2 ETFs poised for breakouts

Stocks gapped down on the open
yesterday morning,
but traded in a tight, sideways range throughout
the entire session. The S&P 500
(
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lost 0.4% and the Dow declined 0.3%.
The Nasdaq Composite
(
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, whose gains outpaced the S&P 500 and Dow Jones
Industrials
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last week, showed relative weakness for the second
straight day by falling 0.8%. Small and mid-cap stocks, which are usually an
accurate leading indicator for the Nasdaq, closed significantly lower as well.
Both the Russell 2000 and the S&P Midcap 400 indices closed 0.9% lower. Traders
showed a lack of commitment into the close, which resulted in each of the major
indices closing near the middle of their narrow intraday ranges.

Turnover fell for the third consecutive day, although this
time the lighter volume was positive. Total volume in the NYSE declined by 16%,
while volume in the Nasdaq was 21% lower than the previous day’s level. Although
the number of shares changing hands was once again below average levels, the
losses on lower volume means that institutions were not aggressively selling
stocks. Interestingly, volume in both exchanges yesterday was the lightest of
any full trading days so far this year. Obviously, a sudden return of
institutional trading activity could result in stocks making a swift move in
either direction, but we are not likely to see that until after the Labor Day
holiday has passed.

Although each of the major indices and most industry sectors
remain well off their 52-week highs, we noticed two ETFs that are consolidating
near their all-time highs and are poised for breakouts to fresh highs. They are
the Vanguard Telecom Services
(
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and the Euro Currency Trust
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.
As the chart below illustrates, VOX has been consolidating at its highs for the
past four days, which means it will likely be one of the first ETFs to break out
to a new record high when the stock market bounces just a bit. Notice how VOX
also closed above its prior high from early May. That prior high should now act
as the new support level:



As you may have noticed, VOX trades an average daily volume of
only fifty thousand shares. But remember that, unlike individual stocks, all
exchange traded funds are synthetic instruments. As such, the amount of average
daily volume that an ETF trades is, for the most part, irrelevant. Even if a
particular ETF had no buyers or sellers for several hours, the bid and ask
prices would continue to move in correlation with the market value of the ETF
that is derived from the prices of the underlying stocks. The only thing you
need to be aware of is that ETFs with a low average daily volume may sometimes
have slightly wider spreads between the bid and ask prices. If this is a
concern, you can simply use limit orders, but it really should not matter much
unless you are a daytrader who is only looking to gain a few pennies on the
trade. The point is that you should not necessarily avoid trading in an ETF just
because it has a low average daily volume.

Since forming a double bottom at the $125 level last month,
FXE has retraced all the way back up to test its prior high from early June. It
may consolidate longer, but we anticipate that FXE will soon attempt to break
out to a new high. We are targeting a potential buy in FXE if it rallies above
the June 5 intraday high of $129.72:



The broad market broke its five-day winning streak yesterday,
but the losses were not significant compared to last week’s gains. Looking at
yesterday’s chart patterns, we observed that the session was an “inside day” for
both the S&P and Nasdaq. That means their intraday trading ranges from the lows
to the highs was contained completely within the previous day’s respective
ranges. An “inside day” is often a continuation pattern that leads to a
resumption of the primary trend, whichever direction that may be. Since stocks
are now in a short-term uptrend, yesterday’s action did little to change the
overall technical picture of the major indices. However, be on guard for a fast
and furious move in either direction if volume suddenly returns to the market. A
close below the August 17 low in the S&P 500 (1,292) or the August 18 low in the
Nasdaq (2,138) should warrant caution on the long side of the market.
Conversely, a firm close above the August 18 high in the S&P (1,302) or August
17 high in the Nasdaq (2,168) would be bullish and would confirm that the bulls
still have the upper hand, at least in the near-term.


Open ETF positions:

Short IWM and GLD (regular subscribers to

The Wagner Daily

receive detailed stop and target prices on open positions and detailed setup
information on new ETF trade entry prices. Intraday e-mail alerts are also sent
as needed.)

Deron Wagner is the head trader of Morpheus Capital
Hedge Fund and founder of Morpheus Trading Group (morpheustrading.com),
which he launched in 2001. Wagner appears on his best-selling video, Sector
Trading Strategies (Marketplace Books, June 2002), and is co-author of both The
Long-Term Day Trader (Career Press, April 2000) and The After-Hours Trader
(McGraw Hill, August 2000). Past television appearances include CNBC, ABC, and
Yahoo! FinanceVision. He is also a frequent guest speaker at various trading and
financial conferences around the world. For a free trial to the full version of
The Wagner Daily or to learn about Deron’s other services, visit

morpheustrading.com
or send an e-mail to

deron@morpheustrading.com
.