In Trader's Market, Shorten Time Frames, Hedge. Take Profits Early

Money Show

Published Jan 07, 2019 12:00PM ET

Updated Jan 07, 2019 01:15PM ET

This time is different as we are living in a new world where the stock market is more like Texas weather than a vehicle for price discovery and investing, writes Dr. Joe Duarte. Applied Materials (NASDAQ:AMAT) and Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) are moving higher and may gather some steam.

Volatility is certainly here to stay as the Dow Jones Industrial Average traveled over 1300 points on a closing basis in a mere two trading sessions last week. For those who slept through the spectacular events, things started to unravel when Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) delivered a stark warning about its upcoming quarterly results on January 3. The market promptly crashed and burned delivering a 600-point decline putting the bears in “I told you so” heaven.

On January 4, a huge beat on the new jobs section of the monthly Employment report and a cordial sounding Fed Chairman Powell who noted that the central bank was going “to adjust policy quickly and flexibly” combined to kick start what seemed to be a dead cat bounce which turned into a real stock rally, at least for a day.

That was then

No matter what they say, this market now trades one day at a time, sometimes one headline at a time, making it difficult for anyone who has even a few days for a trading time frame.

What does it all mean? Well for one thing, the Fed admitted that it’s willing to pause on its path toward more rate increases for a period of time. So, for a day that was good news. Of course, Powell’s remarks don’t necessarily mean that the Fed will stop raising interest rates altogether, but it does suggest that the Fed may know something about a bank or two that may be in some trouble and they are hoping to keep things from getting worse. And since he’s back on the talk circuit on Thursday, we may have more fireworks, unless someone else beats him to the headline circus.

Furthermore, the currency markets had a flash crash last week, which suggests that the market may now be reaching a significant potential fracture point beyond stock prices. If this dynamic develops, we could see something similar to the 1998 Thai Baht and the 1999 Ruble crises. Anyone who lived through those events should shudder given the fact that a stock market crash is like comparing a lit match to the nuclear explosion that could materialize if a major currency crisis is further inflamed and fueled by algo trading.

Moreover, the Fed may have noticed that we live in a new world where even as they move at the speed of a dormant glacier, information travels, and algos trade at the speed of light. Indeed, this incongruence between the Fed’s clock and that of robot traders leaves the markets at the mercy of the algos leaving while the central bank scrambles.

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Market breadth tries to recover

The New York Stock Exchange Advance Decline line (NYAD) is trying to recover from the drubbing it took over the last three months. Because this indicator remains the most reliable market trend gauge since the 2016 election, its actions remain paramount to understanding what may come next in the stock market.