The Fast Moving Consumer Goods Index continues to chop around, but there remains an opportunity in many individual index components on the long side (while avoiding the weak ones).
With Crude Oil down 25% over the last month and the rest of the Energy complex struggling in tandem, let's take a look at where it stands and where it could potentially head.
We often get questions about what levels we're watching or what our stop is, but in truth every market participant has different timeframes, objectives, and plans for how they'll manage their portfolios. It's impossible to answer properly without knowing all of that information.
With that being said, any market participant can identify various levels at which the dynamics of the asset they're trading have changed.
Today I want to walk through an example using the Japan ETF (EWJ) showing how we'd go about identifying those changes through price action and momentum.
For those new to the exercise, we take a chart of interest and remove the x/y-axes and any other labels that would help identify it. The chart can be any security in any asset class on any timeframe on an absolute or relative basis. Maybe it's a custom index or inverted, who knows!
We do all this to put aside the biases we have associated with this specific security/the market and come to a conclusion based solely on price.
You can guess what it is if you must, but the real value comes from sharing what you would do right now.Buy,Sell, or Do Nothing?
This week I saw two different charts floating around that I thought deserved a second look based on how they were presented and what their ultimate conclusion was.
The first has to deal with the underperformance of the Equal-Weighted S&P 500 Index, while the second looks at High Dividend Factor ETFs that have gone off the beaten path.
This post is a quick update on a name in the Consumer Goods' space that we've been watching for a breakout, as well as two other names worth putting on your radar.
With our upside price objectives being met across in Equity markets across the globe, we've shifted our focus to buying Bonds and selling Emerging Market stocks with the expectation of a choppy environment for stocks as an asset class over the coming weeks and months.
With that said, just because the indexes may be choppy there will be winners and losers that we can take advantage of long and short.