This is the video recording of the April 7th Weekly Town Hall w/ Willie Delwiche.
04/07/22 2:00 PM ET [Read more…]
Expert technical analysis of financial markets by JC Parets
by Peter
This is the video recording of the April 7th Weekly Town Hall w/ Willie Delwiche.
04/07/22 2:00 PM ET [Read more…]
by Peter
From the desk of Willie Delwiche.
I got a message last night that Ned Davis is retiring from the eponymous firm he launched more than four decades ago. Turns out, he’s not quite retiring – but he is stepping back. Either way, it’s a good time to reflect on his impact on the industry.
His data-driven, evidence-based approach to the market can seem obvious to those of us who are following the trail he blazed. But it would have been less obvious at a time when data access and computing power were more limited than they are now. It was revolutionary then, and is the gold-standard today.
More than ever, the industry is filled with those who want to tell stories about what should happen without making space for feedback about whether that is happening. Many want to sit still and find ways to have their priors confirmed, rather than having a disciplined and objective approach toward weighing the evidence. Being data-driven is more than just doing a little math and including a decimal place. Knowing what you want the answer to be before you even ask the question is not evidence-based, it’s narrative-driven.
by JC
We discussed this at length on Tuesday night (re-watch here).
Large-cap Healthcare.
And there’s an element of defense to it as well. Let’s not get it twisted:
You see how large-cap healthcare does when stocks are under pressure?
Pretty good huh?
Look at the size of some of these bases: [Read more…]
by Louis Sykes
As sophisticated as public markets can be, they often have little quirks.
Everyone’s heard about the McRib indicator: The S&P 500 has a higher daily return when the McRib is available at McDonald’s than when it’s not available.
Or how about the magazine covers? That’s another classic anecdotal indicator.
Another one is the conference dip.
It’s said that when all the traders are out at conferences, the market dips.
The annual CMT Association Symposium was notorious for this. Later on, we saw this during the big SALT conference in Vegas.
The old thought was that if all the big players are at a conference, who’s left to buy?
It’s funny because now we’re seeing the dips during crypto conferences.
The talk of the town in the world of crypto is the recent Bitcoin conference taking place in Miami.
This just seems to be the latest iteration:
by JC
For this week’s trade, we’re selling an $XLI May 97/105 Strangle for approximately $2.85 net credit. This means we’re naked short both the 97 puts and the 105 calls.
Get the full details, risk management procedures and targets for this trade here:
From the desk of Steve Strazza @Sstrazza
When investing in the stock market, we always want to approach it as a market of stocks.
Regardless of the environment, there are always stocks showing leadership and trending higher.
We may have to look harder to identify them depending on current market conditions… but there are always stocks that are going up.
The same can be said for weak stocks. Regardless of the environment, there are always stocks that are going down, too.
We already have multiple scans focusing on stocks making all-time highs, such as Hall of Famers, Minor Leaguers, and the 2 to 100 Club. We filter these universes for stocks that are exhibiting the best momentum and relative strength characteristics.
Clearly, we spend a lot of time identifying and writing about leading stocks every week, via multiple reports.
Now, we’re also highlighting lagging stocks on a recurring basis.
by Peter
From the desk of Willie Delwiche.
Key Takeaway: The rally off of the mid-March stock market lows has equity investors feeling better. Without upside follow through (in terms of price and/or risk appetite), moods could quickly sour. So far, evidence of follow through has been lacking. Taking a longer-term perspective, the pessimism that was seen earlier this year seems more consistent with frustration that the stocks one owns aren’t going up rather than a deep-seated desire to reduce exposure and avoid equities altogether. Equity funds continue to see inflows, stocks are expensive relative to earnings and household exposure to equities has remained at historically high levels. Without these conditions unwinding, short-term mood swings may be even more sensitive to price changes than they normally are.
Sentiment Report Chart of the Week: Commodities Catching Attention
Commodities were the best performing asset class in 2021 and yet investors hardly noticed. Commodity-related ETF’s actually experienced net outflows last year. Commodities followed that by being the strongest asset class in Q1 2022 (posting their best quarterly gain in decades while both stocks and bonds were underwater). Now, however, investors are starting to take notice. In March, commodity ETF’s experienced their largest monthly inflows in nearly two years. Adjusted for total assets, year-to-date net flows to commodities (11% of AUM) have actually outpaced net flows to equities (3% of AUM).
by Louis Sykes
Demystifying the world of cryptocurrencies can be a taunting task.
Even before you dive into the emerging world of defi, web 3.0, and NFTs, what seems like the relatively simple Bitcoin network has a hidden underworld of complexity and nuance.
Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum can be bought without the necessity of a financial intermediary, like an exchange or crypto broker.
Instead, you can complete transactions on-chain, transferring capital and funds to individuals across the world utilizing the computing power of a peer-to-peer network.
These transactions, in turn, are validated and secured by miners, who dedicate computing power via solving complicated mathematical problems. Once solved, a hash is created.
The hash rate, in formal terms, is the number of hash operations done in a given period of time.
Less formally, the hash rate essentially measures the security and health of any proof-of-work cryptocurrency.
There’s no better way for those wanting a deeper dive than reading the 2008 Bitcoin white paper.