Add to Technorati Favorites

Friday, August 8, 2008

Weekly Trend and Trade Review

Trader Talk

The short term momentum oscillators remain positive, non-confirming the bearish stance of the AlphaKing Trading indicator. The accumulation/distribution profile remains negative, with a failure of high volume to confirm Friday's advance as a follow-through day that would have triggered a buy signal for this very important confirming indicator. The leadership also remains negative, with Friday's close yielding 130 stocks making new 52 week highs versus 222 stocks making new 52 week lows.

The 4% rule remains positive, confirmed with bullish Federal Reserve policy. The VXO volatility indicator closed the week at 21.9, moving back into the complacency camp, and remains contrarian bearish. The primary Elliott wave count continues to suggest a wave 2 counter-trend advance within a bear market continues to unfold. If so, the wave 3 melt-down run should start in the non-too-distant future as wave 2 completes.

Traditional seasonal trends have us looking for a difficult third quarter for the bulls after a modest summer rally attempt stalls, while the Presidential cycle remains bullish for the remainder of 2008. The Benner-Fibonacci cycle will remain bullish until 2010, though this prolonged time period may include one or more cyclical bear phases. The AlphaKing combination cycle sees a bear market slump running all the way into mid-December when the next major turn-date is slated to land.

Summary:

The stock market advance this week confirms the Elliott Wave 2 counter-trend topping move is not yet complete, though may be very close to doing so. The NASDAQ advance, in particular, looks about done, as all waves appear in place. The Dow Industrials and S&P500 closed smack on their 50 day MAs, and whether they too break out and launch to the upside to mimic what happened to the NASDAQ, or if they stall here and the slide resumes, should be answered early next week. The lack of volume on the rally continues to argue that we are experiencing nothing more than a bear market trap for the bulls.

Our trend following indicators may also get caught up in this fool-the-most-people move, but as trend followers we will gladly trade in line with our indicators. That means holding shorts if the stock indexes begin to slide early next week, or move to the long side of the market on any failure to reverse as a buy signal is triggered. If such a buy signal turns out to be the real thing, then we'll happily make money being proven wrong in our thinking that we remain in a bear market. If such a buy signal proves us correct that the bear is alive and well - by triggering a sell signal soon after the buy - then we'll gladly reverse our positions and accept such volatility has part of the process of making money over the long term using a research proven trend following approach.

The goal is to make a solid return when the trend delivers on a new trading signal, while keeping losses small on failed signals, rather than being proven right all the time. No one, no investment system, can do the latter with any degree of success, and trend following is the next best alternate to having a time machine that can give us tomorrow's hindsight today. The average annual rate of return for the AK Trading Indicator - using the NASDAQ Index to gauge results - is 15% long only (unleveraged,) 30% (leveraged,) and 19.7% long/short (unleveraged,) 35.2% leveraged (from 1973 through the end of 2007.) The average trade is close to 17% on wins, versus 3% on failed signals (unleverged,) 34% on wins versus 6% losses (leveraged.) Thus results since the June 24th sell signal are very much in line with expectations.

We will not act before our indicators tell us to, as there have been many times in history where a new trend change signal was close to being signaled yet the signal never happened, as one aspect of the AK Trading Indicator we like is its ability to only limit signal changes to those that likely matter the most. Annual trading results of all our portfolios are shown in the archives of our Updates between 12/24/2007 and 1/2/2008.

Kevin Wilde, Chief Trading Strategist, AlphaKing.com

For Free charts with trading signals and fundamentals ratings, visit AlphaKing

No comments: