Epiphany Trading Daily Blog

Discussion in 'Journals' started by erikrkolodny, Mar 3, 2010.

  1. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    THURS. AUG. 5- What's Up With Volume?

    In July, the volume on the SPY was about 40% lower than it was in May. When I’ve told people this statistic, I’ve been given responses such as “Well, it’s summertime,” the market’s not moving “ (which is not true considering it was the best July in many years for many market averages) to “No way. Most people have been working every day.” I did a little digging to check all of this out. In 2009, the volume on the SPY was 17% lower than it was in May following the huge volumes in 2008 leading to the market bottom in 2009. In 2008, the average SPY volume was up 88.5% over the average SPY volume in May. Want more? In 2007, the July SPY volume was 71.9% heavier in July than May. In 2006, July SPY volume was 4.1% higher than that of May 2006. In 2005, July SPY volume was 5.9% higher than that of May 2005. I can bore all of you with stats as I went back all the way back to 2000 when the SPY truly became an integral instrument to trading; nothing begins to compare to the drop-off from May to July of this year. So, what happened? The flash crash played a role for sure as some people lost confidence. It has indeed been a very hot summer in many parts of the country. It’s also true that in recent months, volume tended to move inversely to the direction of stock prices. And certainly in my office and at Epiphany, the number of overall traders is going up- not down. But 40%? A 40% drop-off in volume has to be caused by something else. And while it’s an opinion- it is an opinion with some facts to back it up that the overall decline in volume is due largely to the increased pace of high frequently trading as well as the switchover from EDGX to a stock exchange. According to studies such as one done by researchers at the prestigious Bouchet Franklin Institute, traded values as well as trading volumes are starting to show more and more correlation at increasingly shorter timescales. As noted Tuesday for instance, moves in markets such as the currency markets now take place in compressed time horizons. Thus, the “self-similar” fractal patterns tend to result in volatility surges, and feedback loops (i.e. something can be ahead 4 ½ points, but move such as that it is up 1, up 1.02, up 97 cents, up 1, up 1.04, up 1.02, up 1.05, up 1.01, up 1.03, up 1.00, up 1.13, up 1.09, up 1.07, up 1.14, up 1.12, and so forth all the way up to the 4 ½ point gain). Basically, such esoteric concepts as the Hurst Exponent (which is a measure of ‘noise’ in stocks) and the Markov Process (which measures randomness of things) put the whole premise of an efficient market in the immediate-term into question which simply makes one conclude that high frequency trading has had a major impact on trading. Again, I keep taking the amoral ground here- it’s not for me to say what it is right or fair or anything of the sort because, frankly, that’s over my head. But where all of this leads is that it makes traders that much more unsure of moves which were once present in different times, the algorithms tend to automatically do the trades, and there is less human participation in total trading volumes overall as humanoids cut down on their trade size. This is not a wah-wah “cry me a river” piece. Markets change. They will always change. Circumstances and dynamics change. It's up to traders to adapt. But to those who say that execution quality, trade volatility, and ephemeral market impact are improved by high frequency trading and the changing of EDGX to a stock exchange, I simply note that as trading volumes continue to plunge, it is very difficult to claim that anything is more efficient. Sure, one can get price improvement at times, but particularly in the immediate-term, many times one does not know if one wants the improvement nor can he/she get the size of desired purchase as was available six months much less six weeks ago. For day traders, obviously all of this directly impacts us as has been showing by gradual declines in volumes by most traders in the last few weeks. I will continue this series for awhile in showing the impact of what happened two weeks ago with the switchover as well as some things I am beginning to actively do in adapting shortly, but I am trying to educate myself (and hopefully a few others) first about what has happened and its effects else how can I or anyone who is a non-high frequency day trader come up with alternative solutions to the new challenge at hand?

    Markets in Asia were generally quiet overnight with Hong Kong ostensibly flat although Tokyo had a nice bounce in closing up 1.7%. In Europe, Paris and Frankfurt are up 0.5% with London up 0.2%. Oil is down slightly, gold up slightly, and bonds and currencies are quiet. Futures are slightly weaker after poor jobless claims data. For today, look for a relatively quiet day with a slight downside bias as stocks go into a holding pattern particularly as the day progresses ahead of the unemployment report. Focus on the relative strength plays, the earnings plays, and the drillers on RIG’s numbers and positive BP news.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    RIG- decent earnings

    SINA- decent earnings

    PRU- decent earnings

    NWS- decent earnings

    SOLR- great earnings

    MIPS- decent earnings

    ATML- decent earnings

    ALL- decent earnings

    RGS- seeking strategic alternatives

    AGN- featured on ‘Mad Money” last night

    INT- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    AGU- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    AREX- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    OEH- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    OPEN- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    DNDN- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    WWWW- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    PWRD- closed near a high after announcing earnings

    POT- closed near a high

    FSLR- closed near a high on takeover rumors

    CLF- closed near a high

    THRX- closed near a high

    DO, APC, ATPG- closed near a high

    CI- decent earnings

    MED- decent earnings

    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern


    HIG- poor earnings

    IPI- poor earnings

    MELI- poor earnings

    CNW- poor earnings

    SNIC- poor earnings

    GCA- poor earnings

    MOH- decent earnings, but announced share offering

    UVV- closed near a low after announcing earnings Tuesday…oddly, it broke yesterday

    WFMI- closed near a low after announcing earnings

    PBI- closed near a low after announcing earnings

    STEC- closed near a low after announcing earnings

    LOCM- closed near a low after announcing earnings

    LEAP- closed near a low after announcing earnings

    FWLT- poor earnings

    ARO- poor earnings guidance

    Earnings:

    THURS AUG 5 BEFORE

    BVF BZH CAH

    CBOE CI CTB

    CVC DSX DTV

    FIG FWLT H

    HOC JOE LAMR

    MED OCR OMG

    PCS TDW THS

    WPI


    THURS AUG 5 AFTER

    ATVI CF CROX

    ELX EOG HANS

    KFT MCHP MHK

    MRX PSA SGMS

    VCLK

    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #131     Aug 5, 2010
  2. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    FRI. AUG. 6- The Fakeout Leading To Two Trades

    I’m going to jump ahead slightly due to some demand/questions I’ve gotten in giving a specific example of a trade set-up which has been changed dramatically. Many years ago, when there was a major buyer or seller in a stock, the entity would acquire/rid themselves of the balance of a position in the form of a block of stock. Much more often than not, the stock would promptly move in the opposite direction of the prevailing trend violently as the overhang of stock evaporated. For instance, pretend XYZ had fallen from 50 to 40 over the course of two weeks on no news with volume averaging 1,000,000 shares a day when the market was neutral. Let’s also say that Big Name Institution was exiting a position of 6,000,000 shares gradually and had gotten rid of 4,500,000 over the course of two weeks. Many times what used to happen is that the stock would rapidly fall to say 37 on any given day and then one would see a block of 1,500,000 shares cross the tape. Well, if there is no news and Big Name Institution has sold all of its stock, there is nothing shoving the stock down artificially anymore and there’d be a rapid ascent in XYZ shares due to a lack of selling pressure. That process sped up in the Technology Age. One of my favorite types of plays occurred when a stock was in a strong trend yet there was a counter trend player in size with a bid or offer. Usually, once the big block of stock left, the stock would immediately move sharply due to the principle just described. For instance, BIDU was trading sharply higher last week and up on Friday(July 30) as well. There was a block of stock of about 400,000 shares being offered around 3PM that day at 81.30 (20 cents off of the then-high of day). What used to happen is that one would wait for the last piece of that block, buy it, and then shorts and momentum players would scramble with the stock typically rising back to its old high of 81.50 and oftentimes significantly higher. With the vacuum of selling pressure and the seller overhang out of the way, it’d set the stage for a nice advice; it is a pattern I’ve employed for over 10 years. However, with the shift over by Direct Edge to a stock exchange along with the increasing percentage of algorithmic trading, things have changed. What occurred in this stock is fairly typical. Once the overhang went away, the stock rose to 81.35, but got thrashed to 81.17 seconds later. Seven minutes later, sure enough, the stock went to 81.50. So what happened? Day traders like myself have made a living off of action such as the 81.30 to 81.50 (and north) move for a long time now. Algorithms know this as they have been programmed. So, what happens is that intelligent programs sell stock to unsuspecting immediate-term targeted day traders, we think we have something, and then get slammed and create a mini-panic when the stock goes below 81.30 (where the original seller was) because there was no reason for the stock to go below there as it never “used to do so.” Then, the trend ‘properly’ reasserts itself. So, in this and a myriad of other cases over the last 2 ½ weeks, the ‘new’ trade a solid majority of the time is to fade the initial move after a block of stock lifts with longer-term players buying the dip for a better entry. In this example, a short at 81.33-81.34 with a cover of 81.20 in seconds would work while the trend itself was intact thus an entry down there rather than at 81.30 as the block of stock disappeared for the move to 81.50 over a longer period of time also was the thing to do.

    Markets overnight were mixed in Asia with Tokyo down 0.1% and Hong Kong ahead 0.6%. At this point, it’s meaningless as the jobs report has come out very badly. The dollar is a bit weaker against the yen and euro, oil is down 1% plus, and gold up slightly. Bond 10-year yields are at a new move low. There is now true legitimate fear that the domestic economy is faltering. Overall job numbers were down, private sector growth slowed (and miss estimates), and there was a revision down for last month’s numbers- a subtle 100,000 jobs to the bad. Oops. Futures are well lower. For today, look for a sharply lower open and then a choppy day. Private sector growth- while slowing- is there. Add to the mix a beautiful summer Friday and illiquidity will be rampant in a very choppy setting. Focus on the earnings (particularly things like AIG), the drillers (affected by ATPG’s numbers and a RIG downgrade), and relative strength plays with most of the volume occurring by lunchtime with the best/smoothest action over very early.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    CROX- great earnings

    HANS- good earnings

    KFT- good earnings

    BID- decent earnings

    MCHP- decent earnings

    NANO- great earnings

    MHK- good earnings

    MRX- good earnings

    AGO- good earnings

    AFFY- closed near a high after posting good earnings

    SINA- closed near a high after posting good earnings

    RIG- closed near a high after posting good earnings

    APC- closed near a high

    FSYS- closed near a high after posting good earnings

    POT, MON, DE, WIN, ONNN, CREE- featured positively on “Mad Money” last night

    AIG- great earnings

    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern

    APEI-terrible earnings

    RST- bad earnings

    CEC- terrible earnings

    NILE- terrible earnings

    ATVI- bad earnings

    CF- poor earnings

    ELX- poor earnings

    HAR- bad earnings

    SGMS- poor earnings

    EOG- poor earnings

    PSA- poor earnings

    LINC- closed near a low after posting bad earnings

    MDAS- closed near a low after posting bad earnings

    MNTA- closed near a low after Sanford Bernstein indicated a generic version of MNTA’s lead drug will likely hit the U.S. market this year

    PACR- closed near a low after posting bad earnings

    UVV- closed near a low

    VECO- closed near a low on a report of fewer orders from Taiwanese rivals

    ONXX- closed near a low in a island reversal

    CECO- closed near a low after posting bad earnings

    RBCAA- closed near a low after the IRS said it will no longer electronically underwrite tax refund anticipation loans

    ATPG- poor earnings


    Earnings:


    FRI AUG 6 BEFORE

    AIG AWI CEDC

    DRQ DYN JRCC

    MIR

    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #132     Aug 6, 2010
  3. thanks for the posts, Erik...

    your insightful contributions are appreciated.


    Walter
     
    #133     Aug 6, 2010
  4. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    You're very welcome. I hope i can help. The only time i actually used today's blog post in practice was AIG. It got above 42 at around 10AM when a huge offer existed thru the high of the day. hen it got back below 42, I shorted it for the immediate-term play as I have more confidence in quick moves than longer-run plays for my own trading. Thus, i missed out on a much bigger move, but again, I tend to go for quick jagged moves.

    Here is my trade:

    Seq # Cxl Time Status Sym Side Qty Exe Qty Lvs Qty Dest Price Avg Exe Prc
    52 10:01:16 Filled AIG BUY 400 400 0 NSDQSTGY 41.75 41.7500
    51 10:01:13 Filled AIG BUY 400 400 0 NSDQSTGY 41.78 41.7500
    50 10:00:51 Filled AIG BUY 800 800 0 NSDQSTGY 41.9 41.9000
    49 10:00:38 Filled AIG SSHRT 1600 1600 0 PDQARCA 41.97 41.9700
    41.9700
     
    #134     Aug 6, 2010
  5. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    MON. AUG. 9- Friday's Jobs Report

    On Friday morning, the monthly jobs report came out. I wrote a bit about the build-up to last month’s report in this piece:

    http://www.capitalmarketforum.org/entry.php?95-FRI.-JUL.-2-Jobs-Jobs-Jobs-Jobs-Jobs

    Well, the unemployment data remains one of if not the most important pieces of data and this one was no exception. According to the Labor Department, private payrolls rose by 71,000 jobs in July, but that was less than the average economist’s prediction of about 90,000. Overall employment fell by 131,000 jobs (also worse than expected) as temporary census workers lost their jobs. Even more notable, the drop in June jobs was revised to a loss of 221,000, down from 125,000 lost…96,000 more jobs lost than originally reported! What is more worrisome is that the recent factory orders report indicated that manufacturing rose in July, but at the slowest pace of 2010. As orders slowed and production drifted down, it signals employment gains may cool. Basically, think of this as the opposite as to what happened last year when there was talk of ‘green chutes’ and things that could be ‘less bad,’ aka regression at a slower pace. Well, now we’re on the other side of that, but growth is gradually slowing. Since job growth is one of the two foundations of economic recovery (along with real estate stabilization), any sign of weakness in the labor market will not be taken lightly by the equity markets thus the decline in stock prices- albeit muted by the end of the day due to rumors of a mortgage forgiveness program at the FHA.

    Markets in Asia were generally higher overnight; Tokyo was down 0.7% but Hong Kong ahead 0.6% with Shanghai up 0.5% and Sydney 0.6%. Markets in Europe rebounded strongly from Friday’s weakness on the U.S. jobs report with Paris up 1.6%, London 1.5%, and Frankfurt 1.4%. The dollar is quiet, bonds and gold up slightly, and oil up 1%. Futures are up nicely despite the HPQ bombshell. Look for a quiet summer Monday with a modest upside bias as the markets show resilience ahead of the FOMC meeting tomorrow. The focus will be in technology with stories out of HPQ, AAPL, and RIMM dominating the landscape and a secondary focus on the agriculture stocks as the Russian drought continues.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    IBM, DELL- will likely benefit from any damage to HPQ

    HANS- closed near a high on good earnings

    CEC- near island reversal after posting earnings in closing near a high

    RIMM- closed near a high

    IOC- closed near a high

    BID- closed near a high on good earnings

    AGO- closed near a high on good earnings

    BIDU- closed near a high

    SWSI- received a tender offer from NBR for $22.12/share

    CHBT- decent earnings

    DGI- entered into a $3.55 billion agreement with NGA

    SOL- decent earnings





    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern

    HPQ- CEO Mark Hurd resigned suddenly on Friday afternoon; there are worries here about a vacuum of leadership and what else may be hidden

    LSCC- CEO Christopher Fanning resigned Friday afternoon after two years on the job

    APEI- closed near a low on terrible earnings

    DEXO- closed near a low

    PACR- closed near a low on continued negative follow-through after posting poor earnings last week

    ATPG- closed near a low on poor earnings

    DV, ESI, LOPE- among the for-profit educational institutions under scrutiny by the U.S. Department of Education which closes on their low on Friday

    PCC- closed near a low after posting bad earnings

    MGA- near island reversal in closing near a low despite great earnings

    DISH- poor earnings

    AMED- poor earnings



    Earnings:

    MON AUG 9 BEFORE

    AMED DISH KG

    MAC SOL TSN

    WCG

    MON AUG 9 AFTER

    CLNE CTRP GNK

    IT MBI MDR

    MDVN MR NUAN

    PRXL QGEN SLXP

    THQI


    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #135     Aug 9, 2010
  6. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    TUES. AUG. 10- The Quiet Money Chase

    If I were to drive to the place I grew up (Savannah, GA), I'd ostensibly take I-95 all the way down because it is quickest and it's straight shot. If I felt l had some extra time and wanted the kids to explore a little, we could stop in a place like Washington, DC along the way. If time and distance weren't issues, I could go to places that were out of the way such as Philadelphia or Hershey, PA, or Atlanta. But I would want to wind up in Savannah so as to see the place I grew up (and my Mommy at that). No matter how I did it, I'd get there. Well, this market is in the midst of a somewhat unconventional up move with three unique factors. First, after an awful 2008 and a good 2009, the market is somewhat flat in 2010. Yet, money managers who underperformed the last two years cannot afford for their own job safety to do so again in 2010. Thus, in a vacuum of news on days like yesterday, Money Chase 2010 is on as select money managers can push stocks up when not a lot of people are around to try to capture those extra fractions of a point of gains. Second, with bond yields paltry, the incentive to take on a little risk is there. Despite this enormous month-long rally, bond yields have continued to decline as well as money floods the American markets. As for "how we get there," the 3rd thing is this continuation of a 'light volume levitation.' Volume on the QQQQ yesterday was just over 1/3 of what it was the day after Thanksgiving in 2009. Think about that. Volume was almost three times heavier on a day after a holiday in which almost nobody goes to work and one in which the market is only open for a half-day of action. But the direction was ultimately north and if you were short all day, it hurt just as much as if volume was heavy. I am no soothsayer and have no real clue with any confidence which way the market will go the rest of the year. But I do know this- on a day like yesterday when news flow is light and as we approach the final 1/3 of the year, quiet days like yesterday- with the key corollary again that there is no major news out there on any given day- have a good shot of having a bullish bias intra-day for the balance of 2010 because of the three factors described herein in this piece.

    Markets in Asia were down overnight with Tokyo down 0.2%, but Hong Kong fell 1.5% and China declined almost 3%. The news out of China last night was not great as a report showed slowing of imports as well as rumors that China will require banks to provide for losses on loans held in trusts. In Europe, markets are also down from London’s 0.5% to Frankfurt’s 1%. Furthermore, commodity shares are falling across the board with oil down over 1% and gold down almost 1%. The dollar is slightly stronger against the yen but much stronger against the euro. Futures are sharply lower on all of the China news. Furthermore, as referenced yesterday, a chunk of the Friday afternoon rally was attributed to rumors of quantitative easing by the Fed, but it does not look likely to happen. Look for a sharply lower open, a very choppy first hour of trading on little liquidity and then a calmness to prevail leading up to 2:15PM ET. At that point, the results of the Fed meeting will be released and we’ll know if rumor becomes fact. If no program is announced, don’t look for much of a reaction. If the Fed downgrades its outlook for the economy somewhat sharply and announced a plan, look for a sharp reaction to the upside likely followed by a sharp reaction to the downside as the reality of the situation is assessed.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    MBI- good earnings

    IT- decent earnings

    PRXL- decent earnings

    GNK- decent earnings

    MDR- decent earnings

    CLNE - decent earnings

    CTRP- decent earnings

    CMFO- decent earnings

    V, MA- closed near their highs

    WYNN- closed near a high

    BTN- closed near a high after posting earnings

    GEOY- closed near a high after getting a huge contract from the National Geospatial Agency

    VLTR- going into the S&P 600 on 8/16

    ESRX, APKT- featured on “Mad Money” last night

    FOSL- great earnings

    VRTX- reported good viral cure rates in phase III Hepatitis C trial


    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern

    NUAN- poor earnings

    QGEN- poor earnings

    SLXP- poor earnings

    THQI- poor earnings

    VSAT- terrible earnings

    ASEI- terrible earnings

    MR- poor earnings

    AMED- island reversal in closing near a low after posting earnings

    DISH- closed near a low after posting earnings

    MDCI- closed near a low after posting earnings

    ADY- closed near a low after posting earnings

    OCR- closed near a low after Moody’s downgraded its rating outlook

    APEI- closed near a low

    PMC- closed near a low

    DGIT- closed near a low after ASCMA outlined a new electronic advertising distribution venture which would be in direct competition to DGIT’s business

    SKX- closed near a low amid advertising lawsuits filed against the company

    NGLS- units and notes offering

    RAX- poor earnings

    BBB- poor earnings

    FEED- poor earnings


    Earnings:

    TUES AUG 10 BEFORE

    AIT CVG JASO

    TUES AUG 10 AFTER

    AONE CREE DIS

    JAZZ LDK MYGN



    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #136     Aug 10, 2010
  7. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    WED. AUG. 11- Notable Fed Move

    Yesterday afternoon, the Federal Reserve did its best to walk a fine line between appearing overconfident about the economy, unconfident about the company, realistic, and unanimous. It was a near impossible task but they pulled it off fairly well judging by the market’s reaction. Basically, they took a baby step upon expressing some worry about the sputtering recovery. After issuing a near identical statement to the last one, two notable differences occurred at the end of said statement. First, the Fed noted that economic growth will likely be “more modest” than it thought even two months ago. Even more notably, the Fed indicated that it could use money from its investments in mortgage securities to buy government debt to a small degree. Ostensibly, this could force down rates on mortgages and corporate debt even lower as yet more money would be poured into bonds. But the gesture is basically a symbolic one if not an important one as the amounts in question are seemingly too small to truly impact credit conditions particularly when bond yields hover at historically low levels. However, it is still of note for one positive and one negative reason. The positive is that the impact of any relative immediate-term Fed move will be known because all one has to do is glance at its balance sheet to see if it is in an easing or tightening mode. The negative though is a dangerous one. Not only is the Fed playing out the same theme of maintaining its strategy of keeping rates low in the hopes of spurring growth it runs the risk of appearing dinosaurish should the economy not pick up. Also, the reality is that new growth is not being spurred; rather people like myself are taking advantage of the low rates to refinance their mortgages rather than buying new houses. Finally, it is debt upon debt in that the monetization of the continuing hefty deficits create an image of a willingness to take on even more debt. The markets have been factoring in some sort of Fed move for a few weeks now which has played a role in the recent rally. The fact that the markets traded lower yesterday but bounced on this announcement actually is immediate-term bullish as this was an indication of the Fed showing a willingness to react if necessary- but not doing so now. Perhaps all of this is a long-term negative, but was an immediate-term positive as confidence is the backbone of any market is the Fed which is certainly trying to keep things stable while not throwing a scare into the mix. Thus, the Dow wiped out a loss of 150 points before settling back a bit as the afternoon progressed. The truest indications of the Fed’s actions over the coming days and weeks will be the performance of the bonds, gold, and dollar…all of these indicators will likely play a very significant role on a macro much less intra-day scale for quite some time particularly if the moves in any or all of those markets becomes exaggerated- as has occurred already this morning.

    Markets overnight were hit very hard with Hong Kong down 0.8%, but Tokyo fell 2.7%. In Europe, the story was no different as the bourses are all down 1.5% to 2% as of this writing. The yen continued to strengthen with the dollar falling below 85 yen but rising sharply against the euro. Gold is up slightly but oil is down well over 1%. 10-year yields continue to plunge. Futures are down sharply as the reality of what occurred yesterday is beginning to sink in. Trading today will be volatile and illiquid- and likely remain to the down-side. Use the dollar as a decent indicator for what will happen today. Focus on big caps, the limited earnings flow, and the solars.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    DIS- decent earnings

    LDK- good earnings

    JAZZ- good earnings

    SPWRA- decent earnings

    HMIN- good earnings

    AMZN- closed on a high

    NFLX- closed near a high after a positive mention on “Mad Money” and upon signing a deal

    ZSTN- closed near a high after posting earnings

    AEM, CHK, AKAM- featured on “Mad Money” last night

    AVT- decent earnings

    M- decent earnings




    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern

    CREE- terrible earnings

    AONE- poor earnings

    MYGN- poor earnings

    MR- closed near a low after posting earnings

    AMED- closed near a low

    MDCI- closed near a low

    PMC- closed near a low

    ADY- closed near a low

    PEGA- closed near a low after posting earnings

    JAG- closed near a low after posting earnings

    APC- closed near a low

    MITL- closed near a low after posting earnings

    HQS- closed near a low after pricing a share offering


    Earnings:

    WED AUG 11 BEFORE

    AVT CSC EJ

    M

    WED AUG 11 AFTER

    AAP ANW CSCO




    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #137     Aug 11, 2010
  8. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    THURS. AUG. 12- Here We Go Again

    The last sentence of yesterday’s piece was this:”The truest indications of the Fed’s actions over the coming days and weeks will be the performance of the bonds, gold, and dollar…all of these indicators will likely play a very significant role on a macro much less intra-day scale for quite some time particularly if the moves in any or all of those markets becomes exaggerated- as has occurred already this morning.” Let me elaborate. There arguably has never been a time in the history of markets in which varying tradable entities have been more interconnected. If X then Y. If C then D. Furthermore, a bevy of hedge funds trade similarly so the herd mentality exists like never before. Well, yesterday, foreign equities were hit, oil suffered a 3% slashing, the dollar had its biggest one-day gain against the euro in months, and bond moves got exaggerated domestically as 10-year yields went below 2.70% while the German bund yield plunged all the while bond yields in hot spots climbed. It gets even more esoteric than this, but the point is that a wild move in any particular non-equities market can have a dramatic impact on stock prices. So, as volatility clearly has returned even on low volume, traders have just got to keep an eye on everything rather than merely the direction of the S&P 500. The correlation yesterday between oil, euro, and the S&P futures was incredibly direct thus the importance of every major indicator and what will be in play must be known early in the morning- and monitored throughout the trading session.

    Markets in Asia were weaker overnight with declines of about 1% across the board. In Europe, stocks are down across the board but much more modestly with losses of around 0.2% in Frankfurt as an example. Gold is up ½%, but oil is down almost 2%. Bonds are slightly weaker. The dollar is slightly stronger against the yen but notably stronger against the euro which has helped to extend stock futures losses state-side. Futures are weak off of the CSCO earnings report but off of their overnight lows. Look for a test of those lows this morning (10254 Dow 1073.40 S&P on the futures with cash about 25 Dow points and 2.5 S&P points higher). If those lows hold and volume remains somewhat light, certainly begin to play some relative strength plays in a market bounce with a focus on big cap tech, casinos, and the retailers which reported today.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    AAP- decent earnings

    JAZZ- closed near a high after posting good earnings

    CALL- closed near a high

    PRGO- decent earnings

    VHC- good earnings


    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern

    CSCO- awful earnings

    ICOP- poor earnings

    GS- closed near a low

    AAPL- closed near a low

    AIG- closed near a low

    CREE- closed near a low after posting terrible earnings

    AONE- closed near a low after posting terrible earnings

    CYD- closed near a low after posting terrible earnings

    WYNN- closed near a low

    VECO- closed near a low

    SPWRA- closed near a low after posting earnings

    CSC- closed near a low after posting terrible earnings

    CLF- closed near a low

    MDCI- closed near a low after posting terrible earnings

    ANW- poor earnings

    MON- closed near a low

    BCSI- closed near a low

    CNW- closed near a low

    WLP- closed near a low

    ATI- closed near a low

    URS- closed near a low after posting terrible earnings

    EL- poor earnings

    KSS- poor earnings

    EAT- poor earnings

    Earnings:


    THURS AUG 12 BEFORE

    BGG BR EAT

    EL HEAT KSS

    PRGO SLE WEN

    THURS AUG 12 AFTER

    ADSK BYI DV

    JWN NVDA RRGB



    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #138     Aug 12, 2010
  9. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    FRI. AUG. 13- The Liquidity Rush

    This post is going to be one of the ones that fall under the “this is so obvious that you shouldn’t write about this, Erik,” but sometimes what seems obvious on the surface is not so obvious. Let’s say you were in the market for a new car- let’s say a Toyota Corolla for simplicity. Furthermore, let’s pretend that there are three Toyota dealers within a mile of each other and you went to each one. If the prices at each dealer ranged from $55,000 at Dealer 1 to $57,500 at Dealer 2 to $60,000 at Dealer 3, I’d have to guess you’d start looking for another car. If the prices were $17,000 at Dealer 1, $18,000 at Dealer 2, and $19,000 at Dealer 3, you’d take some time to do some homework and figure out exactly what type of car you wanted and where you want to buy it. Now pretend that Dealer 1 offered you a price of $100, Dealer 2 was $200, and Dealer 3 was $250. Also pretend you’d done your homework and you knew all of the dealers and cars to be legitimate. Well, speaking for me, I’d buy all three cars on the spot out of fear that they’d be gone at that price imminently in worrying about asking questions later. I’d do so amid the hopes I could keep one of the cars for myself and then sell off the other two for a nice profit due to what appeared to be an artificially low price based on what I knew after the extensive homework I’d done. In the day trading world, if AAPL is trading at 250, nobody is going to buy shares for 275 on a given ECN. Someone may buy it for 250. But if the stock could be bought at 249.95 with the knowledge that it’d quickly go through 250, who wouldn’t buy as much as they could? Going back to the high frequency theme, by being able to beat the average trader to the punch and ostensibly knowing what’s on the book, stocks can and indeed do act like this. This is the reason that many times recently, a stock at a rigger spots will blow right through it. If it’s good, who wouldn’t want to be in it thus a computerized algorithm swipes the shares as rapidly as possible. As a for instance, I was showing AAPL at 249.87 to 249.90 just after 10AM yesterday. I saw the stock tick 249.90 bid and placed my order to buy a couple thousand shares at 250. In the fraction of a second it took me to hit the buy button (with the stock at 249.92 offer), the stock was already 250.10 on its way to 241.86 six minutes later. Now, I am the absolute first to admit when I miss a stock because I am too slow. It happened about once or twice a day on average last year. Yesterday, it happened on 11 separate occasions. All 11 were winning trades. Lookit, I am not complaining…this is the game now. But be aware that if you’re waiting for a precise entry spot, one of the major adaptations to what has happened in the last couple of weeks is that you have to be faster than ever before in your order placement.

    Markets in Asia were mixed overnight with Tokyo gaining 0.4% and Hong Kong down 0.2%. Markets were lower in Europe overall with London off 0.4% and Frankfurt down 0.6%. Gold and currencies are flat with bonds up a tinge. CPI data came in as expected with retail sales missing estimates slightly. There are a number of small takeovers today as well which is quite bullish for M&A, but the interesting feature of the day is that Dow futures were up 87 overnight; they are now down 20. I’ve written about this phenomenon in this space before; it’s certainly something to be aware of today. If markets don’t sell off initially, look for a very nice bounce today on low volume. Focus on the deal stocks in case the prices get out of whacked with the announced takeover strikes the earnings plays, and particularly any relative strength play early on if the markets gap a bit lower.

    Reiterating-

    If the whole story is not there -

    If something is good, assume either a short thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified.

    If something is bad, assume either a buy thru unchanged or an A-B-A2 (preferably to the downside in a downside market and the upside in an upside market) based on direction of the market unless specified-


    Good- The following stocks have good news and/or a strong technical pattern

    ADSK- good earnings

    NVDA- good earnings

    TRBN- being acquired by EBS for $1.365 cash plus .1641 shares of EBS or approximately a net value of 4.55 per share

    NFLX- closed near a high

    MMYT- closed near a high; was best performing IPO in three years

    POT- closed near a high

    LVS- closed near a high

    CAGC- closed near a high after reporting good earnings

    ALY- being bought out for 4.25/share in cash or 1.15 shares of England’s Seawell

    UNCA- being bought out by 21/share in cash by IBM

    SUP- decent earnings


    Bad-The following stocks have bad news and/or a weak technical pattern

    JWN- poor earnings

    BYI- poor earnings

    DV- poor earnings

    TSTC- terrible earnings

    CAVM- closed near a low after CSCO’s poor earnings

    JCP- poor earnings

    Earnings:


    FRI AUG 13 BEFORE

    CTFO JCP



    Epiphany Trading, LLC
    www.epiphanytrading.com

    Erik R. Kolodny- Chief Markets Strategist
    Brendan P. Byrne- President
    Joseph R. McCandless- Managing Partner
    D. Timothy Seaquist- Managing Partner
     
    #139     Aug 13, 2010
  10. erikrkolodny

    erikrkolodny ET Sponsor

    Quick edit: In the post, should have read "251.86" rather than "241.86"
     
    #140     Aug 13, 2010