Monthly Archive for May, 2009

Stock Markets Review – at 24th May

There is really nothing to add this week; the retracement in prices that started two weeks ago after the 9 week rally, is still in play although, so far, it is of small proportion.

The price action on the markets over the last two weeks suggests that the weakness may be renewing and this may cause a sudden drop in share prices during the next week or two. On the other hand, if the buyers return to the market, the indices may start to recover and this could then provide ‘buy’ signals.

The markets are testing our patience but, as we have said before, there is no point in giving in to that desire to buy now if, as is quite possible, prices then turn turtle and end up causing more losses. Better to hang on and wait until we can be more or less certain of an uptrend setting in. That way we can all make profits and with less risk of loss.

Green Shoots and Late Frosts!

At ShareHunter we do tend to ‘go on a bit’ about the need to always trade in sympathy with the dominant trend of the market. There is more heartache suffered and bigger losses made from buying shares too early in the cycle than at any other time.

The problem is largely caused by the media hyping up the possible effect of a rally (and in any ‘bear’ market there are always price rallies) coupled with positive commentry from market ‘experts’.

Once these aspects are added to an investor’s natural desire not to miss out on a stock market rally (especially after a long down phase) and to get in at the lowest possible price you have a loaded gun and a potential for heartache and loss. It is far from uncommon for a share price to halve when at the bottom after a long downtrend; so easy then to lose half your capital at a stroke.

The present situation of the UK and US markets demands a considerable degree of patience. It is important not to be drawn in to buying shares too soon. Yes, you may miss out to some extent but it is better to wait and to achieve less profit per trade rather than risk so much by buying ahead of the main trend change.

Here are three current examples of the risk factor involved -
Thomas Cook Group:
thomas-cook-group
Click chart to enlarge
The price has moved up strogly from the low at 120p and, by the time this started to be ‘tipped’, most people jumped in at prices ranged between 220p and 280p. But, with the heavy resistance (created by the previous highs) at the 310p level and with the fact that its index (the FTSE 100) is not yet out of its dominant downtrend this is not, in ShareHunter terms, a buy. It’s too risky. And now these investors have seen the price suffer a sudden fall back to the 220p level. It could so easily continue down to the 120p level again (we are not saying that it will!) thus causing even bigger losses. Better to have waited for all resistance to be overcome as making profitable gain is then something of a doddle.

Green King:
green-king
Click chart to enlarge

Another example of buying too soon. The resistance level pushed the price straight back down so anyone who bought at the 500p area as the rally got going will now be nursing a loss (and one that could get much bigger if the price continues back down to the 300p area.

The potential for increasing the amount of loss is very real as physchology plays an important part. Very often an investor, having made up his, or her, mind that the rally is going to continue finds it almost impossible to admit and accept that his view was wrong and so he or she is unwilling to change that view and get out. Instead the investor hangs on almost as if to prove to himself that the he was right in the first place. That can be, and often is, quite an expensive ego trip.

Patience is a vital attribute and a path to profits; trading against the dominant trend isn’t.

The Importance of using Stops

We have just read an article on a responsible website which argues that using stop-losses “will strangle your returns”. Such is our despair at reading such dangerous nonsense that we rush to write this blog lest anyone be suckered into believing such arrant nonsense.

The argument used is that “a stop-loss doesn’t just limit a loss, it captures it”. What a brilliant piece of deduction that is – of course it captures the (small) loss – that is exactly what it is supposed to do. What happens when no stop loss is used is that the potential loss will grow and grow until it reaches unbearable proportions for the investor. Why would anyone want to sit idly by and watch their investment(s) continue to fall down a slippery slope? But that is exactly what can happen – and does happen – when the investor has no reference price at which to exit his loss making trade.

The refusal to use a stop-loss is the hollow reasoning of the ‘buy and hold’ investment adviser; why take a small loss early on when you can hold on (for years?) and wait for your stock to recover and go on to make a profit? – sounds a logical argument for someone who knows no better – but how is the investor going to feel as he watches his shares fall in value month after month in a ‘bear’ market such as we have recently experienced? The answer to that is well known and well documented; the investor hangs on in hope, hope that each lower price will be the final turning point until, in the end, all hope is lost and he can stand the disappointment and accumulated losses no longer so he closes his positions in a final expession of sheer exhaustion and disallusionment.

This spurious article then went on to suggest that to protect and preserve your capital all you have to do is achieve a “modest diversification”. How, we wonder, does this suggestion (which we consider as subversively dangerous for the average investor) hold up when some 90% of shares listed on the stock market (London and New York) all suffer a synchronised fall (and some of them losing 90% of their value in a few months)?

Let’s look at just one popular share, Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) – something of a favourite with the ‘buy and hold’ brigade:

Had you bought RBS shares back in, say, 1st June 2001 at about 540p where is the value and what is the point of holding those shares for the last 8 years? -
rbs
Click on chart to enlarge.

As a holder of RBS shares you would have been quite happy when the price got up to the 700p area a couple of times but what now that it is at 38p?!
And as for the argument that you would have had the dividend income every year – well just work out what you would have earned in interest had you left your money in the bank. And you would still have 100% of your capital. A stop-loss would have got you out with a small loss and left you with the majority of your capital to re-invest.

Finally, the last empty boast of the ‘buy and hold’ proponent; If the share was good value at 600p “it is even better value after a price fall” – at 400p perhaps? Is it then even better value again at 250p? And it must be stupendous value then at its current price of 38p!! The fact that it could halve again and fall to its low of 10p just gives the lie to that silly, dangerous ‘value’ argument.

So, dear reader, please do not be beguiled into buying and holding and do, for the security of your capital (or most of it) and for your ability to sleep well - do use stop-losses.

A Fools’ Rally or a new ‘Bull’ Market?

Is now the right time to be buying UK shares? The current rally in the FTSE 250 has been quite strong coming, as it has, after a ‘basing’ period where the index moved sideways for several months. Having now broken above the level of the highs made during that basing phase and moved above its moving average the FTSE 250 is now in a clear ‘Stage 1′ Accumulation trend and, as such, allows us to activate selected ‘buy’ signals on individual shares.
However, it would be foolhardy to chase this price rally and to buy stocks just now. The rally enters its 10th week this week. It has lasted longer than any previous rally since mid 2007 and so it has to be reckoned that a check, a confirmatory retracement, is now due. Much better then to wait and target our buying once the extent of this expected reversal can be seen. This should provide solid confirmation that a new ‘bull’ market is just round the corner.

Here is a chart which highlights the danger of jumping on board the ‘buy’ train now and how it could pay handsomely to wait until the next retracement in prices has developed -
ftse-250-for-blog
Please click on chart to enlarge.

Some weeks ago we expressed dubiety that the FTSE 250 was in process of showing the way for the rest of the World’s major indices to follow. Well, “oh we of little faith”, it is now looking as though we were wrong as that is what appears to be happening exactly. The FTSE 100, the Dow, the S&P 500 etc are all now suggesting that they are swinging out of their down trends and into Accumulation (prior perhaps to moving into Uptrend).

But, again, there is a great need for caution for a while longer as all these indices are due to show retracements shortly.
640-for-ft-100
640-for-sandp
Click on the chart to enlarge.

We should also not forget that the other, historically correct, indicators of a trend change – namely, the cross over of the 13 and 34 week exponential moving averages has not yet happened on any of these markets. Yes, that for the FTSE 250 is close (chart below) but the others are still some way off.
ftse-1105-emas-sml
Click on chart to enlarge.

All in all it boils down to the need to continue to display patience. Don’t be afraid that the market and share prices are going to run away from you. They might but they will then come back down. So it is better to wait and watch. The current market rallies could be based more on hope than substance (and ‘hope’ is the foremost emotion displayed during a ‘bear’ market).
The extent of the coming retracement in share prices will be a valuable indicator as to the liklihood and timing of the next ‘bull’ market so it is a case that patience now will produce dividends (i.e good capital growth profits) later.

The Stock Market Rally

The rally in the UK market has continued but is now at a level and time when it should react and retrace. It is the extent of this expected retracement that will be a really strong signal for the return of a ‘bull’ market (or otherwise). The US market has also now started to catch up with the UK but is still some way off giving any buy signals.
The Overall Market Rating (OMR)* of the FTSE 350 has climbed over recent weeks and has now entered ‘bull’ territory with the FTSE 250 index showing an OMR of 58% (although the FTSE 100 OMR is only at 41%). But, as we comment in our Stock Markets Review (4th May), this is only an ‘in prospect’ ‘bull’ signal as we must wait for the expected retracement and then evaluate the strength of any ‘buy’ signals that might then shine forth. To jump in to the stock market and buy shares now might just invite suffering whipsawing losses as the share prices take a downturn.
And, make no mistake about it, a downturn in share prices is not only due (this rally has extended to its 9th week and no previous rally in this downtrend has lasted more than 8 week) but is required in order to confirm the indications that the trend has changed and the market is going to go up.
We know that Spring does increasingly appear to have sprung and that there are plenty of green shoots around but we really need to advise caution just for a week or two longer until the expected retracement has happened and run its course. Then it may, repeat may, be the time to metaphorically ‘fill ones boots’ with red hot buy-signaled shares. We know that the market has gone up a lot and most people are wondering if now is the time to buy stocks. But it isn’t. Not yet. Soon maybe.
* The Overall Market Rating (‘OMR’) is a proprietary trend indicator of ShareHunter.com