Stocks

Too Far, Too Fast?

Turning the calendar to 2018 kicked off an exciting run in stocks as the market moved up almost 4% in 9 short trading days. In 8 of those 9 days the market closed higher and the one red day was down a whopping .1%. These euphoric-type moves can’t last forever especially when you consider how far price is from its 200 day moving average. Bullish RSI momentum has reached an extreme as it exceeded its all-time highs in the SP500, ever. When things become so stretched in one direction the markets need to rest and digest the moves, as such it would be normal and health to see a correction or a consolidation at a minimum.

Looking at the SP500 chart, you can see Tuesday gapped higher at the open and eventually closed below its open and down for the day and with large volume. This is clearly a distribution day. A day when the big money made some moves, locking in some profits. Anytime they speak, we need to listen. Keep in mind it was not just the SP500 that acted this was as almost all US and most foreign indexes followed suit.  Tuesdays’ action in stocks, while not surprising, was a warning shot to the possibility of a short term reversal. One could argue that “short term” price movement is only applicable to traders because investors have a much longer time horizon so there is no need to be concerned with them. This is a true statement but I find being prepared for any possible correction helpful to stay the longer-term course.

San Ramon certified financial planning retirement expert and indepdent fiduciary investment advisor SPX 1-17-18.png

In an ordinary market, this gap higher and subsequent fizzle would be a huge red flag and a strong short signal. Unfortunately this is not an ordinary market and normal rules do not apply. We’ve seen poor price action over the last few months, but prices rebounded decisively within days, if not hours. Yesterday’s fizzle is still a significant concern as it usually is a sign of the start of a near-term dip. But without a bearish headline catalyst to drive fear into otherwise confident bulls, I don’t expect this selling to go very far or to dampen bulls’ conviction. If they refuse to sell, then it is much harder for a dip to take hold.  Complacency will eventually get us into trouble, but over the near-term confident owners keep supply tight by refusing to sell every bearish headline and any negative price-action. That said, at some point this unsustainable climb higher will falter. When that occurs is anyone’s guess. There is only so much money willing to chase these record highs even higher and yesterday’s daily reversal suggests we may be getting close to that point, at least over the near-term. One day does not make a trend so we will need to see what sort of follow through, if any, occurs over the next few trading days. If not, it yesterday’s action will just be another bump in the road.

Either way, I don’t trust this market, but because markets can be irrational for longer than we can expect and more importantly it keeps doing the right thing means we stick with it.

3 for the Bulls

We are in interesting times. No matter where you look, most charts of stocks are screaming “buy me”. Far be it from me to fight the trend, so I thought I would devote this post to 3 bullish charts which are setting up to break out of short term consolidation to the upside. Why 3? I wanted to provide an example of a stock at the bottom, middle and top of their longer-term charts.

Let’s take a look at a bottom feeder first, Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG). Anyone following Chipotle’s multiple catastrophic PR nightmares over the past two to three years won’t be surprised to see their stock off 65% from its prior highs.  But it looks as if it may be ready to turn things around. With bullish RSI momentum divergence and price forming an inverse head and shoulders bottom reversal pattern, a break out and hold above the neckline would present a compelling investment opportunity. The pattern projects to a ~25+% upside target (around the 415-420 range) if it were to follow through.

Bay area fee only retirement planning independent certified financial planning advisor CMG 1-15-18.png

My second chart is that of Pretium Resources, PVG. As you can see its stock has been consolidating since June of 2016, stuck in a box, its bottom at $7 and top at $12. In addition to the longer-term rectangle pattern, it recently has also formed a bullish cup and handle. Having a bullish shorter-term pattern develop within a longer-term pattern is not unusual and if triggers, increases the probabilities of it meeting either one or both targets. The more conservative cup and handle target projects to a 30% rise while a breakout from the larger rectangle, points to a healthy move near prior 2012 highs some 40% higher. This one has my interest.

San Ramon fee only retirement planning independent certified financial planning advisor PVG 1-15-18.png

My last chart is one that is familiar to everyone, Apple. Its price currently sits at all-time highs but it looks like it’s not done. Like PVG above as it has formed a rectangle and is trying to breakout to the upside. The projections for this pattern if it were to break and hold would, based upon the conservative target, push Apple’s stock price up 8%, while the more extreme target would see Apple test $300, some 17% from where it closed on Friday.

San Ramon fee only retirement planning independent certified financial planning advisor  AAPL 1-15-18.png

Each of the above stock’s charts have formed bullish patterns using classic charting techniques as defined in the TA bible, “Technical Analysis and Stock Market Profits” by Richard Schabacker. While there are never any guarantees when investing, I find those opportunities that conform to the rules outlined in Schabacker’s book have a much higher probability of success.

Dubbya Bottom

Back in July of last year I wrote about the W bottom pattern that had formed in Vietnam’s stock market ( “Good morning, Vietnam”). It occurred after a long one and half year downtrend that was followed by a one and half year sideways consolidation potential bottom.  At the time I mentioned that If it broke out above the upper blue resistance line and held, it suggested an upside target of $18, a 20% move higher. The chart I posted at that time was:

San ramon fee only retirement planning cfp wealth manager investment advisor VNM 1 1-3-18.png

Fast forward 6 months and I am happy to report VNM closed at $18 yesterday as you can see in the updated chart below. 

San ramon fee only retirement planning cfp wealth manager investment advisor VNM 2 1-3-18.png

As always, when our targets are met we have to ask, “what now?” My investing rules are such that if my upside target is achieved, I am required to sell at least half of the position. In the case of VNM, because the chart still looks constructive and there appears to be more room to the upside (2014 prior highs near $21 is the next target), an investor should consider selling just ½ and letting the rest run. Of course, each person needs to make those decisions based upon their own risk tolerance. If you decide to hang on to some shares, be aware you will need to give it some room to wiggle as it is currently very overbought and due for a pullback/consolidation before a big move higher can occur. For those that are watching and wishing, do not chase, the next opportunity is just around the corner

It's Coming, Are You Ready?

Automation may wipe out 1/3 of America’s workforce

In a new study that is optimistic about automation yet stark in its appraisal of the challenge ahead, McKinsey says massive government intervention will be required to hold societies together against the ravages of labor disruption over the next 13 years. Up to 800 million people—including a third of the work force in the U.S. and Germany—will be made jobless by 2030, the study says.

The bottom line: The economy of most countries will eventually replace the lost jobs, the study says, but many of the unemployed will need considerable help to shift to new work, and salaries could continue to flatline. "It's a Marshall Plan size of task," Michael Chui, lead author of the McKinsey report.

In the eight-month study, the McKinsey Global Institute, the firm's think tank, found that almost half of those thrown out of work—375 million people, comprising 14% of the global work force—will have to find entirely new occupations, since their old one will either no longer exist or need far fewer workers. Chinese will have the highest such absolute numbers—100 million people changing occupations, or 12% of the country's 2030 work force.

The details:

  • Up to 30% of the hours worked globally may be automated by 2030.
  • The transition compares to the U.S. shift from a largely agricultural to an industrial-services economy in the early 1900s forward. But this time, it's not young people leaving farms, but mid-career workers who need new skills. "There are few precedents in which societies have successfully retrained such large numbers of people," the report says, and that is the key question: how do you retrain people in their 30s, 40s and 50s for entirely new professions?
  • Just as they are now, wages may still not be sufficient for a middle-class standard of living. But "a healthy consumer class is essential for both economic growth and social stability," the report says. The U.S. should therefore consider income supplement programs, to establish a bottom-line standard of living.
  • Whether the transition to a far more automated society goes smoothly rests almost entirely "on the choices we make," Chui said. For example, wages can be exacerbated or improved. Chui recommended "more investment in infrastructure, and that those workers be paid a middle wage."
  • Do not attempt to slow the rollout of AI and robotization, the report urged, but instead accelerate it, because a slowdown "would curtail the contributions that these technologies make to business dynamism and economic growth."