Digg It |   Del.icio.us |   Printer Friendly |   PDF |   Email

Profit From the Upcoming Crash: A Trader's Blueprint

Friday, June 29, 2007 | Teeka Tiwari

Rating:
For the past few months, I have been Mr. Cautious both in my weekly Tycoon Report commentaries and with my trading service, Point and Profit.  I have been using the recent market strength to cash in multiple profits for my PNP members, and I’ve actually made no brand new buy recommendations in weeks!

My thesis has been that the market is trading at a dangerously overbought level, and statistically speaking, this has been a poor time to buy stocks.

I use the New York Stock Exchange Bullish Percent (NYSE BP) as one of my tools to gauge risk in the market.  The NYSE BP was pioneered by AW Cohen in the 1950’s, and is basically an indicator of overall risk in the entire stock market.

A bullish percent chart is simply a measurement of those stocks in a particular sector, index, or market that is trading on a point and figure buy signal versus a point and figure sell signal.  This measurement is expressed in a percentage form.  You can create Bullish Percent charts for any sector, such as banks, brokers, restaurants, etc.

The New York Stock Exchange Bullish Percent is a measurement of all stocks on the NYSE that are on a P&F buy signal vs. a P&F sell signal.  For example, if the NYSE BP were at 74%, it would mean that 74% of all stocks on the New York Stock Exchange were on a Point and Figure buy signal, and 26% were showing sell signals.

Unlike other chart methods, P&F is very black and white.  A stock is either on a buy signal or on a sell signal.  (FYI, just because a P&F chart is on a buy signal or sell signal does not automatically equate to it being an actionable buy or actionable sell.  This is a very important distinction.)

AW Cohen drew some very important conclusions through his careful observations of the NYSE BP.  He discovered that readings from above 70% and subsequent reversals below 70% generally coincided with market tops, and indicated a statistically higher risk time to own stocks. 

This event has actually just occurred.  The NYSE BP has just reversed from 74% down to 68%.

Now, does this mean that the market will go into free fall?  Maybe, but not necessarily so.  What it does mean is that supply (sellers) now has the upper hand in the market.  It means that rallies will in all likelihood be sold into, not bought.

What I do at times like this is reevaluate my entire portfolio.  I want to be brutally honest with myself and ascertain which of my holdings I am prepared to stick with through the upcoming soft period, and which of my holdings are straight out speculative plays.

I then purge my portfolio of all purely speculative plays, i.e. stocks that I am playing for an event, or a breakout, etc.  Those stocks that are part of my overall long-term portfolio, i.e. those stocks that I feel are experiencing a multi-year above average earnings run, I will generally leave alone and weather the short-term pain of watching them get hit.  My reasoning is that the overall long-term gains will generally eclipse any short-term pain I may experience with the position.

My next step is to identify a list of shorting candidates.  Typically what I look for are those sectors that are underperforming the broad market.  That is, sectors that are exhibiting lower performance than the S&P 500.  Once I have my sector list established, I will then look at ALL of the stocks in the sector and attempt to determine which of those stocks in the sector are the weakest.

Once I have that list narrowed down, I will then look for the stock to rally to its 20-day moving average, and at that point, I will place my short position.  Do I do it that way every single time?  No, sometimes I can just take a look at the chart of a stock and see a fall coming, and I will short it even though it may be in a strong sector.  But that would be an exception and not the rule.

When the market bottoms, I do the same thing but in reverse.  I will attempt to find those sectors that are outperforming the S&P 500.  Now remember that “out performance” is a relative term.  If the S&P is down 22%, and the Oil sector is down 15%, the Oil sector is still outperforming the S&P handily.  I will want to rank all of the sectors' performance relative to the S&P 500.  I will then focus on finding the strongest stocks in the strongest sectors.

I will then take partial positions in those stocks when I see them trade at the low end of their trading range.  I use both P&F charts and bar charts with Bollinger bands and MACD’s to make that determination.

From there the cycle simply repeats itself.  We go from oversold back to overbought, and that, my friends, is the simple truth of the stock market.

I would urge you to print this article and refer to it often, and you too will begin to observe for your self the almost comical cyclicality of the stock market.




(Please let us know what you think about Teeka Tiwari's article.)
Rate his article here »

“Let the Game Come to You.”

Teeka Tiwari
Chief Investment Officer
Point & Profit




Rate this article
Thank you for your vote!

30 Comments

Post your own comment
  1. Michael (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I am a memeber of the EFT Master Trader and joined Teeka's Point and Profit this morning after reviewing this article. If I would have been with Teeka back at the end of June ewhen this article was written, I would have saved a lot of money. I am convinced of Teeka's market insight based on this article and what has happened since June 29th and I look forward to being Teeka's student and learning as much as I can. Teeka, I know I am not worthy, but let's make a ton of money over the next year. I have three children that will need college money in less than 13 years.



    Your loyal student,

    Mike
  2. parviz (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Great article.The listing of group relative strengths would be a great companion to the sector hunter. It would make life a lot easier for members.
  3. parviz (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Great article.The listing of group relative strengths would be a great companion to the sector hunter. It would make life a lot easier for members.
  4. john (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Tweeka.

    Graphs and/or charts would go a long way

    towards a better and clearer understanding for those of us (me) who basically have to read something 2-3 x's before snapping to the idea.
  5. Joseph (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    You were right about the early July "Sweet Spot."

    It happened just like you predicted, based on the past. But I think it might continue despite the "wall of worry" that accompanies bullish rallies - or even because of it. Classic contrarians wait for ubiquitous optimism (extreme bullishness) to take root before calling a market top. So far the higher put/call ratio these days may just be a good sign, if a rising market is what you are looking for.
  6. dmpcards (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Very good article!



    I am trying to get my hands around balancing long term "buy and hold" investing with shorter term "trading".



    I believe myself to be a LT investor..., but believe I should have some positions in ST so that I have opportunities in a downside period.



    This article helped. Thanks!
  7. dave (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Great article! I printed this one and will refer to it often. Good job Teeka
  8. Joseph (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Excellant article--sums up years of study very concisely.
  9. Margaret A (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Great article. Very enlightening.
  10. george (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    hi teeka,

    as usual,pretty informative,however,it would have been much easier to fully understand your article if you were to include charts showing what you meant.please try to do that.

    best regards,

    george

Add Your Comments

Please keep your comments relevant to this blog entry. Email addresses are never displayed.

Please fill in the missing field(s).

Important: To comment on Tycoon Report articles, you must first log in. If you are a paying customer of Tycoon, you may use the same login and password that you use normally. If you do not yet have a login, please take a moment to register below. It’s free, and you only need to do it once.

Register

(email address and password information will NOT be displayed publicly)

Name *

Email *

Password *

Subscribe to The Tycoon Report
By registering, you agree to our terms of service.

Already a member? Log in!

(you will not be taken away from this page)

Email *

Password *

Remember?

Forgot Password?




Important Notice to all stock spammers, scammers and penny stock pump-and-dumpers: You will get no respect here. Don’t bother submitting fraudulent or misleading information in the guise of an article, because we will remove it. Any piece of content submitted on this site can be removed at the sole discretion of the Tycoon staff.