Showing posts with label msft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label msft. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Talk About the Weather

I've always felt a bit sorry for meteorologists here in the San Francisco Bay Area. Because, between about April and October, they really have very little to say. The forecast is, more or less, as follows: "There will be patchy morning fog, clearing by late morning. Highs on the coast will be in the lower to mid 60s, with lower to mid 70s around the Bay and low 80s farther inland." It varies little from day to day, week to week, month to month. No rain. No hail. No nothing.

I'm starting to feel a bit like that about the markets these days. "Horrible economic news was reported to me. The markets rallied on the news to historic new highs. Bearish patterns were laid waste."

Oh, well. At least we didn't go up another 120 points today. The economy came in with the weakest numbers since 2002, and the Dow was basically unchanged. Looking at the RSI and slow stochastic, you can see how the market is seeming awfully tired, in spite of the progression in prices.


Much the same can be said of the S&P 500 ($SPX).


I was distraught at all the gorgeous real estate head & shoulders patterns getting trounced yesterday, but maybe there is hope yet. Apartment Investments (AIV) is no longer a perfect H&S, but today's weakness is a good sign.


I haven't posted American Airlines (AMR) in a while, but this is a head and shoulders pattern which remains cleanly intact with what appears to be a nice retracement to the neckline in progress.


JC Penney hasn't completed its pattern yet, but - - - it could! Keep an eye on it.


A lot of investment banks seem exhausted lately, whether you look at GS, LEH, or any of many others. Here is Morgan Stanley (MS), which seems to have made a bit of a double top.


Whirlpool (WHR), a Dow 30 component, is very lofty right now. This seems to me a short with an attractive risk/reward ratio.


And the Big Oil stocks - Exxon Mobil (XOM) is a favorite of mine to watch - likewise have an attractive risk/reward ratio for shorting right now.


There's a ton of economic news tomorrow morning. Let's see if June gets off to a better start for the bears than May was.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Thanks, Alan

The market surged again this morning. The S&P 500 was at a new lifetime high. As was the Russell 2000. As was the Dow 30. It looked like Dow 14,000 was just around the corner.

Then Alan Greenspan - bless him - threw some cold water on the excitement by speculating the Chinese market was overheated and headed for a fall. That's all it took to render the breakout (shown in green) moot (shown in pink).


Now, the Old Tim would have been dancing around shouting about how it's the end of the world. But the New Improved Tim With Integrated Timing (figure the acronym out for yourself), severely humbled over the past year, will do nothing of the sort. Indeed, if you think back to Greenspan's most famous declaration ever - - "irrational exuberance" - - it might be instructive. He said it on December 5, 1996, and you can see the brief aftermath here:


But if you take a longer view, you will note that the irrational exuberance had barely even started. The market went up hundreds of percent more, as measured by the NASDAQ.


Not to say that I'm unhappy with today's small tumble. A look at the major indexes shows they are very tired. Here's the S&P 500:


And here is the broader Major Market Index ($XMI):


There's an interesting article by Herb Greenberg about the fact that brokerage margin debt is at a never-seen-before high. Obviously people are willing to go into debt on a widespread basis to buy into the recent mania. If you think the shorts are only going to get squeezed worse, you might want to check out this blog which focuses on opportunities to go long on stocks that may be squeezed up.

I am still short Akamai (AKAM), and its head and shoulders pattern (an obvious favorite of mine) is nicely intact.


AutoZone (AZO) is finally getting serious about falling.


Carnival (CCL), which had some recent strength, is again at a relatively low-risk zone for shorting.


Housing stocks, strong yesterday, are a safer short now. Here is Essex (ESS):


Infosys (INFY) is inching ever-so-slowly toward its neckline. If and when the neckline is broken, a substantial fall would seem in order.


Martin Marietta (MLM) may have double-topped here, and it is far above its supporting trendline.


Morgan Stanley (MS) is sporting a nice shooting star today. Granted, many recent shooting stars have been rendered moot by the market's strength. Still........


And Whirlpool (WHR) is likewise far enough above its supporting trendline to present an attractive short (or put-buying) possibility.


There's a ton of economic information coming out tomorrow morning. It should make for an interesting session.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Small Caps Catch Up

The market pushed higher today in fits and starts, and in the end, the Dow and S&P 500 closed down a little while the Russell 2000 - home of smaller cap stocks - pushed to a new high.

Even though the market seems unfazed by the weakness in NZD/USD, it is still worth watching. This currency pair has done a decent job indicating recent turning points in the market.


One stock I don't think I've mentioned before is Bunge. This has made a flag pattern recently. You can make of the pattern what you will:


BTJ has been a recent high-flier that might make a good short candidate:


CRS had a nice breakout a few weeks ago, but this breakout seems to be losing steam in a big hurry. Failed breakouts make great shorts.


Much of the housing sector - - lenders such as AHC as well as builders like BZH - had a nice bounce higher today. I took it as a good opportunity to enter some shorts of stocks that were retracing their head and shoulders pattern to the neckline, such as ESS, shown here.


Honeywell (HON) is starting to lose ground.


....as is Microsoft (MSFT)...


A couple of long suggestions. JetBlue, mentioned here not long ago as a potential buy, looks good. A series of higher lows and agreeable volume trends make this a handsome candidate for puchase.


And Questar (STR), also mentioned in the past, continues to prosper after its well-formed breakout.

Monday, May 07, 2007

The Pain Grows Stronger/Watch It Grin

Years ago I remember seeing a Dilbert cartoon where Dogbert had yet another get-rich-quick scheme. This one was a generic newspaper which featured headlines about "Unrest in Middle East" and "Government Proposes More Taxes". It was basically a newspaper you could read any day for the rest of your life, and it would always be true.

Much the same can be said of the market - at least in terms of the Dow 30. I'm starting to lose track. What would today make it......the last 27 out of 30 sessions up? Something like that. It's starting not to matter. As you can see from the graph below, it essentially never goes down.


I am staying far away from SPX puts (or DIA puts, for that matter). The only index put I've been accumulating is on the Russell 2000. Earlier in this cycle, the Russell was strong than the Dow, but recently, it's been falling behind. It also has the added advantage of falling faster on the rare occasions when the market is weak (notice the recent dip, shown in blue).


A closer look at recent activity illustrates the relative weakness better. Today the Dow was up yet another 50, whereas the Russell - a broader index - actually fell.


The NASDAQ Composite is also relatively low on steam compared with the mega-caps.


And the $XMI is continuing the exhibit the rather fascinating "hug just beneath the broken trendline" phenomenon.


I have no position in the CME, but it's interesting how this is shaping up recently. It's not really a head and shoulders pattern, but it definitely looks toppy.


My puts on INFY did pretty well today. Infosys (INFY) fell on a good pick-up in volume.


Symbol MEE is a pretty massive head and shoulders pattern, although frankly patterns this big don't have as much weight with me, since it has already kind of done the retracement-and-fall-again dance. But your eyes have every right to make an independent judgment.


Symbol MS is doing the same shtick as $XMI.


Airline RYAAY finally took a tumble, losing about 20% of its value in the past week or so. It was really overheated earlier, and I don't see any clear pattern at this point.


Long suggestion SCHN continues to do well, although I'm sure the massive buyout news regarding AL/AA had everything to do with today's rise.

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Twenty-Five-Peat

Yawn. The bull's getting boring. By my count, 25 out of the past 31 days have been up on the Dow. So much for climbing a wall of worry. It's skipping higher.

I mentioned yesterday that the US Dollar had to soften up to have any chance of market softness. Although it didn't help today, I notice the NZD/USD did weaken considerably and is sporting a pretty hefty bearish engulfing pattern.


One nice effect this did have is to soften up gold quite a bit. My $XAU puts continue to do well.


Apple traded over $100 for a while today, its highest price in history. I remembered Dell's famous quote in the late 90s about how Apple should just give up, so I decided to look up when he said that. Well, fancy that - - right near the bottom. Buyers of Dell on that day would have about 140% in profits by now. Buyers of Apple, on the other hand, have enjoyed more like a 1,600% gain.


Akamai, a short suggestion here, continues to fall on very significant volume.


I sold American Airlines (AMR) short yesterday near its high for the day, and it is sinking nicely away from its neckline. By traditional measurements, there could be another $9 in losses on this stock.


I've never charted Honeywell (HON) here before, but it's a Dow 30 stock and worth watching. No clear bearish pattern here, but clearly an opportunity for it to take a breather.


I've mentioned in the recent past how McKesson (MCK) is dancing around its Fibonacci fan lines. At long last, it started to fall away from one of those lines today. It took a while.


Morgan Stanley (MS) represents a relatively low-risk short here, since it has apparently retraced about all of the descent that it is planning to retrace.


PSB, which I've been short a while, continues to slowly form a potential head and shoulders pattern. So far, so good.


Questar (STR), mentioned several times recently as a long candidate, moved handsomely higher today.


In honor of Steven Hawking's planned adventure in weightlessness, I thought I'd share this funny (but slightly NSFW) clip.