much improved and banks have cleaned their balance sheets. The yield curve is still steep and rates are low. Inflation is not yet an issue. The employment picture is now stable and perhaps ready to improve in the second half. The OSX gave the heads up from the weekend edition with the 9.62 put call ratio on the weekly sheets.

The only group that will struggle is Gold. Bonds should put pressure on the Gold market. Housing is doing well. The Public moved out of the market and will get back in above 1221.75. It certainly looks like steady growth is upon is. Well for me, when I see the biggest economy go from -6.6% to up 5.0% in a 5 quarters. I consider that a boom. That is unsustainable and a leveling out is necessary. Normal growth with low rates and low inflation are the mother's milk of growth. Companies are lean and mean and there is money ready to be deployed. The trick is as always to get ahead of it and we are. Also the Dry Bulk Shipping Index looks to have turned higher also.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

July was a great month in stocks & perhaps August will be better!


Bear Trap!!


August should prove to be the month of the macro turn in the stock market. The market has low interest rates, no inflation and a slow basing U.S. economy. The economy in the global world already based and had been slow for over the year. The stock markets in China bottomed in December of 2008 and the United States bottomed in March of 2009. That is the key, understanding if China indeed does have the lead. Copper, the lead commodity to economic growth, acts brilliantly and is in a solid up trend. Macro forces are well positioned globally. On balance economy activity has continue to increase in the United States.

The market continues to point higher and the new month has begun a bullish period. Next week the ISM manufacturing index comes Monday morning at 10est. It may provide a very nice boost to the market after last Friday's Chicago PMI data. The Jobs report comes next Friday. At this point, the unemployment rate may not be the best indicator of labor strength as workers leaving the job market have artificially deflated the number. Instead, we should concentrate on private payroll growth. Once private payrolls stabilize above 100,000, we should start to see improvement in the labor sector. The look of the market is still under short term pressure and consolidation over the past week.

The market did make new weekly highs for the move higher at 1118.75 last week. The ES futures 200/60 currently sits at 1095.04. The market did an excellent job last week of staying together and working off the overbought situation. Overall, economic news mostly was not as bad as expected while earnings generally topped analysts projections. Europe may be moving beyond the sovereign debt crisis and the Fed was still hopeful about the recovery continuing. With housing coming off special tax credits, the economy is looking soft at the end of the second quarter. Who doesn't know this? 

August sets up to move higher with targets at 1113.00, 1115.75, 1118.75, 1129.50, 1159.50 & 1174.75. These numbers are all well within reach. If the down side shows up targets are 1083.50, 1061.25 and 1050.75. The 1050.00 area has proved to be very large support. The down side is the least likely probability at this time. The IWM or Russell 2000 is up 4.0% year to date and is the strongest group. The airline sector, believe it or not, is the best group of the year. 1129.50 is the key, a close at the end of August above that level and we will have Macro buys!!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

The Secular Global Bull Market is alive and well...


The new month (August) sets up macro buy signals in the stock market and it clearly points higher, being led higher by the break out in the copper market! Ben Bernanke's testimony on the "unusually unpredictable" future of the American economy is the perfect "Wall of Worry”. It's my belief that the recent decline in U.S. stocks is a correction within a primary uptrend. I have concluded the recent weakness has been part of a correction within a primary uptrend, rather than the start of an extended
bear market.

This means the environment for stock investing over the next few years is highly favorable in comparison to other investment classes. The economic back drop is slow-to-moderate growth globally, with inflation under control. Maybe the best thing that is going on is all the ‘crazy talk’ that somehow things are different this time. Nothing is ever different in markets. Was it different in 1982, 1987, 1990, 1996, 2000, 2002, 2007 and 2009? Each one of these years the world was ending and things would never been the same.

No one knows what is going to happen tomorrow. Math can potentially lead us to the highest probabilities, and that is my only concern. I don't care about the stories. I care about how markets function and the math behind it. Stories are discounted as soon as they hit the tape.

The biggest edge is knowing that all markets function the same way. As we look at the global back drop, yes a slowing has taken place into normal growth. The break neck pace has slowed in China; yet it's not over by a long shot. If China is going to become the biggest economy in the world, it should happen by 2020 if not sooner. The rest of Asia is acting well, and India has had a small slowing but does continue to grow. Europe is not going to fall into the abyss and the issues there are already contained. All in all, when you look around the world, even the biggest economy is growing, the United States. While a pause to refresh has taken place - that isn't an issue. You grow from a deep negative number in GDP to 3.9% that is almost a 10% GDP swing in a year's time. That isn't something that reverses and goes away in booming global growth.

The stock market is in a wonderful position in the Macro time frame. The low of the year is in and the move higher is being led by the copper market. The secular bull market is well intact and a new leg higher has started.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Just another text book day....


Globex low holds the ATR stop, and work our way to Globex high--Copper has the lead and shorts have little chance...

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

160. LOSE YOUR OPINION--NOT YOU’RE MONEY.

Below are a couple of tweets I sent from StockTwits. Reality is, the market is carrying huge momentum along with strong oil and weaker dollar. Trying to pick highs or lows is not my style. I will short a clear break, not before. Read rule # 160

RT @krglobal $ES_F anyone else selling into this? I will tomorrow on new high 1085 ish about 18 hours ago via StockTwits Web


RT @krglobal $ES_F Opening 1/3 short now waiting for pop higher to add towards 78-82> 1085 caps this run for now. Range set 1050 - 1100 about 18 hours ago via StockTwits Web

Monday, July 19, 2010

stock market 7/18/10

Very simple, the Globex low (whatever it is) in the AM I am a buyer of. I know around 1050.00 there is a lot of support.

Housing starts at 8:30est -Housing starts in May fell back 10.0 percent to an annualized pace of 0.593 million units, following a 3.9 percent boost in April. The decline in the latest month was led by a 17.2 percent decrease in single-family starts, following a 5.6 percent gain in April. The May drop in this component was the largest since the 19.6 percent plunge in January 1991. Permits declined 5.9 percent to an annualized pace of 0.574 million units, following a 10.9 percent fall in April.

EVERYONE KNOWS THIS NUMBER WILL BE WEAK YOU BUY THE WEAKNESS..

IM A BUYER OF XLF, C, BAC, SSO on weakness premarket and any gap down around tomorrow's opening if I have to wait that long.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Weekly Journal 7-18-2010


The market ran into trouble last Friday and the question is was it option related. As was the plan given to our clients, all longs were covered once we broke below the ES rollover pivot of 1080.50.

Was the action last Friday just a one day wonder? Highly doubtful, the market has the look of trouble started. The fact that the bond market continues to rally has made the stock market's upside come into question. Copper also is struggling and since it has led the market around by the nose since March 2009, that is a warning that we must heed. What you cannot do is hesitate. Looking at the position of the (Daily) MACD's on the S&P 500, again it's going to be very late coming to the directional change. The market will have moved long before a sell signal is generated.

Weekly Percentage

Weekly New New Percentage New New
Name Adv Decl High Low Adv Decl High Low
-------------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
Dow Ind 10 20 1 0 33% 67% 3% 0%
S&P 500 133 367 22 3 27% 73% 4% 1%
S&P 100 34 66 3 1 34% 66% 3% 1%
NASDAQ 100 50 50 5 1 50% 50% 5% 1%

Global financial market returns stand at the threshold of mediocrity. With bonds priced not for recession but near depression, most major global bond indices now yield less than 3%. Last Friday, the 2-year T-note yield hit a record low. Note and bond yields have been easing on both favorable inflation numbers and downgrades on the recovery. The 3-month T-bill is still held down by a very low fed funds target range of zero to 0.25 percent. The Fed has continued to state that short-term rates are likely to remain extremely low for an extended period of time.

For July, manufacturing appears to be softening in the mid-Atlantic and New York State areas. The Philadelphia Fed's general business conditions index came in at 5.1 in July indicating a slower rate of growth than June's 8.0 reading. Break even is zero instead of 50 as with the ISM reports. But there is a possibility of decline ahead. New orders fell to minus 4.3 to mark an end to a year long string of growth. Unfilled orders—at minus 8.6—showed significant contraction. Delivery times improved sharply, indicating fewer bottlenecks from softer demand. This is a negative sign for business activity. Employment did show a modest gain at 4.0 vs. June's minus 1.5.

The recovery is still underway but we may be hitting a temporary plateau in the second half. Even though there are signs of softness, growth will still depend heavily on manufacturing and the consumer sector. The good news is that exports and business investment in equipment are starting to carry more weight. On a final note, slower growth is not the same as a double dip. With monetary policy still so loose, another recession is trying to be avoided. The Fractal (see picture) continues to point to higher bond prices and with the economic data shifting for the worse, bonds continue to look stable to higher in price. As bonds go higher in price that continues to pressure stocks lower.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

The 10 Commandments of Trading

1. Stops are the key to success for many traders… limit your loses. Before entering a trade focus on how much you can lose not how much you can make. If you protect yourself you will be surprised by how far your profits run.

2. We do not buy gap ups and we do not sell gaps down. Yes there are exceptions to every rule but we are interested in the highest probability.

3. Remember all markets function in the same manner and the one driving factor is that human nature which dictates price movement based on panic, fear, greed, insecurity, anxiety, stress and uncertainty. Think with the opposite side of your brain. Nothing is new in stocks. The game does not change and neither does human nature.

4. Mark to market everyday which is how a professional watches his or her money. Know your capital every single day and understand the amount of money in your account.

5. Do not let the minute-to-minute or day-to-day swings change your conviction of where the market is going. Stick and stay to make it pay.

6. Of all speculative blunders, there are few greater than selling what shows a profit and keeping what shows a loss. Sell your losers keep your winners it’s that simple.


7. Be advised that it is better to be more interested in the market’s reaction to new information than to be the piece of news itself. People who buy headlines eventually end up selling newspapers.

8. Keep record of your trading results

9. Take a trading break. A break will give you a detached view of the market and a fresh look at yourself and the way you want to trade for the next several weeks.

10. The deepest secret for the trader is to subordinate his will to the will of the market. The market is truth as it reflects all forces that bear upon it. As long as he recognizes this, he is safe. When he ignores it, he is lost.

Summary & Plan 6/14/2010


The clearing of 1080.25 is a huge positive for Quarter 3, 2010 S&P 500

It s pretty simple you continue to buy weakness. Highly doubtful that the market has any type of significant correction until July 23rd - July 25th.

The Globex numbers below are your targets as we move higher.

Globex Left
Globex Left
1174.75

1159.50
1091.25
1129.50
1073.00
1117.00
1065.50

As you see and have watch us be long when the proprietary Trade Advantage* software went into a daily buy (6 days now); and has generated a weekly buy first week up.

People are in disbelief about the rally when they should have been about the decline. That is the joke of all this; the majority is looking for a double dip recession. We always have a plan each week and this one is right on schedule.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

1080.50 very exciting level

1080.50 very exciting level so far nothing unexpected-- honestly thought AA would be fine, it was. Rest of earnings will be fine here big companies are lean and mean!!!

Targets above: 1091; 1097.75; 1117

55. A FATAL MISTAKE MADE BY THE FUNDAMENTAL TRADER IS TO TAKE SMALL PROFITS. THIS IS THE RESULT OF LIMITED VISION. ---EXTREMES ALWAYS SEEM SILLY TO MEN OF SO CALLED GOOD JUDGMENT..

Sunday, July 11, 2010

The Economy is doing very well and should continue at 3% GDP rest of 2010


The Economy is doing very well and should continue at 3% GDP rest of 2010

Some of the best rallies come when everyone is scratching his or her head and can't figure out why it's happening. Last Wednesday on CNBC, a lot of analysts were telling us that this is just a flash in the pan. I didn't hear anyone say that it was time to get on board. I think the markets are in a terrific position.
How can things be getting worse when Canada just pick up 93,000 new jobs some 60,000 higher than the estimate.

As most investors know, investor sentiment is a 'contrary' indicator. That is, sentiment is at a high level of optimism and bullishness at market tops, and high levels of fear and bearishness at market lows. That is only natural. When a market correction is underway, investors naturally become increasingly pessimistic and bearish as their losses mount, so that by the time corrections end investor sentiment is usually at an extreme of bearishness.

While some methods of measuring sentiment, such as the Investors Intelligence Sentiment Index, and the VIX Index (also known as the Fear Index), are not at the high level of fear or bearishness they usually reach at market lows, the poll of its members by the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) did spike up to a level of bearishness this week that is often associated with market lows. We consider that level to be when the poll reaches 55% bearish, and bullishness drops below 21. The poll's bullishness had been holding up surprisingly well until recently. While showing less confidence and bullishness as the market correction that began in April became more serious, three weeks ago the poll showed 34% were still bullish, and only 32% were bearish (the rest neutral). However, over the last two weeks of further market decline, bearishness increased to 42% last week, and spiked up to 57% this week, while bullishness fell to 24.7% last week, and only 20.9% this week. Those are in the range supportive of the market being at a low, not necessarily the low, but a low.

The June ISM non-manufacturing index, the employment component dropped only marginally and is consistent with respectable payroll growth. And the employment trend index was up for the 11th straight month in a row and it always leads payroll growth.

Jobless claims show solid improvement. Initial claims fell 21,000 in the July 3 week to 454,000 for the lowest level since early May. (prior week revised 3,000 higher to 475,000). The four-week average fell 1,250 to 466,000, the best weekly improvement since early May though the level is still slightly higher than a month ago. Declines are also seen for continuing claims, down 224,000 in the June 26 week to 4.413 million for the lowest level since November. Declines here reflect a mix of new hiring but also the expiration of benefits as the unemployed move out of the insured pool. The unemployment rate for insured workers fell 2 tenths to 3.4 percent. Thing are slowly getting better.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

STRATEGY REPORT


Summary & Plan for 7/7/2010--1038.50 S&P futures clear that level everything turns Bullish!!

There is a massive bullish divergence in the SPX cash to the summation index. That is an excellent sign that the market is going to trade higher. Looks like the XLE or oil patch is about to
take the lead in the market. (You buy weakness!)

The market is clearly over sold on many measures & above 1038.50 it is green lights for all time frames. Sentiment is now in a very good position with market vane at 39% bulls & AAII numbers at 25% bulls and 42% bears. The put call numbers are now 1.04 on CBOE 10 day moving average. The ISE numbers are very good with the 10dma at 100 and the Equity ratio is .69 which is getting close to bullish at .70. I really like this set up and with copper doing well the likelihood of a double dip recession is going out the window.

Gold is a sell in the Macro time frame and I consider it very bullish for the stock market.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Friday's selloff at the close......


I have a list of rules that were given to me many years ago by my mentor and periodically i take the time to read through them. The negative activity at the close, although predictable, brought to mind one very important rule...

45. YOU CANNOT PERFORM VERY WELL FOR VERY LONG WITH YOUR SHOES NAILED TO THE FLOOR. IN TRADING AS IN FENCING THERE ARE THE QUICK AND THE DEAD.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Japanes Yen...worth a shot??



As you can see by the chart, since the volume rollover to September (which occurred on June 11th), the Yen has been up 12 of last 15 days. Smarter to wait for a confirmed sell signal but for those who like to gamble..........

Patience.....


You can see now we have made lower low hourly. That sets up the rest of the day with 1010.25 the high of low hour. we are now 1 hour after ism data. The economy has slowed just a bit that is so normal. After 12est we should have legs under us. You must asked yourself why is gold falling apart. Keep your head together this isn't the end of the world.

Bonds are not blowing out to the up side either. The 56 ism number is not a bad number. Housing sales are weak but it's a slow work out. Mortgage rates are the best ever. Inflation is not the threat here.

I love the lower low in hourly chart now a bit deeper than I thought but I have no issue here.

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

What to look for at quarter end.

First Question, are we in deflation? That is a huge issue because if we truly are then you have a depression and all bets are off. Stocks cannot sustain any meaningful move higher if that is true. The evidence may be in falling lumber and copper. Let's not go there just yet.
In the ES futures 977.00 is the 20% decline level from 1221.25, which if that happens puts us in official bear market territory. The bond market again made new highs and at 127 11/32. S&P futures at 1035.00 have a massive bullish divergence versus the bond market or does it need to play catch up? The last time the bonds were at this level was 4/15/09 when the S&P futures were trading at 816.00. So who has it right are we slipping into double dip recession or even depression? Or is the economy just going to muddle thru and high yielding big cap stocks about to have their day in the sun?

The market I know looks bad and is still pointing lower. The fear is in the street and since we have the month end right in front of us, maybe not being so bearish here is a good idea. Gold is saying inflation and 10 year is saying deflation, who is right? The bottom line a lower low could set up a tradable bottom. Stocks down 7 days in a row are values. XOM is trading 8.29 times 2011 earnings with a dividend of 3% that, I believe is going to stay intact. 7 days in a row in any market is worth taking a look at the other side of the trade. Copper certainly has the lead and broken down yesterday from the 309.00 volume cross over level. Can’t the market make a low without going lower? I highly doubt it. The next Globex number is 1119.50 and a good target. Once a lower low is made we will be extremely over sold. That sets up the new monthly low and provides the ability to bounce.