Traders Catch Both SPX Trends With These Two Strategies
Kevin Haggerty is the former head of trading for
Fidelity Capital Markets. His column is intended for more advanced traders. If
you would like to learn how Kevin trades,
you can find more information here.
Traders had good SPX
(
SPX |
Quote |
Chart |
News |
PowerRating) travel range to
work with yesterday with the initial Trap Door short on the early up into the
1237.73 10:25 a.m. ET bar, which then reversed down to 1228.33 which set up a
1,2,3 HB (higher bottom) long entry which advanced into the 1237.81 close, +0.7%
on the day. There was a previous 1,2,3 entry above 1230.59 which only traded to
1232.43 before reversing down to 1228.33. This trade was essentially scratched
and the second entry, as mentioned above, was an excellent trade. The Dow was
+0.9% to 10,686, and the
(
QQQQ |
Quote |
Chart |
News |
PowerRating) +0.8% to 39.43. To highlight the knee-jerk
reactions to news and certain large hedge funds trying to game price, you just
have to look at the QQQQ which has gone -0.6%, +0.4%, -0.8% and +0.8% yesterday.
All of the primary sectors were either +0.6% or
+0.5%, except the RTH, -0.1%. The oversold
(
TLT |
Quote |
Chart |
News |
PowerRating) was +0.7%, in spite of
crude oil, +1.04% to 66.75, and the US Dollar ($US) down to 86.96. The gold
stocks are leading cash gold, which closed at 437.35, +0.6%, and will pick up
some legs above 440 on a breakout from a symmetrical triangle (daily chart). Our
focus gold stock, which is
(
NEM |
Quote |
Chart |
News |
PowerRating), closed at 41.35 above the 1,2,3 HB trend
entry and +10.7% from the initial 1,2,3 entry.
The recent travel range has been good for
daytraders, but frustrating for position traders. In fact, the SPX has really
gone nowhere over the last four weeks with 6 – 7 days having intraday highs
between 1240 – 1245.86 with the rest of them in the mid-1230s. This is what I
consider churning into the .618 retracement zone to 1553 (from the 769 2002 low)
which is 1254.
FYI: All longer-term bull cycle index proxy
positions have been sold. For example, the QQQQ bought in the 23 – 25 range was
jettisoned and replaced with the Dec 05 39 calls at $1.50 when the QQQQ was
trading at about 38.40. That established a defined-risk position with maximum
risk being the additional $1.50 cost of the call. This was just rolled up to the
Dec 05 40 calls bought at $1.50 vs. the sale of the 39 calls at $2.05. That
makes the net cost of the 40 calls just .95. If the market goes into a full bear
cycle, the worst case is a 37.48 out (vs. the original 23 – 25 cost) which is
the initial 38.43 sale, less the .95 cost of the 40 call. If the market
accelerates, then all upside gains are captured above 40.95. Net net, the bull
market gains are taken off the table, and if the market crashes into the August
– October period, you could care less. If the major indices go sideways into the
December expiration at current prices and the 40 call expires worthless, another
decision would have to be made if you wanted to have long exposure in the market
at that point. Now I can sit back and enjoy all of the ridiculous market
commentary that will be coming on whether the bull is over and the bear is
starting, etc., etc.
Enjoy your weekend, and just keep trading the
overreactions should the travel range continue.
Have a good trading day,
Kevin Haggerty