12/21/00 Investment House Daily * * * *
TONIGHT: - The markets started to rally, and we expect some more tomorrow the last day before Santa arrives. - Timely trading thoughts. - More warnings from stalwarts of the economy. - As more information comes in, the economy shows more weakness.
An anemic rally attempt leaves the market still looking decent for a final, one-day ho-ho rally.
The Nasdaq did pretty much what we wanted, testing 2285 and then starting a solid, 135-point move up just over an hour into trading a 6% move. That was great. Then the November FOMC meeting minutes came out where the Fed stated it did not want to shift to a neutral bias for fear it would further soften the markets. Whether that almost incomprehensible logic was the cause or not, the Nasdaq then started a slow topping pattern and then rolled over 12:45 CT when the 5 minute moving average crossed over the 15 minute moving average. A late rally move turned the Nasdaq positive once again at the close, but it was a bittersweet finish. The Dow and the S&P 500 both turned in much better days, but they also sold in the afternoon as sellers once again entered on a rally in order to dump shares.
Still, we were able to trade some plays as we described on Wednesday night on the big move up. Utilizing trailing stop losses, we were able to lock in some decent gains for the session. Not home runs, but nice singles. After the dust settled, there are still some good-looking bounce patterns out there, i.e., doji's at the bottom of a long spate of selling, that could give us another run up as we saw today. We note SEBL, NEWP and VRSN all closed on tight doji's today, an indication they could spring up tomorrow in a pre-holiday rise. Indeed, the Nasdaq itself shows us a doji on its candlestick chart, indicating it too is ready for a rise. Nasdaq futures are 60 points above fair value tonight.
Probably not a meteoric rise, but one, like today, can make us money as the big movers run up. We have to keep putting in stop losses as they move up, just as we did on the JNPR and MRCY trades we discussed last week. That way we are better assured of locking in that gain we do have in the event we get another one of those intraday reversals that peel off the nice gains made intraday. We are thus looking at the same type of plays we were looking at today: techs ready to bounce and run up, solid sectors breaking out, and downside on those stocks that run into resistance in their down trendlines and roll back over.
Investing in this market.
This brings us to some important points to consider in this type of market as we head for the new year. First, as we have stated repeatedly over the last couple of months, this market is not showing us this is a 'buy and hold' market right now. Stocks move up and then fall back. There are uptrends to play as we are seeing in the financials, drugs, healthcare, food, and beverages. There are downtrends we can play in the techs when they hit their down trendlines. None of these are going to last long-term. So, unless you are dollar-cost averaging at this point for the very long term, you are not thinking long term. Indeed, if you are dollar cost averaging, you are not expecting a rise anytime soon; no short-term gains.
What money do you use?
So, what money should you be using? Not your entire trading capital. Times are just too uncertain to risk the whole enchilada on any particular trade. We are using a fraction of our investment capital to make the trades we are making. Our reason is simple: we are not able to let trades run for days or weeks at a time due to the volatile market, so the risk is higher. We do not want to put all of our investment capital at risk on trades that are not going to make us rich. We will make trades that make us 20%, 30%, and 50%, but we are not putting up all of our trading money to do it. We try to make money all the time in the market, but the amount we put at risk depends upon the conditions. We don't want to take ourselves out of the game by losing all of our trading money and have to rebuild a trading account from scratch.
Stick to sell rules.
Many people have taken it on the chin this year. We have some missed sell orders that we had to take greater losses on than we would normally have done; when we did not get the trade we employed the most dangerous of all market tools: hope. Hope does not buy much, and we have paid the price on those trades. You have to keep strict sell rules, especially in this market. Don't hope a trade will turn around. Better to take a small loss than see a one-day drop turn into a 7-day, 500+ point drop as we just saw on the Nasdaq. Watch your positions and use pre-set or mental sell points.
Trust the market signals, not your emotions.
Because this has been a tough year, does that mean we walk away from the market? Of course not. We have to keep our skills sharp despite the carnage. Why? Because emotion is eating at you. That is how the market works. It sends you to incredible emotional highs, and then it just rips it all from you. We know some of you have lost large amounts of money this year; you are not alone. Just think, CSCO, one of the 'safest' stocks to own, the darling of mutual funds, has lost over $500 billion in market cap this year. Think all funds sold out of CSCO? Hardly. They are nursing losses as well. So, you feel as if the market has walked over you, turned around and then and gave you a couple of kicks to the stomach as you were lying there, right? REMEMBER THIS: when you feel ready to chuck it all and give up on the market forever, that is when things are usually ready to turn. That is the negative sentiment that clears out the last holders, the wannabe sellers. What YOU HAVE TO DO is keep looking at the market. DO NOT trust your emotions. Trust the market indicators. Keep watching for a reversal followed by a higher-volume gain of 1.5% or better 4-10 days later. Watch for strong stocks to start breaking out of sound patterns, something we are still a few weeks away from right now. When that happens, you will most likely say 'yeah, right,' and turn away; at least that is what your emotions will tell you to do. That, however, is the precise time you should shun emotion and trust what the market is showing.
Help is on the way.
We know there is going to be a Fed rate cut sometime in January. The Fed Funds Futures contract now as a 44% to 50% probability priced in that there will be a rate cut BEFORE the January 30 FOMC meeting. Very reliable; very accurate. A rate cut officially kicks off stock market recoveries as the market looks ahead, and rate cuts mean more money and investment in the economy, and that means growing earnings. The pundits estimate a 25% to 50% rise in the Nasdaq in 2001. With aggressive rate cuts (75 to 100 basis points in the first half), that is not out of the realm of reasonable reality. 25% is not bad. 50% is great. Who will be in to capture the lion's share of that move? Those who keep in tune with the market and are watching the signals. When the market says 'go,' you go and ask questions later. If you hesitate, ponder, procrastinate, instead of 25%, you may get 10%.
Keep your focus.
We have said it before. Michael Jordan took a year off and then came back to basketball for the playoffs. He was not Michael Jordan; the timing was not there. It is a tired clich , but it is true. You have to run the drills just as if you were playing so when the time comes, you can turn up the tap on the number of dollars you are investing because the risk is diminished when the market starts to rally for those who are watching and ready to take action. Those singles we are hitting now to help build up some cash and keep the money flow coming into the household will start turning into doubles, triples and home runs as the market takes off on the next bull leg. We will be looking at the best of the best that will return much more than 25% to 50% when they start moving. You have to be r eady and know when to act. Keep sharp because the move up is not too far away. When the Fed gets the first quarter GDP numbers, we anticipate that will be the trigger for the rate cut.
THE ECONOMY
Warnings again. LU completed the grand slam today, making it 4 quarters of warnings in a row. Someone once told me LU was going to run CSCO out of business. Talk is cheap; so is Lucent's stock. Georgia Pacific warned of slowing earnings, but it rose on the news of layoffs and restructuring. IP did the same earlier in the year, but then it just warned yesterday again. It is hard to overcome a bad economy. The big one: after hours, Ford warned of a fourth quarter miss (10 cents off) and a 17% production cut in the first quarter. When the economy goes, the big ticket items are the first to go with it.
GDP actually revised lower. We did not think it possible, but the final GDP revision came in at 2.2%, down from the 2.4% revision of the 2.8% number first reported way back in October. Seems that September strength that McTeer was telling us to count on turned into a September swoon. We have a very bad feeling that we are in negative GDP growth right now, well ahead of schedule. Maybe the holiday sales will push us to flat for the quarter, but flat or negative, things are not pleasant. It is really sad to see these dire predictions we made months ago come true, but we have to live with them. Again, help is on the way from the Fed, though we are perplexed that the Fed was not as aggressive in preventing a downturn as it was in pursuing inflation that never really showed its face. Maybe not perplexed, more like saddened.
Jobless claims jumped to 254,000, topping expectations of 250,000. That pushed the four week average to a level not seen since 1988. Seems the Fed got its wish for Christmas, i.e., fewer people with jobs. This is a leading indicator as opposed to the unemployment number that gets all the headlines. It is similar to a boat captain looking in the boat's wake for an approaching reef. Utter foolishness.
Tomorrow is the Michigan sentiment indicator. Closely watched by all including the Fed. The preliminary number showed the fourth largest drop in the history of the survey. Two of the larger drops were during a recession, and the other was when Iraq invaded Kuwait. Let the good times roll.
THE MARKETS
Tried to rally and almost made it. Volume was high, surprisingly so. There is a lot of money out there ready to be put to work. The time is coming. In the interim, we think we get a Santa Claus rally tomorrow. One day, but better than no day.
Overall market stats:
VIX: 34.42; -1.28. 37.50 on its high. The VIX is showing us it is time for a short term rally. Be ready tomorrow.
Put/Call ratio: 0.72; -0.08. Any rally, and the put buyers subside. That is to be expected, however, and the ratio has climbed back to the high-side of its range of the past two months. Nervousness, but not enough. We may have an interim rally tomorrow that may last to next week, but we feel there is another plunge coming that could drop the Nasdaq to the teens and thus spike fear to all-time highs. Hate it, but almost have to have it at this point.
NASDAQ: Down, a rally, then selling into the rally. Another day on the Nasdaq. Tomorrow we see another good point gain even if just intraday. Keep the stops in and hit some singles.
Stats: Up 7.34 points (+0.3%) to close at 2340.12, breaking the 7-day losing streak. Volume: 2.694 billion shares (-5.2%). Rising on lower volume, but this is huge volume nonetheless. Down volume came in at 1.485 billion shares, and up volume shot up to 1.128 billion shares. Much better, but not great. A/D and Hi/Lo: Declining issues still leading, but down to 1.25 to 1 versus the 3.98 to 1 ratio on Wednesday. New highs rose to 57 (+4) while new lows fell (get this, fell) to 692 (-234). The new lows are interesting. They show another sign that a crescendo is building (is that redundant?).
2888.16 was the lose that was tested. We were looking for a test of the 2880 to 2890 level, and that is what we got. That sent the index up 135 points to its high (2423.71) before the sellers came in. On the close it held above the 2300 level again, and with the doji on the candlestick chart today, it looks to us as if we get a continuation move tomorrow.
Dow/NYSE: After Wednesday's carnage, the Dow snapped back nicely above 10,400 on just slightly lower volume. Not bad at all as 10,300 held nicely this time around.
Stats: Up 168.36 points ((+1.6%) to close at 10,487.29. Volume: NYSE volume fell slightly to 1.419 billion shares (-1.3%). Up volume was 760 million versus 608 million to the downside. A/D and Hi/Lo: NYSE advancing issues overtook decliners once again in their seesaw battle, 1.37 to 1. New highs rose to 208 (+16) while new lows fell to 196 (-13).
As noted, 10,300 held, and the Dow, after starting lower on the session, turned stronger and posted a nice gain. A very solid turn off of support, and we expect the Dow to rise again tomorrow. Still, this may be short-lived, and we feel that we will get another test of 10,300, more likely 10,000 before it is done. That is good in the big picture. If the Fed is coming with rate cuts, a selloff that spikes fear higher sets the table for a better move up.
S&P 500: Wednesday the S&P 500 gave us its worst performance in over a year. Today it jumped right back into the game, tapping 1254.07 on its low and then moving up 20 points to close back over 1270. 1270 is considered support, and a one-day violation of support can be forgiven. For now that is okay as we anticipate another rise tomorrow in anticipation of Santa Clause. After that, we will just have to see how low the S&P will go on the next, and hopefully last, test of the lows before the Fed acts.
Stats: Up 10.12 points (+0.8%) to close at 1274.86. Volume: NYSE volume fell ever so slightly on the rise to 1.419 billion shares (-1.3%).
TOMORROW
Today tested the waters, and we feel tomorrow will move ahead for a nice pre-holiday rally. The VIX spiked, the Nasdaq closed on a doji, Nasdaq futures are up 58 points, and we see several stocks once again showing us that doji at the end of a long string of selloff days. We have to treat this like a bear market rally, exactly what it would be, and that means we are going to get some gains and move on. A few thousand extra bucks before Christmas would help keep the Grinch at bay a bit more.
We think we will see an up open tomorrow, not like the picture-perfect lower open and test of 2885 before moving up to the high on the session. That means we are going to let the market open, wait for the pullback, and then when we see the move start back up, we will start with positions on those tech stocks we want to play to the upside for a quick gain. If the first pullback takes the index below its open price, the safer play is to let it and the stocks break back over their open price as that can act as resistance. If it just tests the open price, but does not breach it, the play is to enter when the bounce up of the open occurs.
For other plays, we do as always: let them breakout over resistance and out of their patterns and take positions. On some tech plays, we are watching for them to break over their down trendlines to enter; that is a bullish sign for the day.
Keep it simple, keep it safe. Follow gains with trailing stop losses; don't let gains get away from you. Bank some money for the holidays. If the rally continues next week, we will do it again. Don't try to hit home runs. Swing to make contact, and the home runs will be coming sooner than we think.
Support and Resistance Levels
Nasdaq: Resistance: 2750 represents some resistance. The down trendline is around 28500 at this point. Support: 2288 was the low today. After that 2200 down to 2000.
S&P 500: Resistance: 1335 is acting as some resistance. 1370 is the down trendline. Support: Jumped right back over 1270 after testing 1250 on the low.
Dow: Resistance: 10,800 to 10,900. Support: 10,300 held again. After that, 10,000. |