Unenthusiastic Rebound For Stocks From Stretched Conditions

 | Sep 17, 2018 12:40AM ET

AT40 = 51.6% of stocks are trading above their respective 40-day moving averages (DMAs)
AT200 = 54.6% of stocks are trading above their respective 200DMAs
VIX = 12.1
Short-term Trading Call: cautiously bullish

Commentary
I flipped cautiously bullish last week. As I suspected, the prospects for a bounce were not as good as the previous time the stock market was similarly over-stretched. The S&P 500 (SPDR S&P 500 (NYSE:SPY)) gained 1.1% in a week of choppy, sometimes slow-motion, trading action.

On Monday, the index trickled higher into its short-term downtrend line. It gapped down on Tuesday only to bounce right back for a breakout. On Thursday, the index gapped up. The index stopped short of its all-time high, and I decided to take profits on my SPY call options. While the 20-day moving average (DMA) held well as support, I did not see enough strength to justify the risk of hanging around much longer (calls had an expiry this coming Friday). I will recharge the trade on the next dip to or toward the 20DMA (the dotted line in the graph).

The S&P 500 (SPY) found support at its 20DMA to rally back toward the all-time high set at the end of August.

The NASDAQ and the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) were a little more definitive than the S&P 500 in their bounces away from 50DMA support. The 20DMA looks ready to become support for the current upswing.

The NASDAQ pivoted around its 20DMA in a wide range before breaking out of the latest churn. The intraday lows found support above the 50DMA.

QQQ swung widely below its uptrending 20DMA while finding support at its uptrending 50DMA. The week ended with a breakout holding.

While the major indices tentatively reached higher, the volatility index, the VIX, definitively imploded all over again. The VIX fell every single day of the week. Friday’s drama beat Tuesday’s drama by swinging all the way from above Thursday’s intraday high to a close at a 3-week low. The overall swift return to complacency supports a bullish bias for the coming week even with the renewed headlines generating trade war angst.

The volatility index, the VIX, rapidly reversed the previous week’s angst-filled trading.

AT40 (T2108), the percentage of stocks trading above their respective 40DMAs, sealed my impression of a tentative week. My favorite technical indicator swung around from lows to highs but barely made any progress: it closed the previous week at 48.0% and ended the week at 51.6%. AT40 did little to confirm the stock market’s bounce. The coming week could then hold good upside potential as loitering stocks get moving. The alternative scenario is a break of the 45% level that has held as support since late April. Such a move would require the kind of selling that creates oversold conditions (AT40 below 20%). Needless to say, I am still holding my trading hedges.

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CHART REVIEWS
While AT40 exposed the lack of enthusiasm in the overall stock market rebound, there are of course, as always, dramatic stock moves of interest.

Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD)
When the herd is right, it is a powerful sight. The upward surge in AMD continues apace much to my surprise. Per my trading strategy, I jumped into AMD call options once the blow-off topping action was invalidated. With analysts continuing to chase AMD with upgrades and bullish commentary, stubbornly betting with the herd has become the clear winner on AMD.


Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) continues to barrel upward through its upper Bollinger Band (BB) channel.

BHP Billiton (LON:BLT)
I used the latest sell-off in commodities to finally switch around my BHP vs Rio Tinto (NYSE:RIO) pairs trade. The latest wave of selling in BHP reached a crescendo after the stock gapped down well below its lower Bollinger® Band (BB). Subsequent buying interest was strong enough to close BHP with a gain on the day. I bought call options near the close of that day. The stock has been off to the races ever since. Despite this show of strength off the lows, I still think of the commodity space as overall weak and suggesting that the global economy is not well.

BHP Billiton (BHP) bounced sharply from its recent low which successfully tested the 2018 low set in April.

Rio Tinto (RIO)
RIO found a bottom with much less drama than BHP. I bought put options before the BHP call options. If RIO does not attract more interest soon, I anticipate new lows in due time.

Rio Tinto (RIO) bounced off a 13-month low.

Freeport-McMoran (NYSE:FCX)
Declining copper prices compounded FCX’s operational issues this year. The downtrend off January’s high accelerated off July’s temporary high. Like many commodity plays, buyers rushed into FCX at the intraday lows on Tuesday, September 11. The buying was strong enough to create a long hammer bottoming pattern. The following rebound so far has found stiff resistance at the downtrending 20DMA.



Freeport-McMoran (FCX) created a long hammer bottom at a 14-month low. The 20DMA downtrend is still in effect however.

U.S. Steel (NYSE:X)
U.S. Steel is still not benefiting from the tariffs on steel (or perhaps it would have performed even worse than it is?). Last week, X gapped down to a new 10-month low.

U.S. Steel (X) is struggling at 10-month lows as it continues to confirm August’s major 200DMA breakdown.

Cleveland-Cliffs (NYSE:CLF)
While tariffs are not helping the stocks of steel producers like U.S. Steel, makers of the iron ore used by domestic steel producers seem to be grabbing the lions share of the benefit. I missed out on CLF’s great bounce off 50DMA support. I did not want to buy CLF without first reviewing the last earnings report. I simply never got around to doing that review.


Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF) found firm support at its 50DMA and bounced back toward resistance at its 2009 intraday low.

Camping World Holdings (NYSE:CWH)
I first covered CWH the great things CWH’s CEO had to say in June, I consider this stock and story broken all over again.


Camping World Holdings (CWH) slowly eroded most of its sharp gains from June. The 20DMA is now providing effective resistance.

Facebook (NASDAQ:FB)
Facebook bumped against stiff resistance at its downtrending 20DMA and dropped nearly straight down. Now the stock’s lower-BB is guiding the stock downward. I turned the crank on another short position this week. I have not been bearish enough on FB’s chart. A test of the March and 2018 low is in play.