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It's Time To Sell These Popular Stocks

May 13, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

Last month we wrote about the lackluster move from some of the cyclical sectors off of their March lows, particularly Industrials and Financials.

We continue to see weakness out of these areas over both long and short-term timeframes as Financials are pressing on all-time lows relative to the S&P 500 and Industrials just made a fresh relative 20-year low.

In this post, we'll take a look at these underperforming areas and share some trade ideas to express our bearish thesis.

First, let's take a look at the long-term relative weakness we just mentioned.

Click chart to enlarge view.

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We're Buying These Breakouts

May 12, 2020

If you haven't heard by now, the Online Retail Index broke out to new all-time highs. We're not exactly seeing that from a broad-based perspective. This is not happening domestically and it's certainly not happening around the world. The rotation we're seeing among sectors and industry groups is real. Today we're going to focus specifically on online retail.

The way I see it, the question here is simple. Is the massive reversion, and return to these prior highs, "the" move? Or was that just a multi-year consolidation, and the move is just getting started?

Here's what that looks like:

Click on Charts to Zoom In

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The Week In Review (05-08-2020)

May 10, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

For the week ended Friday, May 8, 2020:

Every weekend we publish performance tables for a variety of different asset classes and categories along with commentary on each.

Many of the relative trends in stocks that have been in place for a long time have come into question recently as they're showing signs of maturing due in part to the change in leadership we wrote about this week.

In this post, we'll highlight two structural intermarket themes that have remained robust throughout this tumultuous time for equity markets.

The first relative trend that hasn't slowed down at all is the relentless outperformance of the US over the rest of the world. Our first table shows the Wilshire 5000 (DWC) dominating every Global Index over just about every timeframe, from this week to the trailing year.

Click table to enlarge view.

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Mining For Long Setups in Gold

May 5, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

Gold (GLD) broke out of a multi-year base last year and has more or less been trending higher since. No new news there.

But as JC explained in a post last week, Gold Miners (GDX) have finally broken out of a 7-year base as well after recently taking out resistance at key prior highs.

Today we're going to take a deeper look at the space.

We love setups like the one in Gold Miners right now. Not only did GDX resolve higher from a massive base but there is also a hefty amount of price memory at the breakout level which should act as solid support going forward.

Click on chart to enlarge image.

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The Week In Review (05-01-2020)

May 3, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

For the week ended Friday, May 1, 2020:

Every weekend we publish performance tables for a variety of different asset classes and categories along with commentary on each.

This week we're highlighting the underperformance from the US using our Global Index and International ETF tables.

Click table to enlarge view.

Despite the Wilshire 5000 (DWC) closing slightly higher on the week, all major Large-Cap averages in the US closed lower. While equities sold off across the board to end the week, the Eurozone still managed to book a nice gain with the German Dax (DAXX) and Stoxx 50 (STOXX) up 4-5% each in what was a short week for much of the region.

The Nikkei 225 (NI) and Shanghai Composite (SSEC) each closed almost 2% higher in what was also a short week for much of Asia.

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Week In Review (04-24-20)

April 26, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

For the week ended Friday, April 24, 2020:

Every weekend we publish performance tables for a variety of different asset classes and categories along with commentary on each.

This week we want to highlight the continued divergence between Energy stocks and Oil using our Sector and Industry ETF and Commodity tables.

First, let's look at some of the longer-term leaders. Biotechs (IBB) just broke out to fresh multi-year highs and are one of the top performers on our Industry ETF list across all timeframes.

Aside from Gold Miners (GDX), they are the only industry on our expanded list of over 50 ETFs already back at fresh 52-week highs. Definitely some relative strength worth paying attention to in these areas.

Be sure to read our recent post on Gold Miners.

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[Chart Of The Week] What Did The Cyclicals Say To The Spooz?

April 23, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

Yesterday I wrote a post about deteriorating market internals. I discussed breadth divergences as well as the lack of confirmation of the S&P 500's recent highs from many important sectors and indexes.

In this post, we're going to focus specifically on the Large-Cap Sector SPDRs that failed to make higher highs and are showing early signs of cracking. To no surprise, these are some of the most cyclical areas of the market including Industrials (XLI), Financials (XLF), Materials (XLB), and Energy (XLE).

This speaks to the lack of risk-appetite we continue to see not only within equities but across all asset classes right now.

You can see the first three sectors in the chart below. With Crude Oil futures crashing below zero this week, we think it's prudent to stay away from the Energy sector until the smoke clears.

Click on chart to enlarge view.

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Canadian Stocks To Buy & Sell

April 21, 2020

From the desk of Tom Bruni @BruniCharting

It's been a while since our last post on Canadian stocks, so today we're going to take a look at the trends that matter and the related trends.

Post #1 of  2 focuses on sector relative trends.

Post #2 of 2 focuses on the absolute trends and stocks we want to be buying and selling.

In our first post, we talked about relative performance in Financials rolling over aggressively. On an absolute basis, the TSX Capped Financials Index is stuck below its December 2018 lows and 2015 highs, much like US Small-Caps, the German DAX, Euro Stoxx 50, and many of the other weakest markets out there. As long as prices are below 263, the bias is to the downside with a target near 210.

Click on chart to enlarge view.

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Canadian Relative Trend Review

April 21, 2020

From the desk of Tom Bruni @BruniCharting

It's been a while since our last post on Canadian stocks, so today we're going to take a look at the trends that matter and the related trends.

Post #1 of  2 focuses on sector relative trends.

Post #2 of 2 focuses on the absolute trends and stocks we want to be buying and selling.

First, let's start with the TSX Capped Financials which represent 33% of the TSX Composite. This chart has spent the last four years putting in a major top and the underperformance looks likely to continue. From that perspective, can the TSX Composite continue to work sustainably higher if its best players are underperforming so drastically? I'd argue no.

Click on chart to enlarge view.

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[Premium] Bull Market Checklist Update

April 20, 2020

From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza

We turned bearish on equities in February from a structural standpoint and have been tactically positioning ourselves in both directions since. We've taken advantage of the bifurcated market we're in by continuing to find opportunities on both the long and short side. Right now we believe the near-term risk is to the downside in equities.

How defensive should we be and what will it take for us to turn bullish again?

Last week we put together a list of key levels that we want to see certain assets hold before turning bullish on stocks over any longer-term timeframe. We're using this as our risk gauge for now.

As promised, we put that list into a table so that we can easily track and update its progress. Let's dive in and see what the weight of the evidence is telling us right now.