Our View
Ladies & Gentlemen, the newsletter is all about being open, transparent, and honest. And we’ll be those things with you; Over the last few weeks, it’s been really hard for me to switch gears.
Long to short, short to long…it’s been exhausting — and that’s coming from someone who was on the trading floor for more than three decades!
We have been steadfast that the market is going to move lower, but we have to be cognizant of when the rallies might present themselves. If anything, just so we don’t get run over on the short side.
I know the markets are no good and know the rallies won’t last and that they are 100% dead-cat bounces. Even so, I have been slow to get out of my longs and go short. Yesterday, I said traders should exit their ES longs at 4508. The high was at 4509.
Still, it was tough to navigate when the whole thing fell apart (and I actually got out a little ahead of that price). My point is, take it easy on yourself because this market is a tough one.
Our Lean
Powell made it clear that the Fed plans on hiking interest rates by 0.50% during the May meeting, the first 0.50% rate increase since 2000. Powell also indicated that the Fed will formally announce plans to begin shrinking its $9 trillion asset portfolio in June.
Bullard was speaking too. He mentioned that “the world didn’t end” when interest rates were raised by 0.75%. Is that on the table now? Nomura analysts think the Fed will raise rates by 75 bps in June and July.
I don’t know about that, but it’s clear where the Fed’s head is at: Tightening Time.
The big picture is for lower prices. Being patient and selling the big rallies is the money trade. If the ES gaps lower, my lean would be for some type of short-covering rally to sell. The ES levels we are watching are 4350 and 4320. The technical section will cover why.
The stock market is on track for a rough spring and summer. Volatility is going to surge and like the PitBull said, “just because some of those hot four-letter names are down 60% to 70%, doesn’t mean they can’t fall further.”
Daily Recap
The ES opened at 4494.50, and rallied to 4509 in the opening 20 minutes as bulls ran with a strong open. But for the second day in a row, the market faded the opening gains — classic bear market action as we have noted throughout the week.
Just after 10:00, the ES faded 15 handles below the Globex high of 4498. Those who follow the ES closely realized this was the “change in tune.” What does that mean?
The opening $TICK measure was ~1350, showing too much exuberance. Further, the Nasdaq opened with about 87% upside breadth. Again, too much exuberance — the bulls blew their entire wad of cash on the opening push.
Anyway, this was just a hint. The “change in tune” came when 4498 was lost, then became resistance. When the ES captures a key level — in this case, the Globex high — and then fails to hold it, it signifies a potential shift. Granted, it wasn’t clear at the time that the ES was going to fall in 10 of the next 12 30-minute windows and shed 129 points in that span, but that’s exactly what happened!
The ES traded 4380 as the final MIM showed $149 million to buy, traded up to 4399.25 at 3:54, and traded 4389 on the 4:00 cash close, down 65 points or 1.46% on the day. It felt a lot worse, though.
In the end, the 4508 exit I put in the ‘Lean’ was right on, but despite calling to “sell the early rallies,” it was still a tough trade. In terms of the ES’s overall tone, it was extremely weak. In terms of the day’s overall trade, volume was on the high side at 1.65 million contracts traded.
- Total Range: 129 points
- H: 4509
- L: 4380
Technical Edge
- NYSE Breadth: 83.5% Downside Volume (!)
- NASDAQ Breadth: 71.5% Downside Volume
Call it what you will, but we were pretty lucky yesterday. On Wednesday we got a number of exits on our long positions and came into Thursday saying, “I’m pumping the brakes here for a day on new trade setups.”
That said, this market has been tough even when the roadmap is laid out correctly. We had flagged the 4500 level in the S&P 500, where it found the 200-day, 21-day and 50% retracement.
And even though the downside was mapped to 4410 — as the ES fell all the way to 4380 — I certainly didn’t expect the market to fail in such a spectacular fashion and did not capture a bulk of the decline. Ugh.
That’s okay. Onto the next.
Game Plan
My suggestions in this tough market would include:
- Take a few days off and do something you enjoy and/or just take a few days off from trading and simply watch the markets without trading (if you’re struggling).
- Trade smaller size. This helps a ton, mentally speaking!
- Look at the relative strength list we provide at the bottom. These stocks are in uptrends, seemingly oblivious to the carnage around them.
- WMT, TGT, DOW, AMGN, MCK, ABC, etc. continue to ride their trends higher. That’s not to say they will forever, but get rid of the desire to trade TSLA, AAPL and the other favorites all the time. New leaders are in play right now. Until that changes, this is where the money is at, in my opinion.
Thursday morning we were going weekly-up. Thursday’s pm Globex session, we were going weekly-down. I can’t reiterate enough how tough these market changes have been.
The best way to approach this market is with a “two-way” mindset. I know that’s hard, but if you can trade the market like that, the levels are fairly straight forward. Look at where the S&P failed yesterday: a trifecta of resistance.
Now trying to stay above last week’s high, I’m definitely cautious of this market. I think we need some downside breadth flushes that really gets us toward a capitulation situation.
On the upside, watch 4405 to 4410 and the 50-day. Above that opens the door up to the 10-day moving average, then 4435, followed by 4445 to 4452.
On the downside, this week’s low is on watch from Monday, down at 4355. Below that opens the door to the 61.8% retracement down near 4320.
Could this be one scenario:
This is mostly just me thinking out loud and sharing it here. It’s not a day-by-day prediction. I am simply looking at the patterns. One reason we expected resistance near 4500 to 4525 was the ES’s recent tendency to trade in ABC or ABCDE waves.
With the Fed tightening the way it is, I don’t think we can rule out a test of the lows. This is one five-wave scenario that would get us there.
Bonds
The TLT has been trying to find its footing down here.
On the upside, watch the 10-day moving average as resistance and potential short opportunity if it can’t close above it.
On the downside, a break of this week’s low at $118.67 could put the 200-month moving average in play.
Individual Stock Trades
Careful with these and size right. With volatility climbing, we could see some very whippy action.
TSLA
Tesla faded right from that $1,085 spot.
Above the 21-day and bulls may be back in control. On the downside, $975 is key. Below that puts $940 to $945 in play next.
NEM
This may be a decent lotto — so size it as such if that’s how you’re trading. EPS this morning and down about 4% in pre-market trading after yesterday’s 6.7% dip.
Set to open near its 50-day and prior high, this prior Relative Strength leader could give us a bounce this a.m. That said, miners and precious metals have not been great lately.
AR
Right into short-term support.
If it holds, look for a bounce into the $35.75 to $36 area as the first trim. $37 to $37.50 is the second trim.
If support fails, the $32.50 area is of interest. There we have a small breakout area, the 21-day moving average and last week’s low.
TGT
A big recent winner of ours (see below) where some members may still be carrying ¼ to ⅓ of their position, TGT might need a rest.
If that’s the case, keep the $235 to $237 area on your radar in the coming days.
DLTR
Another recent retail winner for us, watch the 10-day in DLTR. I want to see if this level acts as support, keeping the thesis alive that some of our retail leaders will continue working.
*Feel free to build your own trades off these relative strength leaders*
Numbered are the ones I’m watching most closely. Please look at these closely, as there are several updates (the most recent of which are noted in bold).
- COP — stopped
- VRTX — First trim zone hit → Next trim spot at $291 to $292.50 vs. B/e Stop
- PANW — Trimmed into weekly-up area near $631. Still looking for $645 to $655 on the upside against a B/E stop (near $598)
- TGT — $250 trim spot hit → A full exit is okay. Otherwise look for $265-ish on remaining ⅓ of position. Stop-loss either at B/E or raised to $235. Your preference.
- WMT — Trim at $158 → B/E Stop. Inside week. Now looking for inside-and-up rotation over $158.29. If so, it puts $162 in play for small trim, otherwise $165 to $170 is our longer term target.
- ABC — $166 Trim spot hit → $170 to $172 would be for the final tranche. Full exit is okay too. B/E stop is fine.
Relative strength leaders (List is getting longer!) →
- AR — watch for test of 10-day
- MAR — back on the list
- CAT
- DOW, NEM
- DLTR
- COST
- MCK
- BRK.B
- XLB — ADM, NTR, CTVA, NEM, DOW — Keep an eye on this group in the coming days.
- ABBV
- FLR
- JNJ
- XLU
- BMY
- Energy — FLNG, XLE, APA, CNQ, CVX, ENB, PXD — etc.
- PANW
- AMGN
- ABC
- UNH
- VRTX
Economic Calendar
As we all know, there’s no crystal ball when it comes to trading stocks, options, or futures. But the Market Imbalance Meter may be as close as it comes. Knowing how the “Big Money” is placing its bets can give our trading room a big wave to ride — or a warning sign to stay out of the water. Come check it out now, risk-free for 30 days.
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