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Mikey's Short Term Trading Rules

1) Make up a list of stocks, commodities or ETF's to trade. This list should be names that have good earnings and high relative strength.
2) Monitor this list and throw out the weaker names
3) Buy only stocks or ETF's that are intermediate and daily up (green) and the market is Daily and intermediate term up (green)
4) Buy pullbacks on these stocks to the 20 and 50 day averages
Usually you get 4 to 6 20 day pullback buys and 2 or 3 50 day pullback buys in an intermediate term trend
5) More agressive traders can buy the 7 day average in the first 3 to 8 weeks of the uptrend.
6) Buy pullbacks not runups. A buy should not be easy or exciting but difficult and somewhat scary. DO NOT CHASE
7) Place stop at 5% below the buy price. Do not remove
8) Sell 3 to 5 days after the stock price takes out its most recent 2 week high with at least 15% gains
9) Uptrends that are 12 weeks or more may be ripe for a correction. The first 2 pullbacks to the 50 day are usually safe.
Intermediate term uptrends and downtrends generally last from 8 to 16 weeks with 12 weeks being the norm.
10) Shorting is a viable strategy in downtrends for experienced traders only. In general, reverse the above rules
11) Tweet Mikey @themarketshadow with questions or ideas

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

"PROS" looking for a restest...Can You say Head and shoulders bottom??

Stocks May Retest Bottom: So Let the Buying Begin

Whether it comes from this Friday's jobs report or some other dose of bad news, the stock market is likely to retest the November bottom—and probably sooner than later, many market pros think.

"Despite me thinking that we've already seen the belly of the beast, I still would not be surprised to see the lows breached and some more fear coming into the market," says Jordan Kimmel, fund manager at Magnet Investing in Randolph, N.J.


But even with the short-term bearishness, many financial advisers are telling clients to look past the bottom and start picking up small- and mid-cap stocks that traditionally lead the market out of recessions. Others see technology and commodities playing leadership roles.

"People think traditional leadership is large-cap growth and it's really not," says Charles Massimo, president of CJM Fiscal Management in Melville, N.Y. "Small-cap stocks always have and always will (lead out of recessions) and they will continue to do so."

Since the Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled to 7,552 and the S&P 500 dropped to 752 on Nov. 20, the market has meandered in a fairly tight trading range while it wallows in the negativity of swelling unemployment along with poor earnings and pessimistic outlooks.

The jobs number due at the end of the week is already expected to be dismal—a 7.5 percent unemployment rate and a 525,000-worker drop in nonfarm payrolls, according to Briefing.com—and a surprise to the downside could be just the ingredient to send investors into a tizzy that tests the previous lows.

While Kimmel says it also could be another event outside the jobs number that provides a market bottom, he thinks the Dow before long could be trading below 7,000.

"This is the most extreme period I've ever seen for people intent on missing the bottom," he says. "People are hoarding cash. All the ingredients for another bottom are already in place. The reality is the new lows are just one bad news story away."

Opportunity Awaits

Those looking inside the numbers think the outlook for the rest of the year, beyond the immediate damage, could be what provides a retest.

"Everyone has come to the conclusion that this quarter and next quarter are a wash," says Dave Rovelli, managing director of US equity trading for Canaccord Adams. "The next quarter is when you could retest the lows. If companies come out and there's no light at the end of the tunnel and guidance is bad, maybe April is when you retest."

But that's going to provide opportunity, and Kimmel says he is buying a raft of small- and mid-caps, while at least in the near term Rovelli likes technology, energy and commodities.

For sectors on the smaller-company end, Kimmel likes shipping and biotech, emphasizing that he continues to see a stock-picker's environment rather than one where plays on indexes and exchange-traded funds will thrive.



While that mentality isn't universally shared, there is growing enthusiasm for companies with less than $1 billion in market capitalization.

"What will lead us out of this is a change in psychology," Massimo of CJM Fiscal Management adds. "You'll want to start to see some of the negative news be minimized and more of the positive stuff will start to come out. That will be the first kind of change in the market. It's all about sentiment. Bear markets reverse much quicker and with much more of an upside than most people realize."

Finding Safe Harbor

As a proponent of passive management, Massimo is counseling clients to hold tight to their positions and not miss gains from when the market recovers. He urges diversification and discourages clients from using "that sense of a crystal ball" to determine which sectors will lead.


Mikey says: If we can hold in this area we have a real chance of a head and shoulders bottom. The Left shoulder is 10-9 to 10-28, the Head is November 21 and 22, and the Right shoulder is 1-20 to present. That would leave the restest people waiting to buy the lows and in cash when the bottom kicked in. .....Could happen!!!

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