InvestmentHouse.com Members Archives
Archives
 

us stock market, trade stock

* * * *
1/02/03 Investment House Alerts Report
* * *
IH Alert Subscribers:

MARKET ALERTS:
Targets hit alerts issued Thursday: None issued
Buy alerts issued: NSCN; CVD; SYK; RBK
Trailing stops issued: None issued
Stop alerts issued: None issued

Signs of economic improvement raise hope for the new year.

There is a saying that as the first days of January go so does the year. Before we get too excited, recall that the indexes were up the first three trading sessions of 2003 before ultimately hitting a new bear market low later in the year. As with most generalizations, that saying applies to normal times. Suffering through the worst bear market for stocks since the Great Depression it is a stretch to say that such a generalization would work right now. As always we have to look at the nuts and bolts behind each rally attempt to see if it has what it takes to stand up.

Stocks were upbeat before the open in a continuation of the Thursday intraday reversal that turned stocks back from their recent selling. Things kicked into high gear, however, when the ISM was released with results far ahead of expectations. Buying picked up at that point and sellers never could enter the picture. Slow mid-day action held the gains, and then stocks drifted higher as institutions started putting some money to work, most likely dragged in by the SP500 and DJ30 clearing their simple 50 day MVA in the afternoon session. Breadth was impressive and volume picked up, but it was not a blowout session as the raw price gains would suggest. Laggards led the move back as there were few breakouts on volume and overall volume was still low. It was a good start to a recovery that may blossom into more.

THE MARKET

After holding support Monday and Tuesday the large caps made good on that action by bolting higher, clearing the 50 day MVA. Nasdaq rallied as well as chips finally moved higher, though Nasdaq could not clear the 50 day MVA as trading closed out. It was a day led by stocks rebounding from recent selling as opposed to breakouts plowing higher. The recent selling was more than a small pullback and damaged some patterns, and as noted previously, there are not as many of those 'building patterns' that there were in October when the chip stocks and other sectors were positioning themselves for a nice run higher. Nonetheless, when the market bottomed in October the patterns were not that great. If stocks such as KLAC, NVLS, etc. can break over their 50 day MVA and then test that level on low volume, they would be set for another such run along with the leading stocks that would have had time to finish the last part of the bases.

That is one reason we did not get too excited today. We anticipated a continuation of the attempted move higher though admittedly the Thursday rally was stronger than anticipated with impressive breadth (3+:1) and rising volume. There were just not many breakouts leading the market higher, and there is still work to do if there is a serious move ahead. And it was not a 'January effect' rally as the small caps were lagging, following along for the ride as investors bought into the beaten back name brands. Again, as seen in October, that is not necessarily a bad thing: big names are bought first and then the rest of the market moves. The lack of a significant number of leader breakouts puts a question mark in the margin and keeps us cautious but ready to continue moving in as the moves warrant.

Market Sentiment

VIX: 28.52; -3.51
VXN: 47.05; +0.11

Put/Call Ratio (CBOE): 0.76; +0.11

Nasdaq

Rallied well with the help of semiconductors, closing right at the simple 50 day MVA on some rising volume.

Stats: +49.34 points (+3.69%) to close at 1384.85
Volume: 1.288B (+10.12%). Rising though still below average volume demonstrated some accumulation, but institutions were not jumping in with both feet.

Up Volume: 1.15B (+545M)
Down Volume: 111M (-426M). All buyers.

A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 2.24 to 1. Very impressive breadth, getting back to where it was during the October and November rally.
Previous Session: Advancers led 1.39 to 1

New Highs: 54 (-4)
New Lows: 20 (-38)

The Chart: http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/$compq.html

As with 2002 Nasdaq started the new year higher after a pullback following a good fall rally. It closed on its high, just eclipsing the simple 50 day MVA (1384.28). It was a solid move on some rising volume that avoided a collapse down in the head and shoulders pattern. Nasdaq is attempting to disrupt that pattern. It still needs to beat 1427 on volume to do it, and the Thursday move was a good start. The problem it has are that so many of its stocks are in the same toppy pattern as well. We can make some good trades up to the next resistance but have to be aware that they could run into trouble at that point. If real buying comes in along with that move that improves the prospect of a breakout. For now we take this for what it is, i.e., the start of a rebound that we can look to trade some but also looking for leaders to breakout to help confirm the move.

S&P 500/NYSE

Large caps were the leaders, plowing over the 50 day MVA to close at the top of the December consolidation range. Promising.

Stats: +29.21 points (+3.32%) to close at 909.03
NYSE Volume: 1.231B (+14.24%). Rising though still below average volume. Some institutional involvement but not a surge of big money buying.

Up Volume: 1.139B (+496M)
Down Volume: 75M (-332M)

A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 3.51 to 1. Very, very impressive breadth as stocks of all sizes moved higher.
Previous Session: Advancers led 1.74 to 1

New Highs: 67 (+16)
New Lows: 11 (-10)

The Chart: http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/$spx.html

Blasted over the 50 day MVA (902) and closed on the high right at the top of the December consolidation range that also marks the July, August, and September interim highs (909-911). It was a surge that was set up by the two intraday tests below support at 875. Now it remains to be seen whether it can break up the head and shoulders pattern with the left shoulder at 925. Very impressive start.

DJ30:

Tapped support at 8250 intraday Monday and Tuesday, and that was enough (along with a good economic report) to send blue chip stocks over the 50 day MVA (8549). Similar to the SP500, DJ30 needs to break over the early November high (8800) to make anything more happen. Volume was up sharply for the Dow stocks, coming in almost average, but again this was still lower than what you want to see on a surge in buying. Much of the action was spurred by JPM settling its litigation, and the momentum built off of that news.

Stats: +265.89 points (+3.19%) to close at 8607.52
Volume: 1.231B (+14.24%)

The Chart: http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/$indu.html

FRIDAY

Encore anyone? The close on the high has good momentum for the next session, but HD will be an early drag as it lowered its fiscal 2003 based on the December quarter. After such a strong move, some warnings could put an early damper on the action. That would be our preference; let stocks cool off a bit and then build into the session. Those tend to be the best upside days.

The move was solid, but there are problems with it as indicated. Without breakouts leading the way it is something like putting the cart before the horse. That can make for a nice trading move up to next major resistance and slightly beyond. In short, the move was solid and has the underpinnings to trade higher near term. It is lacking in solid patterns and volume at this stage. We can trade some stocks, buy some of the few breakouts, but be very cautious. If the rally turns into more than just a trading move we will gladly take it and expand our upside exposure. Until then we are treating this with extra caution.

Support and Resistance

Nasdaq: Closed at 1384.85
Resistance: Simple 50 day MVA (1384). The August high at 1427. The 200 day MVA (1447). Price resistance at 1500. 1574, the May low, is next.
Support: 1357, the 1998 bear market low. July, August, and September interim highs at 1345. Some price support at 1300. 1250 is the next price support after that.

S&P 500: Closed at 909.03
Resistance: The July, August and September interim highs at 909 to 911. 921 is some price resistance. The early November high at 925.66 and key resistance. Price resistance at 950. 965, the September 2001 closing low along with the August 2002 high.
Support: The exponential 50 day MVA (897). The simple 50 day MVA (902). The bottom of the October consolidation range at 875. The September 2000/May 2001 downtrend line at 849. 850 to 855 (the October 1997 and Q2 1998 lows). The March down trendline at 823.

Dow: Closed at 8607.52
Resistance: The top of the recent range at 8630. The late July and early September interim high at 8726 to 8762.14 (8745 closing). The early November high at 8800 is key. A range of resistance from 9000 on up to 9050.
Support: The October high at 8500. The exponential 50 day MVA (8492). 8250, the bottom of the October consolidation range. Then 8000.

Economic Calendar

12-30-02
Existing home sales, November (10:00): -3.5% (5.56M actual), 5.69M expected, 5.77M October.
Chicago PMI, December (10:00): 51.3 actual, 53.0 expected, 54.3 November.

12-31-02
Consumer confidence, December (10:00): 80.3 actual, 86.0 expected, 84.1 November.

1-02-03
Auto and truck sales
Initial jobless claims (8:30): 403K actual; 382K expected, 390K prior (revised from 378K).
ISM Index, December (10:00): 54.3 actual, 50.1 expected, 49.2 November.

1-03-03
Construction spending, November (10:00): 0.1% expected, 0.3% October.

SUBSCRIBER QUESTIONS

Q: We will be in earnings season soon, good time to play stocks that will be reporting on "anticipation" that they will beat the street. Whether they do or not does not matter because the run up prior to earnings can be significant. However, if you are in an earnings play and the company warns...well you aint a happy camper.

So my question is about the "quiet period". You have mentioned this before but your comments have been vague. Do you have a definition of what quiet period is and the exact time frame that it occurs? How many business days? Calendar days? Is it mandated by the SEC?

Many thanks for the hard work you guys and girls do!!

A: The reason we have been somewhat vague on the specifics in the past is because the SEC regulations that cover disclosures when a registration (e.g., earnings information) has been made are do not set out specific times and days. The term "quiet period" -- also referred to as the "waiting period" -- is not actually defined under the federal securities laws. It generally refers to the period that begins when a company files a registration statement with the SEC and lasts until the SEC's staff have declared the registration statement "effective." During this period, the federal securities laws limit what information a company and related parties can release to the public. The regulations do not set out when the SEC has to declare the statement effective. Thus there is not one day you can point to even if you know the date the company files the registration information. That makes it particularly hard to determine when you should bail on an earnings run if you are concerned of an earnings warning (something that is always a problem in this recovering economy).

HOLIDAY SPECIAL ON CD SEMINARS COMING TO AN END!!

Hurry. The holiday special on the CD seminars is coming to an end. Many have already taken advantage of the savings, and there is still time for those that have not. You get the CD's of the live seminars that you view right on your computer. You also get the comprehensive, reference quality manuals. We are giving you all 7 seminars and materials for the price of the 3 seminar package! That is a 45% savings!

There is an incredible wealth of knowledge, years of experience, and 'how to' plans of action in these seminars. As one graduate put it, "I had no idea how little I knew about market direction and the reasons behind it until I took your course." Our graduates over the past year and one-half have made the bear market in stocks their own private second bull market because they learned how to and when to enter the downside and make dramatic profit from what most investors dread. Have the knowledge to take advantage of any kind of market as well as the confidence to act when you see the action unfold. We cover it all from trends, to accumulation/distribution, patterns, stocks, buying and selling options naked, covered, or creating spreads. Go to
http://www.stockseminarsonline.com
and click on the holiday special label.

THE PLAYS:

New:

BRCM (Broadcom--$16.61; +1.55; optionable): Communication semiconductors
http://biz.yahoo.com/p/b/brcm.html
STATUS: Testing the 50 day MVA. BRCM peaked in late November, then sold back to the 50 day MVA (15.40) where it traded for the past three weeks. It never collapsed, and after a shakeout early this week it jumped off the 50 day on sharply rising volume Thursday. While it may test back toward the 50 day MVA after this initial move, we are looking at starting some positions for this trade up to the recent high near 21.
Volume: 10.209M Avg Volume: 10.93M
BUY POINT: $16.85 Volume=12M Target=$20.45 Stop=$15.67
POSITION: RCQ EC - May $15c (69 delta) and/or Stock
http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/brcm.html

COGN (Cognos--$23.99; +0.54; optionable): Application software
http://biz.yahoo.com/p/c/cogn.html
STATUS: Cup. COGN is working through a 10-month cup and has formed this short double bottom over the past 5 weeks using the 50 day MVA just over 22 as its support. Accumulation in the pattern is solid at 10 accumulation weeks to just 7 distribution weeks as money flow is strong and already turning up ahead of the stock price. COGN looks ready to give a breakout over near resistance and then move at least to its prior high. That moves provides a nice return in itself.
Volume: 875.657K Avg Volume: 1.031M
BUY POINT: $25.11 Volume=1.5M Target=$30.24 Stop=$23.35
POSITION: CRQ EY - MAY $25c (71 delta) and/or Stock
http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/cogn.html

SYMC (Symantec--$42.68; +2.17; optionable): Internet security software
http://biz.yahoo.com/p/s/symc.html
STATUS: Testing the 50 day MVA. SYMC was an early leader in the rally, and it has spent the past 5 weeks testing back to the 50 day MVA (40.85), consolidating the strong move off the September low. It tapped the 50 day in early December, bounced, and has now come back to tap it again. This looks like a neat little double bottom that is forming in quite a few leaders, and we want to use this pattern on the 50 day MVA test to take some positions in what has been a strong stock in this rally.
Volume: 3.026M Avg Volume: 3.622M
BUY POINT: $43.05 Volume=4.1M Target=$51 Stop=$40.04
POSITION: SYQ DH - April $40c (79 delta) and/or Stock
http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/symc.html

Revisited:

Play Date: 12/22/2002
NSCN (Netscreen Technologies--$17.68; +0.84; optionable): Security software
http://biz.yahoo.com/p/n/nscn.html
STATUS: Pennant. Starting the breakout from the pattern on some rising though still below average volume. Looks ready and all it needs is some volume.
Volume: 789.409K Avg Volume: 1.053M
BUY POINT: $17.24 Volume=1.8M Target=$21.24 Stop=$16.03
POSITION: QKN FC - June $15c (67 delta) and/or Stock
http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/nscn.html

End Part 1 of 2


us stock market
trade stock