TradingMarkets Stock Strategy: Microsoft, Yahoo

TradingMarkets Stock Strategy shows you how short term stock traders can take advantage of the stocks you read and hear about everyday. See how buying weakness and selling strength remains one of the best ways for swing traders and short term stock traders to make money trading in the markets.

The Case of Microsoft and Yahoo

On Friday, Microsoft
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CEO Steve Ballmer looked to be making nice with Yahoo!
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by offering to raise its bid for the Internet company. All those Yahoo! shareholders who had been leading on their own corporate leadership to take-or least strongly consider-Microsoft bid headed into the weekend with visions of higher shares prices dancing in their heads.

But by Sunday, everything had been turned upside down. Ballmer indeed provided Yahoo! with a higher bid. But Ballmer’s $33/share offer fell significantly short of Yahoo! insistence that the company was worth more, $4 per share more, to be specific. And that $4 per share difference appears to have been a deal breaker as Microsoft announced on Sunday that it was taking its bid and going home.

Yahoo! was down big Monday morning in the pre-market, while shares of Google rallied- likely reflecting the fact that whatever challenge Microsoft might have been able to make to Google after a Yahoo acquisition was not going to develop anytime soon.

Microsoft: From Overbought to Breakout Bust

Our PowerRatings and short term stock trading methods are powerful tools for traders looking to trade obscure, hard to find stocks as well as stocks making headlines. Consider first the PowerRatings chart of Microsoft below.

Note in the second half of April how Microsoft’s Short Term PowerRating slipped from a 4 to a 3 as the stock rallied toward its 200-day moving average. We look at a stock like Microsoft as a weak stock because it is trading below its 200-day moving average. Stocks in this position, according to our research on short term stock price behavior, tend to experience many failed rallies before finally making the rally that eventually lifts them out of the “under 200” club.

As the chart shows, Microsoft continued to move higher even after its Short Term PowerRating had slipped, eventually rallying above and closing beyond the 200-day moving average.

But the warning provided by the PowerRating downgrade remained. One of the most dangerous times to buy a stock is when it breaks out, especially when the stock is a relatively weak one, because many of these breakouts fail. And a failed breakout is ultimately what happened to Microsoft three days after rallying above its 200-day moving average. The stock topped just north of $32 and reversed the next day. Within two days, Microsoft was lower than it was when its Short Term PowerRating was downgraded from 4 to 3.

Yahoo: High PowerRatings and Double Dips

While Microsoft provided an example of how our Short Term PowerRatings work with overbought stocks, Yahoo provides an example of how our Short Term PowerRatings work with oversold stocks-such as Yahoo!.

Look at the chart of Yahoo below.

On two occasions, shares of Yahoo dipped lower to test the 200-day moving average for support. In both instances—