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TTO Daily Update 03-19-07, That should about do it Print E-mail
Written by Jim Patterson   
Monday, 19 March 2007

Here is the Deal:

With a minor rate hike in China and strength overseas, we saw a huge jump higher on the open. However, it is important to note the bulk (two thirds) of the day’s gains were realized by 9:40 AM. Even though it was a Monday, volume was light on the rally day. It was a big up day, but in the last hour of trading I could hear the cry…don’t let the SPX fall below 1400!!! It miraculously held at 1400 despite significant internal deterioration over the last several hours of trading. It was an up day, but the action after the opening gap higher was not remarkably impressive.

Coming into Monday we knew of the potential for a pop to a slight new high, above the mid-week highs. The high of 12,234 makes the move up from Friday’s low equal to 68.2% of the rally from Wednesday’s low. This is a common Fibonacci relationship. In addition, the 12,255 level is the 76% retracement level of the entire move. With the flat pattern over the balance of Monday, odds favor a very slight poke higher. For the near-term bearish case the Dow needs to hold below resistance at 12,235 to 12,255. Seeing the Dow slide below 12,180 will be the first sign of real trouble for the Bulls while 12,205 was vigorously defended on Monday.

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Seeing the Dow above 12,255 should be worrisome for the bears on a very short-term basis. Seeing the Dow below 12,180 is problematic for the Bulls. With the market now extremely overbought, odds of a significant push higher from current levels appear remote.  

Tuesday we get housing starts and building permits. Needless to say, these reports will get a lot of attention. It is also FOMC day 1 and they tend to be quieter type days.

Here’s why:

The Dow was never down on the day. It was up 124.26 at its high of 12,234.67. It closed at 12,226.17 up 115 and just 8.5 points off its high of the day. From a price stand point it was an impressive day. From an internal stand point, the overall action weakened from about 11:30 AM on. The effort was to keep the S&P 500 above 1400 and the Dow above 12,200, but there was no effort to defend the NASD and NDX at a particular level.

As strong as the day was, I find it interesting that the SOX finished lower on the day.

The S&P 500 regained 1400 and once it did, 1400 was a key focal point. The bears tried to break it back below 1400 but failed on two, actually three, attempts. Another really strong rally day may force us to alter our near-term expectations. For now, the pattern retains its corrective A B C look and the internals are remarkably overbought. Monday’s action helped to solidify where we are within the corrective pattern. The current move higher is a C wave. Once complete it should be followed by an aggressive move lower that fully retraces the entire rally.

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The 38% retracement level on the NASD is 2413 and the NASD remains short of the common retracement level. The 38% retracement level on the NDX is 1764.62. Monday the NDX reached a high of 1764.37, a few cents short, but close enough. That leaves the NASD as the only index not to reach its 38% retracement level of the entire decline. Overall the NASD and NDX have moved in a sideways formation and are now near the top of their short-term price structures, and the market has become overbought.

Tuesday March 20 is a longer-term cycle turn date. Technically it is a low. The next longer-term cycle turn date is not until April 20th.

The NYSE was the only index that did not give a daily buy signal on Monday. This is mainly because it never turned its daily trend down last week like all the other indices did. The NDX also managed to turn its weekly trend up by moving above 1763; however, despite the Dow’s strong close the NDX was unable to hold up near the higher turn point.

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Detailed Trend Report on Web & CLX Count and Weekly Signal Counts & NYSE & NASD 5-day up and down volume charts

Total breadth was +2675 on Monday. That is a solid reading, but it is worth noting that the lowest reading (after the open) was seen at 3:30 PM, and if not for a lot of buy on close orders, breadth would likely have finished at its lowest level since the open. This is less than ideal behavior for the sort of gap higher we saw on Monday. In short, while the market moved higher from 9:40 to the close, the internals weakened from 9:40 to the close.

With another powerful advance the market is now overbought. The NYSE 10-day AD line is in even with its most recent major spike highs reached on 2/8/07, 10/16/06, and 8/4/06. All three of those dates were followed by at least a couple of days of weakness. Amazingly, the current 10-day reading contains the massively negative reading from Tuesday, one week ago; however, it will drop the massive positive from two weeks ago on Tuesday.

Typically very high readings of this nature coincide with a very short-term market high. The exceptions are most often when the market has recently broken out of a base formation. At present the indices are in line with the top of their near-term trading ranges and have not broken out yet.

NYSE 10-day advancing volume is at its highest level since June 2, 2006. That’s the day the 2006 counter-trend move ended. While 10-day advancing volume is very high on a real basis, relative buying peaked in mid-January and the 8-day relative buying metrics continues to trace out a pattern of lower highs. We are seeing record buying but it doesn’t feel like we are seeing record buying.

Total Volume on Monday was anemic at 2.3 billion shares. Aside from big moving Mondays, that is in line with recent Mondays. The problem is Monday is viewed as a big rally day that happened on low volume.

Beware of Tuesday: Tuesday 2/27, SPX down 50; Tuesday 3/6 SPX up 21, after a disastrous Monday (read: potentially opposite of now); Tuesday 3/13, SPX down 28. The point being that since this decline started on Tuesday the 27th, Tuesday’s have seen significant market moves.

If we are in a counter-trend move, whether from the 3/5 low or the 3/14 low, at this point the market has become very overbought while the indices have reached common retracement levels. We have an FOMC meeting over the next two days and some key economic data (housing starts & building permits) on Tuesday before the open. In short, the stage is set for a resumption of the move lower that started in late February. From a pattern stand point, one minor final high, above Monday’s highs, on Tuesday will leave a remarkably complete pattern in place.

Jim Patterson

Most Obvious chart resistance levels: (Bold = 62% retracement)
Dow 12,260, 12,347
, 12,420, 12,532, 12,600, 12,780 to 12,800, 12,863
SPX 1407, 1415-18, 1428, 1438, 1458, 1463, 1480-1489
NASD 2413, 2430-36, 2459, 2510, 2538, 2570
NDX 1766, 1800, 1825, 1841, 1847 (high), 1877 (minor Fib)
NYSE 9152, 9225, 9400, 9503

Most obvious Chart Support levels:
Dow 12,180, 12,080, 12,000 (38% retrace,) 11,890, 11653
SPX 1398, 1373 (Fibonacci 38%) 1362, 1340 (50% retracement)
NASD 2380, 2335 (Fibonacci), 2316 (November lows) 2275 (50%  retracement,)
NDX 1738, 1710, 1695 (Fibonacci 38% & Nov 06 lows,) 1650 (50% retracement,)  1465
NYSE  8980, 8850, 8690, 8575

Here’s where we are now:

NASD 100 Index (NDX) Trading System, trade the QQQQ:

The NDX gave us a chance to get short above 1755 and finally reached the 38% retracement of 1764. If you are short, stick with it as the next move of significance should be lower. And, with a solid overbought condition, the indices should struggle to advance from current levels if not simply turn lower. Moving below 1745 will be a very healthy indication for the bears.

S&P 500 (SPX) Trading

>> 3-16-07: With strength on the open it made sense to hold off on the SDS purchase for an hour or so. The SDS bottomed at 60.55, well below the 60.80 I am using as an entry price. We have a full position in the SDS with an entry of 60.80.

>>> If the S&P 500 rallies to 1407.5 then add another 50% position to the SDS.

The SPX came close to 1407.5. If reached we will add another 50% to the SDS position under the assumption that our expectations for lower prices will be fulfilled once the counter-trend move has fully run its course.

Tactical Stock Trading Powered by Patterson Relative Strength

ICLR rec Long 01/24 @ 39.53 stop 34 close, Target >46, closed at 41.83
CBEY
rec Long 02/20 @ 31.31, stop 28 close, Target >38, closed at 29.82

** PRS Open Actives making noise:
MVL put on a good show thrusting above 28.20 on solid volume and closing at 28.29. (I hear the movie is really good.)

Other stocks pushing their short-term down trend channels (all on substandard volume): ANST 30.80 closed at 31.49; ACGY 19.05 closed at 19.40; AMX 45.05 closed at 45.81; ARD 45.31 closed at 46.20; PCU 69.42 closed at 70.03.

ARD and ACGY look the most like meaningful upside breakouts.

In a healthy bull market I would expect all of these stocks to continue their breakout like moves had they traded greater volume.

Jim Patterson
Editor
Tactical Trading Outlook

 
TTO Weekend Update 03-18-07 Print E-mail
Written by Jim Patterson   
Sunday, 18 March 2007

Here is the Deal:

Options expiration Friday the market was more or less stuck in the snow. It didn’t make much progress up or down, but being stuck in the snow is an overall negative thing. At the end of the day the bias was negative. It was an outside day with a negative close but it wasn’t an outside down day. The bulls tried to get things going in the morning but it stalled. The bears tried to break it down, but it came back in the afternoon. Overall the near-term action at best is still weak. The rally that began on Wednesday may pop to a slight new short-term high, but from a big picture stand point, pop or no pop, the overall downtrend not likely to bottom until late March or more likely into the middle of April.

12,180 – 12,200 remains the primary resistance level and the Dow bounced off it hard on Friday.  The 50% retracement line is 12,150 and seeing the Dow recover that will be the first indication this counter-trend rebound is not complete. Fibonacci levels: 38%=12,096, 50%= 12,144, 62% = 12,192. The current range,

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With prices bouncing off the Fibonacci levels I am inclined to say the first one that breaks will win, but that is on a very near-term basis. There are few indications to believe the overall decline has completely run its course. The 12,050 – 12,080 level remains a focal point. Once broken last week we saw a rash of selling as they “ran the stops.” For now it is still a pattern of lower highs and lower lows.

Monday is Post Options Expiration, a day that is notoriously weak by historical standards. But when it comes to tracking historical trends, the composition of options expiration has evolved such that that the historical influences are dissimilar to current conditions. That said, the day after March options expiration is down over 60% of the time while Mondays not after expiration are up 52% of the time. That is a big difference so we will see.

There is no meaningful economic data until Tuesday when we get Housing Starts.

Here’s why:

The Dow was up 30.68 points at its early high of 12,190.36. It then turned lower and fell 108.23 points reaching a low of 12,082.13 at 2:40 PM. As is often the case, the move lower stalled between 2:30 and 3:00 PM and prices managed to rally. But, again we saw price weakness in the final half hour of trading. The left the Dow down 49 points at 12,110, only 28 points off the day’s low.

Looking at the intra-day action, there was one major attempt to jam the market higher as prices were on the verge of breaking lower at about 13:20. The program buy easily pushed the market higher, but the negative hangover was how fast it caved in once the program had run its course. The middle of the day volume spikes are highly indicative of program related activity. Note the absence of a volume spike at the 2:30 PM low.

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The character of the 1:30 rally and subsequent turn lower suggests there is not much “big money” interest in buying stocks and pushing them higher at this time. In other words, aside from short covering and “programmed buying” related activities, there isn’t much buying going on. Bottom line, the market needs real buying interest to go higher and Friday it clearly was not there.

The S&P 500 also traced out an outside day as did the NASD. I am sticking with my earlier interpretation. The market is ready to breakdown, but on Wednesday the indices were getting a little too far from the expiration related “expected price range.” Throw in a couple of heavy buy programs and prices snap back to a reasonable level for expiration. With expiration prices locked in, the decline is set to resume. Seeing more than one solid up day at this point will argue against this line of thinking.

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While the NASD presents a more solid looking low in the form of a double bottom, it looks more like a sideways move to me. That means once the sideways move is complete we will see another step lower. 2400 is resistance while a close below 2350 should be more then the bulls can handle.

All but the NYSE turned their daily trends turned back down after pointing higher for just one day. That development made sure the 3-day trends would finish the week pointing down. Normally when the 3-day trends turn down on Friday you can expect some additional price weakness over the first half of the week. The resilience of the NYSE is somewhat surprising considering oil prices were down.

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Detailed Trend Report on Web & CLX Count and Weekly Signal Counts & NYSE & NASD 5-day up and down volume charts

Total breadth was -1476. The important thing is the morning low reading was -1100. The 11:30 low reading was -1600, and the afternoon low at about 3 PM was -1962. As the indices weakened and worked to lower lows, total breadth also made a series of lower lows. This confirms the truly weak nature of Friday’s action.

Total volume was big at 3.2 Billion shares, but we know much of it was expiration related. However, it was still solid to the downside on a directional basis. 8-day buying and selling are about balanced, but considering the market is up five of the past eight days, one would think buying pressure would be greater than selling pressure, but that’s not the case.

The CLX reading on the S&P 500 has made a series of higher lows since the 2-27 sell off. One thing I remain convinced of is this decline has already seen its peak downside momentum, much like was the case in the May – June 06 decline. While a lower low is still expected, the -355 CLX reading seen on 2-27 is unlikely to be seen again.

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From a pattern stand point there are a number of interpretations. Some call for a couple more days of rally while others call for downside acceleration now. What almost all of them have in common is they call for lower prices, if not sooner then later. One thing is clear, the 1405 to 1410 are on the S&P 500 is a major overhead resistance level. It will take a solid close above 1410 for me to question the expectation of lower prices to come. For now the trend is lower.

Jim Patterson

Most Obvious chart resistance levels: (Bold = 62% retracements)
Dow 12,180, 12,260, 12,347
, 12,420, 12,532, 12,600, 12,780 to 12,800, 12,863
SPX 1398, 1407, 1415-18, 1428, 1438, 1458, 1463, 1480-1489
NASD 2380, 2413, 2430-36, 2459, 2510, 2538, 2570
NDX 1745, 1766, 1800, 1825, 1841, 1847 (high), 1877 (minor Fib)
NYSE 9060, 9152, 9225, 9400, 9503

Most obvious Chart Support levels:
Dow 12,080, 12,000 (38% retrace,) 11,890, 11653
SPX 1373 (Fibonacci 38%) 1362, 1340 (50% retracement)
NASD 2335 (Fibonacci), 2316 (November lows) 2275 (50%  retracement,)
NDX 1710, 1695 (Fibonacci 38% & Nov 06 lows,) 1650 (50% retracement,)  1465
NYSE  8850, 8690, 8575

Here’s where we are now:

NASD 100 Index (NDX) Trading System, trade the QQQQ:

Thursday evening I said sell short above 1755. The NDX only managed 1750.39. Bottom line, the path of lease resistance appears lower. If we see a healthy start to the week, take a shot above 1750 – 1755 if given the chance.

S&P 500 (SPX) Trading

>> 3-16-07: With strength on the open it made sense to hold off on the SDS purchase for an hour or so. The SDS bottomed at 60.55, well below the 60.80 I am using as an entry price. We have a full position in the SDS with an entry of 60.80.

>>> If the S&P 500 rallies to 1407.5 then add another 50% position to the SDS.

Still looking for lower prices.  

Tactical Stock Trading Powered by Patterson Relative Strength

ICLR rec Long 01/24 @ 39.53 stop 34 close, Target >46, closed at 41.24
CBEY
rec Long 02/20 @ 31.31, stop 28 close, Target >38, closed at 29.18

** PRS Open Actives making noise:
GRMN looks good above $54, but it can’t hold that price level.

Stocks reaching the PRS Entry Criteria Friday: BA & FSYS

Jim Patterson
Editor
Tactical Trading Outlook

Last Updated ( Sunday, 18 March 2007 )
 
TTO Mid-day Comment 03-16-07 Print E-mail
Written by Jim Patterson   
Friday, 16 March 2007

Hang in there baby! That's what the bulls are saying as the indices bounce around / off Thursday's lows. This is a precarious position on a day that has not seen much volatility on a relative basis. 

The Dow, NASD, and NDX have broken Thursday's lows turning their daily trends down and their 3-day trends are now pointing down. Their 3-day trends can not turn up until next week. As I type, the S&P 500 remains above 1385.16. Sustained price action below 1385 = bad for the bulls, good for the bears. An upcoming S&P 500 re-balancing may be a factor, and the S&P remains the performance leader being down less than the other indices.

Internally, volume is huge on expiration Friday. With the new 11:30 AM price lows, total breadth reached -1500, well below the morning low of -1100. The rest of the internals fell off with the second hour market sell off. The accompanying internal weakness tells us the weakness is not simply index price weakness or issue specific.

So far the Dow has traced out an outside day. A close below 12,100 will leave an outside down day.

Generally speaking, the big index options related issues are behind us as the opening price is the key.

>>> With some strength on the open we established the SDS position at 60.80. If the SPX rallies on up to 1410 we will go to a 150% position on the trade.

Looking forward, breaking the day's established lows, which are inline with Thursday's mid-day lows, Key prices to watch, 12,110, 1385, 2370, and about 1740 on the NDX. Seeing prices below these levels for more than a brief moment (about 10 min) should lead to additional downside acceleration.

In light of the weak internal condition, odds favor a breakdown, if not over the balance of Friday, then early next week with a post expiration move.

The weekend report will go out on Sunday morning

Enjoy the weather, if you can

Jim Patterson

 
More...
  • TTO Daily Update 03-15-07
  • TTO Daily Update 03-14-07, Prepared before the market close
  • TTO Mid-day Comment 03-14-07, Now that's a recovery!
  • TTO Daily Update 03-13-07, Ouch!
  • TTO Daily Update 03-12-07
  • TTO Weekend Update 03-11-07
  • TTO Friday Intraday 03-09-07
  • TTO Daily Update 03-08-07, advancing the hard way
  • TTO Daily Update 03-07-07
  • TTO Daily Update 03-06-07, Now that's a rally!
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It should not be assumed that recommendations made will be profitable or will equal the past performance of securities discussed herein. The information herein is collected from various sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed in any way. Patterson Capital, Inc., Patterson Relative Strength Report, nor their employees or directors shall be liable in any manner for losses of any kind. The firm, its affiliates and their respective offices, directors, employees and clients may or may not have a position long or short in stocks mentioned in this publication and may from time to time increase or decrease their positions. All performance numbers presented are hypothetical and do not represent actual trading.
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