October 2010 Archived Entries

October 16, 2010

TRANSPORTATION ISHARES REACH MAY HIGH

By John Murphy
John Murphy

Previous messages showed the upside breakout in the Dow Transports (over their summer high) which confirmed a previous upside breakout in the Dow Industrials and constituted a Dow Theory buy signal (see circle). Both Dow averages are approaching another test at their spring highs. Needless to say, the ability of both Dow averages to clear their spring highs is necessary to keep the new uptrend going. I'm going to focus today on what I consider to be the most economically-sensitive part of the transports which are the rails. Chart 1 shows the DJTA iShares (IYT) testing its May high near 86. Rails have the strongest IYT weighting at 29%, air freight is second at 23%, truckers are third at 21%, and airlines at 8%. Rail dominance is further demonstrated by the fact that four out of the top ten IYT holdings are rails. Transportation stocks are considered to be economically-sensitive because they move goods throughout the country. The two groups most often used to move that traffic are rails and truckers. Chart 2 shows, however, that rails (black line) have been much stronger than truckers (blue line). One reason for stronger rails is that they're less fuel-sensitive than truckers. Another is that rails are the primary mover of commodities like coal and grains which have been very much in demand. In a sense, it could be said that rails are another way to play rising commodity markets.

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October 16, 2010

A LOOK AT THE FINANCIALS

By Tom Bowley
Tom Bowley

I spend a great deal of time evaluating the financial sector because I believe it's the most influential group in terms of leading the market.  Financials underperformed miserably in 2007 and 2008 and overall market performance followed suit.  In 2009, financials outperformed and the market recovered a lot of its prior losses.  But in 2010, the market doesn't quite seem to know what to do about the lagging financial sector.  Year-to-date, our major indices are up as follows:
 
Dow Jones: +6.09%
S&P 500: +5.48%
NASDAQ: +8.80%
Russell 2000:  +12.44%
 
The financials?  Well, the Dow Jones US Financial Index ($DJUSFN) is roughly 1% higher, badly lagging the major indices.  Take a look at the chart below and you'll see another failed breakout attempt in this sector:

DJUSFN 10.16.10

The financials performed extremely well from February to April of 2010 and the overall market did very well also.  Since April, however, the financials have performed miserably.  Yes, our major indices have had their moments where we've seen straight up moves, but the overall direction since April has been sideways at best.  In my opinion, the market is awaiting leadership from financials and if last week's initial reaction to JP Morgan's (JPM) earnings is any indication, the market may not like the kind of leadership it's about to get.  Financials had an opportunity to seize a major breakout and they simply choked.  Foreclosures, high unemployment, sagging consumer confidence, etc. are taking their toll on this sector.
 
Google (GOOG) provided a huge lift to the NASDAQ, especially the NDX, last week based on its blowout earnings, but I do not believe these types of gains will be sustainable if the DJUSFN cannot break that 271 resistance level.  Believe me, there are no clearcut signs in this market.  Several indicators say BUY, but many others say SELL.  Certain indicators, like the MACD, are suggesting this rally has a long, long way to go potentially.  Before I buy into that theory, however, I want to see a technical breakout in financials.  A close above 271.00 on the DJUSFN and 48.10 on the Bank Index ($BKX) would provide a HUGE boost to our major indices.  Should the financials actually begin to gain strength, we're keeping a very close eye on an insurance stock that could be poised to make a nice run to the upside.  We're featuring it as our Chart of the Day for Monday, October 18, 2010.  CLICK HERE for more information.
 
Market timing could be an issue soon as well.  September 2010 is now in the record books, defying historical bearish trends for that month.  While the September 2010 gains were the strongest September gains since the 1930s, we still need to take a step back and objectively look at the big picture.  Despite a great September, that months still looms as the worst calendar month of the year, and it's not even close.  Now we are quickly approaching the single worst week of the year historically.  The stock market's historical tendencies are the subject of our next Online Traders Series event, scheduled for Monday, October 18, 2010.  I will discuss, in detail, the upcoming bearish period that has produced MINUS 53.82% annualized returns over the last six decades, and share other remarkable statistics about historical trends that can help in your trading.  For more details, CLICK HERE
 
Happy trading!

October 16, 2010

PERCENT BUY INDEX VS. BULLISH PERCENT INDEX

By Carl Swenlin
Carl Swenlin

A subscriber had some questions about the Percent Buy Index (PBI) versus the Bullish Percent Index (BPI). The PBI is my creation, and it tracks the percentage of Price Momentum Model (PMM) buy signals for the components in a given index. (In the case of this discussion we will be looking at the PBI for the S&P 500 Index.) The BPI was, I believe, created by Tom Dorsey, who is a highly regarded expert on point and figure (P&F) charting. The BPI tracks the percentage of P&F buy signals in an index.

To clarify, as far As I know the BPI was introduced long before we got the idea for the PBI, but we started collecting data on the OEX PBI many years before we even heard of the BPI. I think that is called "reinventing the wheel." Nevertheless, there are significant differences between the timing models that drive the BPI and PBI.

As I said before, the BPI uses buy signals generated on P&F charts. I'm not going to go into how P&F charts are made, but suffice it to say that they are nothing like a standard bar or line chart that we normally use for charting, nor are the buy signals they generate. I don't use P&F charts because I don't find them intuitive enough for me, but many people do use them with great success, and more power to them.

The Price Momentum Model (PMM) uses ten percent price move and 200-EMA crossover to generate buy signals (see our Glossary article).

On the chart below we can see how both have performed over the last three years. I think they are remarkably similar, except for the period I have highlighted in the red rectangle, which was during the last six months of the bear market and prices were getting thoroughly hammered. As you can see, the BPI was quite volatile, showing a spike of over 70% of buy signals well ahead of the final price low. Conversely, the PBI correctly stayed flat during that time and did not start a strong up trend until the final price low was in place.

As I have said many times, every mechanical model has its weaknesses, and in this case we can see the weakness in the P&F model. Specifically, expect volatile signals during periods when there is severe price decline -- the P&F model apparently triggers too easily in these circumstances.

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We use a PBI 32-EMA crossover to generate buy and sell signals, but the PBI has a finite range, and these crossovers will generate some noise when the PBI is near the top or bottom of its range. It is most reliable in generating buy signals from the bottom to the middle of its range.

Currently, both the PBI and BPI are becoming overbought. If we are in a condition similar to what we were in mid-2009, I don't think that will be a problem. In other words, the indicators can remain overbought for some time while prices move higher.

Conclusion: The PBI and BPI have a similar objective of tracking the number of buy signals for the components in a given index, so we can estimate the kind of participation is behind price moves. The PBI seems to be more stable, particularly during severe price declines.

 

October 16, 2010

CHARTING CONTEST ENDS SUNDAY. CHIP SPEAKING IN CLEVELAND. ICHIMOKU SUPPORT IN SCANS. CHARTNOTES 2.0 BETA NEWS.

By Chip Anderson
Site News

WIN A RARE STOCKCHARTS FLEECE JACKET! - Hurry!  We are holding another contest on our Facebook page.  This one is for great charts.  Just post your "best" chart on our Facebook page and you could win one of three StockCharts.com fleece jackets.  Entries will be judged in the following categories:  Best Technical Information, Most Creative, and Best Annotations.  Check out the charts that have already been posted for ideas.  But hurry, the contest ends on Sunday!

CHIP PRESENTING TO THE AAII IN CLEVELAND ON WEDNESDAY - "I'm heading out on the road again next week.  This time I'm bound for Cleveland and the good folks at the Cleveland chapter of the AAII.  I'm presenting to them on Wednesday, October 20th at 6:30pm in the Brecksville Recreation Center in Brecksville, Ohio.  There's just a small admission fee to cover the cost of the venue.  Please come by and see me if you can.  (I always hand out "swag" at these events!)  Here's a link to all the details."

ICHIMOKU CLOUD SIGNALS ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN THE SCAN ENGINE - If you are a fan of Ichimoku Cloud Charts, you can now enter criteria for various cloud signals into your scans.  Want to see all of the stocks that have just had their Base Line enter the cloud?  There's a scan for that.  Click here for more details.

CHARTNOTES 2.0 BETA NEWS - More improvements are coming soon including (finally) the ability for you to start uploading charts with these new annotations on them.  Thanks for all the great feedback that's been sent in so far!

October 16, 2010

"WHERE DO I START?" HERE - YOU START HERE...

By Chip Anderson
Chip Anderson

Hello Fellow ChartWatchers!

Today I want to answer a question that we get frequently - "Where do I start?  This is all so overwhelming!"

The answer is, you start with John Murphy's 10 Laws of Technical Trading.

In anticipation of your next question, here and now I present to you <fanfare> "John Murphy's Ten Law's of Technical Trading" with my strong recommendation that you read (or re-read) them and take everything in them to heart.

- Chip

John Murphy's Ten Laws of Technical Trading

1. Map the Trends

Study long-term charts. Begin a chart analysis with monthly and weekly charts spanning several years. A larger scale map of the market provides more visibility and a better long-term perspective on a market. Once the long-term has been established, then consult daily and intra-day charts. A short-term market view alone can often be deceptive. Even if you only trade the very short term, you will do better if you're trading in the same direction as the intermediate and longer term trends.

2. Spot the Trend and Go With It

Determine the trend and follow it. Market trends come in many sizes – long-term, intermediate-term and short-term. First, determine which one you're going to trade and use the appropriate chart. Make sure you trade in the direction of that trend. Buy dips if the trend is up. Sell rallies if the trend is down. If you're trading the intermediate trend, use daily and weekly charts. If you're day trading, use daily and intra-day charts. But in each case, let the longer range chart determine the trend, and then use the shorter term chart for timing.

3. Find the Low and High of It

Find support and resistance levels. The best place to buy a market is near support levels. That support is usually a previous reaction low. The best place to sell a market is near resistance levels. Resistance is usually a previous peak. After a resistance peak has been broken, it will usually provide support on subsequent pullbacks. In other words, the old "high" becomes the new low. In the same way, when a support level has been broken, it will usually produce selling on subsequent rallies – the old "low" can become the new "high."

4. Know How Far to Backtrack

Measure percentage retracements. Market corrections up or down usually retrace a significant portion of the previous trend. You can measure the corrections in an existing trend in simple percentages. A fifty percent retracement of a prior trend is most common. A minimum retracement is usually one-third of the prior trend. The maximum retracement is usually two-thirds. Fibonacci retracements of 38% and 62% are also worth watching. During a pullback in an uptrend, therefore, initial buy points are in the 33-38% retracement area.

5. Draw the Line

Draw trend lines. Trend lines are one of the simplest and most effective charting tools. All you need is a straight edge and two points on the chart. Up trend lines are drawn along two successive lows. Down trend lines are drawn along two successive peaks. Prices will often pull back to trend lines before resuming their trend. The breaking of trend lines usually signals a change in trend. A valid trend line should be touched at least three times. The longer a trend line has been in effect, and the more times it has been tested, the more important it becomes.

6. Follow that Average

Follow moving averages. Moving averages provide objective buy and sell signals. They tell you if existing trend is still in motion and help confirm a trend change. Moving averages do not tell you in advance, however, that a trend change is imminent. A combination chart of two moving averages is the most popular way of finding trading signals. Some popular futures combinations are 4- and 9-day moving averages, 9- and 18-day, 5- and 20-day. Signals are given when the shorter average line crosses the longer. Price crossings above and below a 40-day moving average also provide good trading signals. Since moving average chart lines are trend-following indicators, they work best in a trending market.

7. Learn the Turns

Track oscillators. Oscillators help identify overbought and oversold markets. While moving averages offer confirmation of a market trend change, oscillators often help warn us in advance that a market has rallied or fallen too far and will soon turn. Two of the most popular are the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and Stochastics. They both work on a scale of 0 to 100. With the RSI, readings over 70 are overbought while readings below 30 are oversold. The overbought and oversold values for Stochastics are 80 and 20. Most traders use 14-days or weeks for stochastics and either 9 or 14 days or weeks for RSI. Oscillator divergences often warn of market turns. These tools work best in a trading market range. Weekly signals can be used as filters on daily signals. Daily signals can be used as filters for intra-day charts.

8. Know the Warning Signs

Trade MACD. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator (developed by Gerald Appel) combines a moving average crossover system with the overbought/oversold elements of an oscillator. A buy signal occurs when the faster line crosses above the slower and both lines are below zero. A sell signal takes place when the faster line crosses below the slower from above the zero line. Weekly signals take precedence over daily signals. An MACD histogram plots the difference between the two lines and gives even earlier warnings of trend changes. It's called a "histogram" because vertical bars are used to show the difference between the two lines on the chart.

9. Trend or Not a Trend

Use ADX. The Average Directional Movement Index (ADX) line helps determine whether a market is in a trending or a trading phase. It measures the degree of trend or direction in the market. A rising ADX line suggests the presence of a strong trend. A falling ADX line suggests the presence of a trading market and the absence of a trend. A rising ADX line favors moving averages; a falling ADX favors oscillators. By plotting the direction of the ADX line, the trader is able to determine which trading style and which set of indicators are most suitable for the current market environment.

10. Know the Confirming Signs

Include volume and open interest. Volume and open interest are important confirming indicators in futures markets. Volume precedes price. It's important to ensure that heavier volume is taking place in the direction of the prevailing trend. In an uptrend, heavier volume should be seen on up days. Rising open interest confirms that new money is supporting the prevailing trend. Declining open interest is often a warning that the trend is near completion. A solid price uptrend should be accompanied by rising volume and rising open interest.

"11."

Technical analysis is a skill that improves with experience and study. Always be a student and keep learning.  The ChartSchool area of StockCharts.com is a great please to start.

 

 

October 16, 2010

THE SMOOTHER COUSINS OF THE MCCLELLAN OSCILLATOR REMAIN BULLISH

By Arthur Hill
Arthur Hill

Even though stocks are overextended after a massive seven week run, we have yet to seen any evidence of weakness that would signal the start of a correction or pullback. Many momentum oscillators are also at or near overbought levels, but cumulative indicators, such as the McClellan Summation Index, continue moving higher to capture the current uptrend.

Think of the Summation Index as the smoother cousin of the McClellan Oscillator. Basically, the McClellan Oscillator equals the 19-day EMA of Net Advances less the 39-day EMA of Net Advances. Like MACD, it captures momentum by taking the difference of two moving averages. This indicator oscillates around the zero line as momentum shifts for Net Advances. The Summation Index is a cumulative McClellan Oscillator. As a cumulative indicator, it is smoother than the McClellan Oscillator and has fewer crosses above/below the zero line. It also trends.

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Click this image for a live chart.

The charts below show the Summation Index with a 5-day EMA to identify upturns and downturns. This may seem like a tight moving average, but the Summation Index is already smooth and this short moving average identifies the turns pretty well. Notice that the Summation Index moved above its 5-day EMA in early September and remains above this moving average. There is no questioning the uptrend in the Summation Index. As long as this breadth indicator remains above the 5-day EMA, I would expect the current rally to continue, even if conditions are overbought. A break below this moving average would signal weakness in breadth that could give way to a correction or pullback in the market. The second chart shows the NYSE Summation Index ($NYSI) with similar characteristics.

101015nysi
Click this image for a live chart.

October 02, 2010

NEW CHARTNOTES NEXT WEEK, CHIP SPEAKING IN MICHIGAN

By Chip Anderson
Site News

NEW CHARTNOTES BETA WILL START NEXT WEEK - We're very close to having the new version of our ChartNotes annotation tool ready.  We showed off many of the new features in last month's newsletter.  Keep checking the "What's New" section of the website for an announcement.

CHIP SPEAKING IN MICHIGAN NEXT SATURDAY - On Saturday, Oct. 9th at 10:30am, Chip is going to give a presentation to the Computer Trading Special Interest Group of the Eastern Michigan Chapter of the American Association of Individual Investors (EM-AII-CT-SIG).  The meeting is at the Farmington Community Library in Farmington Hills just outside of Detroit.  Chip will be showing off some of the lesser known features of the website and answering audience questions.  He'd love to see you there if you are in the area.

October 02, 2010

CHARTING PERCENTAGE ABOVE/BELOW A MOVING AVERAGE

By Chip Anderson

Hello Fellow ChartWatchers!

(Here's an article I wrote back in 2007.  We've gotten several questions about this topic recently, so I thought I'd re-print this now.  Enjoy!  - Chip)

Mary W. writes "I'd like to see how much above or below the 200-day moving average a stock currently is. Does your charting system show that?"

While we don't have a specific indicator for "Percentage above/below the Moving Average", clever chartists that understand how the "Price Oscillator (PPO)" works can create such an indicator easily. The PPO is very similar to the well-known MACD Indicator. Both are based on the difference between two exponential moving averages. The PPO differs from the MACD in that it's values are converted into a "percentage difference" rather than the "absolute difference" used by the MACD.

Essentially, PPO(#1, #2) = Percentage Difference of EMA #1 from EMA #2.

Remember, what Mary asked to chart is "Percentage Difference of the Closing value from the 200-day Moving Average."

See the similarity in those two statements? If Mary is willing to use the difference between the close and a 200-day Exponential Moving Average, then we can accommodate her. The final piece of the puzzle is to recognize that "Closing value" is equal to "EMA(1)." Given that, then

PPO(1, 200) = Percentage Difference of EMA(1) (i.e., Close) to EMA(200).

Thus all we need to do is plot PPO(1, 200) to see the line that Mary is asking for.

Percentage Above/Below 200-day EMA

Viola! With a couple of setting changes, we can overlay that indicator on our price plot:

Overlaid Percentage Chart

Click either chart to see how they were constructed. Last we heard, Mary was happily charting percentage differences left and right. Hopefully, this trick can help your chart analysis also!

October 02, 2010

IS THIS RALLY SUSTAINABLE?

By Tom Bowley
Tom Bowley

Great question.  There are as many arguments saying "no" as there are those saying "yes".  Who do you believe?  In August, our major indices were tumbling and it seemed like every media outlet was touting our doom and gloom.  By the end of September, psychologically it seemed like a completely different market.  There are a ton of reasons to like the market to keep doing what it's been doing.  Price action has been superb.  The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) is based on price and the divergences are solid across all timeframes.  Those weekly MACDs, which looked so ugly back on those April highs, suggested a rough summer ahead and that's what we saw.  Currently, however, the MACDs on the weekly timeframes look super.  They've all crossed back above the centerline and are pointing straight up.  This tells us that bullish momentum will support higher prices.
 
But price action is only half the story.  The other half is big too, and that's the side that deals with volume.  I love the analysts who try to make excuses for the market and tell us that this time it doesn't matter and then proceed to lay out all the reasons why.  VOLUME ALWAYS MATTERS.  Don't let anyone tell you otherwise.  It's the combination of price and volume that matters.  Neither one without the other can be relied upon - in any market.  So exactly what kind of what volume matters?  Well, this is where judgment is involved.  I'll be the first to say that you won't see the same type of volume during periods of market strength that you'll see during market selloffs.  Fear is a very powerful emotion, one that makes most of us do things we wouldn't ordinarily do.  And when fear involves the loss of money, really strange behavior takes over.  The acceleration of volume during periods of panic will never be matched by the acceleration of volume during periods of market ascent.  In other words, we shouldn't be looking for the type of volume we saw in May (during the flash crash) to confirm the recent market strength.  It's very, very unlikely to happen.  We should see above average volume though.
 
I spoke for weeks about the importance of 1131 resistance on the S&P 500.  That was the June reaction high.  In August, the S&P 500 rose to intraday highs between 1120 and 1130 on 7 consecutive days without once trading above 1131.  In September, we saw five more consecutive sessions approach 1131 without a breakthrough.  On September 20th, the sixth consecutive intraday attempt at 1131 finally worked.  13 times we tried to penetrate 1131 and we failed.  The bulls tore down what appeared to be an impenetrable wall of resistance.  Every technical analyst I follow talked about the importance of 1131 resistance.  Given that this major level of resistance was lifted, the short covering would begin in earnest, right?  Cash on the sidelines would finally pour in, right?  Hardly.  A summer's worth of resistance was taken out on......3.4 billion shares on the S&P 500.  Let's put this in perspective.  The average daily volume on the S&P 500 during September prior to the 20th was 3.7 billion shares.  The average daily volume on the S&P 500 during August (a very slow month for equities historically) was 3.9 billion shares.  The "long-awaited" breakout after 13 failed attempts occurs on 3.4 billion shares and we're supposed to be ok with it?  Pardon me, but I can't get excited by the action.
 
I view the lack of volume as a negative and a signficant red flag.  It doesn't mean I'd be shorting.  We do have to respect the price action.  The market is sending me loads of mixed signals and they're not all related to price/volume.  Consider sentiment for a moment.  I like to follow the VIX and the equity only put call ratio.  The latter rose to extreme levels back in April and that made it easier to call a top.  Currently, the action in options is quite boring, if I'm being honest.  There are no impending signs of a market top and that may be one of the reasons September was such a strong month.  It's hard to imagine that few would trade equity calls given the straight up move in September, but the facts speak for themselves.  Leading up to the April 26th top, the equity only put call ratio averaged .47 month-to-date in April.  During that same period, an average of 1.95 million equity call contracts were traded each day.  Now let's fast forward to today.  During September, the equity only put call ratio averaged .58 and an average of 1.13 million equity call contracts were traded each day.  Does that sound like a complacent market that's ready to reverse big time to the downside?  Nope, not to me either.  The VIX, on the other hand, is more bearish.  Despite a significant rally in equities during September, the VIX finished the month slightly below where it was on September 2nd.  Ordinarily, the VIX moves inversely to equities.  While equity prices were rallying strongly throughout the month, it seemed as though VIX traders weren't buying into it.  The VIX has stubbornly remained in the 21-24 range.  The message that sends to me is traders are looking for increasing volatility down the road.  Increasing volatility is associated with weakening equity prices.  So should we follow the equity only put call ratio and its flippant attitude or the lack of bullish behavior in the VIX?  The VIX is included as our Chart of the Day for Monday, October 4th.  CLICK HERE to see how the VIX is failing to confirm the bullish market action of late.
 
There's one really big problem this rally faces in my opinion, and it's the poor relative performance of financials.  The financial group should act much healthier in an improving economic environment.  Money should be flowing TO the group, not AWAY from it.  While the media outlets would have you believe our economy is on the improve, and many economic reports would confirm this belief, the lack of money flowing to financials while an exorbitant amount flows to bonds simply doesn't support this argument.  It's as if Wall Street is telling us one thing and doing the opposite.  They wouldn't do that, right?  If banks and other financials aren't technically as strong as the remainder of the market, I have problems buying into the improving economy theory.  Sorry.  Look at this chart:
 
DJUSFN vs. S&P 500 10.2.10

In my view, when the financial sector is falling and its relative strength is also falling at the same time the overall market is rising, it's a MAJOR warning sign.  We saw it in 2007 just before the market began its most recent bear market.  We also saw the relative strength of financials weaken in April as the market neared a significant intermediate-term top.  Currently, we have the market rising while BOTH financials AND their relative strength are dropping.  I can't help but be cautious is this type of environment.  If I leave some money on the table, then so be it.  When it comes to preservation of capital, cautiousness always prevails over greed.
 
The price action remains bullish and we'll continue to do what we've been doing at Invested Central.  That's trading fewer shares, mostly on the long side for now, but with both eyes fixated on the exit sign.  If you adamantly wish to remain on the long side, consider hedging strategies to minimize risk.  It wouldn't be prudent to trade this market without insurance.
 
Happy trading!

October 02, 2010

CLOUDS ON THE HORIZON

By Richard Rhodes
Richard Rhodes
The S&P 500 rally off the late-August lows continues apace, although it would appear that it is stalling and a correction at a minimum is warranted. There are many who point to the 200-day moving average breakout and the "head & shoulders" neckline being pierced to the upside as being sufficient to call for higher and higher targets - a new bull market in full bloom. However, while these are major technical pattern breakouts to be sure, but they come under less-than-ideal circumstances as they haven't been confirmed by the OBV "on-balance-volume". We would look to this indicator for confirmation of the breakout, for OBV did indeed lead the S&P higher with its early-March breakout. It has not thus far, and we find this troubling.

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Given this non-confirmation, then we would turn to the developing bearish consolidation from May-to-Present as the overarching technical pattern, then point out the recent key reversal pattern to the downside that denotes exhaustion of the current uptrend. If we are right, then we'll get a minimum correction towards rising trendline support at 1060. However, we would further view this as doing excessive technical damage given the invalidation of the 200-day moving average and "head & shoulder" neckline breakouts. This would increase the probability of the bearish consolidation projecting lower lows towards 950. Moreover, were weakness were to develop from current as expected; it would turn the 40-day stochastic lower...further confirming weakness.

Therefore, while others look at sunshine ahead - we see clouds on the horizon, which has pushed us to the sidelines and a modest short position. We'll look to build upon it as prices invalidate the aforementioned breakouts. One should consider battening down the hatches at this juncture.

October 02, 2010

RISK TOLERANCE STILL DOWN

By Carl Swenlin
Carl Swenlin

According to the Investment Company Institute Annual Mutual Fund Shareholder Tracking Survey, shareholders' willingness to take "substantial or above average risk" has not recovered since the beginning of the financial crisis started in 2008. (Click here to read the entire article.) The chart below shows that there has been marginal recovery in two age groups, but overall risk tolerance is unchanged from last year, which was down from 2008.

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Source: ICI Annual Mutual Fund Shareholder Tracking Survey

Faded risk tolerance, of course explains why mutual fund assets are well down from their 2008 high. To be sure, when investor tolerance for risk increases again and new highs in mutual fund assets are seen, another price top will surely be at hand.

Cww20101002c-2

The ICI article got me thinking about how the the traditional approach to risk is that we should be more aggressive when we are young, because we will have time to recover from any losses that result from high-risk investments. As we become older we should shrink from the risky antics of the younger set because time is no longer on our side. 

In my opinion, this is one of the many flaws in the buy-and-hold logic. Risk has less to do with one's age than it does with the context of the market trend. Being invested when the market is in a bull market significantly reduces the risk no matter how aggressive an investment may seem to be, and even the most conservative exposure will still generate losses in a bear market.

To further illustrate this point we are fortunate that Rydex has three funds, started in 2006, that have conservative, moderate, and aggressive management styles. Review the charts, and we will resume below.

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You will notice that the shape of the price indexes are very similar, but the results are quite different. To begin, let's look at the results from inception to 9/29/2010, then during the bear market beginning in 2007/2008, and finally the bull market from the 2009 low to the April 2010 top.

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It is interesting that over a range of bull and bear markets, the conservative approach had the best return since inception, but, when we separate the bull and bear market performance, the returns are appropriate (what we would expect) to each approach. For example, the aggressive (most risky) approach loses the most in the bear market, and gains the most in a bull market. The obvious assessment is that, in a buy-and-hold world, there is really no significant benefit of one approach over another, just that the aggressive approach results in more volatility.

While at first glance it may appear that, during the bull market, all approaches have regained slightly more than they lost during the bear market, remember that a 100% gain is needed to recover a 50% loss.

Bottom Line: Using a particular strategy (conservative or aggressive) is not as important as when it is used, and I don't mean whether you are young or old. It is most important that bear markets be avoided and that bull markets be exploited. Using an aggressive strategy during a bull market will carry far less risk than using a conservative approach during a bear market.

 

October 01, 2010

OIL AND GASOLINE ETFs BREAK RESISTANCE

By Arthur Hill
Arthur Hill

Oil finally started making up for lost time. Despite strength in stocks and weakness in the Dollar throughout September, oil remained below its mid September high the latter part of the month. Broken support around 34 turned into resistance and was holding. Things suddenly changed as the USO Oil Fund (USO) broke out with the biggest weekly gain since March. USO also broke above the May trendline. Broken support and the August high combine to mark the next resistance zone around 37-38. The second chart shows the US Gasoline Fund (UGA) following oil higher with a breakout as well. Broken support turns into the first resistance zone around 36-37.

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