“Trade what you see; not what you think.” – The Old Fool,
Richard McCranie, trader extraordinaire.
“The big money is not in the buying and selling. But in
the waiting.” - Charlie Munger, Vice Chairman, Berkshire Hathaway
“Bubbles tend to topple under their own weight. Everybody
is in. The last short has covered. The last buyer has bought (or bought massive
amounts of weekly calls). The decline starts and the psychology shifts from
greed to complacency to worry to panic. Our working hypothesis, which might be disproven, is that September
2, 2020 was the top and the bubble has already popped.” - David
Einhorn, Greenlight hedge fund.
JOBLESS CLAIMS (CNBC)
“The pace of weekly jobless claims jumped last week after
filings caught up with a decline due in part to the Thanksgiving holiday. First-time
claims for unemployment insurance totaled 853,000, an increase from the
upwardly revised 716,000 total a week before...” Story at...
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/10/weekly-jobless-claims.html
CPI (MSN.com)
“The cost of consumer goods and services rose modestly in
November, but U.S. inflation more broadly was still quite low, with the economy
facing little threat of building price pressures in the near future.
The consumer price index increased 0.2% last month...”
Story at...
CORONAVIRUS (NTSM)
Here’s the latest from the COVID19 Johns Hopkins website
at 7:00 pm Thursday. US total case numbers are on the left axis; daily numbers
are on the right side of the graph with the 10-dMA of daily numbers in Green.
MARKET REPORT / ANALYSIS
-Thursday the S&P 500 dropped
about 0.1% to 3668.
-VIX rose about 1% to 22.52.
-The yield on the 10-year
Treasury was 0.912%.
Indicators are turning down some, but not enough to suggest
anything big coming, at least at this time. Overall, Market Internals don’t
look that bad, but MACD of Price did have a bearish crossover today.
The daily sum of 20 Indicators declined from +6 to +2 (a
positive number is bullish; negatives are bearish). The 10-day smoothed sum
that smooths the daily fluctuations declined from +72 to 68. (These numbers
sometimes change after I post the blog based on data that comes in late.) Most
of these indicators are short-term and many are trend following.
The Long Term NTSM indicator
ensemble switched back up to BUY, 24 Nov. Now, Price & VIX are bullish;
Sentiment & Volume are neutral. The Indicator remains BUY, but I think we
are near a top so I am waiting. There is nothing at this point that indicates
the top will be significant – we may see a 5-7% drop if that much.
Even while the market
indicators are generally bullish, the market remains extremely overbought with the
S&P 500 15.7% above its 200-dMA. If past history follows, that tends to cap
the gains going forward. The downside risk is greater than the upside risk.
I’ll continue to keep a low %
of funds in the stock market until I see a better buying point.
MOMENTUM ANALYSIS:
TODAY’S RANKING OF 15 ETFs (Ranked Daily)
The top ranked ETF receives
100%. The rest are then ranked based on their momentum relative to the leading
ETF.
*For additional background on
the ETF ranking system see NTSM Page at…
http://navigatethestockmarket.blogspot.com/p/exchange-traded-funds-etf-ranking.html
TODAY’S RANKING OF THE DOW 30
STOCKS (Ranked Daily)
Here’s the revised DOW 30 and
its momentum analysis. The top ranked stock receives 100%. The rest are then
ranked based on their momentum relative to the leading stock.
For more details, see NTSM
Page at…
https://navigatethestockmarket.blogspot.com/p/a-system-for-trading-dow-30-stocks-my_8.html
THURSDAY MARKET INTERNALS
(NYSE DATA)
Market Internals remained NEUTRAL on the market.
Market Internals are a decent
trend-following analysis of current market action, but should not be used alone
for short term trading. They are usually right, but they are often late. They are most useful when they diverge from
the Index.
Using the Short-term indicator
in 2018 in SPY would have made a 5% gain instead of a 6% loss for buy-and-hold.
The methodology was Buy on a POSITIVE indication and Sell on a NEGATIVE
indication and stay out until the next POSITIVE indication. The back-test
included 13-buys and 13-sells, or a trade every 2-weeks on average.
My current stock allocation is
about 30% invested in stocks. You may wish to have a higher or lower % invested
in stocks depending on your risk tolerance. 30% is a very conservative position
that I re-evaluate daily.
The markets have not
retested the lows on recent corrections and that has left me under-invested on
the bounces. I will need to put less reliance on retests in the future.
As a retiree, 50% in the stock
market is about fully invested for me – it is a cautious and conservative
number. If I feel very confident, I might go to 60%; if a correction is deep
enough, 80% would not be out of the question.