Two months ago we highlighted Deutsche Bank because we felt that price action disagreed with prevailing bearish sentiment around the stock, which created an opportunity for us on the long side. Today we're looking at a stock that presents a similar trade for us, with well-defined risk and 30% of potential upside over the intermediate-term.
Last week I wrote about the Canada's Energy markets to introduce our new Canadian Chartbooks (Major Sectors & Indices and TSX 60). In today's post I want to focus on the Banking and REIT sectors, which are showing relative strength and continue to offer opportunity on the long side. Not to mention I've been itching to use this Toy Story pun as a title since JC hired me.
First let's take a look at the TSX Capped REITs Index vs the TSX Capped Composite. It's spent the last 2 years bottoming and is now breaking out above a confluence of resistance. If this ratio is above it, the bias is to the upside with a target at the '15-'16 highs.
Last month we added the Investors Business Daily 50 List to our chart coverage. This list combined relative strength and strong fundamentals to highlight 50 of the best stocks in the market. Today I updated the Chartbook for members, so I wanted to highlight some of the best names I'm seeing on this list across several sectors of the market.
First, let's start off with a daily chart of the IBD 50 ETF $FFTY. Prices have been in a strong uptrend and look to be continuing higher after a failed breakdown below 35.15 and test of the 200-day moving average (if you're into that sort of thing). Momentum remains in a bullish range, so if prices are above 35.15 our upside objective continues to be 40.75.
Sector rotation. Sector rotation. Sector rotation. I probably sound like a broken record at this point, but today's theme is once again...sector rotation. This time it's Transports being helped back to their January highs by an improving Airline sector. We've spoken about the relative strength in Railroads and Trucking stocks, and acknowledged the relative under-performance in Airlines two months ago, but the data has slowly shifted.
We also pointed out that although Airlines were the worst of the Transport stocks, they were hanging in there on an absolute basis. Sure, there were weak names within the sector like American Airlines, but there were also strong stocks like United Airlines. Today, however, we're seeing the relative performance of the group trying to bottom and the absolute performance of even the weakest names improve.
Friday we wrote about the US Dollar breaking out to 1-year highs and why it's one of the most important charts we're watching from an intermarket perspective. With that said, we always look at both sides of the story, and while the US Dollar breakout certainly adds to the bear case for Precious Metals, I want to use this post to explore all of the current bullish and bearish characteristics of the space.
It's not about being right, it's about making money. There's a difference and I think that gets forgotten too often. We want to position ourselves where we have the highest probabilities for success as well as where the risk vs reward is skewed in our favor. The goal is not to be right every time. The goal is to be profitable. That's why we're always thinking worst case scenario: always a risk level and always a target.
Today I want to focus in on what we're seeing in the S&P500 because I think that from a risk management standpoint, this 2780-2800 level is a big one today from a structural perspective. Until now, we've used 7000 in the Nasdaq100 and 2650 in the S&P500 as our lines in the sand. We've only wanted to be long if we were above those levels and that has worked out very well. Moving forward, I've identified some higher levels that we need to monitor.
As part of our ongoing partnership with Investor's Business Daily we have added all of the IBD50 components to our equity research coverage. We are updating our Chartbook on a weekly basis and members of Allstarcharts have access to that workbook here.
Today, I wanted to discuss what we're seeing from this group to identify the overall trend for U.S. stocks and also to find trading ideas to profit from that directional move.
This index is made up of stocks showing both relative strength and positive momentum, in addition to other factors that play a role in adding or removing components from the list of 50. What attracts me to this group, however, is the relative strength and positive momentum, just to be clear.
This is the Innovator IBD50 ETF $FFTY which to me, is still in an uptrend. We want to continue to err on the bullish side of this ETF and the group as a whole:
Sector rotation in this market continues and the Agribusiness and Chemical Industries within the Materials Sector look to be heating up. While their performance on a relative basis is lackluster, on an absolute basis there are several setups offering reward/risk scenarios skewed in our favor.
First let's take a structural look at the Agribusiness ETF $MOO, which contains exposure to Chemical stocks as there is no ETF dedicated to that industry. Prices got back to their '08 highs earlier in the year and have been consolidating since. A breakout above 66 would signal the beginning of a new long-term uptrend that targets 94.25.
We've been extremely vocal about the Medical Devices space on the blog, and rightfully so, with the sector continuing its long-term trend of out-performance throughout 2018. The index has 57 components, but because the top 10 stocks make up roughly 60% of the index, opportunities in the smaller components tend to be overlooked by many market participants. In this post I want to look at all of its components and highlight names where our risk is well-defined and the reward/risk is still skewed in our favor.
Let's start off with the sector ETF $IHI on an absolute basis for context. Prices are just off all-time highs after successfully retesting their breakout area near 203.50. As long as prices are above that level, short and intermediate-term momentum remains intact and our next upside objective is up near 248-249.50.
I could not be more thrilled that it's the end of the month for one reason alone: Monthly Candlestick Charts. They get me every time! It's easy to get lost in the every day noise surrounding the market. The chart review I do heading into the first of every month is one of the most important parts of my process. It brings me home. There's no better way I know to maintain composure and recognize trends than this monthly music and chart session!
Since June of 2017 when the S&P500 broke out above 2400, we've had a target of 3000. After close to a 4% rally in the S&P500 Index this month, we went out just 6 points from a new all-time high monthly close. This is not any evidence we think suggests anything has changed. To the contrary, higher prices are things we expect to see in an uptrend: