31-Oct

A Major Jump Up in the Cards?

[this message comes from Tony S, a Member in the UK – Alex]As part of my planning process I occasionally look at the Monthly charts for the companies I follow. The one think that struck me was how many companies have reached what I think is a long term support resistance.Do these companies go for the sky or head for the floor. Almost all of these companies are in uptrends and so until proven otherwise you would have to say that these companies are about to take a major jump up.ANF – there has been one failed test of the resistance and 45 is still holdingAET – the 32 level is holding for the past 2 years and every break failsBA – Boeing has broken the 70 level but will it now rise to 100 or fail again at this level and fall back to 60?DE -will

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30-Oct

The Squeeze by Grant C

The Squeeze, sometimes called a Slim Jim, is a pattern I and a couple other Spikers trade. The pattern indicates a decrease in volatility followed by a surge and a strong move. As volatility declines, the Bollinger Bands squeeze together indicating a period of base building. Then usually a news event or a buyer in size, will trigger volatility expansion and a wave of new buyers will plow into the stock. I use Bollinger Bands to find them, and look for circumstances similar to the one SPN is showing.In mid-September, SPN announced good newsaccompanied by a major spike on high volume. The spike closed far outside the bands, which indicated significant strength and the potential for more upside. Then it traded sideways for several days (make sure it’s at least 12 bars). As the bands come together, it had a little test of resistance at 27, then drifted back as the short-term indicators dropped into ST/OS area. A trader could have bought as the short-term indicators first dropped and anticipated the squeeze, or at the point of the false break (which I did and had to sit through the test of support again), or on the recent decline of the 2-day RSI below 30. The reality of these lateral squeeze patterns is that they usually set up in front of a news event, so picking direction can be a gamble (I won’t trade them into an earning announcement.)Anotherstrategy is to buy an option straddle as volatility drops and wait for the move (I met a guy that had made a fortune doing this on S&P squeezes during the 1990s). I usually take a position in the direction of the initial spike and trend and keep a tight stop on it. If you get stopped out, pay attention and look for a second entry.A couple of other comments–if you find a squeeze setting up around a trending 20-day EMA take a position early and let the Squeeze set up. At other times, they will set up in the last gasp of a move, so be careful. Sometimes they form right after a top or bottom completes, and initiate a new trend. I also look for them on the weekly charts and trade the subsequent move off the daily charts.

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28-Oct

Who will push it – by Kim B

[This message came from Kim B – a SpikeTrade who has just earned her Bank Robbery Award – Alex]Bernanke’s Fed are likely to announce what they are going to do about Quantitative Easing at the next meeting on Nov 2-3. It appears that this market (at least parts of it) have already factored in the Quantitative Easing, so that any disappointment on this score might bring the markets down hard.Although shipping stocks have been lagging and may well rise if the quarrel with China is resolved, other stocks, commodities, and ETF’s are relatively high and have room to fall. The aftermath of the G20, so far, seems to be that the US will keep devaluing the dollar until China softens its stance on keeping the yuan low. But if the country and the markets become “surprised” to hear at next week’s Fed meeting that there is NOT to be adequate “quantitative easing,” that might swing the elections against the current administration. It appears GS is “gunning” for a fall with short positions….A negative surprise in the Federal stimulus plans could potentially produce a rout, as the timing of that would disappoint stock markets that are already destabilized by elections uncertainty. If that happened simultaneously with elections, it could severely harm the current administration’s chances of re-election in two years. I tend to believe that there will be devaluation of the dollar in the face of intransigence by the Chinese.Kim B

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19-Oct

What do you make of CRUS? by Grant C

Flipping through some charts, I stumbled across Cirrus Logic, or CRUS. This stock has formed two exceptionally odd chart patterns. On the weekly, it has formed an almost perfect symmetrical pattern except for point #2. But the spirit of the pattern with lower highs and higher lows and price compression leading to the apex is intact. On the daily chart, the pattern is also odd with two 1,2,3 Bottoms inside a more or less symmetrical shape. CRUS had this enormous run from about 8 to 21, and is working it off by trading sideways. The decline barely reaches the 32.8% Fib ratio, instead of the more normal 50%, and is forming this pattern above the rising 200 EMA. These are signs of a particularly strong stock. Eventually, we’ll know if CRUS can live up to it’s promise, but it sure is an unusual pattern on both charts.

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14-Oct

CM & Triangles by Grant C

At the Spike Reunion (which was exceptional) I was talking with some folks about symmetrical triangles. I thought I would do a post explaining it a little better. CM is a fundamentally sound Canadian bank that forms both large and small symmetrical triangles as part of its price behavior. Like most world banks, CM sold off in late 2008. Eventually as the good banks got separated out from the crummy ones, CM improved in price, rising from around 30 to a new high around 78 in April 2010. Instead of correcting by decline, it traded sideways between 78 and 62, eventually completing a multi-month symmetrical triangle on the weekly chart. It busted loose in late August and is now moving steadily to test the 78 highs. Symmetrical triangles typically form mid-way through a trend move, have 5 points, and usually resolve in the direction of the trend. If you’re lucky enough to find one forming, you can begin to buy at point 5 in anticipation of the break out.If you missed the move on the weekly, CM was nice enough to form a small “Dynamic Triangle” on the daily chart. The break offered another chance to get long. Now, we’re almost ST/OB as we challenge the highs at 78. While you could take a chance and buy on a solid break of the old highs, the surer trade would be to wait for a pullback and retest. Buying on successful tests of support, and letting the short-term indicators (2-day RSI and 2-day FI) decline to oversold is the preferred and most reliable approach. CM’s 2007’s high was at 109 in 2007, so if we break the 78-80 area we should head there. If so, then buying dips and pullbacks on CM will work well.

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4-Oct

CM forms Symmetrical Triangle on Weekly by Grant C

I was flipping through some charts, looking for examples for a presentation, and came across CM. CM’s weekly chart is a classic example of a symmetrical triangle formed by volatility contraction, then being resolved with volatility expansion. Symmetrical triangles–weekly ones are rare and usually powerful–are continuation patterns. They usually break out across the 2-4 line, not the 1-5. Generally, they form about mid-way through a move, so CM may top 120 eventually. Right now, it is short-term overbought on the daily. It may slip back to the rising 50-day EMA around 70, which would be a logical support level.

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2-Oct

Kass May Be Right by Grant C

Doug Kass is a high profile hedge-fund manager who recently declared that “short bonds is the trade of the decade”. Since I trade bonds, I thought I would take a look, and darn if I don’t think he’s on to something–maybe not the “trade of the decade” but at least something with profit potential. I choose TBT, the inverse bond ETF for my trade. If we get a close above 32.12 it will complete a 1,2,3 Bottom on the weekly chart and give us notice that the trend as reversed. The daily chart has completed a 1,2,3 B with a higher low, so the game has started.

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30-Sep

A Different Look by Grant C

I like to use patterns to provide insight into the markets. They often give me a heads-up to trend reversals and other profit-generating behaviors. Today’s market as represented by the SPY offers a very interesting pattern. Let me start by noting that the SPY weekly chart has retraced about 62% from the 6/25 low of 107 to the 4/23 high of 122. This is a classic Fibonacci reversal zone, which adds probability to the idea that we’re entering resistance. The daily chart shows a broadening pattern (RST) cumulating with a 1,2,3 Top. We also have an inside day, which is usually a sign of exhaustion or indecision at tops. Now, I’m not saying we’re reversing–just pointing out some of the market structure now in play. If anything, caution may be prudent until/if we push through 115 on volume.

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20-Sep

Continuation Diamond (Bullish) Pattern

Typically a ‘Diamond’ Pattern signals nasty reversals of tops and is very bearish. However, it can also signal a bullish continuation pattern, as described below by Trending 1.2.3.A Continuation Diamond (Bullish) is considered a bullish signal, indicating that the current uptrend may continue.topDescriptionDiamond patterns usually form over several months in very active markets. Volume will remain high during the formation of this pattern. The Continuation Diamond (Bullish) pattern forms because prices create higher highs and lower lows in a broadening pattern. Then the trading range gradually narrows after the highs peak and the lows start trending upward. The Technical Analysis occurs when prices break upward out of the diamond formation to continue the prior uptrend.No one is considering this to be the case with our current market, but look at the pattern similarities of the S&P 500 weekly chart below.Perhaps this market will continue to surge and burn September bears, challenge the top then burn the new bulls in October?Stephen M

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