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Weekly Trader Alert #74
10/14/2006 6:48:30 PM
Overview
The market is moving higher, convinced that the Goldilocks economy is in place.
Optimism is a wonderful thing, and the markets are just that. We will not suggest
investors and traders are wrong to be optimistic, as the direction of the crowd,
is the direction of the market.
With the liquidity of money leaving commodities trades, and leaving the real
estate market, it has to go somewhere. With the dollar strengthening against
other currencies, foreign investors will also be more likely to flow money
into U.S. markets. All of this is powering equity prices to climb higher, as
money flowing into the market has to be put to work.
Consumers continue to spend, although the latest report showed a pull back
of 0.4% in spending. Although that might have been cause for concern, those
concerns were dismissed due to the 9.3% drop in the price of gasoline. When
gasoline is excluded, consumer spending actually rose by 0.6% last month. Consumer
sentiment is also on the rise with the Michigan Sentiment Survey showing a
reading of 92.3%, over 6% higher than consensus estimates.
The uptrend has been solidly in place since mid-August. Professional traders
have been waiting for a pull-back to enter the markets uptrend. In hindsight,
anyone wishing to get long should have done so by mid-August and just let the
money ride. But hindsight it always easier than trading, and so a number of
traders find themselves needing to get on that bullish train, and are getting
frustrated there has not been a nice pull-back to do so. When greed takes over
and everyone is worried they will miss the train, there is usually a flood
of money powering stock prices ever higher, until there are no more buyers,
as everyone has climbed aboard. It is these times that it is dangerous to be
attached to stocks in your portfolio.
The late nineties saw this sort of a market that lasted for a couple of years.
People at cocktail parties were all talking stocks. More recently, cocktail
party conversations were about real-estate investments and commodities. With
the air being let out of housing and commodities, and energy prices having
fallen from their highs, cocktail party conversations may once again include
discussions of the stock market. Indeed, with the Dow hitting new highs daily,
the S&P-500 hitting five and three quarter year highs, and with the NASDAQ
within fifteen points of its highs this year, cocktail party conversation could
once again turn to stocks.
We still believe that market participants are disregarding negative signs,
as was evidenced on Wednesday and Friday. Alcoa reported a big miss which started
the Dow down on Wednesday. Bellwether GE met analyst expectations and is growing
at about a six percent annual growth rate. The Dow opened down on this news
but recovered, even with rising oil prices on Friday to power higher. The markets
ignored North Korea's claim of a nuclear weapon test, and Iran's continued
defiance of UN calls for it to reign in its nuclear program.
Noting market participants' penchant for good news, and their dismissal of
negative news, the market is clearly of a mind to move higher. With that said,
technical indicators show the market as overbought, and some correction is
more than possible in the near term.
The price of oil seems to have stabilized under sixty dollars ($58.57), and
natural gas has once again been falling, having closed at $5.66 on Friday.
Although the fall in the price of natural gas has been at a significant rate
(remember, last Friday it was nearly a dollar higher), Friday's price movement
moderated so the downtrend could be slowing. New York has seen its first heavy
snowfall of the season, but with the historically high amount of natural gas
in storage, it will take a cold extended winter to move prices up significantly
in natural gas.
Leadership, which has been one of our concerns, seems to be shaping up to
be tech. This is a clear change that we have been waiting for to signal that
there will be sector leadership besides retail or energy. In fact, tech has
been the first sector where there is a movement into risk, rather than defensively
positioned industries. Mind you, defensive plays continue to be in the leaders,
but the move to risk signals the uptrend may be sustainable.
We have been decidedly pessimistic in our outlook, and we would like to change
that to being guarded. The market is telling us that it wants to move higher.
If the Goldilocks scenario continues to unfold without unraveling, then the
bull market could continue. We do believe that there are risks to this progress,
and will be looking to take advantage of a continued run upward in tech, while
keeping a watchful eye on downside risk.
Last week we mentioned that we decided to re-examine our system trading models.
We actually use two different timeframes in our models, for signals, and some
longer timeframes to indicate overall trend. You are already familiar with
the moving averages, and how price has climbed above all the ones that we track
on a weekly basis. Although these aren't the indicators we are referring to,
it illustrates that price will cross moving averages at different times, which
allows you to define whether markets are in an uptrend, trading sideways, in
a downtrend, or in a transition state.
We are going to make the intermediate term signals primary, instead of one
of the shorter term signals we had been using. This will allow us to enter
trades in a timely manner, but keep us from entering some counter-trend trades
that haven't worked as well over the last couple of months. So that you are
not alarmed, these are the indicators that we have used as our primary input
to signals over the years.
To understand more about our view on the markets, we will have to look at
the charts.
Market Climate
The market continues to progress in its uptrend. The uptrend is now three
months old and has seen the Dow hit all time highs, the broader S&P-500
index rise to nearly six year highs, and the NASDAQ rising toward this year's
high. The overall market has seen a lag in small cap issues, with the Russell
2000 representing the largest of these trailing other indexes. The smallest
public companies have seen the worst performance.
A chart of the composite of over 8,000 stocks traded on the U.S. Stock markets
continues to be included.
The U.S. stock market composite chart:

The market continues to move higher and is trading at the top of its uptrend
channel and its upper Bollinger Band. The boundaries formed an rising wedge
before this, but the uptrend channel is now just that, with parallel upper
and lower boundaries.
The MACD continues to rise in a clear uptrend. When it turns down, it would
indicate the uptrend is pausing or over. If it crosses a downtrend would be
indicated. Right now, that is just speculation, as all indications are currently
for a continued uptrend, but perhaps with a pull back in the short term.
A look at the chart for the Dow Industrials is represented by the Diamonds
ETF (Amex:DIA).

Abbreviations and color key appears below:
Note the following order is Red, Yellow, Green, just like a stop light,
so it might be a helpful mnemonic:
Thick Red line represents the 200-day simple Moving Average, (200DMA)
The yellow line represents the 50-day simple Moving Average, (50DMA)
The green line represents the 20-day simple Moving Average, (20DMA)
The light blue line represents the 3-day Moving Average, moved forward three
days in time, (3x3MA)
The thick blue line indicates the exponential 13-day Moving Average (13DMA)
Bollinger Bands are abbreviated as BB. There is an upper and a lower Bollinger
Band that varies in distance from a central moving average (shown as light
red/pink) based on the volatility of stock price movements.
RSI stands for Relative Strength Index. It is an oscillator, which can be used
to determine how overbought or oversold a stock may be.
The trend has been up since mid-July. Since mid-August, the DIAmonds have
followed an uptrend channel. The uptrend channel looked like a rising wedge
until the end of the last week. With the DIAmonds are the upper limits of the
channel and volume decreasing, a pull back or sideways trading action are likely.
We wouldn't want to get aggressive with short opportunities until the trend
is broken.
The S&P 500 ETF, known as the Spyders (AMEX:SPY) is shown in the chart
below:

The SPYders looks similar to the DIAmonds. What appeared to be a good shorting
opportunity for the SPYders last week, turned out to be a bear trap. The sideways
trading action for six days straight was broken out of with a move to the upper
Bollinger Band on Thursday. Thursday's and Friday's volume was light, so the
move upward is suspect. With that said, the uptrend would remain unbroken,
even with a pullback next week to the $134 level. We will watch to see what
opportunity the SPYders give for a long entry next week.
This week, we will look at the weekly NASDAQ 100 ETF (QQQQ) Chart before the
daily. It is below:

The QQQQs continue to move upward, having registered larger gains than the
other major indexes last week. What is important to note is that they have
touched the line defining the tops for this year, from January, April, and
for last Friday. If resistance is seen here, then a significant battle may
ensue here between bulls and bears.
This week's NASDAQ 100 ETF (QQQQ) Chart is below:

The QQQQs have closed higher than their open for nine days in a row. Counting
is a legitimate strategy in trading, and right now the odds of a pull back
are high. With that said, tech is on a roll, so the pull back may take the
form of a sideways move.
The 20-day moving average has served as support for this uptrend since early
August. Price has rarely traded below the 3x3 Moving Average, with the last
time being Oct 2nd before price bounced off the 200-day moving average. In
other words this has been a very strong and steady uptrend with little room
for successful counter trend trading. What that implies is to trade with the
trend until something gives.
As indicated in discussing the weekly QQQQs chart, a possible battle may ensure
between bulls and bears now that the QQQQs are at a resistance line. They are
also approaching their 2006 top levels so either of these could provide significant
resistance, or, at least, resist the initial move higher. We will have to wait
for trading action in the coming week to determine whether we will see such
a battle.
Fundamental Trends
Other than the one week blip of airlines showing up in the top five last week,
not a whole lot has changed. Airlines fell to tenth in our ranking of 190 industries.
Retail continues to provide leadership as the American consumer continues
to spend. Consumer priorities include shoes and clothing, as well as things
for their homes. A report was issued late in the week that showed consumer
spending slowing. This, as it turns out, was due to lower gasoline prices.
When gasoline was factored out, consumer spending rose by 0.6% last month.
In addition to retail, food industries are favored and we are finally seeing
tech wade in. Telecomm, Networking, Software, and semiconductors are all in
the top screen (thirty-one top industries). With tech making a strong showing,
we may finally be seeing the sort of leadership that can power a rally.
One surprise is that both basic steel and steel alloys are in the top screen
industries now. The steel trade has been improving, so stocks related to it
have improved significantly, of late.
The Industry leaders (ranked 1st-5th out of 190) are:

The laggards list is little changed from a week ago. International Petroleum
replaces Canadian Petroleum and Control Instruments are replaced by home textiles.
Coal has moved up to 178th out of 190 industries. As a source of fuel to produce
heating for homes, or other forms of energy at power plants, this move has
been understandable, with the drop in oil and natural gas prices. However,
metallurgical coal is high quality and required to make steel. Prices for stocks
that supply this have also been hurt by the general fall in energy prices,
but may bounce back with the steel trade.
The Industry laggards (ranked 186th-190th out of 190) are:

Trade Recommendations
We are going to wait to see if there is a tradable pull back to enter long
positions in the coming week. We will need to see what the early part of the
week brings, but it is the time when the market looks to be at its most vulnerable.
Current Portfolio
We were stopped out of the LRCX short trade as tech has heated up to have
a number of industries in the top screen.
FDG has rallied with a slow rally in the coal industries, in general, and
a definite rally to place both steel industries in the top screen.
We are behind a little on our short trade on the S&P-500 (Amex:SPY). We
will wait one more day to see if a sign of weakness will emerge before closing
this trade.

Generally, our model uses set stop prices to control risk. Index ETFs, including
DIA, SPY, QQQQ, and IWM are managed somewhat differently, in that trades will
be reversed to time the market, as opposed to using a set stop limit.
Unlike the majority of position trades in the fundamental trader, our ETF
trades may see us exit positions prior to specific profit goals being achieved,
as we are more concerned with positioning for the correct direction of the
market more than with achieving a specific profit level. The reason for this
is the profits come over time with a fair number of exchanges for long and
short trades.
* Initial stop prices are set to cause us to exit our positions if they close
below these levels. You will note they are generally kept pretty tightly the
opposite side of the trades we initiate. Historic volatility would imply that
intraday price action may trade outside of these values, so that condition
is insufficient to cause an exit from an existing position. On significant
movement beyond our stop prices, we may issue an intraday message to exit the
position or to maintain the position. You may chose to implement an absolute
stop below these suggested stop values, but that stop should be wide enough
to take care of the daily volatility for the stock in question. You can examine
the candlesticks for an idea of intraday price fluctuations.
Entry prices are adjusted to account for dividends paid. The stock price was
adjusted by your broker, to reflect the dividend taken out. The non-adjusted
entry price reflects the actual entry price, without the adjustment for dividend
values.
LVPB Concept: The concept is a Light Volume Pull Back, where
a stock's price will pull back to a support level on light volume. Obviously,
heavy selling is a sign of weakness, and we would not want to buy on a heavy
volume pullback. However, we will occasionally place stocks on the LVPB (Light
Volume Pullback List) to indicate a "re-entry" buying opportunity, when we
have already entered a position. This should be used to add to existing positions,
or to enter a position if you missed the initial entry.
LVPB Portfolio Stocks:
Conclusions
We are amending our take on the market to suggest it may be time to get on
the train as it leaves the station. That is known as greed. The opposite of
greed is fear. When enough investors get greedy, then it will be time for the
market to turn back down. When there is sufficient fear, the market hits a
bottom.
With leadership emerging as tech stocks, it is not time to stand in the way
of the liquidity rush which could be sustained for quite some time. With that
said, we would like a pull back to improve our entry into long positions.
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Regards and Good Trading,
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