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MauiTrader’s Big Wave Trading

Market Insights From Professional Investor, Joshua Hayes

March 31st, 2007

Seven New Speculative Swing Longs And Three Stocks I Am Adding To My Existing Positions

new speculative swing longs: HGR GGAL VCC MRB GMA SONE ECI

HGR is breaking out from a very flat pretty base, on very strong volume. Well, they don’t get much better than this (except BOP could have been max green). In the middle of January HGR broke out of a basing pattern on extremely strong trade with BOP going max green. After the breakout, the stock rode a nice steady trend upwards into the end of February, on a huge surge in accumulation that came with max green BOP. After the uptrend, the stock started a pullback into what has become a very perfectly shaped flat base. Volume dried up in the base, besides two days of accumulation, and BOP stayed above the zero line and stayed green most of the way. Today’s breakout, with all the green on this chart, makes this a very nice stock to go long. The fundamentals are improving with EPS growing 25% to 21% the past three quarters; sales have grown between 0% and 6% the past eight quarters. Fund ownership has increased from 20 to 24, the past four quarters. Estimates for 2008 are for a 17% increase in yearly EPS. This stock is not at the top of this crummy list for no reason. Cut your loss if the stock closes below the 50 day moving average on strong volume, if the stock does not follow-through on this breakout immediately. If it pulls back on lower volume, use the 10.51 area as your final cut loss. Read the rest of this entry »

March 31st, 2007

No New Swing Shorts For Monday As The Market Is Still In An Uptrend Off The March 14 Lows

No new swing shorts for Monday as the market is starting to offer up a lot of pretty young speculative stocks to go long. Even though this market has NO quality stocks breaking out of fresh bases, and lower prices would seem to be expected the way the market is acting, it is still not time to short stocks. Why? Because there are still breakouts in the speculative crap. Big caps and speculative cheap-junk lead at the end. The uptrend isn’t over yet.

But if it was over and this was a clear bear market, these charts would be ripe for a perfect short: NVS IBN

March 29th, 2007

Bullish Intraday Reversal, Helps Stocks Avoid Another Possible Ugly Day; Stock Indexes Close Higher On Lower Volume

A bullish Q4 GDP final revision higher to 2.5% from 2.2%, along with jobless claims falling for the fourth week in a row, helped start stocks off on a very bullish foot before the opening bell. But soon after the opening bell, stocks trended lower all day until a strong late afternoon rally sent stocks up into the closing bell with the SP 500 even closing near its HOD. This reversal in the face of rising oil to six-month highs of over $66 a barrel and gasoline future to eight month highs at $2.1355, due to the tension between Iran and the free-world, has to be considered very impressive. Read the rest of this entry »

March 29th, 2007

One New Speculative Swing Long And One Speculative Stock I Am Adding To My Existing Position

new speculative swing long: GLBC

GLBC is bouncing off the 50 day moving average, on strong volume. This stock has been in a steady uptrend since the August lows, with strong accumulation, low volume pullbacks, and green BOP all over this chart. Even before the stock found a bottom, max green BOP littered this chart from March to June. After a nice steady uptrend started, the stock has constantly found support near or at the 50 dma. This time the stock is doing it after putting in some heavy accumulation days the past three months with BOP now floating around the max green territory. The bounce today on some volume, along with all the green on the chart, makes this a very pretty chart to go long. The fundamentals are horrible, with EPS showing nothing but red ink and sales showing absolutely no growth. Therefore, despite the pretty green chart, this stock is probably not the best long to take for investors looking to make a safe bet. There is simply too many flaws in the fundamentals to expect this thing to rocket to the moon. Cut your first loss and most of your loss with a close below the 50 day moving average and your final loss with a close below the 25.95 level, if the stock does not follow-through higher immediately. Read the rest of this entry »

March 29th, 2007

No New Swing Shorts For Friday As The Market Is Still In An Uptrend From The March 21st Follow-Through Day

Even though I am not taking any shorts due to the fact that 3 out of 4 stocks follow the general trend of the market. That trend, while it may not be a great upward beast, is still not in a downtrend and unless the market is in a downtrend I simply find it too dangerous for me to risk my capital fighting the trend. The greatest traders of all time did not fight the trend. Why should I?

However, there are some stocks that are clearly breaking down and/or showing signs of putting in a significant top. I am sure there is another RYL in here: PAYX ETFC KMX KIM

March 29th, 2007

Stock Indexes Close Lower On Higher Volume, Producing The First Distribution Day Since The Follow-Through On Wednesday; Is This Rally Done Already?

Stocks turned tail Wednesday and for the second day in a row dip-buyers did not show up as stocks moved lower, with an intraday roller-coaster ride mid-day after a speech by Ben to a Congressional panel, closing near the lows of the day. Things got off to a bad start, after the February durable good came out below expectations of a 3.5% gain with an actual 2.5% gain. That might have been bad but the ex-transportation numbers hitting YOY growth lows not seen since 2003 and capital goods coming in 1.2% lower and at lows not seen since 2004 were probably what really gave traders a scare. On top of that, add oil hitting six-month highs of $68 after-hours and settling in at $64.08 after weekly inventories were announced falling by 900k, comments by Ben that inflation is still a worry, and the tensions between Britain and Iran over the naval incident and you have plenty of reasons for stocks to go lower; and lower they went. Read the rest of this entry »

March 28th, 2007

One New Very Speculative CANSLIM Swing Long, Five New Speculative Swing Longs, And Two Stocks I Am Adding To My Existing Positions

new very speculative CANSLIM swing long: JAX

JAX is bouncing off recent support and breaking out of a nice flat base pattern, on very strong volume. This stock has been in a nice steady uptrend since 2003, building nice long bases along the way. Those bases are characterized by their constant accumulation at key support areas around the 50 and 200 dma. The stock really picked up, this time around, in December, with the stock jumping on a surge in volume and BOP into the green zone. Then after another quiet base, the stock exploded to the upside at the beginning of March, on very strong accumulation and with BOP going to the max green area. Since then, the stock has created the perfect base, making a flat consolidation area with heavy accumulation and intraday bullish reversals in the base. Along with that, the stock’s BOP has been max green during the entire base. Finally a nice base I can be proud of looking at. The move today on a surge in volume, along with the max green BOP, makes this a pretty chart. The fundamentals are ok, with EPS starting to jump but on stagnant sales. The most recent quarter saw EPS gain 72% over the previous year. However, sales have only grown between 0% and 10% the past eight quarters. This stock has a perfect chart but the problem lies in the amount of volume it trades. This baby is very thin and therefore it is not going to be easy to get a good fill if you simply put a market order in. This is a limit only stock. And for newbies there should be no limit, as the average daily volume is only 10,000 and this stock does not have HUGE earnings and sales growth like what should be DEMANDED by your purchases. If you are experienced, cut your loss with a close below the 10.46 level (10.10, if you have more risk tolerance), if the stock does not follow-through on the breakout immediately. Read the rest of this entry »

March 28th, 2007

No New Swing Shorts For Thursday As The Market Is Still In A Solid Uptrend Off Of The March 14 Lows

The market still is not selling off on huge volume signaling to us that a bear market is here. Until, the trend is down on HUGE volume and we lose all of our pretty charts, like we started to after the Feb 27 sell-off, it is not smart to go short and fight the trend. Especially, since we are not in a clear trend and the fact that 3 out of 4 stocks follow the general trend of the market.

There are some stocks that look ripe for a deep fall: RYL PPS ABFS TM

If this was a bear market, I would love to be short these patterns.

March 27th, 2007

The Bad News From The Housing Sector Just Doesn’t Stop; Stocks End Lower But On Lower Volume

It was a day of bad news all around, as rising oil prices, more bad news from the housing market, and a drop in consumer confidence rocked stocks early. After the early morning rock, stocks basically spent the rest of the day boring everyone as all of the action was before the bell.

Before the bell, the Conference Board consumer confidence index fell to 107.2 in March, from a downward revised 111.2 in February. This was the first decline in five month and below estimates, after the index hit a 5 1/2 year high in February. Then we had the bad news from LEN’s Q1 report. The stock said this quarter EPS came in 72% lower and withdrew 2007 earnings estimates. The combination of these two news events, with oil making gains helped send all stock indexes lower. The bad news continued, after-hours, for the homebuilders, but we will get to that later.

At the close, the Nasdaq and SP 600 led to the downside with .7% declines, the SP 500, the DJIA and NYSE lost .6%, and the SP 400 held up the best with only a .5% loss. Leading stocks kept pace with the market, with the IBD 100 falling .7%. Even with the leading stocks keeping pace with the Nassy to the downside, there still was virtually no selling in the stocks that make up this current index.

Volume was lower yesterday on the NYSE by about 5% and lower on the Nasdaq by 2% or so. The lower prices with lower volume shows that the big boys still are not dumping their holdings. In fact, the light volume on this pullback, on top of all of today’s negative news headlines, is a very bullish situation. Combine today’s action with yesterday’s reversal and it is hard to believe the bulls are done with the upside. You simply do not see this kind of light volume pullbacks in a true bear market.

Breadth was negative on both stock exchanges today. Decliners beat advancers by a 2-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq and by a 9-to-4 ratio on the NYSE. There were 183 new highs to 64 new lows. There is nothing, underneath the market, that is signaling the market is ready to fall.

Some of the highlights today that have to be mentioned revolve around the housing sector. The IBD Building-Residential fell 1.8% and the IBD Building-A/C & Heating fell 2.2%, giving these indexes yet one more day of ugliness. The overall Philly Housing sector fell 1.5% today. It seems the pain never ends for these stocks. And by that I mean…the pain never ends. After the bell, there was even more bad news, as the FBI has started an investigation into the lending practices of BZH. The number of bad loans on their books is much higher than the national average. This sent the stock down as much as 15% after-hours. Not good.

So, basically, nothing has changed. The market is still in the same position as it has been in since the follow-through day last Wednesday. We are going nowhere, either up or down. A lot of traders are not sure if this is positive. Truth be told, I don’t know either. But what I do know is history. And IBD has hit the nail on the head again today by giving us another history lesson on follow-through days.

Even though we have not had another powerful day of gains in the market since the follow through day (the best bull markets have immediate gains), we still have not had any distribution days within the first five days. That bodes well for at least a possibility of higher prices. While no great bull market has ever started without more powerful gains on heavier volume right after a follow-through day, a follow-through day that does not have any distribution days within the next five days (like we just finished today) has a much lower chance of failing than other rallies. So basically what this tells me is that we need to be ready for more choppy trading.

If we do not sell-off here and instead keep rallying, you can guarantee, that the indexes will make slow steady (or slow and choppy) gains that will limiit my and your chance to make a TON of money. Like I keep saying, a bull market here is not that great of news. The gains here, with the low VIX, guarantees us that we will probably find ZERO stocks making 500% moves in six months. Even if there is one or two, trying to pick that one out of 8000 stocks is damn near impossible.

The chances of us going higher increases also with me finding this little gem from the Merrill Lynch Corporate Indicator. The net short position of hedge funds in the Russell 2000 is at record levels. The majority of these investment funds are not only too complicated for 99.9% of investors (nobody needs to be in anything where they do more than buy and sell stocks) but they are also ran by complete morons. Trust me, I have met my fair share of these people. Do you think they just focus on price, volume, cutting losses, money management, and studying and trying to find the greatest stock market winners? NO! They are too busy trying to let you know how smart they are. This is why the total pool of hedge funds do much worse than mutual funds. I still am shocked that people invest in these things.

On the other hand, portfolio managers cash balance has increased from 4.4% to 3.8%, signaling that they are more cautious now than they were in February before the sell-off. Along with that there risk appetite for stocks fell to five-year lows. This shows that even these guys, like me, feel cautious here. However, just like me (I am long 193 stocks), they are still long and are not selling off their stocks. That is why cash levels is not around 10% or more. These guys still love the stocks they are holding. Just like I do. Why do we like them? They are going up. That is all I want the stupid stock to do.

And on top of all of this information is the fact that the put/call ratio has jumped back up over 1 and closed at 1.1. This along with those hedge-fund douche bags shows that the market is going to have a hard time going down, with all of these short sellers. The market likes to reward the contrarians. The contrarian play right now is to be long, according to the put/call ratio and hedge fund investments in the Russell 2000.

But, just to confuse you and me some more, the overbought/oversold indicators that I follow have all of them now in overbought territory. The only way to work off the overbought condition is to either go sideways or lower. So expect some of that action. Based on the futures it appears we will be going lower again tomorrow. However, unless volume picks up and we get some clear distribution there will be nothing to worry about, much to my chagrin.

But, it doesn’t really matter. I am still long 190 plus stocks that are all putting in solid gains so I guess I should just be happy with the current gains. The gains I am seeing I am sure many people would die to be producing. So I guess I am just crying over spilled milk. But I love being able to hit home runs left and right. I do not like being a high OBP kind of guy. Because even when I can hit home runs the OBP is still high anyways. It all comes down to the damn VIX. And that can’t jump until we get a real sell-off.

I have ranted enough tonigh. If you are not making money in this market, I need you to please go and review all the longs I have taken since February 27. Why am I up 7% this year in my personal account, if this has been such an ugly market. Should I be up more? HELL YEAH!!!! Everybody should be with a flat market, if you are a CANSLIM trader. But this market, right now, is not rewarding growth investors or momentum investors, unless you concentrate solely on the solar stocks. Still go review my longs. You will see all are up or still have not violated the stated cut loss area. That is bullish, not bearish. I don’t know when I will get my bear market, but as each day goes by without a sell-off, the more and more I doubt it is time for a bear market. I will just have to keep waiting for real euphoria I guess. It makes me wonder if it is all going to end with a big-bang like the final run-up in 2000. By “it is all” I mean the bubble in China’s equity market which is what is holding this whole charade up. Like I keep saying, the chart of the China stock market is the same two year chart that preceded the sell-off in the 1929 DJIA and the 2000 Nasdaq.

Aloha and I will see you in the chat room.

March 27th, 2007

One New Speculative CANSLIM Swing Long, Six New Very Speculative Swing Longs, And One Stock I Am Adding To My Existing Position

new speculative CANSLIM swing long: EDGW

EDGW is breaking out from a cup with high handle pattern, on very strong volume. This stock has been in a nice solid uptrend for years, with plenty of accumulation, low volume pullbacks, and max green BOP along the way. In April of 2006, the stock started a pullback on lower volume. Around July activity got really wild but the stock still managed to find a bottom around then. After climbing up off the bottom, the stock started to advance more rapidly in January with volume really picking up into February with BOP staying well above the zero line and in the green zone most of the way. This month, the stock started to form a base on very quiet trade that led up to today. Today’s breakout on a surge in volume and BOP, along with the overall pattern, makes this a pretty chart. The fundamentals are very strong, with EPS growth between 60% and 600% the past eight quarters and sales growth between 30% and 135%. The only problem is that it appears funds are not interested in this stock as the fund ownership has not increased in a year. This stock would be good for newbies, besides the low volume. However, because of the lower volume, this is not the best stock for those who can not stand pullbacks. Cut your loss w/ a close below 7.67, if the stock does not move up immediately from this breakout. Read the rest of this entry »

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Disclaimer: This site may include market analysis. All ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are for informational purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation to invest, trade, and/or speculate in the markets. Any investments, trades, and/or speculations made in light of the ideas, opinions, and/or forecasts, expressed or implied herein, are committed at your own risk, financial or otherwise.