View Full Version : 3-29-15 Comments
IBD has the Market Under Pressure. In a study I have seen regarding growth stock breakouts since 2003 the best opportunities came with the market in correction and the worst times came when the market was under pressure. The first part may seem counter intuitive but by the time stocks start breaking out in a correction the Follow Through Day usually comes along and the early breakouts do okay. So it seems we are currently in the worst of times.
The Market School position is 30% invested on the long side with buy switch on, waiting (hoping) for a FTD to reset the distribution count which is now high at 7 days. These distribution resetting FTDs are a bit different from normal FTDs when the buy switch is off and are part of a complicated advanced technique. The earliest we could see a legal FTD is Tuesday (day-4 of an advance off of a low).
With the USD index still riding high at 97.6 I expect companies with big exposure to international sales to miss profits in the upcoming earnings releases. This would equate to many large cap companies. Thus I am suspecting that we could see a real correction develop in the coming months. I don't know how this would impact the FED but I doubt it would hasten their move to tighten.
Watch lists in the High Growth section are updated.
Harry
03-30-2015, 06:01 AM
Appreciate the write-up Mike.
Harry
eschroeter
03-31-2015, 11:41 AM
What are your thoughts on the success of Market School? Is it still an official IBD premium feature? Any changes in the methodology of note?
What are your thoughts on the success of Market School? Is it still an official IBD premium feature? Any changes in the methodology of note?
Market School is still being taught, the next seminar is in Florida April or May. They are going to convert it to a home study course soon. Market School brings in some techniques that Bill O'Neil uses that are taught nowhere else. The prime example may be setting up right now in the market. When the distribution count climbs to a full count (+6) in a 25 day trailing window and a pullback occurs followed by a follow-through-like day Bill will zero the distribution count. Normally follow-through days apply to situation when the buy switch is off but this is a case where the FTD is used in an ongoing rally with the buy switch on. We are at a full count right now and we have had a pullback. Today is day-4 of a possible advance so if the market strengthens going forward the distribution count could drop to zero. IBD won't make mention this in the paper if it occurs, nor will they drop the count in IBD. Bill and his portfolio managers will however.
The changes that have occurred involve the addition of an S14 sell signal (sell if we close below the last marked high that triggered a B8 higher-high buy signal. The definition of the power trend has changed also making it much more "sticky" keeping the buy switch on more of the time. There have been minor tweaks to other rules.
The buy switch is on now in a power trend with an investment level of 55%. We have 7 days of distribution.
eschroeter
03-31-2015, 01:20 PM
Thank you, Mike. You obviously have an excellent grasp of all the rules. Can one still get the notifications of Market School through Leaderboard? Also, plain and simple, do you think it still works? Any results anywhere I can look at? (I realize it is stock-selection dependent, but perhaps someone has some numbers using simply an index, etc.)
Thank you, Mike. You obviously have an excellent grasp of all the rules. Can one still get the notifications of Market School through Leaderboard? Also, plain and simple, do you think it still works? Any results anywhere I can look at? (I realize it is stock-selection dependent, but perhaps someone has some numbers using simply an index, etc.)
Market School posts results of the exposure model on Leaderboard if you have attended Market School, otherwise the data is hidden from view. I presume this will continue to be the case with the upcoming home study course. The exposure model is a good guide to what you should be doing in the market and in my opinion better than I have been able to do by reading IBD or other mechanisms I have tried. As a way to measure performance I show the following chart.
29271
The blue line represents passive buy and hold. The buy and hold strategy buys one share of the NASDAQ on 1/2/1973 at $134.63 and holds it until yesterday's close value of $4,947.44.
The red line starts with a starting portfolio of $134.63 on 1/2/1973 (same as buy and hold) and buys the NASDAQ index at the Market School recommended exposure (0% to 100%) ending up with $43,599.19 at yesterday's close.
The first conclusion is that timing the market can work but you should note that I have not modeled trading costs in this analysis which would reduce the performance of the exposure model (red line). Also note that you can't really buy NASDAQ shares, this is just a way to measure relative performance of two approaches using the underlying index that the exposure model is using. Also note that this is a cash portfolio analysis, judicious use of margin could increase the performance over this baseline case.
For me the best part of the approach is what I learned about reading the market with a totally mechanical model. It is a true unbiased read of the market as the only inputs are index price and volume.
kimmd
04-24-2015, 11:00 PM
Mike-
Just wondering why MNST didn't trigger today on your volume breakout screen. Marketsmith shows a volume today of 913,000 which qualifies as a 10 day pocket pivot plus price <4% above the 10 day ma and up in price. Just wondering as my HGSI charts picked it up.
thx
-kim
Mike-
Just wondering why MNST didn't trigger today on your volume breakout screen. Marketsmith shows a volume today of 913,000 which qualifies as a 10 day pocket pivot plus price <4% above the 10 day ma and up in price. Just wondering as my HGSI charts picked it up.
thx
-kim
kim,
Volume reporting from different sources results in different numbers. One would think it would be simple to count trades but apparently not. This only makes a difference when volume is close to a threshold. The source of volume used on Pascal's site is not MarketSmith and shows end of day volume of 816,273 versus a threshold volume of 878,136 a small miss. My eSignal platform also showed a volume alert with volume of 914,317 (also different from MarketSmith).
Another case of tiny variations in volume reporting having a large impact on trading is associated with Follow Through Days and distribution days. These are cases of looking for volume higher than the day before: different volume reporting sources coming up with different answers.
We can't use MarketSmith in real time to answer volume questions as the volume service is 20-minute delayed, so we result to a real-time data feed. There are very few instances of a volume alert on eSignal for example not agreeing with the EV site alert. You found one of them.
I used to fret over volume reporting being different from different providers. Now for FTDs and Distribution days I run with MarketSmith and for real-time volume vs. threshold I use the EV site or eSignal.
kimmd
04-25-2015, 11:43 AM
Thanks Mike as I appreciate all the work you do especially with the High Growth Stock selections and volume trigger sites-all your comments and instructions are valued as I would like to hear you more often.
-kim
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