Monday, March 29, 2010

Bagged an 18% Whopper and First Trading Mistake of the Year

A Change in Strategy

In prior posts, I spoke of how changing startegies can create a downward spiral that can be extremely frustrating and hard to pull out of. Therefore, I pick my changes in strategy very carefully. For a while now, my philosophy has been to get into the best possible position I can once per week, every Monday morning. I held 12 stocks at a time and closed each position exactly 12 weeks after having owned it. That way, I always had 12 stocks in my portfolio, and opened one and closed one position per week. Now, you may be asking, well, where are all the sells? Well, I only started blogging a couple of months ago, and to tell a story with continuity, I didn't want to report the closing of positions I opened before the start of the blog.

Now I have been watching my postions very closely trying to predict where they are going, or at least where a good gain can be had or a bad loss can be stopped. I'm pretty tired of being right only on paper and not doing anything about it. As you will see below, right now is a moment ripe for a pullback as well, and that has obviously gotten my attention, being at my maximum long position (75% long). So, from here on, I will analyze each holding every week and determine if I think its trend is done or if it is overextended. If so, I'll sell it. You'll see below that that's what I did with Burger King.

One last thing, full disclosure, the reason why I being so regimented about all of this is that although I know quite a bit about technical analysis, I will not delude myself into thinking that the gambler in me is gone. I have had some interesting obssessive episodes with the market in the past, and this is an awesome way to prevent it. I am, in fact, still preventing it because I still am dedicated to only entering one position per week. I am just giving myself leeway to close those positions before the 12 weeks are up.

The Broad Market - Overbought, Ready for a Pullback

Whenever people ask me to predict where the market is headed, I refrain. I am human and know that humans are not very good at this thing. However, at a point in time, you can place moments where the odds are stacked against you. I don't know how far the market will pull back once it pulls back. What I do know is that the odds are extremely favorable for it to pull back. There is classic divergence in the Relative Strength Index (RSI) of the Wilshire 5,000 index. It's there, plain as day. It's diverged and now is trying to make another run over the past two trading days. Notice how the volume is sinking as the index attempts to make a new high. Maybe the market does go a bit higher. This is further manifested in the flattening out of the Accumulation/Distribution (A/D) line. Look how it's failed to make a higher low even though the price did. After all, we're close to a key Fibbonaci level, and markets tend to like to gravitate in that direction, but you're staring danger in the face by seeing divergence like that and simply doing nothing about it. I'm looking for gains to take.

Sold Burger King Holdings, Inc. (BKC)

In my hunt for a prime sell candidate, the steepness of the price line for Burger King was a clear signal. Also, looking at the RSI gives divergence in progress. Yeah, I could have waited until next week for the divergence to complete, but really, with this steepness, on a good market reversal (which again, I think is imminent) you can lose half your gains in one day. What's more, I was seeing divergence in the A/D line. Not a downtrend yet, but I wanted my gain. I bought BKC about 1 1/2 months ago. I was sitting on about a 17% gain. It just made sense. I got lucky with an analyst upgrade as well this morning and ended up with 18% of gain instead. Not bad.

Rackspace Hosting Inc. (RAX) - My Favorite Mistake?

I am pretty excited about finding RAX to short. It's a prime candidate, for sure, except for the fact that I wasn't ready yet. As of last night, it was sitting at support of $17.90. Now I usually want to see a stock break a support or resistance point by at least 3% before I'm willing to enter the position. So I entered a short stop limit order at $17.36 . . . or so I thought. What I really did was set a short limit order at $17.36. I've done this type of thing more times than I can remember. Just plain old carelessness is the problem. What's the difference? Well what I meant to say with the short stop limit was "don't enter the position until the price crosses $17.36." What I said with the short limit was "I am willing to pay anything above $17.36." Remember, we're short here, so the higher the price, the lower your investment. So I'm the proud unintentional shorter of RAX. While I can't stand stuff like that, I'm staying short because the argument is pretty darn good to stay in the position, especially since it was down .45% today to $17.82, which breaks support in an up market, but not as much as I would like. Again, I wanted it at $17.36. This is a foul. I'm in the penalty box, but I'm apprehensively excited to see what happens.

RAX Fundamentals (Courtesy of Yahoo.com)

This one has all kinds of fundamental arguments for dumping it. To begin with, overvalued, overvalued, my Lord this thing is overvalued. The price/earnings (P/E) ratio is over three times that of the industry average, and the price/earnings growth (PEG) ratio is almost twice the average. To begin with, it's at 2.24, and 2 is considered high. Not really that exaggeratedly high, but again, when you compare it to the competition, it's rich.

Now let's look at insider transactions and institutional sponsorship. There have been 91 transactions in the past 6 months, and I can't find one legitimate open market purchase. Insiders are dumping shares. Institutions (the big boys everyone loves to hate these days) also have dumped 13.4% of their holdings last quarter. So the folks who know (insiders) and the folks who move money (the institutions) are all giving this one the thumbs-down.

Finally, analyst opinion on this one is just to darn cheery. You've got 7 strong buy, 12 buy, and 3 hold. Not one underperform or sell. RAX is a stock ripe for downgrade.

RAX Technicals - Weekly

There was already divergence in the RSI a long time ago, that's in the rear-view mirror. What we have now is a head-and-shoulders formation coupled with the breaking of support on on upward channel line. Those two elements of support resided at $17.90. You can see the long red channel lines and the shorter red neckline of the h&s pattern. The neckline was broken today, not enough for my taste, but broken nonetheless. What was also cleared was the level of highest volume for the stock since its IPO in mid-2008.

Stochastics aren't telling me much. You can see price relative to the Wilshire 5,000 has been underperforming the broad market. Now the one that makes me quite giddy (am I a friggin' geek or what?) is the slope of the A/D line compared to the slope of the neckline of the pattern. The neckline slopes upward. The A/D line slopes down, saying that while the price of this stock is fighting to stay in uptrend, behind the scenes, shares are being dumped. Usually what this means is that those who know are heading for the exits, leaving the less sophisticated folks holding the bag when the stock falls out of bed. That seems to be less than 2 weeks away. At the rate this stock is being dumped, someone knows something.

This was a long posting. I'm tired. If you go take a look at the daily chart, there's nothing pretty there either. Sorry to bale on you, but me needs some zzzz's!

As usual, thanks for reading!

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All opinions expressed by the Author are solely his current opinions and do not reflect the opinions of the companies with which the Author is affiliated and may have been previously disseminated by him. The author’s opinions are based upon information he considers reliable, but the companies with which he is affiliated do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. No part of any compensation the Author may derive from this blog is related to the specific opinions he expresses.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Neither the Author nor his affiliated companies guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware o the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed in this blog. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value.

Investments or strategies mentioned in this blog may not be suitable for you, and you should make our own independent decision regarding them. This material does not take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You should strongly consider seeking advice from your own investment adviser.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Bought Some SUNH

You would think that my buying Sun Healthcare Group, Inc. (SUNH) this morning at the open had something to do with the passage of the healthcare bill. Well, long ago I came to the conclusion that we humans are just not intelligent enough to invest based on the news--well, most of us. Case in point, I heard all day today that there weren't huge downside moves in the healthcare stocks because the news was "baked in." That's what's used when "sell the news" doesn't work.

This one is primarily a chart play.

Fundamentals

I picked this one off a screen on Finviz.com that shows PEG ratios below 1, and it's .9 or so. Good enough for government work, but not too exciting--much better than the industry average at 1.25. However, the stock caught my eye on the charts, and I'm going with it because I just love the pattern on the weekly. Operating margins are slightly better than the industry average. P/E ratio of 12 beats the industry average of 16 nicely. Overall, not a bad showing, but the stocks I usually choose are usually more glitzy on the valuation front.

Technicals - Weekly

I like this one mostly for the pattern itself. This is a bullish flag formation (bullish because it is sloping downward before the breakout), about a year old, a good long time. Can't remember who it was who said sharp indecision resolves itself sharply. So the longer you see a stock bouncing around in this formation, the greater and more pronounced the move after price breaks out of the formation. This is Friday's chart. Today, the stock was up over 6%. You can see that in general, this is an even tug-of-war by the sellers and buyers by looking at the accumulation/distribution line. Notice how the A/D line is relatively flat as price slopes downward. This means that there really is an even fight going on, despite the fact that the price is biased toward the downside. RSI and Stochastics tell me next to nothing on this one on the weekly chart.

Technicals - Daily

Like last week's stock, this one is ripe for a short-term pullback, frankly. The relative strength index (RSI) was already overbought this morning. Being up 6% is putting it in nicely overbought territory now. But having a 3-month trading horizon on all my holdings, I don't mind too much buying something that might pull back because I only buy on Monday mornings, and the best stock I can find on a weekly chart is the best stock I can find, period. So this one will pull back over the next couple of days, maybe resuming to the upside and pulling back again very shortly thereafter. Net-net, I don't expect to be up double digits on this 2 weeks from now. Stochastics don't look great either. When they diverge in overbought territory (80+), fall out of overbought, and then rise back into overbought, diverging again, that's when you are ripe for a pullback. If you follow the stochastics from the beginning of my red line to the end and compare to price, you will see that's happened. The price relative to the Wilshire 5,000 general sloped upward, outperforming the market recently, and then we see a nice breakout from that tight range. One of the nicer things is that the A/D line is screaming upward as the stock is consolidating into it's bullish flag.

Thanks so much for reading, as usual!

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All opinions expressed by the Author are solely his current opinions and do not reflect the opinions of the companies with which the Author is affiliated and may have been previously disseminated by him. The author’s opinions are based upon information he considers reliable, but the companies with which he is affiliated do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. No part of any compensation the Author may derive from this blog is related to the specific opinions he expresses.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Neither the Author nor his affiliated companies guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware o the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed in this blog. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value.

Investments or strategies mentioned in this blog may not be suitable for you, and you should make our own independent decision regarding them. This material does not take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You should strongly consider seeking advice from your own investment adviser.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Long PDLI Tomorrow

Tomorrow, I will be long PDL BioPharma, Inc. (PDLI). Biotechnology stocks are clearly speculative, especially small cap ones like this one. However, with 12 stocks in my portfolio at once, it is good to take on some clear speculative risk, especially when the company is this well valued.


Fundamental Analysis

On a valuation basis, PDLI looks quite impressive. Its operating margins are extremely high compared to the competition at 93% vs. an industry average of -158%. The price/earnings ratio is about 1/3 that of the industry at 7. The PEG ratio is a beauty at .23 vs. the industry 1.27, and anything below 1 is already considered cheap. I'm not a huge price/sales person, but let's throw it in as a small bolster to the argument at about 1/5 the industry average.

13% of the shares are also held short, and anything in the double digits is extremely high. So I'm looking for a mid-term general increase bolstered by a significant short squeeze.

Technical Analysis - Weekly


Relative strength is a weak indicator on this one, but the RSI values have been bouncing along traditional resistance of 50, and a current value of 63 gives the stock decent room to run to an oversold value of 70, and even then you have to see divergence to price before concern sets in. The price just broke out in the highest volume area of the 3-year chart. So there is not significant support below at about $6.50 per share. The price has also been in a slight uptrend as it has been consolidating from October thru January. Stochastics are pretty neutral. The price relative to the Wilshire 5,000 has been flat meaning it's paced the market almost exactly. The accumluation/distribution line has been about flat, but a bit negative in a downtrend. Not enough to cause concern, however.

Technical Analysis - Daily


The RSI on this stock is showing that it's ripe for a pullback, which has likely already started. The price could surge again and diverge before it pulls back. However, this was the most appealing stock in my screens this week, my investment horizon is 3 months, so timing isn't quite as of the essence as if I was day trading. I also force myself to make one trade a week. So if it pulls back for a few weeks or a month, gains appear to still be on the horizon. Stochastics also show that the pullback might already be happening. I usually wait for the stochastics to diverge from price once and then drop out of overbought territory, reentering and diverging again, and then dropping out of overbought territory. This appears to be happening right now. The only way these stochastics could resolve themselves is if they blasted through the previous high and didn't dip below. But you are about to get a cross, so the short-term pullback looks set. Volume has been healthy, increasing as the stock rose. Hopefully, volume will be fairly benign as the stock pulls back, setting it for another move higher. The price relative to the Wilshire 5,000 has been going up, meaning that the stock has been outperforming the broad market recently. The accumulation/distribution line has also been in an uptrend, signifying recent interest in the stock as the price increases. So obviously, I would rather the stock continue to go up, but a short-term pullback is OK because the 3-month uptrend appears set.

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All opinions expressed by the Author are solely his current opinions and do not reflect the opinions of the companies with which the Author is affiliated and may have been previously disseminated by him. The author’s opinions are based upon information he considers reliable, but the companies with which he is affiliated do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. No part of any compensation the Author may derive from this blog is related to the specific opinions he expresses.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Neither the Author nor his affiliated companies guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware o the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed in this blog. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value.

Investments or strategies mentioned in this blog may not be suitable for you, and you should make our own independent decision regarding them. This material does not take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You should strongly consider seeking advice from your own investment adviser.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Long Boise, Inc. (BZ)

I am excited about a paper company. That’s right. Humans have been felling trees since God knows when, and here I am, buying a paper company, with the thousands of i-Drool, Blueberry stocks out there. I the tradition of my late father, the stock wiz, Ben Graham incarnate, try as I may, I cannot turn my back on value like this. Which leads me to . . .

Valuation

This stock comes in at the low end of the spectrum for all my valuation metrics, which include:

• Price/Earnings
• Price/Forward Earnings
• Price/Book Value
• Price/Cash Flow
• Price/Sales
• Price/Free Cash Flow
• Price/Earnings Growth

For every one of these “low” thresholds, this humdrum company comes in at the low end of the spectrum. And compared to its peers, BZ is also a steal. Current P/E is one-third the industry average 9 and the best of its direct competitors. PEG ratio at .7 is a just over half the industry average at 1. I don’t usually care about price/sales (so much can happen between the time you take in a buck and actually produce results), but it looks pretty good as well. Now you may be looking higher in the competitor chart and saying, “Hey! Wait a minute! These people are running their company sub-optimally compared to their peers.” Well, you’d be right. I’m not buying BZ because it’s a great company. In fact, it appears when you look at operating margins and revenue growth that they’re getting the pants kicked off them by their competitors. The play here is not that this is a great company. What is happening here is that the market has given this stock the chair when it really only needed a few months in solitary. So there’s an overreaction to the downside.
Technical – Weekly

OK, just to say it, there is no breakout or uptrend here, which is almost against my religion of only buying uptrends or breakouts on the long side. The value proposition is a bit too compelling, though, and there is a slight redeeming factor in the daily chart in that there is a breakout there. Daily charts tend to be weak signals for my 3-month investment horizon, but it’s something. As I said above, I’m really looking at the valuation. I like the RSI a bit because there was never divergence before the stock started to level off. By the way, this thing is already up 2,000% since it bottomed at a quarter in March, coinciding with the broad market lows. The RSI has also been bouncing off traditional resistance at 50—a good sign. Going to the price action, what I like about this stock is that it’s been doing the mating dance with the $5 level. The significance of the $5 level is that it’s the last bastion of hope before a stock becomes a “penny stock,” which is the traditional trash category for stocks. Never buy anything below $5. So there are crowds of fund managers here betting one way or the other that this stock will either rise above or remain below $5. Look at the volume. It appears that there is a break out, not of the cup-with-handle chart pattern you can see, but rather at the $5 level. Look at the explosive volume the last two weeks as the stock lifts out of pauper status into the realm of the investable again. Managers are buying into this story. Stochastics and price relative to the Wilshire 5,000 tell me nothing, but look how explosive the accumulation/distribution line has been compared to the price action. Compare the last peak in the price to the current level, and then do the same to the A/D line. The A/D line has out-advanced the price.
Technical Analysis – Daily

This is a story of capitulation and breakout. RSI diverged at the bottom, but that’s really history at this point. The chart pattern is a really good sign. Look at the capitulation the last week in February. The stock retraced back through resistance at $4.85, but too many people panicked and got involved. Who knows? Since the stock moved very little that day, it may have been a huge institution that just made a quick decision, or a quant, for that matter. Fact still remains that volume is volume and every seller you could imagine came out that day and pounded the stock. That was the highest volume day in 3 years. You have to respect that. Then, the stock reversed, and 3 days later, marched toward resistance at the $5.20-ish level and then broke through on, unfortunately, tepid volume the next two days. Nonetheless, it’s through. Stochastics say not much of anything again. Price relative tells a story of outperformance over the last week-and-a-half, which is great in light of the fact that the stock faced resistance during that time. I would have liked to see the A/D line make a higher high, but we’re not at that point yet. The last day on the chart, by the way, was spent breaking through the 50-day. Now that was on low volume, though. I expect it to probably fail and make another (number of) try(ies).
So, the valuations are primary here, with the technicals secondary. But the valuation is so compelling that this stock is buoyant, at the least, and I am very confident in its prospects.
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All opinions expressed by the Author are solely his current opinions and do not reflect the opinions of the companies with which the Author is affiliated and may have been previously disseminated by him. The author’s opinions are based upon information he considers reliable, but the companies with which he is affiliated do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. No part of any compensation the Author may derive from this blog is related to the specific opinions he expresses.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. Neither the Author nor his affiliated companies guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware o the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed in this blog. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value.

Investments or strategies mentioned in this blog may not be suitable for you, and you should make our own independent decision regarding them. This material does not take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You should strongly consider seeking advice from your own investment adviser.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Long Sohu.com Inc. (SOHU)

It is just brutal out there for a trend investor right now, at least for one like me who has a 3-month time horizon. Sure, as a day trader I could pick up trends at any time because I'd be looking minute by minute. But all long-term trends have either been violated or are approaching or at overbought territory. Woe is me. But not to despair. When you are not in a trending market, you are in a "stock-picker's market." What do all these terms mean, anyway? To me, it means that I need to start looking for horizontal resistance and support rather than a diagonal trend line. And, hence, I give you Sohu.com.

Oh, before I go on, sorry for not writing on a Sunday, but I really had a brutal time finding something to invest in this week. It took me until late last night despite spending 2 hours on Sunday. Things just don't look great out there for plays in either direction. This market has little volume and is in significant limbo right now.

Fundamentals

I just love the comparative valuation against its competitors. Operating margins are over 10 times the industry average. The Price/Earnings Ratio is at less than half the industry average. The PEG Ratio is the only slightly suspect thing for me, as I love a PEG ratio below 1. This is important for me, and it's not even close enough for government work. However, with the other valuations in the table looking great, I will accept it (but not overlook it). Thankfully, the PEG ratio is still the lowest among its competitors and significantly below its peers. So valuations look very good.

Technical Analysis – Monthly




On the monthly chart, you can see the Relative Strength Index (RSI) is at around 50, a point of support. Look at the behavior of this stock as it hits 50 over the years. It bounces every time. The chart itself doesn't tell me much. No Fib. Levels to speak of. Stochastics have no relevance with the pattern they've been exhibiting. I'm not a huge fan of the price relative to the Wilshire 5,000. This stock has clearly been underperforming the broad market for almost a year now. What I do like, however is the Accumulation/Distribution line, and this is really one of my favorite indicators. As the stock pulled back to bottom in January of 2009 and again during the recent pullback, look at how the overall trend of the A/D line remains upward. Granted, it's flattening, but I consider this a positive sign for a stock that peaked at around $88 and is now at $50.


Technical Analysis – Weekly


On a weekly chart, the RSI is showing a similar support level at around 35, which it just bounced off of. The most compelling thing for this stock, and the real reason I chose it is the price support level it just bounced off of. Look at the $48/$49 level and the amount of volume that has been present at that level over the past 3 years. It bounced off nicely. I would have preferred more volume on the upside bounce, but it tested and recovered. There is divergence in the Stochastics. Good for some, but I like to see stocks diverge twice in succession before I pay attention to the Stochastics, so nothing of note there. Again, the Price Relative don't look so good . . . And the A/D Line could be a bit more desireable, but did not fall as fast as the price did in the most recent decline. To reiterate, the stock just bounced from the most significant support line over the last 3 years. That's notable.

So that's what's up in Glen-land. Thanks so much, as usual, for reading.

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All opinions expressed by the Author are solely his current opinions and do not reflect the opinions of the companies with which the Author is affiliated and may have been previously disseminated by him. The author's opinions are based upon information he considers reliable, but the companies with which he is affiliated do not warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such. No part of any compensation the Author may derive from this blog is related to the specific opinions he expresses.


Past performance is not indicative of future results. Neither the Author nor his affiliated companies guarantee any specific outcome or profit. You should be aware o the real risk of loss in following any strategy or investment discussed in this blog. Strategies or investments discussed may fluctuate in price or value.


Investments or strategies mentioned in this blog may not be suitable for you, and you should make our own independent decision regarding them. This material does not take into account your particular investment objectives, financial situation or needs and is not intended as recommendations appropriate for you. You should strongly consider seeking advice from your own investment adviser.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Anatomy of a Spiraling Trader (Part 2) – The Serial Rebounder

In my post a couple of weeks back, "Anatomy of a Spiraling Trader (Part 1) – Trader's Narcosis," we talked about how a trader who puts himself in a downward spiral gets a type of narcosis similar do that of wreck divers. In that narcosis, he makes more and more risky decisions and exhibits less and less logical behavior, weakens his stance in the market as time goes by. We said this is because a trader has gotten to this point because he has linked his ego to his trading, and therefore, he now subconsciously associates being successful at trading with survival, the primary business of successful wreck diving.

Steps 3-4 of the trader's narcosis are really the lynchpin of the downward spiral as you, the trader in a spiral, repeat the same negative behavior at an always accelerating pace. I wanted to go more into depth about what is really happening here. What, specifically, drives these ever sloppier choices that the trader is making? As I looked back into my past, what resonated clearly was the analogy of my rebound relationships, so I went out to Yahoo! and searched "rebound relationships." I hit the jackpot on the first selected link (http://www.romanceforeveryone.com/article/rebound-relationships.html ). This is the thought process in the mirror.

You – Making the Pain Go Away

Now prerequisite to anything I say here is the first choice you have made, which is to change your trading style. You wouldn't be in a spiral if you didn't. We can always make tweaks here and there, and in a future post, I will talk about healthy ways to do that. After all, the point of trading is to stay fairly consistent, but to put on concrete boots and be completely immobile as a result is not healthy. We want to leave some leeway to make healthy choices. The decision you have come to do something—anything—to make the pain go away is the result of a battered ego or self-esteem. Your ego is hurting, and you need to feel better about yourself.

Get a load of this, quoting from the website on rebound relationships:

"A rebound relationship is often a distraction from the pain of their sorrow and a quick fix for their damaged self-esteem."

"Their mind is often filled with questions of why their relationship failed and what they could have done to stop the breakup. They may also feel that precious time was wasted on the failed relationship and feel the need to quickly move on with their life."

So here you are. Let's just say that many of us have no idea how much emphasis we are putting on our trading success as a mechanism for validation. Your self-worth becomes increasingly based on one thing only—your success as a trader. So when you have a very bad experience as a trader, you look for that "quick fix," especially because you feel that "precious time [and money] was wasted" and wonder "what [you] could have done to stop" this great loss. So what do you do?

Little do you know that you will look for the thing that is absolutely working right now at the expense of all well-thought-out long-term logic. You are "angry at your ex" (the market) for "breaking [your] heart" (bruising your sense of self-worth), and you are going to teach it a lesson. The difference here is that the market can't reject you. You can go right back to that same market at any moment, and it will receive you with open arms. So in a way, it's worse than the perilous rebound relationship!

So you start looking for trades that "have a nice smile," or in other words, that are in a nice trend, look like a sure thing, and will erase all the pain, suffering, and losses you just experienced. You start dating the rebound stocks or options, or whatever seems to have the nicest smile. This new trade is "initially . . . very satisfying," since trends aren't just going to immediately reverse because you entered a trade. However, you are on the rebound and are "not in a healthy state of mind." You are not in a "place to make healthy . . . decisions." "[You] are thinking about the moment, not the long term," which causes you to make a "poor choice" for a rebound trade.

You know, I'm actually getting sick of quoting this thing. I mean I'm realizing that if I cut and pasted the article and did a search/replace on a few words, I'd have a better post than I probably have here. So let's shift gears about the choices you actually are prone to make here.

You – The Mean Reverter

Nature is all about equilibrium. We know this. The laws of nature always go to the norm. We have global warming and ice ages, but the average temperature over time stays the same. Species die out every day and others are created. Water evaporates, and then it rains. I could go on and on.

You, the trader and fellow human, are also are a creature of equilibrium, as are the markets, since they were created by beings of nature. Let's take you first. Above, we said that you when you are in extreme pain, you are going to reach for something of extreme comfort—that is, the trade that is working right now. However, the markets revert to the mean over time as well. This means two things:

  • If you were experiencing so much pain that you had to change a hard-and-fast trading philosophy to make yourself feel better, then there is probably a not-so-small probability the trade you left was soon going to shift from a position of extreme pain to at least a position of less pain.
  • The trade you switch to has probably been working for a while and is soon going to reverse trend to start causing acute pain.

So you are moving from a spot that likely would improve to one that is prone to start deteriorating! And what could be worse than that? You will repeat this over and over. Leaving the trade that is causing you pain and could soon reverse to one that has been making people feel better and will soon reverse.

In the end, the interworking between the market's mean reversion and your own, while timed about the same, are directionally opposed, and are creating a situation where you make choices that are exactly diametrically opposite to what would make you successful over time. And so what do you do? Well, going back to the diving analogy, you can't stand to be down in these threatening depths anymore. You fill your wings and blast to the surface, withdrawing completely from the market to heal, vulnerable for your next rebound move.

So what's the remedy? Well, half of the cure is recognizing the pattern. So hopefully if you are in a real bad spot right now or occasionally get into them and get into these spiral-spiral-exit patterns frequently, you will be able to begin recognizing this and thwart entry into the spiral process. I will present a structured way to recover from this and ensure that it never happens again in future posts.

Thank you so much for reading. I very much hope this helps.

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Picking Up Some Republic Airway Holdings Inc. (RJET)

This week, I look at an airline. Wait. Let me take a deep breath. Yes, an airline. Look, investing in airlines is the Wall Street version of Seppuku, but no one ever said you couldn't trade them.

Valuation


RJET fell off a cliff recently. I do like the way it fell so far so fast. The faster it falls in the face of good valuation, then the more impetus you have of seeing a snap-back rally. Again, I only invest for 3 months, so I'm looking for, at minimum, a short-term bounce, one that is already in play. Let's take a look at this juicy valuation.

First, you'll see that the PEG Ratio is .56, well below the maximum of 1 which I will tolerate, and less than half the industry. Quarterly revenue growth is lagging the industry, which could be concerning, but I focus more on the bottom line. The operating margins are better than twice the industry average. The price/earnings ratio is less than twice the industry.

Technical Analysis – Monthly


What makes this stock so appealing is the capitulation that happened last month, and the bounce back that now appears to be in place. Admittedly, the indicators that measure participation, specifically the accumulation/distribution line, looks horrible. However, when you have a volume spike on down volume the highest in 5 years in the face of horrible price action when the stock has been declining as far as it has, a short-term bounce could very well be in order, especially with a high short interest of 12% like the stock has and the awesome valuation compared to the industry. The industry has been exhibiting high relative strength compared to the broad market recently, incidentally.

Also positive here is the divergence of the relative strength line with the price action. Notice how as the price decreases, the RSI increases, as do the stochastics. I usually prefer a double signal from the stochastics, however, and I am only getting a single here. What I don't generally like is the price relative to the Wilshire 5,000. This stock has been significantly lagging the market, but again, the amount of capitulation (or sellers just losing their patience and panicking completely), is a very good sign that will likely reverse the trend, at least in the short term.

Technical Analysis – Weekly


Again, look at how nicely the Relative Strength Index diverges the price, showing the downward momentum has been weakening over time. You can also see 3 weeks of heavy selling action last month. Again, the stochastics have diverged, signifying a bottom was put in June. The Accumulation/Distribution line has been diverging from the price action for quite a while, showing that buyers have been coming in and picking up the stock as it goes down. And the most recent action in the A/D line just looks completely pathetic, signaling that potential capitulation last month.



Let's see how this one goes. I don't usually pick bottoms, but really if I were doing that, we'd be talking this past June. The momentum on this one really seems to be lightening up to the downside and the nice scare that investors got last month should be constructive for a bounce. Let's see how this looks in 90 days.