May 2018 Charts on the Move Video

The US stock markets continue to consolidate and digest its huge 2017 year run-up and subsequent double digit correction. The lone exception being small cap stocks as they have moved on to all-time highs. Will the rest of the market follow suit?  The benefit of the doubt has to be given to the prior underlying trend but I don't think the answer will be resolved any time soon. Until then, check out this month's Charts on the Move video at the link below  ...

https://youtu.be/XQLqeDGpNCA

 

Mmm, Mmm, Not so Good

Consumer staples stocks have been the worst performing sector this year (-12%), and Campbell’s Soup stock (CPB) has done nothing to help. Since forming negative divergence and peaking in July of 2016, the stock went on to fall more than 22%, bottoming in October later that year. From that point it went on to rally, albeit a weak one eventually running out of gas in January of 2017, formed a lower high and an ominous rounded topping pattern. Top callers should memorize the look as it is what tops normally look like. From that point it has been downhill as the sellers have been in control pushing its price down more than 45%.

Fast forward to the present and notice how in the weekly chart of CPB below, the most recent low which formed two weeks ago, was done on extremely high volume as shown in the bottom  pane (exhaustion selling?) and stopped right at a prior bottom (support). Notice also how momentum is now oversold and showing positive divergence.  Exactly the opposite of what occurred at the top back in 2016. If one had a very long term investment horizon, they could consider dollar cost averaging into the stock. Typically, when a stock gets decimated like CPB has (think Chipotle, CMG) it can take 12-18 months before it’s safe to enter as a buyer. Why? At that point all the sellers have left the building leaving only buyers and as such the stock can only go one direction, up. During that unwind in sellers, prices typically chop around viciously and will test your patience if you buy early. Forewarned is forearmed.  In the meantime while you wait though, you will be paid fairly well to hold the stock as its dividend yield is now above 4%. I am not a top or bottom caller and as such this interest in CPB is about the small downside risk as compared to the upside potential.

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Cisco Bulls on Notice

One of old techs beloved companies, Cisco, has been on an 8-month tear. But its recent earnings announcement, while not bad, was not well received by investors and The Street. Price gapped down more than 4% the day after the call and has been consolidating sideways since. As you can see in its daily chart below, price sits right on a confluence of support, including both horizontal and its rising uptrend line which, just coincidentally, is the bottom of the (blue) bearish rising wedge. On a longer-term time-frame, price is well above its rising 200 day moving average telling me any short-term concerns are, well probably just that, short term. But risk is clearly elevated right here so CSCO bulls have a decision to make if support does not hold.

If price were to break support and hold below, I have identified likely downside targets on the chart as T1 and T2. CSCO shareholders have to be open to the potential for further downside as price sits below both its declining 10 and 50 day moving average, telling us in the short term, the sellers are in control. This is made obvious by perusing the lower volume pane where the big volume is dominated by the red (selling) bars. I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the slight bearish RSI momentum divergence and the head and shoulders top pattern which adds further caution to the stock continuing its move higher.

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If the buyers can hold above the current support zone, it is likely we will see CSCO go on to make new, all-time highs. A break below and move to one of the lower targets would likely signal the (short term) end of its recent bull run and a much longer-term sideways consolidation, something most traders would prefer to avoid.

The Real Deal?

For months I have been mentioning seeing signs that inflation is perking up. This is seen directly in the prices of commodities as they are coming back to life after severe multi-year downtrend. Taking a look at wheat as an example, it’s easy to see its price peaked back in 2012 and has fallen almost 60%, bottoming in late 2016. Since then it has been consolidating sideways, eventually breaking above the red long-term trendline mid last year.

The 2-year (so far) sideways consolidation has formed a fairly symmetrical inverse head and shoulders reversal pattern with price now sitting above a rising 200-day moving average and just under the pattern’s neckline. If in the next few weeks/months price were to confirm the pattern by breaking above the neckline on increased volume, its upside target is near the 730 level (indicated T1 above), a 35%+ increase from where it sits today.  

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In spite of a relatively ideal reversal investment set up that has developed on wheat, I still wonder whether this is the real deal. Even though this provides a remarkable 7:1 reward to risk ratio because so many commodities have provided false breakouts over the past few years I have become somewhat jaded to their signals.

Bullish Demand Tailwind

Stock prices work like most other free market items, the greater the supply, the lower the price. On the flip side, the greater the demand, the higher the price. Corporate stock buy-backs have historically provided a tailwind for higher stock prices as companies retire shares (thereby increasing demand while reducing supply) but have been decreasing for the past 3 years. 

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It looks like 2018 may reverse that decline. If the above repurchase forecast turns out to be true, it should provide a bullish backdrop for equity prices this year. While it may or may not be enough to push prices higher, it will surely provide a floor likely keeping a lid on the size of any decline.