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The essential guide to The Tactical Trading Outlook Print E-mail
Written by Jim Patterson   
Wednesday, 24 January 2007

There are four basic parts to Tactical Trading Outlook, The Daily Outlook, The Breakout Trading System, Index Trading on the NDX and SPX, and Hop&Pop stocks. Below I will briefly describe each section and what it does for you. If you have an interest in the stock market then there is a segment of Tactical Trading that will help you with your daily decision making process. The more energy you put towards the markets and your investments the more Tactical Trading has to offer.

 

 

 

The Daily Outlook what to expect and what it means top

Our Daily Outlook is emailed in the evening, generally Sunday through Thursday and it is sent by about 7:00 PM Eastern This is my take on the market. There is a quick review of what happened, and then I explain what I think was or was not important and what the implications are going forward. Tactical Trading is a technical based service. At times we will talk about economic events but our focus is on what the market is doing and how it is doing it. Economics are great to talk about, but when and how the market moves tells us what folks are actually doing in reaction to all that other stuff. I think what investors are doing is a lot more important than all the other stuff, so that is what I focus on. From time to time there will be a top section dedicated to something slightly askew of our normal outlook, but it always relates to the market.

The heart of our approach is technical as opposed to fundamental. Our primary technical methods are briefly explained at the end of this guide in How we analyze the market. Our focus is on price movement relative to previous movements and we consider psychological indicators and conditions as well. The primary tools are, the Directional Trends, Pattern analysis, the short-term cycles, and keen awareness of the market internals. The key is using the right supporting evidence at the right time. How and why the market moves is sometimes more important than the size and magnitude of the move. Sometimes it is the other way around. We have many tools at our disposal, but depending on the character of the market we won't hesitate to leave a tool in the box. A good carpenter has a lot of different hammers and he uses the right one for the job at hand. By remaining flexible with our approach we do the same thing and I think this is one of my greatest strengths. Great traders are flexible and they are always willing to adjust to the market environment. I use technical methods but I remain flexible and therefore mistakes are avoided by not trying force something to work that not working.

The Daily Outlook has one featured element, the Directional Trend and summary Table. The goal is to present, in a relatively small space, a clear picture of what the market is and has been doing, points (support and resistance) that if reached will indicate a potential change in direction, and a breakdown of the day's activity on an internal basis. The table may look confusing at first, and my lengthy explanation may not help either. But, it only takes a minute to understand what you are looking at and then it all makes sense. Below is an example and it is divided into three sections. 

essent1

The top section is the Directional Trend Summary. We follow five indices, the Dow (DJI), the S&P 500 (SPX), the NYSE Composite (NYA), the NASD Composite, (COMP), and the NASD 100 index, (NDX). By keeping track of all five we are able to maintain a clear picture of the market. We have narrow indices, the Dow and the NDX. The S&P 500 and NASD Composite give us a view of the bulk of the market capitalization, and the NYSE Composite is the broadest measure of the market. This full spectrum helps us avoid being swayed by a single index, which can be misleading at times. Every day I look at the top section first. I look for changes in the longer time frames first and then work down to the shorter time periods. Changes on a longer time frame such as Monthly or quarterly are very important. The shorter the time frame the more important the change is likely to be to our current stock holdings or index positions.

For each index there is a Trend and the Trends are shown in five different time frames: daily, 3-day, weekly, monthly, and quarterly. A trend points either up or down and they also give buy or sell signals. If a trend is on a buy signal then by definition it must be pointing up. A Trend must be pointing down to be on a sell signal. The terms buy and sell are used lightly here as we do not make trades based on these signals. However, if you follow the signals closely, they do produce gains over a prolonged period of time. For now just remember a buy signal is more bullish than an up signal and a sell is more bearish than Down. I have studied every trend change on the Dow going back over 70 years. Each trend has its own personality, and when something happens I will talk about it as necessary. Please feel free to send me questions regarding the trends. In general the trends are best utilized as a guide to confirm or deny expectations going forward. If you are expecting higher prices and the daily trends turn up then your expectations are being confirmed. When a trend does change it is highlighted and in bold print the next day. Green if for a positive change and red is obviously a negative change. This adds a dynamic element to the table, which makes it more useful.  top

The middle section of the table shows us what the indices did today and where they closed. Key turn and or signal prices for the daily and weekly trend are also shown. Sometimes in the commentary we list support and resistance levels, but if we don't and you want a level to focus on, these turn and or signal points are the place to focus. Notice the daily trend on the Dow is showing buy. Now look at the daily turn and signal points. It shows "D @ 9040 S @ 8871" That means the daily trend will turn down if the Dow reaches 9040 and subsequently a daily sell signal will be given if the Dow reaches 8871. When a trend turns it suggest the move will continue. When a buy or sell signal is given it means an even stronger move should be expected. If 9040 is broken then we should see additional weakness as the daily turn point is the first support level. If the second support level, 8871, is broken a more serious negative signal is given. The weekly column works much the same way, but the price points are more important because of the longer time scale. You don't need to spend a lot of time considering the implication of these price points. I usually spell that out for you. But, understand these are important support and resistance levels, which if broken will indicate a changing or strengthening (buy or sell signal) trend.

The bottom section contains technical metrics. The market internals shown for the New York Stock Exchange, the OTC market, and we combine these readings into a Market Total column. By looking at them in three ways we can quickly tell if a move was uniform or lopsided. During the course of the bear market this has helped us spot clear divergences as the market peaked and/or lopsided advances that were prone to failure. For an explanation of the internal metrics, see Common Terms Explained at the end of this guide.

Last we have the VIX and VXN buy and sell signals and the CQI index. CQI stands for Confidence in Quality Index. When this metric reaches one the market should be very close to a very important low as a reading of one indicates folks have very little confidence in what they have in their portfolios. The higher the reading the greater the confidence folks have in their holding. If there is a remarkable reading I will discuss it.

The VIX and VXN buy and sell signals are based on the action of the VIX and VXN indices. 100% indicates a very strong signal while 0% is a very weak signal. The ideal time to act on a signal is the first day it is not at 100% after it has been at 100%. When a good signal is given we will discuss the situation. These will also be highlighted when they are close to 100% or 0%. This signal set is just another tool. When it is working it is nice, but for the first half of 2003 this tool has been in the tool box.

In addition to the indicators, metrics, and techniques mentioned here, we have a lot more. These are the metrics we think are the most important and should be observed at on a daily basis. From time to time we will have additional charts or comments on other things deemed important or relevant to the current market condition. top

At the end of the Daily Outlook we have a conclusion paragraph that starts out "Here is the Deal." If you are pressed for time just skip to this paragraph. I summarize the situation as briefly as possible and offer a likely expectation. When things are going well I will have a "Perfect world" scenario. The "Perfect world" scenario is a combination of all our different approaches and it is an expectation. If the market follows the "Perfect World" scenario we know all of our methods are in sync and confidence is high. The further the market strays from the "perfect world" or sometimes I will say "Ideally" the more we will have to adjust our expectations to fit with what is actually happening. I am not here to tell you what happened. Anyone can do that. I am here to tell you how and why what happened is or relates to what should or should not happen going forward. The market can only go up or down, but staying on track with the market and knowing when you are off track are the keys to staying on track and that is my goal, to keep you on track with the market.

The Breakout Trading System top

The Breakout Trading System is a professional style trading strategy designed to capitalize on strong price moves which occur as stocks make short to intermediate term trend changes or accelerate higher from short consolidation patterns. In short, we employ a trend reversal or breakout system. A key component to a successful breakout move is volume, the more the better.

What to expect

Our goal is for a huge winner every time, but don't expect every single trade to be a huge winner. That would be unrealistic. This is the stock market and anything can happen. While we do have a high success rate it is important to understand that the key starting elements of any successful trading approach are risk control and risk management. Even if you have a terrible system if you use proper risk control and risk management you can make money. These elements are designed into the Breakout Trading system and I know the system is a great one, so we are starting with a successful formula. Common sense risk disclosure: don't put too much of your money into any signal trade, this is risk control. Exit any position that is not working before it moves significantly against you, this is risk management. We use specific stop prices for risk management. I suggest you follow them.

Each night we show our Current Portfolio. The positions are listed in the order they were added with the most recent first. The Longs on top and the Shorts come at the bottom. These are trades we have already made. If you can't get into the trade near the entry price then wait for the next trade. While we don't have a specific time table, we are flexible and if a stock starts acting funny we won't hesitate to exit. I don't want to see you buy into a current position today and then we sell it the next day. We take a big gain, but because you got in at a different price your result is different. Wait for new trading ideas. Our goal is 8 to 12 trades per month. That is a target and general market action will impact the trade count to a certain degree. There are times when it is better to do nothing than to try and force something to happen. My years of experience have taught me that trying to force a trade is rarely profitable.

A Breakout System top

On a daily bases we scan over 450 stocks looking for specific formations. Our scanning software, which I call Reggie, does a lot of work for us. But that is just the beginning. Typically Reggie will find between 75 and 150 stocks that should be monitored for a breakout move the following day. Yes, I usually watch over 100 stocks a day looking for the ones that are breaking out and have the greatest potential to move a lot higher.

When a stock is on the move and we are going to add it to the Current Portfolio we send an e-mail alert. If you get an alert to go long or go short, unless specifically stated that we are waiting for a price to be reached, we are making the trade and the stock will be added to the Current Portfolio.

The e-mail Alerts have a lot of specific information in them. Now it is important to interpret this information the right way. If the alert says we are going long at $15.25, and you look at the stock and it is $15.35, then go ahead and make the trade. Our entry price will be what is listed in the alert, but a few pennies here or there won't make much difference in the long run. But, don't chase a stock too far. In the example, I might go as high as $15.40 or $15.50 depending on the price action that day, but I don't recommend going much further than that. If it is a higher priced stock maybe you give it more latitude. With a lower priced stock you will want to be more precise as 10 cents is a greater percentage of a lower priced stock than a higher priced stock. There will also be times when you can get a better price. When that happens you will be able to make up for other times. Be flexible but keep you emotions under control.

The Stops and Targets top

Once you are in a position the focus becomes on getting out right. Don't expect to sell at the very high. While that might happen from time to time making that a goal will drive you insane. Trust me, when I first started trading I got a huge winner exactly right. That success screwed me up for a year because I kept trying to repeat the perfect trade. Let me save you the trouble. There is no perfect trade. If we get out with a one cent gain then it is a good trade because you avoided a loss. If we get out with a 7% loss it stinks but our risk management will keep us from taking a really big loss. If we end up with a 30% gain...well that is pretty good too.

Our stop and target prices are subject to change daily. What a stock does today impacts the expectations for tomorrow and the next day. If a current position gets close to its stop price we will send an automatically generated stop alert. Stops are done automatically to make sure the information is sent out in as timely fashion as possible. However, just because we send a stop does not mean to exit the trade. The stops are sent before the stop price is reached. It is an early warning system. I think that is a lot better than telling you we sold a stock at our stop price long after it went through it.

As we manage the current positions try to keep the positions in perspective. Trading can be emotional, but we really want to keep emotion out of the decision making process. It's the stock doing what we want it to do, is it acting normal, or do we need to sell it? These are the factors to consider. Having a gain or a loss is not important. If the stock is acting poorly when it should be strong then it is time to move on.

We also use Targets. Targets lock in gains where as stops protect gains. Some folks don't like targets because they think it puts a limit on the upside. Well, it does. It also can make a big difference in a gain though. A target may be 10% above a stop price. If the target is reaches and the stock later falls to the stop price you were better off exiting at the target. In short, using targets improves overall returns.

The NDX and SPX Trading Systems top

After the daily outlook we have two index trading systems which employ the same methodology; however, when we have a higher degree of confidence in our market call we will use an appropriate strategy. The NDX trading system is based on the NASD 100 index. The symbol on my quote service is NDX, so I call it the NDX system. The other is the S&P 500 system whose symbol is SPX. These are both cash indices and it is not possible to actually trade the NDX and the SPX unless you have a whole lot of money. The easiest way to take advantage of these trading recommendations is to trade the ETF equivalents, which are the QQQ and the SPY. The SPY normally trades at a premium to the cash index while the QQQ normally trades at a discount. The formula for each is:
SPY = [ SPX + 3 to 5 points of premium ] divided by 10
QQQ = [ NDX -- 3 to 5 points of discount ] divided by 40

In our comments we often list the QQQ and SPY equivalent prices, but I can not express how important it is to focus on the action of the SPX and NDX. In a fast market the premiums and discounts on the ETF's will expand or contract and that will affect your entry price, but this is give and take. Sometimes your price will be better sometimes worse. Over a period of time the differences should equalize.

Each day buy and sell points are displayed on the charts, but in our comments we don't always discuss them. Follow the instructions in the comments.

Hop&Pop Stocks top

Hop&Pop Stocks are additional trading ideas for those of you that want more stocks to look at on your own. I look at the current list of stocks on a daily basis, but additions and deletions are not made daily. Specifically deletions are not likely to be timely so if you are trading these stocks you need to set your own risk parameters for a timely exit.

A Hop&Pop Stock is a stock that traded a lot of volume recently, volume was hopping, and the price is popping higher. First I screen for stocks that are up on volume. Then I run that list through an algorithm that looks for a Cup with Handle formation. Ideally we want a stock that is popping higher from a handle on strong volume, hence Hop&Pop.

Just keep in mind that these trading recommendations are outside our Breakout Trading Portfolio and they "don't count" in our official record.

That covers the Essential Guide to Tactical Trading. The comments below briefly explain several concepts we use in our basic approach to analyzing the market on a daily basis. If you are new to the service I recommend you read the Daily Outlook for a few days. Once you are familiar with our comments you can return to this section to answer questions that may arise. Though brief, I could write a book on this stuff, it should answer the basic questions. In addition, at the end is FAQ that should answer the most common questions and some terminology is explained.

How we analyze the market top

First off I want to talk about how we go about analyzing the market. We have four conceptual components, the trends, the pattern, Cycles, and the technicals. In the part called the technicals I include all technical oscillators, the internals, sentiment, and just about everything else.

The Directional Trends are one of our primary tools and the Directional Trend Table is updated every day. In short, the trend is your friend. While we follow the trends in five different time frames the concept is generally the same for each period. If a periods high is higher than the previous periods high the trend is up and vise versa. The picture below presents the basic concept. The bars can represent daily, weekly, monthly or even quarterly time periods. The basic concept is the same.

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Daily trends change often and signals only last several days. Weekly trends turn on average about once per month. The monthly trends are very important and when turns or signals are given we have to respect the message. Generally speaking, the longer the trend the more important the message. However, all of the time frames have their own unique behavioral characteristics. We constantly comment on them as changes occur. The quarterly trends don't change very often, only once or twice per year. They are best used as a general guideline reference. For more detail about the trends and their construction see the section on "How We Analyze the Market at the end of this guide."

I will need to mention the 3-day trend separately because they are a little different than the others. The principals are the same but the 3 day time span is unique. The 3-day trend is one of the most reliable indicators I have encountered. It consistently provides reliable  forward looking information about 70% of the time and that is an uncommon level of accuracy in this business. Note, it is important to understand that if it is right 70% of the time we know it will be wrong 30% of the time too. Nothing in the market is 100% and good traders know this. Successful traders tailor their approach and risk management techniques with the knowledge and expectation that they will be wrong and they will take losses. It is the nature of this business, but the key to success is a flexible approach that maximizes gains when the market is generous and curtails losses during the less prosperous periods.

Next we have the pattern. For this we use a rather complicated approach called Elliot Wave Analysis. Some folks think this is the Holy Grail but we all know there is no Holy Grail when it comes to technical analysis. Elliot Waves are somewhat complex, but the basic idea is simple There are two kinds of moves, impulsive and corrective. Each one has its own characteristics, and once a move of either type is complete it is generally followed by a move of the other type. Impulsive moves are supposed to go somewhere, while corrective moves correct the excesses built up during an impulsive move. A strong advance is impulsive. The pullback or consolidation before the next wave higher is the corrective move. There are a lot of rules and guidelines that govern the details over what comes next and how far a move should go  and so on. Just remember when we say a move has an impulsive nature or corrective nature this is what we are referring to. Impulsive moves are also in the direction of the longer-term trend. The picture below presents the basic concept in its simplest form.

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While the blue lines are impulsive moves, the entire advance from the low to the high is an impulsive move with two corrective moves along the way. This fractal nature of Elliott Wave makes it a very useful tool across a broad spectrum of time periods. However, I think it is best to look for the best near-term interpretation and to keep that separate from larger structures. This is another way of saying I think the fractal nature has a limit and pushing beyond this limit can lead to very erroneous conclusions. When the pattern correlates with our other techniques it is very effective. When I start on a perfect world expectation on a daily basis it is most likely being drawn from this approach.

Cycles are cyclical. We use a variety of techniques for cycle forecasting. Some are fixed, some are variable, and some are irregular. Cycles are great but there are a few major drawbacks. One is that a cycle can appear and be rock steady for a long time and then just disappear with no warning. The other problem is that sometimes cycles invert. By this I mean when you are expecting a cycle high but you get a low instead. This is more common for some series than others.

The most important concept of cycle analysis is not which cycle you use, but to simply understand that cycles exist and they exist within one another. From 1982 to 2000 we were in a bull cycle. Since 2000 we have been in a bear cycle. But during each of those cycles we have seen smaller bull cycles and smaller bear cycles. In addition, by having a cyclical component you will always be estimating when or where the next turning point will be. Cyclical expectations force you to realize that despite hopes or desires each up leg will be followed by a down leg. Because we track larger and smaller cycles we can assign more or less importance to an expected cycle turning point. When a big cycle is due to turn at the same time as a small cycle then the market is probably going to change direction. Then we add in expectations from the pattern and the trends and when it all comes together you can make an extremely accurate forecast. In late November 2002 everything lined up perfectly. I correctly called for a market high at the end of November 2002 and expected a weak December. For the record the S&P 500 reached its closing high on November 27, 2002 and fell over 5% during the month of December.

Fourth is the technical component. Basically I call everything not discussed above a technical component. Technicals include the market internals and all the oscillators related to them. I also include any standard technical indicator. The ones that are standard in shrink-wrapped charting applications. Examples include things like Relative Strength, Moving Average Convergence/Divergence (MACD), and Stochastic. Other things like the sentiment indicators, the put/call ratio, and the VIX index also come in this group.

I even put fundamental news events and economic releases in this category. While they are not technical in any way I am much more interested in the technical dynamics of the response to the news than to the news itself. Who cares if the news is good or bad. We have all seen the market go up on bad news. We have also seen it go down on good news. Well, what if the market rises with poor technicals on good news? Who cares what the news is, if the rally sports poor technicals then it is likely to fail and that is what I think is important from a technical standpoint.

In a perfect world all disciplines will converge and convey the same message but this is the stock market and things are rarely a perfect fit. However, when several approaches align with the same message we have confidence in the signals. Most of the time we will have a strong signal from one component and the others will provide the supporting evidence, which allows us to make some really great market calls. When everything lines up I will let you know and you will be able to act with confidence.

Common Terms Explained and Frequently Asked Questions top

  • Directional Trend Summary Table
    • Key Trend Turn and Signal Points
      • U @ = The price where the trend will turn Up
      • B @ = The price where a buy signal will be given
      • D @ = The price where the trend will turn Down
      • S @ = The price where a Sell signal will be given
    • Net breadth is advancing issues minus declining issues.
    • Net Directional volume is up volume minus down volume.
    • Total volume is self explanatory.
    • The Arrows pointing up and down indicate today's value relative to the previous value. Pointing up indicates a larger value while down is means a smaller value.
    • Buying Pressure and Selling Pressure
      • Daily Buy Pressure is a relative measure of daily up volume to the recent average of daily up volume. This tells us how strong up volume or buying is relative to what it has been like. On a normal "flat" day we would expect a reading of 50%. Anything higher than 50% indicates buying pressure is healthy. 80% or higher is very strong and the unique aspect of this proprietary indicator is that it can go above 100%. When buying is above 100% it is a really strong day. We contrast these daily readings with other metrics and when something remarkable happens we will explain all the details and the potential meaning.
      • Daily Sell Pressure is a relative measure of daily down volume to the recent average of down volume. When high, near or above 100%, it tells us that selling was much stronger than average.
      • 8-Day Buy and Sell Pressure These are 8-day weighted averages of the daily readings. If the 8-day numbers are 55%-57% then the market internals are suggesting the trend is sustainable.
    • The 5-day RSI's shown are based on the Wilder RSI Formula. In short the further these metrics move above 70 the more overbought the market is. Below 30 indicates oversold. 80 and 20 are very overbought and though very rare, numbers above 90 or below 10 indicate an extreme situation that will likely mark an important turn. If we have an expectation for the market to reverse lower and the RSI readings are overbought we can have greater confidence in the expectations.
  • What do the ** mean in front of some of the stock symbols?
    • If you see ** in front of a stock symbol it means the stock is a new position. This makes it easy to distinguish which stocks are new to the list.
  • The Target or Stop price changed, why?
    • Every day we look at where a stock is and where it has the potential to go. The stops and targets are adjusted accordingly, and they change often.
  • You rarely talk about the Names of the Companies, why?
    • I am a technical analyst. For short-term trading I have found it can be advantageous not to know much about the company you are trading. There is always a risk of some fundamental development, but in the day and age of fair disclosure no one should know when or if a significant development is coming. However, knowing when earnings reports are due out is not a bad idea. Basically I find it is easier to sell a stock when I don't know anything about it. If I learn what the company does or if I read a bullish report I might like it. Then it may become difficult to part with it and that can become expensive.
  • Under Days Held, why do some say HOLD while others just list a number?
    • If you see exit, that means we will exit the stock at the end of trading the following day.
    • If you see hold it means we are happy with the stock after holding it for a week and we will give the trade more time to develop.

top

Jim Patterson

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 24 January 2007 )
 
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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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