MarketChess
Showing articles 61 - 70 (6586 total)
18Jul11:43 amEST
A Bad Morning in Boca Raton
This morning was the first time in what seems like years (and perhaps is) that the Nasdaq Composite faded an initial heavy post-selloff rally hard. In a corrective or bearish tape over the decades of modern market history we very often see opening gaps higher faded. This is a function of underwater longs who were levered needing to unwind...
17Jul11:31 amEST
It's All One Big Trade
According to some folks I speak to in the institutional trenches, apparently the "low volatility" melt-up trade has seen quite a few shops, who previously had not dabbled in volatility, pile into selling it for a good while now. Part of that trade has enabled a nonstop rally in the mega cap techs, namely the "Mag7" leaders, alongside...
16Jul12:12 pmEST
Gold is Sniffing Out the Mouse Trap
Students of history, and those who traded through it, will note that the best asset to own in the 1970s was gold, which went from $35 an ounce at the beginning of the decade to as high as $850 by 1980. Gold, silver, and the miners are surging today, with gold printing a nominal new all-time high, as Fed Chair Jay Powell and his band of merry...
15Jul1:05 pmEST
Fade to Nowhere
I have lost count of how many fades we have seen the Nasdaq this year which, inevitably, led to nowhere. Specifically, failed bearish reversals are the hallmark of a bullish melt-up, practically by definition. One expects it, even if one is a steadfast bear. However, at a certain point it becomes comical. And this market, what with its...
14Jul10:50 amEST
Weekend Overview and Analysis 07/14/24 {Video}
The following video is a brief, condensed version of the full-length Weekend Video Strategy Session which I present each weekend to members of Market Chess Subscription Services. In the longer version, I offer tons of actionable trade ideas, educational content, and in-depth objective analysis across all markets. Please click here for more...
12Jul11:23 amEST
A Clear Setup Emerges This Summer
Talk about wanting your cake and eating, too. Or, perhaps, in this case: Burritos. Consumer and retail bulls (as well as small cap bulls) love to cheer for rate cuts, as though that will be some guaranteed panacea for a new leg higher in these stocks. However, history teaches us that rate cuts coming into rising unemployment is a recipe for a...
11Jul11:35 amEST
I Want My Deflationary Steak!
I have been holding my bond short (via long the TBT ETF) for what seems like a decade or two. So, the silver lining to this morning's rally in bonds and selloff in rates off the cool CPI print is that I still have some modest profit cushion on the position. However, rates, homebuilders, small caps, and banks are all rallying on the move in...
10Jul2:05 pmEST
Do They Even Remember How to Rally?
Uranium names are red hot today. However, I know many times over from recent quarters just how slippery this sector can be. While I am wildly bullish on uranium (and most commodities) looking out the next decade, I recognize that we have to see it to believe it in the here and now, insofar as these rallies holding and building on themselves....
09Jul12:04 pmEST
Aftermath of a Memorial Day Massacre
In the wake of Memorial Day this year there can be little doubt that the software stocks staged a massacre of shorts into last Friday's highs, spanning roughly five weeks of nonstop ripping to take the sector back to its early-February highs. The IGV, ETF for the software sector ETF, illustrates as much on the daily chart, first below. As a...
08Jul2:01 pmEST
Two Diamonds in the Rough
I have been fairly sour on biotechs for a long while now, and for good reason: The IBB and XBI sector ETFs have largely lagged at many junctures, defying many bold calls for an imminent rotation. That said, Madrigal and Mannkind, respectively below on their daily charts, are in two hot areas of biotech. More importantly, it is hard to quibble...