Wednesday, November 12, 2014

The Morning Call---This Market continues overbought

The Morning Call

11/12/14

The Market
           
    Technical

            With the bond crowd on holiday, the indices (DJIA 17614, S&P 2039) snoozed their way through the day.  Both closed within uptrends across all timeframes: short term (16053-18810, 1801-2207), intermediate term (16053-20153, 1692-2408) and long term (5159-18521, 781-2043).  They are also finished above their 50 day moving averages.

            Volume plunged (not surprisingly); breadth remains negative (somewhat surprisingly).  The VIX rose, ending within a short term uptrend (though close to its lower boundary) and an intermediate term downtrend and below its 50 day moving average.

            Sentiment versus momentum (medium):

            More on breadth (short):

            And (short):

            As I noted above, the bond market was closed; so nothing on the long treasury.

            GLD rose and continues to act like it might want to try to put in a bottom.  However, until it at least breaks out of its short term downtrend and recovers the lower boundary of its former long term trading range, there is no point assuming that it might occur.  Meanwhile, it also remains within intermediate and long term downtrends and below its 50 day moving average.

Bottom line: the Averages took a break yesterday with the bond market closed.  Nonetheless, they remain quite overbought; so softness at any point in time shouldn’t come as a surprise.  However, with the indices re-syncing to the upside on all timeframes, any weakness should be limited.

            That said, if stocks continue to move higher, I will continue to use this rise in prices to Sell stocks that are near or at their Sell Half Range or whose underlying company’s fundamentals have deteriorated. 
             
    Fundamental
    
        Headlines

            No US economic data yesterday.  Nothing out of Europe.  There was a report that the Japanese government may delay its second sales tax increase---a plus in the sense that it won’t be just another anchor on the Japanese economy.  Of course, my seven year grandson could have figured that out three months ago; so in another sense it is not so good as it typifies the bureaucratic sclerosis that got Japan in its current mess in the first place.

Bottom line: in the midst of this day of calm, there is nothing to add to our current strategy:

I can’t emphasize strongly enough that I believe that the key investment strategy today is to take advantage of the current high prices to sell any stock that has been a disappointment or no longer fits your investment criteria and to trim the holding of any stock that has doubled or more in price.

Bear in mind, this is not a recommendation to run for the hills.  Our Portfolios are still 55-60% invested and their cash position is a function of individual stocks either hitting their Sell Half Prices or their underlying company failing to meet the requisite minimum financial criteria needed for inclusion in our Universe.
 
            I am looking at potential hedges for the Aggressive Growth Portfolio in the form of buying volatility (VXX), the S&P Market short (SH) and the Gamco Gold and Income Trust (GNT).  ‘Looking’ is the operative word.  I have done nothing to date.

            Three reasons to underweight high yield debt (short):

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