When going over some of this week's content ideas with JC, I told him "I can't possibly write another post about Tech stocks, but I want to."
His response was simple: "That's information."
In other words, based on the thousands of US Equities charts I'm looking at each week, the strongest uptrends continue to be in Technology $XLK. The fact that it almost seems too good to be true, or that I feel like I'm beating a dead horse about "tech, tech, and more tech" - is all the more reason to remain bullish.
We can't change the fact that there's a lot of good stuff going on in the space right now. We can only interpret the data in front of us, and right now, it's saying we should keep buying Tech.
Financials are what we're watching very closely this week as a warning of a more substantial stock market correction throughout the summer.
Our strategy has been to buy stocks that are going up. That's worked well. But if you noticed, that has NOT included financials. It's been mostly in the Technology, Internet, Social Media, Biotech & Mobile Payments sectors. That has been our go-to universe during this multi-month rally in stocks.
However, even though we haven't been buying bank stocks, that doesn't mean we just ignore them. Quite the opposite, in fact. If you recall, it was the bank stocks that helped us get so bearish in early February, well before any market crash. We are focused on this group again today for the exact same reasons: Risk Management.
Here is a chart of Financials flirting with that 23 level. That represents the former highs from April. If we're below that, the risk in here is down, and not up:
Outside of India, many major indexes like the S&P 500, have yet to recover above their resistance levels we outlined two weeks ago. With that said, prices have yet to collapse either.
Instead, what we're seeing is prices digesting their gains and setting up for their next move...in whatever direction that may be.
Inside of India, we're seeing the major indices experiencing their first real day of selling after a strong run off of the June 12th lows.
In this post, we're going to provide some perspective on the question many are seemingly asking, "was that it for stocks?"
Last week, we introduced our new weekly column called "Under The Hood." You can read more about it here.
Basically, we are looking at a universe of the most popular stocks on Robinhood measured by the net increase in accounts holding them week-over-week. Then we're drilling into the charts to find opportunities to either join in and ride the momentum in these names higher, or bet against those that get too frothy.
Here is this week's list. It represents the top 60 stocks that experienced net increases in ownership among Robinhood users last week. We've also included their weekly performance.
Reliance Industries is the largest component of the Nifty 50 at nearly 12% of the index's weighting, so when it moves, we need to pay attention.
The stock has come a long way since its March lows, so we want to take a look at where it's come from and what its recent break to new all-time highs means for its future.
I get asked a lot about Fibonacci and why I use it so often. If by now I haven't made that perfectly obvious, the reason we use it is because it works! Fibonacci levels help us set price targets and, most importantly, manage risk. The market tends to respect these levels, so it would be foolish for us to ignore them.
In our NEW Charting School, I explain exactly how I calculate these levels and walk you through a bunch of real life examples where they helped us over the years. You can watch Lesson 1 here for Free, and then decide if you'd like to continue with the rest of the course.
Today I want to walk you through the process of analyzing shares of Abbott Labs. But first, why Abbott Labs? Why am I interested in this name?
Every week we publish performance tables for a variety of different asset classes and categories along with commentary on each.
Despite some volatility in the second half, risk assets continued their steady march higher last week. The broadening participation from Equities was again evident as every major US and Global Index was higher with the exception of Dow Utilities $DJU.
We've written extensively about the strongest areas and those first to reclaim their highs. In this post, we'll highlight a handful of Equity ETFs/Indexes which are at or just beneath fresh highs. Whether these areas work through their overhead supply or get rejected at these key levels will provide important information into the strength and durability of the current rally.
Let's dive right in and take a look at our Sector SPDR ETF table.
In early May we outlined the "Five Bull Market Barometers" we're watching to identify the beginning of a new bull market in stocks.
If you haven't read our initial post linked above, we'd encourage you to check it out so you understand what the rationale behind these five indicators is.
Now, let's see where we stand after another strong week in the market.
Contrary to popular belief, Small and Mid-Cap stocks do not always provide better returns than Large-Cap stocks.
In academia, the thesis is that these "riskier" Small and Mid-Cap stocks should provide a higher potential return than more mature "Large-Cap" stocks. If they didn't, then rational investors would not own them because they're not being adequately compensated for the risk they're taking.
In the real world, we know that this theory is absolute nonsense. Instead of the consistent outperformance from the SMID (Small/Mid-Cap) segment of the market, we see periods of outperformance, periods of in-line performance, and performance of underperformance.
Since 2018 the SMID market-cap segments have been absolutely clobbered, but the weight of the evidence is suggesting that we may be at a major inflection point and SMID stocks are beginning a period of long-term outperformance.
Here we're going to explore the SMID resurgence thesis, what it would mean for Equities as an asset class, and how we're taking advantage of it.
A few week's ago we profiled the strength in Biotech and highlighted the Genomics space as one of the top-performing industry groups. We said we were looking for some consolidation in these areas in the coming weeks and that if and when prices resolved higher these would be areas we'd look to for long opportunities.
In this post, we'll highlight our top-down approach to look into the Biotech space and offer some trade ideas. Then we'll drill further down into Genomics, provide an update on what we're seeing there, and share some setups in holdings of the ARK Genomic Revolution ETF $ARKG.
We talk a lot about the importance of secular leaders. More often than not these groups have a relationship to Technology, regardless of whether they are classified as a Technology stock or not. Tech is everywhere today.
The last time a sector was so pervasive would have to be Industrials way back in the mid-1900's. One could argue Financials had their time in the sun too, but that was short-lived and we all remember how it ended.
Industrials may not be as important as they once were, but they are still important.