By my work, everything started to improve for stocks after June 16th.
That was when the list of new 52-week lows peaked and stocks started the process of going up all the time, instead of going down all the time.
In bull markets, stocks go up. In bear markets they go down, not sure if you heard...
Anyway, these days I'm seeing a lot of investors pointing to October 13th as the market bottom, because that's when the S&P500 and some of the other indexes made their lows.
But by then, most stocks had already bottomed. It was only a few of those large-cap indexes left still falling.
In fact, I was interviewed by Maria Bartiromo on national television the very next morning (Oct 14th), and I was telling her how stocks had already been in a bull market for months.
To be clear, the list of Sectors in uptrends kept getting longer throughout the 4th quarter, not shorter.
And so now here we are, with all of those sectors still above their 200 day moving averages. But you can also add Technology and Communications to that list as well.
From the Desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza and Alfonso Depablos @AlfCharts
Our Hall of Famers list is composed of the 150 largest US-based stocks.
These stocks range from the mega-cap growth behemoths like Apple and Microsoft – with market caps in excess of $2T – to some of the new-age large-cap disruptors such as Moderna, Square, and Snap.
It has all the big names and more.
It doesn’t include ADRs or any stock not domiciled in the US. But don’t worry; we developed a separate universe for that. Click here to check it out.
The Hall of Famers is simple.
We take our list of 150 names and then apply our technical filters so the strongest stocks with the most momentum rise to the top.
Let’s dive right in and check out what these big boys are up to.
Warren Buffett was the smart money. And we listened.
Now this week, you can argue that the even smarter money, the company itself, announced a $75 Billion Buyback.
In other words, with all the money that Chevron is making these days, they believe the best thing they can do with all that cash is to buy their own stock.
And so $CVX is now making new all-time highs, again:
The near-term direction of US interest rates will play a major role in how market conditions resolve in the coming weeks. This is a chart you want to monitor closely...
Sure, risk appetite is returning as long-duration assets catch a bid.
The ARK Innovation ETF $ARKK, Tesla $TSLA, and even the Emerging Markets Bond ETF $EMB show impressive near-term strength.
Nevertheless, the overall market is still a range-bound mess…
The S&P 500 churns below overhead supply. A decisive downside resolution in the US Dollar Index $DXY has yet to occur. And commodities – at least at the index level – refuse to violate key support levels.
I doubt the markets will clean themselves up in the coming weeks. But if you want insight into the near-term direction of the major asset classes, keep an eye on this one chart…
Here it is – a triple-pane look at the yields on the five-, 10-, and 30-year US Treasury bonds:
Today’s note has nothing to do with trading, and absolutely everything to do with trading.
Let me explain.
The solutions to trading problems aren’t always found when we’re trading. In fact, I would argue most of the time they aren’t. At least not for me.
Have you ever been in the shower, on a walk with your dog, or driving your car when suddenly you were struck with a fantastic idea or an important “to-do”? Not just about trading, but about anything?
Happens to me all the time.
Even worse, it seems that whenever I’m struck with a great idea or a prompt for an errand I need to do, they come in waves. The brainstorming just flows ideas out of my head in a torrent that makes it impossible for me to remember everything. And it always seems to happen when I have no ability to write it down.
So I just try to remember it all until later when I can either perform the task, send that email, write that blog post, make that trade, or adjust that strategy.
But this act of remembering prevents me from moving forward when all I’m trying to do is balance the spinning plates of thoughts running in my head.