Here is a list of trade ideas organized by date, ticker symbol and directional bias. Please make sure you have clicked on the link and read the details surrounding the trade before acting upon any of them. Also, make sure you have checked with your financial advisor and tax accountants to make sure you are suitable to be executing what is discussed on this website. The risk management procedures and targets are detailed for each idea. Please read and review the terms and conditions page before making any trades of your own.
This is one of my favorite things to do: Forget everything that happened this quarter and this year and start from scratch. It doesn't matter what we did or how we felt in 2018. It's irrelevant. We're moving forward. This is my Q1 2019 Playbook.
Yesterday after the bell we sent out our Year End '18 ETF Risk Update to our Institutional Clients, covering 100+ of the most actionable and informative charts. To put this report together we examined over 500 inter-market and cross-asset relationships across weekly & daily time-frames to identify trend direction, momentum, risk-management levels, and prices targets.
In this premium post I want to highlight a few charts from each of our five sections: Factors, International, Domestic, Fixed-Income, and Thematic/Niche. If you like what you see and want the full report, you can fill out our Institutional Client Application or contact our Head of Institutional Sales, Jonathan Bloom, for access.
Some stocks are going up and most stocks are going down. That's been the trend over the past 10 weeks or so. There is nothing out of the ordinary about that and cash heavy positions have helped us tremendously during this period.
As far as the indexes themselves are concerned, I think it's obvious that they're a mess. You've heard me say it a thousand times, "If you trade the averages you'll get average returns". It's something I learned the hard way a long time ago. Focusing on individual stocks, both long and short in this environment continues to make the most sense based on the weight-of-the-evidence.
First we'll look at the stocks that remain weak. We want to keep selling those if they're below key levels. From the long side, it's hard to ignore some of the relative strength out there. If the market catches a bid, those are likely to be the ones that lead us higher.
This week's "Chart of the Week" answers the question about what characteristics determine the stocks we're fading strength in, so this premium post will outline the best setups I found during my review of the S&P 1500. If you haven't read the other post, click here to do so as it will provide more context around these trade ideas.
It's a market of stocks, after all. The indexes are one thing, but the components that drive them are another. Last week we laid out a list of the stocks we wanted to be buying for a December rally. The idea was to get involved with stocks already working, rather than trying to get cute and bottom fish the underperformers.
We'll see how that works out. In the meantime, let's take a look at market breadth.
The stock market has spoken and it seems clear that we’re stuck in between some pretty significant levels of support and resistance. This argues for more of a sideways mess type of a market vs a complete collapse, at least for now.
We’ve laid out some important prices where something more substantial would be possible. We’ve successfully held above those key prices. A few examples are Technology $XLK above the 2000 highs, Regional Banks $KRE & Broker Dealers $IAI above their respective 2007 highs. In the indexes, 2660 in the S&P500 is a big one. We’re not going to have a complete collapse if these assets are above those levels. It’s if and when we’re below them that the real problems could start.
All of this suggests that we’re in more of a sideways range type market, at least for now. In that environment, if we’re going to buy stocks, we want to buy strength. I don’t think it’s worth messing around looking for mean reversions. We want to buy what has already been working compared to the rest during the past 2 months of selling pressure.
While updating our Canadian Chartbooks this weekend, I noticed a few that stood out as offering well-defined opportunities where the reward/risk is skewed in our favor. This short post will outline these names and levels, but members can view all of our Canadian Universe by clicking here.
There aren't many stocks in Canada hitting all-time highs right now, but Rogers Communications is one of them. It's a leading stock in a strong sector, so as long as it's above 68.70, we want to be long with an upside objective of 95.25.