A Post-Fed Market Still In Bullish Position

 | Jun 19, 2017 06:28AM ET

AT40 = 56.7% of stocks are trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs)
AT200 = 57.5% of stocks are trading above their respective 200DMAs
VIX = 10.4 (volatility index)
Short-term Trading Call: cautiously bullish

Commentary
The Federal Reserve gave the permission to the stock market that I awaited…well, sort of.

On Wednesday, June 14, 2017, the Q&A period , Fed Chair Janet Yellen had the opportunity to knock down stocks but instead took a pass:

“We have certainly noticed the stock market is up considerably over the last year. That usually shows up in financial conditions indexes and is an important reason why some of them show easier financial conditions.”

With the Fed ever so slowing tightening monetary conditions, Yellen could have easily noted a relative loftiness of stock valuations.

The S&P 500 (SPY (NYSE:SPY)) ended that day flat but lost a few points going into the end of the week. Its 20-day moving average (DMA) uptrend held up as support. Another Bollinger Band® (BB) squeeze seems underway, but I am guessing the index is in for an extended period of consolidation until at least earnings next month. Investors will likely want to confirm all is well (or not) on the earnings front before making any decisive post-Fed moves.


The S&P 500 (SPY) looks like it has started another consolidation period that will include marginal all-time highs.

For the first time in a while, the NASDAQ is under-performing the S&P 500. The tech-laden index has yet to mount a serious reversal of the big 1-day sell-off from June 9th. Its 50-day moving average (DMA) is still holding as support; the same for the related PowerShares QQQ Trust Series 1 (NASDAQ:QQQ) which represents the biggest 100 stocks of the NASDAQ.


Despite a sudden and sharp 1-day plunge, the NASDAQ (and QQQ) is holding support at its uptrending 50DMA.

AT40 (T2108), the percentage of stocks trading above their respective 40DMAs, fell from its high pre-Fed perch of 64.2% and closed the week at 56.7%. This performance is still impressive given the recent calamities in big cap high-tech. AT40 did not get quite close enough to overbought status (above 70%) for me to declare this pullback a bearish moment. AT200 (T2107), the percentage of stocks trading above their respective 200DMAs, is performing similarly to AT40.

To underline the overall strength of the market, the volatility index remains comfortably seated in extreme lows. Each visit above 12, and even each stretch to solid intra-day gains, has been met with a subsequent implosion of volatility. In the wake of the Fed on Thursday, I departed from my strategy of quickly locking in profits from my call options on ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures (NYSE:UVXY). I thought maybe, just maybe, the market might churn further, even if just for one more day, in angst over the implications of the Fed’s latest move. I am now sitting on a small loss as a sharp reminder to stick to the script!

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The volatility index, the VIX, has a path of least resistance…down to 14-year lows!

The ProShares Ultra VIX Short-Term Futures ETF (UVXY) continues to be attracted to all-time lows like a moth to a flame.

There are a lot of sub-themes I want to cover for additional color on the market and for my strategy going forward (for at least the next month or so until earnings). I have divided these into sections.

Tech stocks
As I stated in a prior post , I used the swoon on big cap tech to trade the call options and/or shares of PowerShares QQQ Trust (QQQ), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), and NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA). Seeing AAPL continue to weaken, I decided on Thursday to speculate on a hedged (swing trade) approach. I bought call options on Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) and put options on Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX). While I eked out a small gain in GOOG, NFLX was a complete bust as it rallied into the end of the week – the exact opposite of what AAPL did.


Apple (AAPL) has yet to recover form the swoon in big cap tech stocks.

Netflix (NFLX) broke down below 50DMA support but sellers have yet to follow-through. Based on trading volume, buying interest is starting to take shape over selling interest.

Alphabet (GOOG) has yet to test uptrending 50DMA support. However, sellers still have the advantage in trading volume.

It just so happened Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) was the best big cap tech stock to play for the week. On Friday, AMZN even came within $0.25 of returning to the psychologically important $1000 level. I wish I had AMZN call options in play, but at least I did not leave the AMZN story of the week empty-handed.

Retail/Groceries
The biggest news from Friday was the move by Amazon.com (AMZN) to buy out Whole Foods Market Inc (NASDAQ:WFM). AMZN offered to buy WFM for $13.7B in an all-cash deal. While this deal sent WFM soaring 29.1%, the truly remarkable reaction was the parallel 2.4% gain in AMZN which added about $11.1B in market cap.


Whole Foods Market (WFM) completed a breakout from a very extended consolidation period. Ironically enough, M&A speculation was rampant at the beginning of this period.

Amazon.com (AMZN) essentially purchased WFM for “free” with a 2.4% gain in its stock as a reward for offering to buy WFM. AMZN’s 50DMA survived as a firm support for the swoon in big cap tech stocks.

The stock market essentially made the deal a no-brainer for AMZN as the company received WFM almost for free. Yet, industry-wide there were PLENTY of costs which turned the AMZN/WFM gain into a giant sucking sound. Nightly Business Report delivered extensive deal coverage that outlined a slew of casualties. The collateral damage ranged from grocery stores…


Grocers suffered substantial losses on the day thanks to Amazon’s offer for Whole Foods Market.

…to any store which sells food: trading down on heavy volume were Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT) by 4.7% although up notably from its low of the day, Costco (NASDAQ:COST) by 7.2%, and Target Corporation (NYSE:TGT) by 5.1% which was down as much as a whopping 12.4% at its low of the day (I wish my trading radar was up on THAT move!).

…to packaged goods companies which now face potentially tougher negotiations from a robust Amazon grocery business… Hershey Company (NYSE:HSY) lost 2.7% (my buying radar is up!), Kellogg Company (NYSE:K) lost 1.7%, and Mondelez International Inc (NASDAQ:MDLZ) lost 1.5% all on heavy trading volume.

…to shopping center REITs which include grocers as tenants, considered by many to be stable renters…


Shopping center REITs took major hits thanks to the Amazon offer for Whole Foods

Even payment processor Vantiv Inc (NYSE:VNTV) took a 3.8% hit on high volume because presumably it will lose business due to the combined AMZN/WFM entity. The one sliver of sympathy benefit came from Impinj (PI) which soared 19.1% on high volume. This is a gain I will not chase: the move seems like an extremely speculative bet on a gain in business from WFM transactions that will presumably use RFIDs (Radio Frequency Identity tags) thanks to Amazon’s prowess in inventory automation. PI went public a year ago. The stock now sits at a fresh all-time high.


Impinj Inc (NASDAQ:PI) soared to a new all-time high thanks to the Amazon for Whole Foods deal.

The ironic component of the market action was the large dip in WFM the previous day. Presumably in sympathy with a poor earnings report from Kroger Company (NYSE:KR), WFM plunged 6.7%. KR sank 18.9%. I happened to be holding a substantial amount of WFM stock from an accumulation I made after fresh buyout talk/rumors in April. If I had not just gone through a similar situation with Nordstrom (NYSE:JWN) where that stock plunged ahead of fantastic news and a big one-day jump, I would have cut my losses and bailed on WFM. Instead, I bit my lip, ground my teeth, and held. Thank goodness I did. I sold my shares into the post-Amazon gap up.

On Friday, I decided to start accumulating KR. The grocery business has been a rough business for a very long time. It has gone through cycles like the current one. Sure AMZN is poised to put a new twist on the competitive pressure, but the history for grocers is one of adaptability. To start my bet on a future rebound, I sold a single put option on KR expiring in January, 2018. I will be looking for additional opportunities to accumulate (likely using long-term call options). I have yet to figure out how to play the rest of the ripple effects of AMZN/WFM, but I strongly suspect some good value will emerge from the rubble. There are likely even good pairs trades in the mix.


The Kroger Company (NYSE:KR) suffered a double whammy on its way to losing as much as a third of its value in two days. Buyers stepped in at Friday’s lows in a move that looks like an early attempt at bottoming.