Categories: The Wagner Daily

The Wagner Daily


Commentary:

Yesterday was a tale of two markets, as the major indices diverged sharply. A 3% pop and relative strength in the Semiconductor Index ($SOX) enabled the Nasdaq to secure a respectable 0.6% gain, but the S&P 500 merely spun its wheels and finished unchanged. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, small-cap Russell 2000, and S&P Midcap 400 indices each advanced 0.2%. Though the Nasdaq fared best, it was a choppy and indecisive day for the major stock market indexes. The S&P 500 oscillated between positive and unchanged territory throughout the session before closing near its intraday low. The Nasdaq came to rest just above the middle of its range.

Substantial institutional money flow into a handful of semiconductor stocks caused volume in the Nasdaq to surge 25% above the previous day’s level. The Nasdaq’s higher volume gain represented a bullish “accumulation day” that made it easy to overlook Monday’s loss on slightly increasing turnover. Unfortunately, the same could not be said of the S&P. Total volume in the NYSE increased 5%, but this was not necessarily good considering the S&P closed flat. When trading rises and an index doesn’t go anywhere, it is often indicative of “churning” caused by institutional selling into strength. Conversely, turnover should recede during periods of consolidation and increase on “up” days. Market internals were mixed. Advancing volume in the Nasdaq exceeded declining volume by a margin of approximately 2 to 1. In the NYSE, declining volume was greater than advancing volume by nearly 3 to 2.

Before the market closed yesterday afternoon, we were prepared to analyze and illustrate the impressive strength that several tech sectors displayed. But the situation quickly changed after Intel (INTC) and Yahoo! (YHOO) announced their latest quarterly results after the close. Unimpressive earnings reports caused both stocks to sell off sharply in the after-hours market, dragging the rest of the market lower as well. Both INTC and YHOO were last seen trading about 5% below their official closing prices, with heavy volume to boot. The Semiconductor HOLDR (SMH), which rallied as much as 2.7% during the regular session, gave back all of the day’s gain in after-hours trading. Both the S&P and Nasdaq futures were trading 0.6% lower after-hours. So, what might we expect to happen today?

One way or the other, stocks are likely to trend sharply. The first possible scenario, common in bull markets, is that stocks gap sharply lower on the open, but buyers immediately step in, causing the major indices to reverse and “fill the gap” within the first 30 minutes. If this happens, it would certainly lay to rest any concerns about the true strength of this market. Momentum from such a bullish move would probably lead to further gains throughout the day.

The bearish scenario is that institutions fail to support the stock market after the initial gap down. If this happens, traders who aggressively bought yesterday’s numerous tech breakouts will be trapped well below their entry prices. Such a “bull trap” would cause those traders to sell their positions, further compounding the market’s weakness and subsequently attracting short sellers. The end result is a downtrending day that follow the opening losses. You may want to review yesterday’s commentary for a detailed listing and illustration of key support levels in the S&P, Nasdaq, and Dow.

In yesterday’s Wagner Daily, we said that, “The reaction to the onslaught of corporate earnings reports on tap over the next week will be the biggest determinant of whether or not last week’s rally will hold up. With quarterly earnings season in full swing, expect greater than usual day-to-day volatility and erratic movements in the broad market.” Clearly, we’re going to get a taste of that volatility in today’s session. We have no opinion as to whether the bullish or bearish possibility will prevail, but we do feel confident the market will quickly show its hand. The best advice is to be mentally prepared for either situation. As earnings season is just getting under way, stay alert and prepared for other such shocks to the system along the way.


Today’s Watchlist:

There are no new setups in the pre-market today. As always, we will send an intraday e-mail alert if/when we come across any new ETF trade entries today.


Daily Performance Report:

Below is an overview of all open positions, as well as a performance report on all positions that were closed only since the previous day’s newsletter. Net P/L figures are based on the $50,000 Wagner Daily model account size. Changes to open positions since the previous report are listed in red text below:

    Open positions (coming into today):
      INP long (200 shares from July 12 entry) – bought 63.07 (avg.), stop 60.28, target new high (will trail stop), unrealized points = + 1.42, unrealized P/L = + $284

      FXC long (250 shares from July 6 entry) – bought 95.51, stop 93.54, target new high (will trail stop), unrealized points = + 0.56, unrealized P/L = + $140

      GDX long (300 shares total – 200 shares from July 10, added 100 on July 17) –

      bought 40.76 (avg.), stop 38.68, target new high (will trail stop), unrealized points = + 0.06, unrealized P/L = + $18

      IBB long (250 shares from July 13 entry) – bought 80.33, stop 78.69, target 83.35, unrealized points = (0.82), unrealized P/L = ($205)

    Closed positions (since last report):

      OIH short (100 shares from July 17 entry) – sold short 176.30, covered 176.76, points = (0.46), net P/L = ($48)

    Current equity exposure ($100,000 max. buying power):

      $69,039

    Notes:


      Per intraday e-mail alert, we attempted a short sale in OIH yesterday, but scratched the trade a few hours later when it failed to set a new intraday low. We also added 100 shares to the GDX long position. New average price shown above, as well as the adjusted stop.

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    Edited by Deron Wagner,
    MTG Founder and
    Head Trader

    Deron Wagner

    Deron Wagner is a professional trader, author of several ETF trading books, and the Founder of Morpheus Trading Group. Since 2002, he has been sharing his proven swing trading strategy with thousands of traders around the world. He has appeared on CNBC, ABC, and Yahoo! Finance Vision television networks, and is a frequent guest speaker at various global investing conferences.

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