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Note to the reader: This is the twenty-second in a series of articles I’m publishing here taken from my book, “Investing with the Trend.” Hopefully, you will find this content useful. Market myths are generally perpetuated by repetition, misleading symbolic connections, and the complete ignorance of facts. The world of finance is full of such tendencies, and here, you’ll see some examples. Please keep in mind that not all of these examples are totally misleading — they are sometimes valid — but have too many holes in them to be worthwhile as investment concepts. And not all are directly related to investing and finance. Enjoy! – Greg

One of the basic premises for model development is the concept of Occam’s Razor. Occam’s (or Ockham’s) Razor is a principle attributed to the 14th-century logician and Franciscan friar William of Ockham. This is the basic premise of all scientific and theory building. The simpler of two methods is preferable. Simplest may not necessarily be best, but is a good start.

Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler. — Albert Einstein

It is the only form that takes its own advice: Keep things simple. A model built on sound principles will probably survive the tumult of the markets much longer and better than an overly complex model. Complexity has a tendency to fail, and, unfortunately, usually at the worst time. I always think about the complex algorithms used by Long Term Capital in 1998, when they began to fail miserably. Their complete failure and the foolish effort to tweak them almost took the New York Fed down with them. It seems that, too often, investors associate complexity with viability. That is just not correct.

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. — Leonardo da Vinci

There are three primary components to a sound model, and just like a three-legged stool, a model must be stable in all environments. They are:

Weight of the evidence measurement of market movement.Rules and guidelines to show how to trade the weight of the evidence information.Strict discipline to follow the process with confidence.

Remove any one of those components, and like the legs on a three-legged stool, the model will tumble. The following discusses each of these components and how they fit together to produce a comfortable rules-based trend-following model. I mention comfortable because you must be comfortable with your model, or else you will constantly challenge it and probably abandon it. The only thing that really matters when judging a strategy is actual, real-time, verifiable results. Everything else is just window dressing.

Weight of the Evidence

 The “Dancing with the Trend” model described herein uses a basket of technical measures to determine the overall risk levels in the market place. The model has been constructed so that each technical measure (see Chapter 13) carries a specified weight based on extensive research. These weights (percentage points) are cumulated to derive a total model point measure to build the weight of the evidence. This approach gives one the ability to protect assets in difficult market environments (low weight of the evidence totals) while also allowing one to make tactical shifts to better-performing assets when the investment environment is more favorable (high weight of the evidence totals).

Each of the weight of the evidence components is assigned a weight based on their percentage contribution to the overall model, with the total of all components equal to 100. The weight of the evidence is further broken into four different levels in this example. For example, if the sum of the weights of the indicators is equal to 65, the model would be deemed to be yellow, as the yellow range is from 51 to 80. These ranges and the number of ranges are determined during model development and research. Sometimes, only three ranges are necessary, and, in fact, for most, it is advisable. In this example, I have four ranges, with the middle two considered as transition ranges. This allows the model to absorb some market volatility without penalizing the process.

0–30 = Red31–50 = Orange51–80 = Yellow81–100 = Green

An alternative range could also be used. One must decide on how close the stops are in order to determine how many levels, and, in particular, how the middle or transitional levels are used. Like the porridge in the three bears’ story, one is going to be just right (for your model).

0–30 = Red31–70 = Yellow71–100 = Green

These levels serve the model concept, as they determine what set of rules to use to buy, sell, or trade up (trade up is the act of replacing current poor relative performing holdings with better-performing holdings). Asset allocation (equity exposure) values are also a function of the weight of the evidence level. There are also three additional Initial Trend Measures (ITM), which provide guidance to the buying and trading up process using the point system. These help refine the various levels using shorter-term trend measures.

The weight of the evidence model uses these primary components that, when used together, help determine the most appropriate asset allocation level as measured by the model. The terminology below of “turning on” refers to the fact that the measurement is indicating a positive or upward trend. In this example, the price-based components are:

Trend Capturing (one component)Price ShortPrice MediumPrice LongAdaptive Trend

The next group of components fall into the category of Market Breadth measures. Market Breadth indicators allow one to look at the market internals that are not always reflected in the price action of the market. This is much like a physical examination performed by your doctor. You might be feeling fine, but, when the doctor runs his diagnostic tests, he is getting an internal look that can potentially find a health risk that you were not aware of. That is the precise reason it is recommended you have routine physical exams. I’ll spend some time here to illustrate how such Breadth measures can be used to evaluate potential risk in the markets that is not readily apparent in the price action alone.

To use a very simplistic example, let’s focus on the Dow Jones Industrial Average Index (DJIA), which is comprised of 30 large blue-chip issues. If IBM (or another of the high priced stocks in the index) was up 15% on the day, but the other 29 DJIA stocks were down slightly, the DJIA could possibly still be up for the day because of the large price contribution from IBM. The price movement of the index would be showing a positive action. However, if you look at the fact that only one of the 30 was up while 29 were down, a much different picture of the overall health of the market is yielded. Since DJIA is a price-weighted index, this example demonstrates how a high-priced stock can influence the average. Similarly, capitalization-weighted indices (S&P 500) can have cases where the top 10 percent of the components will influence the daily return of the index.

Additionally, the Nasdaq 100 index, which comprises the top capitalization stocks in the Nasdaq Composite, shows that the top 10 stocks of the Nasdaq 100 account for about 43% of the movement of the entire Nasdaq 100 index. The largest capitalization stock in the index can be up $20 for the day, and the smallest capitalization stock can be down one cent for the day, but with breadth, they evenly cancel each other out. Breadth, on the other hand, shows the true internal action of an index from treating all issues equally. Therefore, Breadth measures will generally begin to decline prior to price or cap weighted indexes at market tops. Tom McClellan is fond of saying that breadth arrives at the party on time, but always leaves early.

During periods of market distribution or the long drawn-out topping process, investors will tend to move from their more illiquid higher-risk holdings (usually small cap issues) into what they perceive as less risky large capitalization blue chip stocks. This serves to drive price and capitalization indices (which most are) higher, while breadth, being equally weighted, shows that most issues are declining. As the breadth measures turn off it reduces risk by tightening your sell criteria.

Figure 15.1 is an example from 2007 in which the price-based capitalization index moved higher (top plot of S&P 500), the breadth-based advance decline measure (bottom plot) moved lower.

Here are the breadth-based measures used in this example of the weight of the evidence used in the Dance with the Trend model:

Advance/DeclineNew Highs/New LowsUp Volume/Down VolumeBreadth CombinationTrend Capturing (2 components)

The single remaining weight of the evidence component is the relative strength measure. Recall that it is a compound measure using small cap versus large cap, growth vs. value, and breadth vs. price (see Figure 13.24 and Figure 13.25). Figure 15.2 shows the Nasdaq Composite in the top plot, with the total weight of the evidence overlaid on it, and below are all nine weight of the evidence binary indicators. You can see from the individual binaries that they turn on and off independently. As one binary comes on, the total weight of the evidence in the top plot moves up based upon how many points that binary was worth.

Figure 15.3 shows an example of the weight of the evidence in the top plot overlaid on the Nasdaq Composite, going from 100 just after the first vertical line down to zero just before the second vertical line. The weight of the evidence component binaries are all shown below. You can see that as they turn off, the total weight of the evidence line in the top plot declines based on the percentage value of the binary that turned off. Below are the dates and names of the weight of the evidence components and when they turned off. You can see that it took from 5/4/2010 (month/date/year) until 5/20/2010 for all of them to turn off and take the weight of the evidence from 100 to zero. However, don’t forget that, as the weight of the evidence transitions through the four zones, the stops on each holding are tighter, so a nearly defensive position was reached by 5/7/2010.

5/4/2010 Adaptive Trend5/5/2010 Trend Capturing5/7/2010 Price Medium5/10/2010 High Low5/17/2010 Price Long5/18/2010 Up Volume Down Volume5/18/2010 Breadth Combination5/19/2010 Advance Decline5/20/2010 Relative Strength

Figure 15.4 shows the total weight of the evidence with the Nasdaq Composite overlaid. When the weight of the evidence is at the top, which is 100, it means all of the components are saying the trend is up. When it is at the bottom, which is zero, it means all of the components are saying the trend is not up. The three horizontal lines are at 80, 50, and 30, which break the weight of the evidence into four sections, which are described in the next section. I think you can clearly see that when the weight of the evidence is strong (> 50), the market is generally in an uptrend.

Investing with the Weight of the Evidence

When all of the indicators are “on,” you have very strong uptrends occurring that have been confirmed by a number of weight of the evidence indicators, meaning there is strong confirmation of the trends in place. There is thus a strong relative strength relationship, in that there is ample speculation taking place in the markets to help drive upward price movement and investor sentiment is good. In addition, the positive price movement is being fully supported by the internal breadth measures. This is a favorable time to be invested, and this is also when you want to participate in the equity markets, because of the favorable opportunity of market gains.

However, when all of the indicators are off, a negative or insufficient uptrend is in place and there is no confirmation of a solid positive trend. The relative strength relationship is showing unfavorable market sentiment, which leads to less-than-favorable market conditions. In addition, the breadth measures are telling you that the market internals are weak. This is a time when the risk of negative price movement is at its greatest, and the time to be invested in much safer assets, such as cash or cash equivalents, until market conditions improve.

Transitional markets occur when the weight of the evidence is either increasing or decreasing. If the weight of the evidence is increasing, one will generally begin increasing the equity allocations as evidence builds, until you get to a point where most or all of the indicators are on, at which time you would have generally moved to a fully invested position. When the weight of the evidence is declining, the stops that are in place on every holding in the portfolio are tightened. These stops, which act as a downside protection mechanism in the event the market price action reverses suddenly, control the sell side discipline, and, if these stops are hit, the positions are sold. Stopped out positions are not replaced until you once again begin to see an improvement in the market’s performance or the weight of the evidence, depending on the rules and guidelines. Therefore, as the weight of the evidence continues to decline (indicators turning off) and holdings continue to hit stop loss levels, one is naturally decreasing the equity allocation until such time that you might be fully defensive. Figure 15.5 shows the Nasdaq Composite with the weight of the evidence composite overlaid and the four levels defined previously.

Table 15.1 shows in table form what Figure 15.5 displays visually.

The technical measures are based on sound principles and solid research, and are applied with uncompromised discipline. This approach to trend following for money management provides a level of comfort to investing in the equities market that few can question.

Ranking and Selection

Chapter 14 presented all of the ranking measures and details on each one. Here, I just bring them into the full picture of how the overall model works.

From the ETF universe (currently about 1,400), using the mandatory ranking measures of Trend, Price Performance, Relative Performance, and Risk Adjusted Return Measures, a fully invested portfolio will contain anywhere from 12 to 18 holdings. (Naturally, the actual number is decided by the strategy team or the investment committee, and this number is used here merely as an example.) The Ranking Measures bring the giant universe of possible ETFs down to only the ones qualified for investment based upon their technical and risk performance. Figure 15.6 helps visualize this ranking and selection process.

Figure 15.7 is a sample of the ranking measures that are mandatory with some of the top-rated ETFs based on the value of Trend. In this particular example, you can see that many fixed income issues ranked high, plus the energy ETFs and a few equity-based ETFs. From this, I would guess the market was in a transition area going from up to down or vice versa, because not many equity-related ETFs are performing well.

Figure 15.8 shows not only the mandatory ranking measures, but also the tie-breakers, all of which were covered in detail in the previous two articles. The conditional formatting allowed in spreadsheet software is invaluable for this process. If the negative numbers are displayed and easily determined, it drastically speeds up and simplifies the selection process.

Discipline

Up to this point in the book, I have given many examples of discipline and its constant need when using an objective model. It is mentioned again here because it is a critically important component. In fact, I think discipline is the sole reason most analysts fail when using a model.

Sell Criteria

Selling of holdings is accomplished in two ways: one is when actively trading up and a holding is sold because it is being replaced by a holding that has better ranking measures, and the other is when a holding hits its stop loss level.

Tweaking the Model

A model that is based on sound principles using a rational approach to measuring trends, a strong set of reasonable rules, and the discipline to follow it (especially, when it seems it isn’t working) is the secret to a successful model process. Tweaking a model is the equivalent of creating destruction. The best models are the ones that are least sensitive to changes in their parameters.

There are times, however, when one of the measures just seems to steadily be losing its trend identification ability. I’m not saying you should never change a parameter or a model component, just don’t start tinkering with the parameters—change the component. In this case, my goal is to find a replacement that only makes a positive contribution to the model’s historical performance, with extremely little or no negative contribution.

Model in Action

The following charts (Figures 15.9, 15.10, 15.11, and 15.12) show the stages of the weight of the evidence model over different time periods. The binary overlaid on the Nasdaq Composite Index is a simplified process that shows an uptrend whenever the Weight of the Evidence measure is greater than 50, and a downtrend whenever it is less than 50. This method shows when the measure is essentially invested (uptrend) and when it is defensive (downtrend). The lower plot is the weight of the evidence composite.

Remember: All of the financial theories and all of the market fundamentals will never be any better than what the trend of the market allows.

Risk Statistics, Ratios, Stops, Whipsaws, and Miscellaneous

This is a wrap-up section that contains important information and concepts, but would have been out of place if put in one of the previous chapters.

Risk statistics are generally good for two purposes: predicting the probability of future outcome and comparing two funds, managers, and so on. If you have read this far, you know I only think they are good for the latter—comparison purposes. When looking at historical returns and standard deviation, you will find that they are not constant, but dependent on the time frame being analyzed. Personally, using less than five years will produce statistics that are not significant for longer-term analysis. Risk statistics come in all sizes and shapes, but comparative risk-adjusted statistics are what we discuss here. These should always be calculated using exactly the same time frames for the two series you are analyzing. Plus, it is good to do this over a number of different time frames, say 5, 7, 10, 15, even 20 years. This section also covers whipsaws, fund expenses, stop losses, and turnover.

Sharpe Ratio

The Sharpe Ratio was created by William Sharpe in the 1960s and introduced as an alternative to the reward-to-volatility ratio. Clearly, in this case, he is assuming volatility is standard deviation.

Sharpe Ratio = (Mean – Risk Free Rate) / Standard Deviation  

Here is a simple example: let’s say investment A has a return of 12% and a Standard Deviation of 10%, while investment B has a return of 18% and a Standard Deviation of 16%. Let’s assume the Risk Free Rate is 3%. Then Investment A has a Sharpe Ratio of 0.90 ((12 – 3)/10). Investment B has a Sharpe Ratio of 0.9375 ((18 – 3)/16). Hence, Investment B is a better investment based on this risk-adjusted statistic. The purpose of this example is to show that a higher standard deviation is acceptable if accompanied by a higher return.

Sortino Ratio

Created by Frank Sortino and offered as an alternative to the Sharpe Ratio, the Sortino Ratio is simply the use of downside deviation in the denominator instead of standard deviation. Instead of using the Risk Free return, it uses a user-defined measure of minimal acceptable return. Downside deviation sounds reasonable, but you must be careful in its determination and assess it for the data in question. If you were to determine variability in a long period of data, the downside variation would be different than if you looked at a short term part of the data.

Sortino Ratio = (Mean – Minimal Acceptable Return ) / Downside Deviation

The Minimal Acceptable Return can be set as a function relative to the Mean Return using a rolling return chart.

Correlations, Alpha, Beta, and Coefficient of Determination

These were thoroughly covered in articles 2-5 of Rules-Based Money Management.

Up and Down Capture

Personally, I think this statistic on performance is the most important of all of them. It measures the cumulative return of an investment compared to a benchmark’s cumulative return in both up and down periods of the benchmark. If the value of the Up Capture is more than 100%, then it means that the investment captured more than 100% of the move when the benchmark advances. If the number is less than 100%, e.g. 80%, then it means the investment only captured 80% of the up moves as the benchmark advanced. Down Capture works the same way, only focusing on the downward moves of the benchmark.

For example, we have an Up Year with the Benchmark increasing 20%. If the Up Capture of the investment is 60%, then the Investment made 20% x 60% = 12%. Assume a down year in which the benchmark declined by 40%, the Investment had a Down Capture of 80%, then the Investment returned 40% x 80% = 32%.

Whipsaws

Trend following has one issue that will constantly plague the investor, usually at the absolute least-expected time, and that is whipsaws. I have to admit, I think it just takes experience to get used to whipsaws. I hate them, but I also know that trying to adjust a model based on sound principles so that the ones in the recent past are reduced or eliminated will lead to two things: the performance in the past will probably be reduced, and you have probably reduced the performance going forward and probably without actually changing the overall number of whipsaws. Trying to eliminate whipsaws will often create more and at the worst time—going forward.

Up Market Whipsaw

A whipsaw can occur in both up and down markets. An up market whipsaw is when the market is trending higher, and then experiences a pullback in price such that it triggers a stop loss and a holding is sold. Shortly thereafter, the market resumes its uptrend (see Figure 15.13). You follow your rules on the process of how to reinstate the equity exposure, and you then purchase another asset to replace the one that was sold, or you can repurchase the one that was sold as long as you are aware of wash sale rules.

Down Market Whipsaw

A down market whipsaw occurs in a downtrend after a bottom forms, your trend measures see an uptrend developing, and calls for equity exposure are made, so you buy based on your rules. Shortly thereafter, the market reverses and the downtrend resumes, and the security just purchased is at its stop loss and is sold. This is the most common type of whipsaw (see Figure 15.14) because, when uptrends begin, the Weight of the Evidence is usually low and your trade up rules are not yet into play. When legging into a new uptrend, your goals is liquid exposure—period.

Stops and Stop Loss Protection

A stop loss is generally applied in an effort to reduce a portfolio’s exposure to the risk of downside market moves. These are determined by a number of methods, e.g. a predetermined cumulative loss is reached or on a percentage of drawdown. Stops can be justified from behavior biases such as disposition effect and loss aversion. I think it can be stated that the use of stop loss protection will almost always reduce a portfolio’s return, especially if the returns are not momentum-driven. In other words, the use of stop losses in trend following is certainly better than in mean reversion strategies. Further, they provide an investor with discipline and the potential to reduce risk.

Generally, though, the reality is that although many think they will improve performance, instead the real value of them is in overall risk reduction. On another note, trend following can be best served with using the reversal of trend as the stop loss technique. However, this would require some real stamina in the process, as one can suffer significant losses before most trend-following methods will provide the risk reduction.

Figure 15.15 shows how a moving stop loss system can work. This stop is based on a 5% decline in price from the highest close reached in the last 15 trading days (top oval). Therefore, that highest point reached in the past 15 days moves within the range of prices during those 15 days. In Figure 15.15 you can see the highest close was about midway back in the 15-day range, or 7 days ago to be exact. The plot at the bottom shows the percent decline from the moving 15-day highest close. Hence, once it drops below the second horizontal line at -5% (bottom oval), the stop is reached and the sell order is executed. Don’t waste your time creating elaborate stop loss techniques if you aren’t going to follow them. In my opinion, all stops are inviolable—period.

This stop loss technique works well because it protects the gains from momentum investing. However, there are situations in market action that would cause this stop loss to fail, and that is during a slow nonvolatile decline. Since the stop is based on the moving past (15 days in this example), it is conceivable that the price would decline and the stop would follow it down because the decline did not exceed the stop loss percentage. Although this is rare, it is certainly possible and must be addressed. One solution is to use a stop that is measuring the trend of the holding, such as the Trend measure discussed in Chapter 14. This way, if the price was declining slowly and the percent from previous high value stop isn’t working, the trend stop will catch it before the decline in price becomes an issue.

Stop Loss Execution

This is easy! Execute it when it hits—period. Although it is easy to write this, very often managers fail to live up to this simple creed. I do not know how many times I have heard of a manager that holds a committee meeting when a stop is hit to decide whether to execute it. How truly sad! If you are going to spend time and effort in developing a stop loss process, then why would you question it when it occurs? To me, a stop loss is inviolable.

Now there is an issue with stops and when they hit based on the time of day, but this can be dealt with in the rules of a good model. Here is an example of a stop loss process that considers the time of day. From rules, there is no trading during the first 30 minutes of the trading day. This has historically been referred to as amateur hour and probably not just appropriate for amateurs but professionals alike. There is often a lot of volatility just after the open, as prices seek stability after watching the news and morning futures. I think it is just best to stand aside during this period. The rules also can cease all trading beyond one hour before the market closes. This period of time also has some volatility, but often the time is justified for trade execution, depending on the size of the trade. In any case, the actual trading day is reduced from the market hours to help overcome the uncertainty during those periods and allow execution time.

When within the rules-based trading day (defined above), when a stop is hit, it is executed. However, the execution process can also be defined with rules. For example, when a holding hits its predefined stop, an alert is sent to all involved in the trading process. This identification of a holding hitting its stop starts a 30-minute clock, which, if after 30 minutes the holding is still below its stop or goes below its stop for the remainder of the trading day, it is executed. The 30 minutes is designed to overcome the onslaught of breaking news, Internet, and constant media coverage throughout the day, with the concern that occasionally the news is initially incorrect for whatever reason. Often, a news story about a particular company can cause not only the company stock to decline, but the industry, the industry group, and even the sector that company is in to decline. If you were holding a technology sector ETF and Intel had a bad news blast, it could and probably would affect your technology holding. The 30-minute window from the stop being hit until it is executed allows any incorrect reporting to be corrected. Often, you can see this in intra-day charts: a spike down, followed a few minutes later by a return to the previous price level.

The bottom line is that you should have a process predefined on how to handle stops. It can be as simple or as complex as you feel comfortable with, but you must follow it.

Thanks for reading this far. I intend to publish one article in this series every week. Can’t wait? The book is for sale here.

On this week’s edition of Stock Talk with Joe Rabil, Joe shows a specific semiconductor stock that meets all the criteria that he looks for. He starts with the monthly chart and then works down to the daily explaining all the key aspects to the setup. He then covers the cryptos, followed by stock requests that came through this week.

This video was originally published on May 22, 2024. Click this link to watch on StockCharts TV.

Archived episodes of the show are available at this link. Send symbol requests to stocktalk@stockcharts.com; you can also submit a request in the comments section below the video on YouTube. Symbol Requests can be sent in throughout the week prior to the next show.

In this edition of StockCharts TV‘s The Final Bar, Dave welcomes Mike Singleton of Invictus Research. David highlights a bearish momentum divergence for gold, and also illustrates how mid-cap and small-cap stocks have yet to make new highs in Q2. Mike paints a bullish picture for stocks based on economic growth and improving earnings, and why materials may be the best way to play the reflation trade.

This video originally premiered on May 22, 2024. Watch on our dedicated Final Bar page on StockCharts TV!

New episodes of The Final Bar premiere every weekday afternoon. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

As equity markets print new all-time highs and the CBOE Volatility Index ($VIX) prints 52-week lows, this should be considered a bullish outlook by all accounts.

However, when you look under the hood, the internals with this rally concern me and, in my opinion, warrant buying some protection at these all-time highs.

Time to Play Defense?

Firstly, as Julius de Kempenaer, Senior Technical Analyst at StockCharts.com pointed out earlier this week, if you look at the Sector Rotation RRG Chart below, you can see that, over the past five weeks, the rally in the S&P 500 has been led by Utilities, Energy and Staples. While Technology has started to show a slight increase in strength this week, the market’s overall tone is clearly in defense. With Materials and Industrials also rolling over, we simply lack the confidence to call a strong bull market on the recent all-time highs.

CHART 1. SECTOR ROTATION RRG CHART. Utilities, Energy, and Consumer Staples led the rally in the S&P 500 index.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

Now, if you look at a chart of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY), you see that the new all-time highs were not confirmed with a new high on the Relative Strength Index (RSI) momentum indicator; this suggests that buyers are exhausted, and may lack the strength to continue higher. Additionally, volume has been increasing on down weeks and decreasing on up weeks, which is further evidence that this bull market lacks strength.

CHART 2. WEEKLY CHART OF THE SPY. The S&P 500’s new highs have not been confirmed by a new high in the RSI, and volume is declining on up weeks. These indicate that the bull market doesn’t have strength.Chart source: StockCharts.com. For educational purposes.

Planning Your Strategy

There are two possible ways this can play out. The offensive sectors, such as Technology, Discretionary, Materials, and Industrials, can start leading again; alternatively, the S&P 500 could begin to roll over.

With the VIX trading around the 12 handle, my view is that it costs us very little to buy some protection, and it would allow you to remain fully invested in the markets. This would allow further upside participation if the offensive sectors returned to life, while giving up a small percentage of your portfolio for the hedge. And this would provide downside protection if the markets were to roll over.

I’m going out to the July expiration, and buying the $530 puts on SPY for a $7.35 debit, which is only 1.3% of SPY’s value to buy over two months of protection. I’m choosing a strike price with a delta of 40, which translates to $0.40 of profits for every $1 drop in SPY.

Note: Options data is available in StockCharts in the Summary Pages.

As you can see, the potential reward for risking $735 is very favorable. If SPY declines in value, all things equal, the put’s value will increase. Remember, when you buy a put, you have the right to sell the underlying at the strike price before expiration date. You could also sell the contract before expiration. If SPY is above the strike price at expiration, you can let the contract expire worthless and just lose the premium.

My initial intent was to focus on the number of major equity indices near their all-time highs or attempting to break out of long-term ranges, and how their behaviors around those prior highs over coming months will likely offer significant insight into what comes next. It’s evolved into something else, which I will share with you here.

Making Sense of the Stock Market’s Randomness

I am convinced that most market fluctuations are random, mostly untradable noise. Yet most who work with the financial markets for a living must translate meaningless behavior into a continuous narrative for clients and employers. Importantly, once a narrative is publicly expressed, the analyst/trader becomes entrapped in that narrative, and all the resultant behavioral biases that being identified with a view entails. Working in the institutional setting, my solution was to focus on longer timeframes.

When patterns occur at the proper position on the chart, they become much more valuable and actionable.

Part of the technician’s evolution is finding the style that best suits their emotional and risk management tolerance. For me, it was a long and sometimes painful journey. One of my toughest challenges was finding a systematic approach to separating signal from noise. In other words, when is market behavior important, and when is it not? And if it is, how do I subsequently fashion a trade to take advantage of the informational advantage?

Anyone who has traded for a living knows that market behaviors and patterns are often unreliable. This is particularly true if they are occurring in a trending market and well away from substantive support or resistance (the most obvious exception being early-stage trends and climax/ending structures). Don’t get me wrong; trading-focused systematic entries to established trends can work well. However, I prefer to enter initial positions into trends in their early stages, where I have tighter control over risk management and where my macro opinion, hopefully divergent from the dominant market narrative, is more likely to be a change catalyst.

When patterns occur at the proper position on the chart, they become much more valuable and actionable. To be fair, I don’t ignore day-to-day shifts; staring at tens of thousands of charts for years has given me a decent feel for the short-term fluctuations. However, I place less emphasis on building trading plans or adjusting my positions around them, and I try to avoid labeling them as meaningful for anything more than a short-term trade. In these cases, my chart analysis typically consists of a cursory glance at the price-volume relationships and a general view of the chart. On the other hand, solid confluences of support and resistance that have been well-defined in the weekly and monthly perspectives are my wheelhouse. When I find these markets, I focus on them intently.

In my process, I actively scan for markets, testing well-defined price junctures in their weekly and monthly perspectives. At these junctures, the price/volume behavior combinations in the daily, weekly, and even hourly perspectives become meaningful and often produce actionable insight.

As a professional fixed-income trader, I have always been envious of non-constrained traders who had thousands of global stocks, equity indices, currencies, and commodities across multiple time perspectives to choose from. A fat pitch is always set up somewhere, as long as you are dogged enough to find it.

On To the Charts!

Multiple global equity markets are testing important prior highs, many from monthly perspectives, others from weekly perspectives. These are the situations in which signal quality is high, the price/volume relationships become more important, and where, oftentimes, new trends with quality risk reward tolerances are set up.

These are all charts that have recently moved onto my watch list.

MSCI Italy Capped ETF

The iShares MSCI Italy Capped ETF (EWI) represents a point in case.

CHART 1. Monthly Chart of EWI.

Italy recently moved modestly above the top of a two-decade-long trading range. From this position, even small daily perspective fluctuations generate meaningful information. Importantly, with the long trading range acting as a potential cause, potential breakout targets are much higher, and even a failure back toward the trading range lows would produce roughly a 40–45% return. It’s pretty simple: either the market:

A) Is breaking out, orB) Has washed out the top of the range, sucked in weak hands, and will soon fail back into the range leaving weak hands trapped.

Upon examining the chart, I initially thought it was indeed breaking out of its decade-long trading range.

The September 2022 low (B) was higher than the prior low (A).During the last decline toward the range lows (34.53–20.99) there were significant signs of accumulation.The market is clearly above the most immediate horizontal resistance( 34.45–34.53) and just above the 36.88 resistance.Corrections since breaking out have mostly taken the form of bull flags or pennants.

However, there are a few caveats.

Momentum is significantly over-extended in all time frames.The weekly slow stochastic is diverging and threatening to roll over.The monthly slow stochastic is attempting to roll over.EWI is close to the top of the daily, weekly, and monthly Bollinger Bands.Multiple price channel tops confluence in the 38.00 area of the chart.Volume has declined markedly as the market rallied over the last 19 months. This suggests a lack of selling pressure rather than strong demand.Since 2011, the peaks have been running in the mid 40-month range. It’s currently at 35 months.While above the most recent resistance, the 2009 high at 43.54 should offer strong resistance.

 Suppose the market is ready to pull back. In that case, the price-volume relationships, pattern, behavior relative to support and resistance zone, and other traditional technical relationships should allow early entry into the next meaningful directional move.

For now, I suspect the market may be breaking out in the long term, but the long laundry list of concerns suggests that a pullback is likely to develop before the next strong trending phase begins. The behaviors on the pullback and where the pullback holds (most likely the broken C–D resistance) will be critical (see chart below).

CHART 2. Watch to see if the pullback holds at the C-D resistance in EWI.

The Nikkei 225

 The Nikkei is another major market that’s testing its all-time high. The monthly chart below shows the index is at all-time highs and at a channel top. This is clearly a chart to add to my watchlist.

CHART 3. Monthly Chart of the Japan Stock Market Index (JP225).

MSCI India ETF

India is interesting. There has been a very positive change in the reporting on India’s economic outlook, and the market recently moved to a new all-time high. However, note the swell in volume and poor upside result generated by that volume (see monthly chart of iShares MSCI India ETF (INDA) below). I suspect strong hands are selling the rally.

CHART 4. Monthly Chart of iShares MSCI India ETF (INDA). And on a final note, many of the topics and techniques discussed in this post are part of the CMT Association’s Chartered Market Technician’s curriculum.

Disclaimer: Shared content and posted charts are intended to be used for informational and educational purposes only. The CMT Association does not offer, and this information shall not be understood or construed as, financial advice or investment recommendations. The information provided is not a substitute for advice from an investment professional. The CMT Association does not accept liability for any financial loss or damage our audience may incur.

Driven by the work-from-home dynamic, as well as by new migration patterns, both single-family and multifamily rent prices were red-hot during the first years of the pandemic.

Now different drivers are pushing some rents higher — and throwing cold water on others.

Multifamily rents in April were 0.8% lower than they were in the same month last year, according to Apartment List. Rents cooled because a massive amount of new supply entered the market, with still more in the pipeline.

Apartment rents did rise for the third straight month, but the growth, at 0.5%, is very small. Rents usually begin to rise in the spring, and the gain this year is not only smaller than usual but smaller than the previous month’s gain. The national median rent in April was $1,396.

“This is typically the time of year when rent growth is accelerating heading into the busy moving season, so the fact that growth stalled this month could be a sign that the market is headed for another slow summer,” according to the Apartment List report.

Apartment vacancies are also climbing, hitting 6.7% as of March, marking the highest reading since August 2020. New multifamily building permits are slowing down, but the number of units currently under construction is near a record high, and last year saw the most new apartments hit the market in over 30 years.

Single-family rents are much stronger, up 3.4% in March year over year, according to a new report from CoreLogic. That annual increase, however, continues to shrink as more supply comes onto the market from build-for-rent companies.

Roughly 18,000 single-family, built-for-rent homes were started during the first quarter, a 20% increase from the first quarter of 2023, according to an analysis of Census data by the National Association of Home Builders. Over the last four quarters, 80,000 such homes began construction, representing a nearly 16% jump from the prior four quarters.

“U.S. single-family rent growth strengthened overall in March, though some weaknesses are revealed in the latest numbers,” said Molly Boesel, principal economist for CoreLogic. “Overbuilt areas, such as Austin, Texas, continued to soften, decreasing by 3.5% annually in March.”

The continued strength overall in single-family rents indicates that potential homebuyers who are priced out of the home-purchase market are choosing to rent similar alternatives, according to Boesel. Mortgage rates have risen back into the 7% range, and home prices continue to rise, making it harder to buy a home.

Of the nation’s 20 largest cities, Seattle saw the highest year-over-year increase in single-family rents at 6.3%, followed by New York at 5.3% and Boston at 5.2%. Those leading the declines were Austin, Texas, down 3.5%; Miami, down 3.2%; and New Orleans, down 1.4%.

For the first time in 14 years, however, single-family attached properties, namely townhomes, posted a year-over-year rent decline.

“The decrease in the attached segment is being driven by a subset of markets, mostly in Florida, but including Austin and New Orleans. As multifamily apartments are being completed, some markets are gaining rental supply, which competes with the attached segment of the single-family rental market,” Boesel added.

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Long-expected layoffs are hitting Pixar Animation Studios today.

Pixar will lay off about 175 employees, or around 14% of the studio’s workforce, a spokesperson for parent company Walt Disney told CNBC. The cuts come as CEO Bob Iger works toward his overarching mandate to focus on quality content, not quantity.

Layoffs hit other Disney businesses last year, but Pixar’s cuts were delayed because of production schedules. Initially, it was expected that 20% of the animation studio’s employees would be laid off.

Iger, who returned to the mantle of CEO in late 2022, has been working to reverse the company’s box office woes, spurred both by the company’s content decisions and pandemic shutdowns. While Disney has seen mixed box office success with a number of franchises, including the Marvel Cinematic Universe, its has faced a challenge getting its animated features to resonate with audiences.

When theaters closed during the pandemic, Disney sought to pad the company’s fledgling streaming service Disney+ with content, stretching its creative teams thin and sending theatrical movies straight to digital.

The decision trained parents to seek out new Disney titles on streaming, not theaters, even when Disney opted to return its films to the big screen. Compounding Disney’s woes, many audiences members started to feel the company’s content had grown overly existential and too concerned with social issues beyond the reach of children.

As a result, no Disney animated feature from Pixar or Walt Disney Animation has generated more than $480 million at the global box office since 2019. For comparison, just prior to the pandemic, “Coco” generated $796 million globally, “Incredibles 2″ tallied $1.24 billion globally and “Toy Story 4” snared $1.07 billion globally.

With Iger back at the helm, Pixar will refocus on theatrical releases and move away from short-form series for Disney+.

— CNBC’s Julia Boorstin contributed to this report

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Spirit Airlines is doing away with both change and cancellation fees, effective immediately, days after Frontier’s similar announcement, part of an overhaul of the country’s biggest discount carriers’ longtime strategy.

Prior to the new rule, Spirit used to charge anywhere between $69 and $119 for ticket changes and cancellations, depending on how close to departure the customer made the change.

“This new policy is among the best in the industry because it applies to each and every guest,” Spirit said in a statement to CNBC. “We have many other enhancements in the works and look forward to sharing more soon.”

The changes mark a shift for budget airlines’ longtime pricing approach, which includes low base fares to attract customers and add-on fees for advanced seating assignments, bottled water and cabin baggage. Ancillary revenue routinely surpasses those airlines’ ticket prices.

“As we continue to see the demand and competitive environments develop, we know that we must also change with the times,” Spirit’s Chief Commercial Officer Matt Klein said on an earnings call earlier this month. “We will continue to test out new merchandising strategies, which we anticipate will change how we think about the components of total revenue generation.”

Both Spirit and Frontier are trying to return to profitability in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, while larger airlines that offer both bare-bones fares to domestic destinations and big international networks have posted profits.

Most larger rivals such as Delta, American, Alaska and United got rid of change fees during the pandemic except for the cheapest, most restrictive tickets. Southwest Airlines does not charge customers a flight-change fee.

Along with getting rid of change fees, Frontier also announced Friday that it will start offering bundles that include add-on options such as early boarding and checked baggage that they previously offered a la carte. 

Spirit is also offering bundled packages with varying prices that include perks such as checked bags.

President Joe Biden and the Department of Transportation have been cracking down on what they deem “junk fees.” As part of that push, the DOT issued a new rule requiring airlines to be upfront about add-on fees such as those for checked or carry-on baggage, which was subsequently challenged by a slew of airlines.

Spirit said the end of cancellation fees were not tied to the new rules.

The Biden administration also recently issued a new rule requiring airlines to offer automatic cash refunds for cancellations rather than in response to a customer’s request.

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Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito sold shares of beer giant Anheuser-Busch as conservatives were ditching the Bud Light brewer over its partnership with a transgender social media influencer.

On the same day Alito sold Anheuser-Busch, he then bought the same amount of stock in Molson Coors, a company with a history of facing political boycotts of its own, the filing shows.

The transactions have bred fresh accusations that Alito, one of the high court’s six conservatives, is engaging in or aligning with partisan politics, despite a recently adopted code of conduct that directs the justices to “refrain from political activity.”

Alito sold between $1,000 and $15,000 of AB InBev’s stock on Aug. 14, 2023, according to a financial disclosure filing for the justice that was recently made visible through a federal judicial database.

The Supreme Court did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on Alito’s transaction report or the timing of his stock activity.

At the time of Alito’s stock sale, Anheuser-Busch was still grappling with a monthslong campaign to boycott Bud Light after the company partnered with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney in an April 2023 social media campaign.

The partnership threw the world’s largest beermaker to the center of a broader fight over transgender rights and acceptance in the U.S. — and stoked a backlash from both conservatives and supporters of Mulvaney, who was reportedly stalked and targeted with death threats amid the controversy.

In May 2023, Modelo replaced Bud Light as the top-selling beer in the U.S. Data from around that time showed sales of Bud Light had dropped nearly 25% year over year.

AB InBev nevertheless reported better-than-expected profits in the second fiscal quarter of 2023, and as of May appears to have emerged from the boycott efforts virtually unscathed.

Alito’s switch to Coors is also noteworthy in light of the company’s history of facing boycotts from Mexican-Americans, Black people and the LGBTQ community over workplace practices.

Alito’s investment activities came to light as the associate justice is facing a swell of criticism over a New York Times report that an upside-down U.S. flag — a symbol used by supporters of the pro-Trump “Stop the Steal” conspiracy — was flown at his home in the days after the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Alito denied any involvement in inverting the flag. He told the Times that his wife, Martha-Ann Alito, “briefly” did so “in response to a neighbor’s use of objectionable and personally insulting language on yard signs.”

But that statement has not quelled Alito’s critics, some of whom are now demanding he explain the timing of his sale of Anheuser-Busch.

“This sale, given the timing and much like an upside-down flag, can be construed as a political statement,” said Gabe Roth, executive director of the nonprofit judicial watchdog group Fix the Court, in an email to CNBC.

“I believe Supreme Court justices should refrain from making political statements — even oblique ones or even ones their wife or broker may have made on their property or in their brokerage accounts, respectively,” Roth said.

Roth noted that the beer companies in question have no pending business before the Supreme Court that he can think of.

But if Alito or his broker were truly reacting to the Bud Light boycott or the surrounding culture war, Roth said, then the stock sale “speaks more about the justice’s media intake and where that puts him on the political spectrum.”

“If the sale was in response to the Bud Light controversy last year, he might have an appearance-of-bias problem when it comes to future court cases related to trans rights,” Roth said.

The transaction notice was one of several that were posted to the Federal Judicial Financial Disclosure Reports database last week, and then removed without explanation. Roth said their disappearance was “possibly due to the newness of the system.” The reports had reemerged on the database as of late Monday morning.

The filings were first reported earlier Monday by the legal blog Law Dork.

The court is set to soon deliver a ruling on whether former President Donald Trump enjoys presidential immunity from criminal charges related to his efforts to overturn his loss to President Joe Biden in the 2020 election.

The court, which bears a six-to-three conservative majority after Trump appointed three justices, is not expected to grant Trump’s sweeping immunity claim that a former president cannot be charged for any official acts they perform in office. But the justices in oral arguments in April seemed skeptical of parts of federal prosecutors’ case against Trump.

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Trump Media & Technology Group, the parent company of Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform, disclosed a net loss of $327.6 million in the first quarter of the year, with total revenue at $770,500, according to its earnings report, filed Monday with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The report is one of the first measures of company’s true financial health since it debuted as a public company on the Nasdaq stock exchange in March, after completing a merger with a shell company, Digital World Acquisition Corp.

DJT shares were relatively flat in post-market trading following the release of the earnings report, which had not been highly publicized prior. The stock was down 5% at market close, with a share price of $48, giving it a total value of about $6.6 billion.

Since going public, the DJT stock has whipsawed on what experts say is a meme stock trajectory, sometimes rising or falling dramatically, without any significant news to account for the swing.

TMTG CEO Devin Nunes said that the company is exploring “a wide array of initiatives and innovations to build out the Truth Social platform including potential mergers and acquisitions activities” in a statement on Monday.

“We are particularly excited to move forward with live TV streaming by developing our own content delivery network, which we believe will be a major enhancement of the platform,” Nunes added.

In April, the company announced that Truth Social would launch a TV streaming platform in three phases, the first for Android, iOS, and Web. The second would roll out as stand-alone apps for phones, tablets and other devices. The last phase would launch for home television.

In its Q1 report, TMTG said it has signed contracts with its first data center partner, which would host the TV platform, and a hardware vendor to provide equipment.

The company told the SEC last week that it would delay its quarterly filing, after the agency charged its former auditor, BF Borgers CPA, with “massive fraud” of hundreds of companies, raising red flags about the accuracy of the financial information that the firm had audited.

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