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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

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Experts touts Techs

DJIA 8407 -122 SPX 914 -12.60 VIX 27.34 Gold 928.40 -12.40 Oil 69.33 -2.16 Dollar Index 80.51 .3050 TLT (Long Term Gov Bonds)94.69 -.03 IEF (7-10 Yr Gov Bonds)90.77 -.13

As Rally Stalls, Tech May Be The Answer

With questions looming over whether Wall Street's three-month rally is running out steam, some portfolio managers are turning to technology as a way to ride out the next stock market cycle.

After jumping as much as 35 percent off the March lows, stocks have been in the doldrums lately, trading in a tight range as investors ponder data points that mostly show a tepid economic recovery at best.

Technology stocks, though, have taken on a fairly strong leadership position, and the fundamentals of the industry are indicating that could continue.

"From a fundamental standpoint, the good thing about technologies is they're typically low-leveraged," said Peter Miralles, president of Atlanta Wealth Consultants. "Since this has been a credit and leverage problem in this recession, technology actually is doing pretty well compared to some of the other groups. That trend will continue."

In both broad and narrow comparisons, tech has outperformed both during the massive stock market collapse off the October 2007 historic highs and through the spring 2009 rally.

The Nasdaq tech gauge is up roughly 31 percent since its March 9 low, while the Standard & Poor's 500 is up 27 percent and the Dow industrials have gained 22 percent over the same period. Even as the stock market dropped Tuesday, the Nasdaq's losses were only about half those of its counterparts.

Similarly, tech-based exchange-traded funds also have been among the market's leaders, occupying top spots in both percentage gains and total performance this year.

The Direxion Daily Technology Bull 3X [TYH 88.64 -2.46 (-2.7%) ] is the fourth-largest gainer by percentage this year of all ETFs, surging about 64 percent. The fund tracks the small-cap Russell 1000 Technology Index.

Similarly, the Ultra Technology ProShares [ROM 31.76 -0.61 (-1.88%) ] ETF, which provides twice the performance of the Dow technology index, has popped 49 percent in 2009 and is also in the top 20 percentage gainers, according to Morningstar.

The more closely followed and much higher volume tech ETF, the PowerShares QQQQ [QQQQ 36.23 -0.22 (-0.6%) ] that follows the Nasdaq, is up 22 percent for the year. The Qs, as the ETF is known, has moved into a bullish position according to its 80-day and 200-day moving averages, according to Schaeffer's Investment Research in Cincinnati.

"Despite this outperformance, investors continue to overlook and to bet against the shares," Schaeffer's wrote in an analysis for clients.

The company is bullish on techs, saying options trading also is showing higher trends for the group. Schaeffer's specifically recommends Palm [PALM 16.2199 0.3999 (+2.53%) ], Synaptics [SYNA 37.90 -0.41 (-1.07%) ], Juniper Networks [JNPR 23.4229 -0.2071 (-0.88%) ] and Priceline.com [PCLN 111.12 -3.53 (-3.08%) ].

To be sure, there are some caution signals out there for tech: Some are suspicious of the sector precisely because of how strong its run has been and caution that a pullback, much like many have been predicting for the broader market, could be in the makings.

The fears, though, seem to be more confined to the short term, and many remain bullish for technology over the longer haul.

"We're getting mixed signals from the technology sector at least in near-term outlook," said Steven Roge, portfolio manager at Roge Partners in Omaha, Neb. "From a growth perspective on the short term, things are looking fairly neutral. From a long-term perspective, we're slightly bullish on the technology sector at this time."

Roge thinks any move higher in stocks is likely to continue to come from the beaten-down sectors that still have room to run.

As for technology, there is some indication of bumpiness ahead, but there's large options put interest at the 35 strike for the QQQQ ETF, just below its current level.

"In most recessions you're going to see technology become a leader, but of course with tremendous volatility like technology has always had," said Miralles, who sees chip companies as being cyclical while hand-held devices "is where the action is."

As financial companies continue to battle their way through the minefield of credit issues and inflation, technology companies that historically have low exposure to leverage and even inflation are likely to persevere.

"One thing that makes us slightly bullish is the balance sheets of these companies, and valuations are still relatively compelling," Roge said. "Typically technology companies keep more cash on their balance sheets, so they have a lot of room to work with."


Well now as the world burns the experts are going to hide in the oasis of the techs.

So Again where are they hiding

Energy XLE 47.55
Techs QQQQ 36.24 XLK 18.14 ROM 31.87
Emerging Markets EEM 32.14 FXI 38.14 EWZ 52.79
Commodities GLD 91.21 USO 37.70

That is exactly where they were hiding just before the crash last year. The song remains the same except the economy has broken now and the results will be the same as last year.

I think great shorts in here are the TYH 88.67 -2.43, the QQQQ 36.24,the XLE 47.55, the GLD 91.21, and the EEM 32.14. The QQQQ broke down at about 39 in late Sept so a rally to that area is possible, The charts on oil and tech are identical and they like both. The XLE (oil index) broke down at 61 at the same time it had a recent high of 55. The EEM broke at 35 also on late Sept. Again the charts all look the same and are just in a snap back rally.

The beat goes on....Mikey

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