So far in the early stages of this market correction (dare I say Bear Market? Too Soon?), I've been aggressively deploying Bear Call Spreads to attack bearish trading opportunities.
Bear Call Spreads are a version of a vertical spread that consist of a short call at or slightly out-of-the-money and a long call further out-of-the-money. The profit profile of bear call spreads typically maps out like this:
There is a reason we look at the stock market from a global perspective. It's because we invest in a global market. Stocks in America weren't going up the past couple of years because of what was happening in DC or New York. Stocks in the U.S. were going up because stocks all over the world were going up.
That changed earlier this year. While U.S. stocks keep making new highs through the Summer, global markets were not participating.
The question was simple: Were we going to get rotation back into Emerging Markets, Europe and other under performing areas around the world? Or was the U.S. just the last man standing and would catch down to the rest of the world. It's clearly been the latter as stocks have come off significantly this Fall.
For clues about what we should expect in U.S. stocks, I think it's important to continue to value the data coming in from global indexes.
Two weeks ago we wrote that the weight of the evidence was suggesting the major indexes in India were getting ready to resume lower. While we were a few days early, most have resolved their consolidations lower. So the question now is, will they continue lower or will they be able to base and head higher? That's the question we're looking to answer in this post.
First let's start with the weakest area of the market, small-caps. Prices were consolidating for about a month in a super tight range, but are now resolving to the downside to continue their long-term downtrend.
Click on chart to enlarge view.
Mid-caps look equally as bad. Nothing in this chart suggests higher prices are ahead, quite the opposite actually.
Large-caps continue to out-perform, but on an absolute basis are range-bound at...
There have been many whipsaws in the Commodities' market as of late, with few intermediate-term trends allowing us to trade them with well-defined risk. Every now and again the market provides us with a clear opportunity, this time it's in the form of a breakdown in Tumeric.
There's a saying among market participants that "all gaps need to be filled" or "all gaps are eventually filled", but as with most market generalizations, this saying shouldn't be taken at face value.
This post is going to discuss the four types of gaps and explain why this phrase is not something any market participant should take seriously.
A conversation with Arun Chopra is one that makes you smarter. That's how I see it. Arun has formal training as both a CFA Charterholder and a CMT. He has helped produce award winning films at the Sundance Film Festival and he's on the same journey as us: to make money in the market. He uses a combination of global macro, technical and sentiment indicators that he is working on putting into a more quantitative model. Picking his brain about the process and his experiences in this endeavor was really enlightening. In this episode we discuss current markets, sector rotation, credit spreads widening and the possibilities for the US Stock Market Indexes to break to new lows. I really enjoyed this discussion with Arun. I always do.
We always hear the phrases "fading strength" or "selling into strength" from market participants, but what does that mean from a practical standpoint? How do you know what to sell? When do you sell?
In light of those questions, this week's "Chart of the Week" is going to help provide some context around the types of characteristics we look for when choosing stocks to fade.
Over the last three weeks Sun Pharmaceuticals has been doing its best Deutsche Bank impression, losing roughly a third of its value and trading at levels not seen since March 2013.
As the largest component of the Nifty Pharmaceuticals Index this performance has been a major drag on the index, however, equally-weighted charts can offer us a much better read of the sector's health.
I've seen way too much at this point to underestimate what the market is capable of doing. People call me all the time and say, "JC crazy market huh?" or "Did you see that crazy move in XYZ". Yea I saw it. So what? As Jay-Z said in his latest album,
if everybody's crazy, you're the one that's insane".
How high can a stock go? Much higher than you think. How low can a stock go? Zero. How low can your account go? In the negatives where you actually owe money. That's the deal we make when we enter the marketplace.
So there is being overly dramatic and there is being realistic. We've seen these clowns calling for market crashes since a month after the last one was over. They prey on vulnerable hard working citizens preaching the end of the world and they make a ton of money doing it. They're terrible people.
It's my job as a market participant to identify the risk that is on the table at any given time. Until just recently, the risk in U.S. Stocks had been higher for years. Not being aggressively long, was the real risk in my opinion. All of that...
You hear it all the time, "Cash is King". But we forget that it really can be. Not all the time, very few times in fact, but cash does serve a great purpose.
There are a lot of institutions that are not allowed to go to cash, as part of their mandate. The majority of investors, however, do have that option. Why not use it?
You're going to see a lot of the passive investing community advise against cash. "Market sell-offs are an opportunity to buy more at lower levels", they say. "You're not disciplined or smart enough to get back in", they preach. "Just buy and hold and everything will be ok". It's all based off this theory that the market always goes up. I guess if you trust data based off the tiny sample sizes that we have, you'll believe anything.
Crude Oil is down roughly 35% over the last two months as record bullish sentiment unwound and prices fell in what was essentially a straight line. There hasn't been any reason to bottom-fish this market, but today we received our first indication that a short-term bottom may be in.
If you're bullish coming out of this Autumn's correction, then you're betting that recent lows in the indexes mark significant bottoms.
While we at All Star Charts don't believe Bulls are out of the woods just yet, we're of the view that if stocks can manage to trade in a sideways range for any length of time, that might be long term bullish for stocks and the economy in general.
With this as a backdrop, believers of the bull case should look at Walmart $WMT as a barometer of the American consumer and the willingness of investors to step in and take some risk.