Quantcast
  Free Trial!
  Today’s Best Stocks To Trade!   
Click Here


Quote


Stocks

Trading Ideas

Short Term
Long Term
All Trading Ideas


Trading Lessons

Strategies
Courses
Interviews
Glossary
All Trading Lessons


Daily Stock Setups

Connors Daily Battle Plan
Haggerty Professional
Kaltbaum Intra-day Set-ups
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
TM Indicators


Trading News

Markets Updates
Technical Alerts
Breaking News


PowerRatings

Short Term
Long Term
Charts


Indicators

Stocks
Market Bias


Quotes

Markets
Stocks
Charts
Level II
Historical Data
Options


Trading Contests

Up or Down




When NOT to buy breakouts
By Deron Wagner | TradingMarkets.com | August 15, 2006
Stocks RSS

The major indices leapt higher out of the starting gates Monday morning, but as we often see in a weak market, stocks rolled over in the afternoon. The broad market still closed higher, but each of the indices gave back most of their gains and finished near their intraday lows. Both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJX | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) eked out gains of 0.1%, while moderate strength in the Networking and Semiconductor sectors helped the Nasdaq Composite (COMP | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) advance 0.6%. The small-cap Russell 2000 similarly closed 0.4% higher, but the S&P Midcap 400 only managed a gain of less than 0.1%. At their mid-day highs, both the Nasdaq and Russell indices were printing 1.7% higher, but the stock market's afternoon downtrend erased most of those gains.

Total volume in the NYSE was 6% higher than the previous day's level, while volume in the Nasdaq increased by only 1%. Technically, the market's broad-based gains on higher volume registered as a bullish "accumulation day" for both the S&P and Nasdaq, but the intraday action was rather negative and certainly not indicative of institutional buying. The positive is that turnover did not increase during the afternoon selloff, but it didn't decline either. Volume levels in both exchanges finished the day about the same percentages higher than where they were when stocks were at their intraday highs. Again, we expect turnover to remain light throughout the rest of the month, as the summer doldrums don't really end until after the Labor Day holiday.

In healthy markets, buying a breakout to a new 52-week high is one of the most simple and profitable trading strategies. However, breakouts to new highs in a weak market have a very high rate of failure. When the breakouts do fail, they trap the bulls who bought the breakouts, which typically leads to rapid downward price action. In fact, one of our favorite techniques in a bear market is short selling stocks and ETFs that break out to new highs, but immediately fail and fall back down to the bottom of their prior trading ranges. Momentum accelerates, which usually results in further downward price action and a break of the primary uptrend lines. The key to all this, of course, is making sure the breakout has actually failed before attempting to sell short. Obviously, selling short a stock or ETF that has just broken out to a new high without first waiting for confirmation of the price failure is suicidal. One such ETF that meets our criteria for a failed breakout is the iShares DJ Real Estate Index (IYR | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) On the daily chart below, notice how IYR gapped up and broke out to a new high on August 4, but promptly fell back into its prior range two days later:

Since failing its breakout, IYR has been consolidating near the low of its range. If it breaks below the August 11 low, it will also correspond to a break of its 50-day moving average. That is the point at which we would consider initiating a new short position in IYR. A logical protective stop price would be 50 cents to 1 point over the 20-day moving average. Taking a longer-term look at the technical picture of IYR, we also like that a double top has formed on the weekly chart. Resistance of the prior high from March of 2006 was one of the major reasons this month's breakout attempt has failed:

Yesterday's action caused both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to form bearish "inverted hammer" candlestick patterns on their daily charts. This pattern occurs when an index rallies at some point during the day, but subsequently sells off and closes near its lowest level of the session. Such price action tells us there was indecision and a tug-of-war between the bulls and bears, but the bears took control in the end. Similar bearish formations have occurred with the S&P 500 on three other days since the beginning of the month. Notice also how the 200-day moving average once again held the S&P down:

The Nasdaq Composite tested resistance of its primary downtrend line for the third time within the past two weeks, but once again failed to break out. Its "inverted hammer" candlestick formed after failing to overcome the downtrend line:

The bears had the upper hand yesterday, but don't forget that the broad market remains choppy and range-bound in the short-term. As long as the major indices remain below their respective downtrend lines, the overall odds favor the short side of the market. However, we are laying low and focusing on managing existing positions rather than entering new ones. As mentioned in yesterday's newsletter, this is a good time to develop your plan of attack and watchlist for both sides of the market so that you are prepared when traders return back to business in a few weeks.


Open ETF positions:

Long PPH and SDS, short IWM (regular subscribers to The Wagner Daily receive detailed stop and target prices on open positions and detailed setup information on new ETF trade entry prices. Intraday e-mail alerts are also sent as needed.)


Deron Wagner is the head trader of Morpheus Capital Hedge Fund and founder of Morpheus Trading Group (morpheustrading.com), which he launched in 2001. Wagner appears on his best-selling video, Sector Trading Strategies (Marketplace Books, June 2002), and is co-author of both The Long-Term Day Trader (Career Press, April 2000) and The After-Hours Trader (McGraw Hill, August 2000). Past television appearances include CNBC, ABC, and Yahoo! FinanceVision. He is also a frequent guest speaker at various trading and financial conferences around the world. For a free trial to the full version of The Wagner Daily or to learn about Deron's other services, visit morpheustrading.com or send an e-mail to deron@morpheustrading.com .
 


Stocks RSS
Related Articles

PREMIER SPONSORED LINKS
TRADE CENTER

The TradingMarkets Directory
Stocks
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis
PowerRatings
Training Classes
Tools
Stock Scanner
Daily Market Bias

Options
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis

Forex
How to Trade
Forex Momentum Index
Pivots

E-mini/Futures
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Daily Market Bias

How to Trade
Stocks
Options
Forex
E-mini/Futures
Glossary

Tools
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Stock Screener
Quotes & Charts
Stock Indicators
Market bias Indicators

PowerRatings
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Industry PowerRatings
PowerRatings Charts
Training Classes
PowerRatings Strategies
Search PowerRatings

Trading Contests
Up or Down Stock Contest
#1 - Win $1000 every month

Up or Down Forex Contest -
Win $1000 every month


Premium Subscription Services
Short Term PowerRatings Free Trial
Long Term PowerRatings Free Trial
TradingMarkets Subscription Free Trial
Daily Battle Plan Free Trial
Gary Kaltbaum - Intraday Breaking Alerts Free Trial
Kevin Haggerty Professional Trading Service Free Trial
Forex Force with Mark Whistler Free Trial

RELATED SITES
Nothing but forex





All analyst commentary provided on TradingMarkets.com is provided for educational purposes only. The analysts and employees or affiliates of TradingMarkets.com may hold positions in the stocks or industries discussed here. This information is NOT a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Your use of this and all information contained on TradingMarkets.com is governed by the Terms and Conditions of Use. Please click the link to view those terms. Follow this link to read our Editorial Policy.

© 2008 The Connors Group, Inc.