Best, Most Reliable Answers Come From The Market – And You

Michael Noonan – Almost everyone is searching for answers about what to do in the stock market. The two best sources are the market itself, and the second source will surprise many, but it is you! No one has a greater vested interest in your financial interests than you when it is your money on the line, at risk. The inherent problem with this simple solution is that few ever consider either source as the best solution.

Wall Street, such a big mystery. Not really. The only mystery about Wall Street is the thieves who run it. Like the Wizard of Oz, Wall Street does not want you to look behind the curtain to discover all of the fraud, the greed, and the purely self-motivated financial interests that are opposite to yours.

The S&P used to be our staple for market commentaries. However, once the government and central banks took over, starting with POMO [Permanent Open Market Operations], we stopped recommending the buy side of the market to not abet the overt market manipulation to keep people trapped in stocks and simple stopped writing articles.

We did the same thing in the gold and silver markets. Once it become so apparent that the elite’s central bankers were totally manipulating gold and silver to eliminate competition to their fiat Ponzi scheme, we stopped recommending any trading on the short side in PMs, again, not to abet what would otherwise be considered criminal activity.

From our point of view, markets are full of logic and reason. There are times when neither may be clear, but overall, both can be found in reading market activity. A direct result of understanding what is being advertised is your ability to then draw a conclusion based on your own best financial interests. Is it easy? Yes and no.

It is easy if you just accept the reality of what the market is doing and compare your individual stock holdings to averages. The most difficult part is the realization that you have that kind of power to choose. For example, are any of your stocks under performing the market averages? If yes, accept the reality and get out. For those stocks that are outperforming the market, use a sell stop to protect your profits should the situation take a turn and start moving lower.

8at the time, and a brief look at what was conveyed exemplifies what we are saying. After both reviews, we then return to current market conditions and give an update based on what developing market activity is saying. From our perspective, and combined with the other two articles, it ain’t pretty, but you can draw your own conclusions.

In a May 4, 2015 commentary, [See Stocks – Bulls, Bears, And Pigs: Which Are You?], we said the following: [A re-read of the entire article is a good reminder of having a market perspective, at all times.]

“Where are you as a stock investor in today’s faux-Bull market? Are you a Bull, a Bear, or a Pig? If a Bear, clearly you do not understand the nature and function of one and are operating against the prevailing market strength. A mis-placed Bear in a Bull market is nothing more than an ego gone awry. Most who remain on the long side of the market more than likely considers him/herself a Bull. Unless one has been exceptionally select in being long, at this late phase of the market, those who are long and wrong are really playing the role of a Pig destined to be slaughtered.

“Share prices are in the last stages of a Bull market. It can last another week, another month, another year, maybe even longer [?], we do not know and have no clue, nor do we even need to know. What we know for certain is that the market trend still points up. Just because a trend is up, however, does not necessarily equate to all stocks rising and showing profits. It is here where you need to know if you are being a Bull or a Pig.

“During the latter phase of a Bull move, there is a lot of rotation in stock leadership. The initial leaders stop leading, and even their price may stop rising, moving more sideways, but definitely not producing the gains when the trend was in an earlier phase. These days, it is harder and harder to find quality stocks poised to undergo sustained gains. Even in a trending market, it does not always pay to be a Bull.”

Last August 2015, when price had such a huge collapse, we called it a game changer, [See S&P, DAX, FTSE – When Markets Talk, Pay Attention, 4th paragraph]. It was. We also stated, just above the weekly chart:

“As an aside, the 100 point TR in the S&P, just since March, contained price swings totaling over 1,450 points. That kind of churning is a recipe for undue risk, also more of topping action than for continuation higher.”

We now return to the present. A monthly chart provides an overall context, and this time frame is more controlling than the lower weekly and daily time frames. When all time frames are in sync, making market decisions is much easier.

The trend has been up since 2009. One can say the trend remains up, relative to where it has been, and we are choosing to call it sideways due to the lack of direction for the past year. Labeling the market up or sideways is less important than the context of where price is within developing market activity, and the lower time frames may clarify that point.

market

EDM = Ease of Downward Movement. It is a quick measure to determine if price has an easier time going up, [EUM, Ease of Upward Movement] or down. Clearly, the up bars are shorter and more labored when compared to the waterfall-type declines indicated on the chart. Continue reading . . .

Michael Noonan is a Contributing Writer for Shift Frequency

SF Source Edge Trader Plus  Feb 2016

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