This idea has just recently occurred to me, should Amazon buy Tesla? They seem to making headways into every aspect of our lives, why not energy generation and electric cars too?
Likely the most upside could come from merging their space programs, Blue Origin and SpaceX. A joining of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos could reshape technology in a completely new direction.
What kind of growth premium could space exploration demand? Think of the possibilities in travel, colonization, etc.
I saw a stat last week on Twitter showing AMZN gaining $20B in market cap since the Whole Foods acquisition, and therefore paying for the deal 1.5x already. What an interesting purchase..
Probably the most accessible and immediate application would be Alexa in your
car. Imagine the scenario of leaving the office, climbing into your
Tesla and your wife calls saying we need a few things from the store.
You say: "Alexa, I need Peanut Butter, Milk, Bread, and 1lb of
Hamburger". You drive to your newest Whole Foods, pull up outside the
entrance, and an employee delivers the groceries to your vehicle. No
need to pay either because your Prime account has already been billed.
What Tesla needs is funding, Amazon could provide all the capital they would ever need. Tesla offers the most brilliant engineering minds in
the world. Intellectual property meets unlimited capital.
As far as the stocks are concerned both continue to trade near their all-time highs and are in strong position going forward as growth leaders.
Tesla's stock has just thrown back to retest a 3-year horizontal resistance level. It appears TSLA is beginning a new secular breakout.
I think Goldman has been doing some buying...I'll put it this way, they don't make downgrades to prove how smart they are to us lowly retail investors. They want to accumulate positions...Just a hunch ; )
This doesn't even have to be a full takeover, though I don't see the regulators having too much conflict in such an event. But in my view it appears to be a match made for a possible future merger.
I am sure there are those much smarter than myself who could offer plenty of additional reasons why this should or should not be done, I simply find it intriguing from a technology and diversification standpoint. Whether it ever happens or not I have no idea, but the possibilities from such a merge could absolutely change the way we live.
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Saturday, July 8, 2017
Regional Banks Build Bullish Patterns
Taking a look at Regional Bank ETF KRE on multiple timeframes
Monthly
In November of last year KRE emerged from a 10-year base following its inception in 2006. This is the equivalent of a "post-IPO" base for a newly issued equity. The recent breakout above the prior high from 2006 is what has my attention here.
The base has formed a decade-long Cup/Handle pattern that is currently in motion. November's breakout kicked off the pattern and since we have seen price consolidate sideways, all the while holding above that 2006 high.
This is a huge pattern and these don't resolve overnight or over the course of a few weeks. Often the length of rally will resemble the length of base its emerging from. It is not impossible we could only be 7-months into a 10-year bull market for Regional Banking stocks.
For this analysis to be invalidated price would need to trade below the November 2016 low.
Weekly
The Weekly shows a closer look at the 7-month breakout consolidation. Participants got quite negative in March and then again in May when there was a lot of discussion that KRE was forming a Head/Shoulder Top. As with any price pattern, nothing is confirmed until price breaks down through key support. In this case the support from those prior highs in '06 was never violated and price has since reversed back higher and is pressing against a significant resistance level.
A breakdown below the $51 support would become more problematic for the intermediate-term trend. Above that however the setup remains very constructive.
Daily
The Daily chart looks very positive to me as well. Price continues to press against the $56.50 resistance. Once the range from 3/21 is overcome it should be a quick shot to the prior highs near $60.
Due to the size of the overall pattern on the larger timeframes, this range breakout could be the launchpad to reignite the prior trend.
Hourly
Zooming in on the Hourly chart the trend is in firm position. The past 4-weeks have formed a Cup/Handle pattern and recently a bull flag into the rising 50 SMA. A move over about $56 would kick off this shorter-term pattern.
When viewing Regional Banks on multiple timeframes it appears to me that they are all suggesting the same thing. Patterns don't always play out but they give us an indication of the market's intentions and a way to measure risk.
From my view it looks like these Banks want to push higher, until price suggests otherwise I will continue to put money to work as the patterns suggest.
Monthly
In November of last year KRE emerged from a 10-year base following its inception in 2006. This is the equivalent of a "post-IPO" base for a newly issued equity. The recent breakout above the prior high from 2006 is what has my attention here.
The base has formed a decade-long Cup/Handle pattern that is currently in motion. November's breakout kicked off the pattern and since we have seen price consolidate sideways, all the while holding above that 2006 high.
This is a huge pattern and these don't resolve overnight or over the course of a few weeks. Often the length of rally will resemble the length of base its emerging from. It is not impossible we could only be 7-months into a 10-year bull market for Regional Banking stocks.
For this analysis to be invalidated price would need to trade below the November 2016 low.
The Weekly shows a closer look at the 7-month breakout consolidation. Participants got quite negative in March and then again in May when there was a lot of discussion that KRE was forming a Head/Shoulder Top. As with any price pattern, nothing is confirmed until price breaks down through key support. In this case the support from those prior highs in '06 was never violated and price has since reversed back higher and is pressing against a significant resistance level.
A breakdown below the $51 support would become more problematic for the intermediate-term trend. Above that however the setup remains very constructive.
Daily
The Daily chart looks very positive to me as well. Price continues to press against the $56.50 resistance. Once the range from 3/21 is overcome it should be a quick shot to the prior highs near $60.
Due to the size of the overall pattern on the larger timeframes, this range breakout could be the launchpad to reignite the prior trend.
Hourly
Zooming in on the Hourly chart the trend is in firm position. The past 4-weeks have formed a Cup/Handle pattern and recently a bull flag into the rising 50 SMA. A move over about $56 would kick off this shorter-term pattern.
When viewing Regional Banks on multiple timeframes it appears to me that they are all suggesting the same thing. Patterns don't always play out but they give us an indication of the market's intentions and a way to measure risk.
From my view it looks like these Banks want to push higher, until price suggests otherwise I will continue to put money to work as the patterns suggest.
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Tech Rotation
To close out the week we saw many of the major leading names get
pounded along with any other tech stock you can think of. The NASDAQ Composite
declined -1.8%, while the QQQ and XLK ETF’s dropped -2.5%.
What is astonishing despite this carnage is that the SP500
finished the day unchanged and the Dow Jones was up nearly ½ a percent!
Normally if the market was set for a broad correction, when the leading index
completely falls out of bed the other Indices follow suit and decline even
more.
However, Friday was a day marked by textbook market
rotation. Hardly any other sectors were phased by the slaughter that went on in
Technology. In fact, Financials, Industrials, Health Care, and Materials all
rallied fairly substantially.
We've been waiting for the extended Tech sector to cool-off and it seems that time may have arrived. This doesn’t mean sell
everything indiscriminately, but it is prudent to reduce exposure to
the prior large winning positions we have held for some time now.
I
want to discuss what it means to watch price behavior for adverse “changes” to
a prevailing trend. When a trend has been tremendously strong (at least on an
intermediate basis) it pays to stick with that trend through normal
retracements as long as the behavior of the price action is within a “normal”
character. Let’s look at the Financials (Regional Banks-KRE) for a recent
example of what this means.
In November price made what appeared to be a major bullish shift
in momentum by breaking out of a multi-month range. We then saw a sharp rally
for 6-weeks which consolidated orderly with no real shocks to the prevailing
trend. Consolidations after rallies can have little shakeout attempts (as seen
in the middle of January) but follow-through is important to watch for in the
following week or two. Price held the initial dip and then resumed normally to
new highs.
It wasn’t until the gap higher rally that then saw a
shocking reversal the following day that participants began to be alerted to a
potential change in character. It is one thing for a consolidation to provide a
one day shakeout, it is another to see a very bullish indication (gap higher
from a consolidation) immediately sold and reversed so strongly, which occurred
on March 2nd.
The ensuing action the next week or two provided zero sign
of recovery, price continued to drift lower and all rally attempts were faded
quickly. This is the follow-through confirmation we look for.
Clearly something had changed in the behavior after the
Outside reversal from new highs, shares were then being distributed on any
strength rather than accumulated in an orderly consolidation.
Seeing no relief during this time the bottom finally gave
way mid-March with a selling day that has defined the market action since.
There was a bit of a pop at the end of March but for all intents and purposes,
price has been contained in a volatile sideways trend bounded by the March 21st
range since.
Turning to the Tech sector, it is possible we may be seeing
that initial shock to the prevailing, extended trend.
The
Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) has been red-hot since the January breakout
It should be noted there have been two one-day shakeout
attempts since the January breakout began, one in mid-March and another
mid-May. Note that neither saw a single day’s worth of follow-through.
One key item that seems different to me with Friday’s
reversal is the sheer width of intraday trading range. While the other two
attempts to break trend were relatively wide, Friday’s range was roughly double
those prior days.
Obviously the most important factor will be watching how
price now reacts over the next couple weeks. If there is no problem and this
too was just another shakeout attempt, we should see price stabilize quickly
and recover. What Tech bulls don’t want to see however would be action similar
to the Financials in mid-March; they don’t want to see Friday’s low taken out
on a closing basis and certainly don’t want to see any rally attempt sold into
strength.
Bottom line the trend remains intact for now as no lower
lows were made, price is above its 50 Day and 20 Week SMA’s. But evidence is
beginning to mount that suggests Tech may be due for an extended rest over the
coming summer doldrums ahead.
Saturday, April 29, 2017
CRHM: Position Review
I received many questions regarding the increased volatility in CRHM this week. This is a position I have been involved with since the middle of last year and would like to discuss my ongoing management of this trade.
To preface, this is a perfect example of what I discuss with members about not chasing extended Monthly charts. When prices begin to stretch well beyond the longer-term trend averages the likelihood of an adverse retracement increases substantially. The proper time to get involved with a long-term uptrend is after prices have rested and are near the trend average.
A lot of traders get caught up in the Daily movements of stocks and assume after a 3-week pullback that the stock is in strong posture to continue in the desired direction. However without assessing the longer-term trends they often are entering a position that has much higher risk than they are preparing for. In this game managing risk is of paramount importance, knowing when a stock in the vicinity of "high risk" can go a long way to reducing that initial risk. This is not to say that momentum cannot continue and the stock cannot become more extended, it certainly can. But in the market we are not forced to trade, we can wait for our pitch, it is not necessary to take an increased risk for the chance that this particular stock continues to defy the odds.
In my experience and testing it is not the strongest play to ignore long-term posture of the stock even when entering for a shorter-term trade. Unless you are a highly experienced, highly skilled, and very short-term trader, most often returns will grind to a halt because of chasing stocks that are due for a period of longer-term consolidation. Stock trends ebb and flow, depending on your timeframe that can mean the difference between a normal trend digestion and a shakeout due to increased short-term volatility.
Key point #1 to effectively manage risk and trade fast growing stocks: Don't chase extended Monthly charts
This is the first rule I consider when entering a new position; has the monthly chart rested and coiled near the longer-term average OR has price expanded beyond its prior base support, leaving a significant amount of "air" between price and the trend average?
According to my method of trading longer-term growth stocks, CRHM has presented 3 places to enter at the lowest risk/reward. Only three times since the IPO has this stock offered the "right pitch" for me to strongly enter with the best odds of success.
The optimal entry point revolves around a tight consolidation as price moves into the rising 20 Month SMA. This combination gives a relatively close stop and the coiled spring for a "liftoff" move.
Key point #2: "re-balance" position size as the longer-term trend extends.
Something I do to keep risk in check with stocks that have since run strongly from prior consolidation is to re-balance the position size at certain intervals. As an example I like to keep individual position sizes to roughly 10% of total account. Once a position grows beyond 10% of total equity risk to the portfolio becomes more lopsided to that individual issue. In terms of diversification, if a holding grows to 15% of total equity (+50% appreciation in the position), I will "re-balance" the size back to the 10% portfolio allocation. The intervals I use for rebalancing are +50%, +100%, +200%, etc.
Entry points are shown in Green with "re-balance'' sales shown in Red at +50% and +100% gain. Stops only trail to where viable support has been established. I determine established support once a new consolidation forms and then resumes higher. Currently the most recent Weekly stop is below the 12/30/16 Bull Flag signal at $5.15. Monthly stops remain under the most relevant monthly support established in September 2016 at $3.40.
The theory behind this method is twofold:
1. Continue to allocate the majority of funds toward the strongest risk/reward opportunities (those opportunities that are just emerging from periods of consolidation near the trend average).
2. Keep overall portfolio balance which allows for extended trades to have plenty of room to consolidate without emotional bias in the event of retracement.
Once stocks begin to run vertical, having a way to manage open risk becomes very important for outperforming returns. As prices stretch risk increases, some may argue this point, but its true. As prices consolidate risk decreases. I try to position my funds toward the lowest risk and reduce away from higher risk.
This method allows for a stock like CRHM to undergo a normal correction without making us react adversely in an emotional way. Since the longer-term trend has not been damaged, the position remains valid. But to ignore that prices are at a higher risk of correction places unnecessary exposure onto the portfolio. I never advocate exiting a position entirely due to it simply trading higher, but it is also not required to maintain 100% exposure to a position 100% of the time. Scaling around a holding allows for flexibility and better managed risk for the overall account.
To preface, this is a perfect example of what I discuss with members about not chasing extended Monthly charts. When prices begin to stretch well beyond the longer-term trend averages the likelihood of an adverse retracement increases substantially. The proper time to get involved with a long-term uptrend is after prices have rested and are near the trend average.
A lot of traders get caught up in the Daily movements of stocks and assume after a 3-week pullback that the stock is in strong posture to continue in the desired direction. However without assessing the longer-term trends they often are entering a position that has much higher risk than they are preparing for. In this game managing risk is of paramount importance, knowing when a stock in the vicinity of "high risk" can go a long way to reducing that initial risk. This is not to say that momentum cannot continue and the stock cannot become more extended, it certainly can. But in the market we are not forced to trade, we can wait for our pitch, it is not necessary to take an increased risk for the chance that this particular stock continues to defy the odds.
In my experience and testing it is not the strongest play to ignore long-term posture of the stock even when entering for a shorter-term trade. Unless you are a highly experienced, highly skilled, and very short-term trader, most often returns will grind to a halt because of chasing stocks that are due for a period of longer-term consolidation. Stock trends ebb and flow, depending on your timeframe that can mean the difference between a normal trend digestion and a shakeout due to increased short-term volatility.
Key point #1 to effectively manage risk and trade fast growing stocks: Don't chase extended Monthly charts
This is the first rule I consider when entering a new position; has the monthly chart rested and coiled near the longer-term average OR has price expanded beyond its prior base support, leaving a significant amount of "air" between price and the trend average?
According to my method of trading longer-term growth stocks, CRHM has presented 3 places to enter at the lowest risk/reward. Only three times since the IPO has this stock offered the "right pitch" for me to strongly enter with the best odds of success.
The optimal entry point revolves around a tight consolidation as price moves into the rising 20 Month SMA. This combination gives a relatively close stop and the coiled spring for a "liftoff" move.
Key point #2: "re-balance" position size as the longer-term trend extends.
Something I do to keep risk in check with stocks that have since run strongly from prior consolidation is to re-balance the position size at certain intervals. As an example I like to keep individual position sizes to roughly 10% of total account. Once a position grows beyond 10% of total equity risk to the portfolio becomes more lopsided to that individual issue. In terms of diversification, if a holding grows to 15% of total equity (+50% appreciation in the position), I will "re-balance" the size back to the 10% portfolio allocation. The intervals I use for rebalancing are +50%, +100%, +200%, etc.
Entry points are shown in Green with "re-balance'' sales shown in Red at +50% and +100% gain. Stops only trail to where viable support has been established. I determine established support once a new consolidation forms and then resumes higher. Currently the most recent Weekly stop is below the 12/30/16 Bull Flag signal at $5.15. Monthly stops remain under the most relevant monthly support established in September 2016 at $3.40.
The theory behind this method is twofold:
1. Continue to allocate the majority of funds toward the strongest risk/reward opportunities (those opportunities that are just emerging from periods of consolidation near the trend average).
2. Keep overall portfolio balance which allows for extended trades to have plenty of room to consolidate without emotional bias in the event of retracement.
Once stocks begin to run vertical, having a way to manage open risk becomes very important for outperforming returns. As prices stretch risk increases, some may argue this point, but its true. As prices consolidate risk decreases. I try to position my funds toward the lowest risk and reduce away from higher risk.
This method allows for a stock like CRHM to undergo a normal correction without making us react adversely in an emotional way. Since the longer-term trend has not been damaged, the position remains valid. But to ignore that prices are at a higher risk of correction places unnecessary exposure onto the portfolio. I never advocate exiting a position entirely due to it simply trading higher, but it is also not required to maintain 100% exposure to a position 100% of the time. Scaling around a holding allows for flexibility and better managed risk for the overall account.
Saturday, April 8, 2017
Quick Observation on This Week's News Events
In regard to this week’s news flow, apparently the market
doesn’t think whatever it was that went on in Syria matters for US corporate
profits. At the onset of the bombing Thursday evening S&P500 Futures fell
20 points, but within a couple hours prices had completely reversed and were
nearly flat on the session. We also saw a softer than expected Jobs Report for
March. With the combined military action and weaker than expected economic report
I would have expected the market to be lower by at least 1%. That simply wasn’t the
case at all as for most of the day prices flipped into the green multiple times
and ended flat on the day.
It is some very interesting price action we are seeing.
Nobody is committed to selling this market. In the face of bad news on multiple
fronts it simply shrugged and relatively strong stocks continued to rally. The
recent action overall has been softer for the past month, this “event”
seemingly should have caused raucous noise and very volatile trading, yet it
didn’t. Be sure to note that behavior. It is suggestive of great strength in
the underlying price action.
Sunday, March 12, 2017
Retests or Bull Traps?
Something we always need to watch out for are when bullish
patterns go through their inevitable pullback/retests; we want to watch that
the pattern formation doesn’t fail. Pullbacks and retests are very normal price
behavior following breakouts and rallies. They are normal so long as the
pattern doesn’t break and set a lower low.
When bullish patterns trigger we expect price to remain firm
and hold the higher swing low created by the new breakout. If the pattern is to
stay intact price will resume higher after the period of consolidation.
Take a look at CLF as an example of this:
Since the trend reversal in early 2016 the stock has been in
a steady trend of higher highs and higher lows. The stock pulls back into the
rising 20 Week SMA and then resumes higher with a strong reaction breakout.
Each pullback forms a higher swing low compared to the prior low
keeping the pattern valid.
Currently we are seeing the fourth such pullback since 2016.
What we need to watch for is does CLF hold the prior low near 8.25 and
resume higher with another breakout (as it has done each time in this rally) OR
does this pattern fail by breaking through the prior
low?
Unfortunately, we don’t have a crystal ball so
we can’t know with certainty whether this is the time the pattern fails or if it
just resumes back higher like the previous instances. What we can do is identify character change in the market. For more than a year CLF has
rallied, tripling from the first bull flag signal in April 2016 ($4 to a high
of over $12), the trend of higher highs and higher lows has remained intact
this whole time. If this trend were to change and price makes a lower low, we
will have proof that something is changing. Maybe it’s a temporary change or
maybe it completely reverses the new positive trend, we can’t know that either.
It is our job as risk
managers to avoid the situations where no pattern exists and to stick with
those that do. As long as CLF can maintain its recent higher low the pattern
will be intact and we will stick with the bullish pattern. If it fails we will
stop out and take our gains.
Keeping the signals and strategy simple is what gives us our edge;
being able to identify with clarity what the situation is at any given time
helps align us with the market. We need to be watchful of these changes in
character. The individual stocks will give us the early indication of the
overall intentions. When we begin to see many bullish trends fail we know that
the underlying support for the market is weakening. Until the patterns break
however it means we need to stick with the market as the overall trend remains intact.
Monday, February 13, 2017
Fractal Trading Using CELG
You may have heard before that markets are "fractal". Well what does that mean and how do we apply it?
A Fractal is defined as: a curve or geometric figure, each part of which has the same statistical character as the whole. Fractals are useful in modeling structures (such as eroded coastlines or snowflakes) in which similar patterns recur at progressively smaller scales, and in describing partly random or chaotic phenomena such as crystal growth, fluid turbulence, and galaxy formation.
Simply put patterns in nature seem to repeat in similar shape or dimension on any scale. We see this fractal behavior occur in financial markets as well. Seeming chaos can actually be reduced to simple patterns that play out across multiple timeframes and in different magnitude.
For an example of this phenomenon lets take a look at Biotech giant Celgene (CELG):
Monthly
On the long-term Monthly chart we can see this "flag" like formation following a strong rally. After the stock moves higher it undergoes a period of rest in an orderly and somewhat "flag" or triangle like pattern.
Weekly
The Weekly chart zooms in on the larger Monthly pattern and we can see following the sharp November rally price then underwent a rest period in a similar "flag" shape as the larger pattern above.
Daily
Taking the timeframe down a step further to the Daily it shows another sharp rally to end January and is now in a period of rest in a similar pattern.
Hourly
Finally zooming into the intra-day action on the Hourly chart we can see today's action with a sharp rally at the open of trading and then a rest period for the remainder of the day.
This "flag" pattern is not unique to the fractal phenomenon, there are many other examples of how patterns repeat across all timeframes in financial charting. But it should be noted that any of these formations can be traded within their own time periods for similar relative results.
I prefer to use these patterns as confirmation of each other. When I see a stock displaying similar behavior on all major timeframes it gives a hint to how it will trade moving forward. None of this is directly predictive but it gives us a method for managing risk and making effective moves within a seemingly meaningless set of lines on a graph.
In this game pattern recognition and risk management are the two most important aspects of success. It is critical to understand how prices behave across multiple timeframes and how to position in sympathy with that action until it changes.
A Fractal is defined as: a curve or geometric figure, each part of which has the same statistical character as the whole. Fractals are useful in modeling structures (such as eroded coastlines or snowflakes) in which similar patterns recur at progressively smaller scales, and in describing partly random or chaotic phenomena such as crystal growth, fluid turbulence, and galaxy formation.
Simply put patterns in nature seem to repeat in similar shape or dimension on any scale. We see this fractal behavior occur in financial markets as well. Seeming chaos can actually be reduced to simple patterns that play out across multiple timeframes and in different magnitude.
For an example of this phenomenon lets take a look at Biotech giant Celgene (CELG):
Monthly
On the long-term Monthly chart we can see this "flag" like formation following a strong rally. After the stock moves higher it undergoes a period of rest in an orderly and somewhat "flag" or triangle like pattern.
Weekly
The Weekly chart zooms in on the larger Monthly pattern and we can see following the sharp November rally price then underwent a rest period in a similar "flag" shape as the larger pattern above.
Daily
Taking the timeframe down a step further to the Daily it shows another sharp rally to end January and is now in a period of rest in a similar pattern.
Hourly
Finally zooming into the intra-day action on the Hourly chart we can see today's action with a sharp rally at the open of trading and then a rest period for the remainder of the day.
This "flag" pattern is not unique to the fractal phenomenon, there are many other examples of how patterns repeat across all timeframes in financial charting. But it should be noted that any of these formations can be traded within their own time periods for similar relative results.
I prefer to use these patterns as confirmation of each other. When I see a stock displaying similar behavior on all major timeframes it gives a hint to how it will trade moving forward. None of this is directly predictive but it gives us a method for managing risk and making effective moves within a seemingly meaningless set of lines on a graph.
In this game pattern recognition and risk management are the two most important aspects of success. It is critical to understand how prices behave across multiple timeframes and how to position in sympathy with that action until it changes.
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