For this week's trade, we're putting on a $CCJ September 30/40 Bull Call Spread for an approximately $2.20 debit. This means we're long the 30 calls and short an equal amount of 40 calls for a net debit which represents the most we can lose in this trade.
Get the full details, risk management procedures and targets for this trade here:
From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @Ianculley
It finally happened…
The yield curve inverted for a brief moment as the 2-year yield rose above the 10-year earlier this week.
But whether or not it inverted yet is beside the point. It’s been flattening for a long time, and that’s the direction we’re headed in. It's only a matter of time.
While media outlets and fearmongers will spin this development as an urgent warning of an impending bear market, here's what you need to know: Throughout history, equities have done well during and after inversions.
This commonly observed leading indicator has a tendency to precede major market tops by years, not months. In other words, there's still time. The average lead time is about 18 months after prior inversions.
More importantly, when it comes to forecasting bear markets and recessions, many experts will argue that it is actually not the 2-year we should be focused on, but the 3-month yield.
Over the last few months, I've jumped down the rabbit hole that is Crypto Twitter (better known as CT).
As someone who's snooped around Financial Twitter (or FinTwit), a community dominated by industry professionals, CMTs, and CFAs, opening the trapdoor into CT felt similar to the culture shock I would experience moving to a new country.
Anyone that's had a presence in CT knows the culture: anon (anonymous) accounts, constant meme-ing, and shit-posting from a community of outcasts and degenerates enjoying riding the volatility of a new generation of assets.
This carnage was the perfect breeding ground for the wassie...
As many of you know, something we've been working on internally is using various bottom-up tools and scans to complement our top-down approach. It's really been working for us!
One way we're doing this is by identifying the strongest growth stocks as they climb the market-cap ladder from small- to mid- to large- and, ultimately, to mega-cap status (over $200B).
Once they graduate from small-cap to mid-cap status (over $2B), they come on our radar. Likewise, when they surpass the roughly $30B mark, they roll off our list.
But the scan doesn't just end there.
We only want to look at the strongest growth industries in the market, as that is typically where these potential 50-baggers come from.
Some of the best performers in recent decades – stocks like Priceline, Amazon, Netflix, Salesforce, and myriad others – would have been on this list at some point during...
JC had a great blog post out this week about zooming out. In a nutshell, he was reminding us that zooming out and looking at price action from a wider lens often makes the present murky waters look suddenly clear. It's easy to get distracted by the day-to-day price action and to look at only the last few months of daily charts and conclude that a stock or an index is in one sloppy clusterjam of price action.
But when you look at that same price action, instead with weekly or monthly candles, the more recent ones will often look like insignificant noise in an otherwise smoothly trending longer term pattern.
In the post referenced above, JC shared several current examples of instruments that look sloppy recently, but the bigger picture is still sitting pretty.
One of the stocks he mentioned is currently giving us a nice pullback to get a nice entry on.
One of the hallmarks of the beginning stages of new trends, irrespective of asset class, is the thrust.
Thrust: push suddenly or violently in a specified direction.
There are many different ways markets can thrust, but it's commonly one of two:
momentum; or
breadth.
In Monday's letter, we discussed that if Bitcoin could close in the green, it'd be the first time it's seen seven consecutive positive closes since the July short squeeze.
Fast-forward, we're now sitting on eight with a probability of nine green candles in a row:
Over the past half-decade or so, we've seen the US Dollar Index maintain a very high negative correlation with risk assets.
When stocks are doing well, the Dollar has normally been under pressure. And when stocks have struggled, as most of them have over the past year, the US Dollar has kept a bid.
Look how poorly the Dollar did when stocks ripped in 2020 off those pandemic lows. And then look at the strength in the Dollar over the last year as most stocks have struggled:
From the desk of Steven Strazza @Sstrazza and Ian Culley @IanCulley
Rates continue to move higher around the world as central banks do their best to combat inflation.
As investors, our best course of action is to position ourselves in those areas that benefit most from rising rates.
Commodities and cyclical stocks immediately come to mind. But there are also specific currencies that tend to excel in rising rate environments.
Today, we'll discuss a handful of emerging-market currencies with heavy commodity exposure.
We’ve been waiting on these currencies to catch higher and confirm the price action in commodities since last year… and it looks like it’s finally happening.
Let’s dive in.
First up is an overlay chart of the US 10-year yield and our equal-weight basket of EM commodity currencies:
As you can see, these currencies trend in the same direction as interest...
We’ve had some great trades come out of this small-cap-focused column since we launched it back in 2020 and started rotating it with our flagship bottom-up scan, Under the Hood.
For the first year or so, we focused only on Russell 2000 stocks with a market cap between $1B and $2B.
That was fun, but we wanted to branch out a bit and allow some new stocks to find their way onto our list.
The way we did this is simple…
To make the cut for our revised Minor Leaguers list, a company must have a market cap between $1B and $4B.
And it doesn’t have to be a Russell component–it can be any US-listed equity. With participation expanding around the globe, we want all those ADRs in our universe.
After our price and liquidity filters are applied, we sort by proximity to new highs in order...
This is one of our favorite bottom-up scans: Follow the Flow. In this note, we simply create a universe of stocks that experienced the most unusual options activity — either bullish or bearish… but NOT both.
Then, we dig through the level 2 details and do all the work upfront for our clients. Our goal is to isolate only those options market splashes that represent levered and high-conviction, directional bets.
We also weed out hedging activity and ensure there are no offsetting trades that either neutralize or cap the risk on these unusual options trades.
What remains is a list of stocks that large financial institutions are putting big money behind… and they’re doing so for one reason only: because they think the stock is about to move in...