tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-83538415875822271782024-03-13T13:17:37.810-07:00Stock Market Power RankingsHow have shares of the best companies in the market done this week?Linxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06231462343123561311noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8353841587582227178.post-84533384964042476312012-10-02T10:39:00.003-07:002012-10-02T10:39:21.381-07:00Is there a Golden Cross to be Unearthed in the Gold Miners?<br />
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From a technical perspective, one of the major buy
indicators is a Golden Cross, when a short term indicator, moving up on a chart
crosses a longer term indicator, specifically when the 50 day moving average
crosses the 200 day moving average.</div>
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There are a lot of articles about a recent Golden Cross in
the price of gold, the actual physical metal as represented by the SPDR Gold
Shares, (GLD) ETF, but there is an impending golden cross in the gold miners as
well. </div>
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Two of the largest gold stocks, Barrick Gold (ABX) and Goldcorp,
(GG) have been an uptrend, and barring a disastrous collapse in share price,
are almost guaranteed to hit a golden cross in the next few weeks. It’s a function of mathematics, since the 50
day will move faster than the 200 if there has been a significant recent move
in the stock. </div>
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Goldcorp’s 50 day MA as of October 1 is 40.31 and the 200 is
41.50. These numbers have been getting
closer. If I extrapolate this based on an
unchanged share price for the next trading sessions, the 50 and 200 will equal
in seven days. The Golden Cross will
happen on October 9. If the price
changes, it will still happen, but may vary by a day or two. The only thing that might prevent the Cross
is a catastrophic drop in the price. </div>
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Barrick stock has been on a similar trajectory, but it had
fallen further and will take longer to reach the Golden Cross. If the stock price is unchanged, it will take
22 days for the 50 to cross the 200. The
longer it takes the more risk of a substantial price change, so investors should
continue to monitor the price. </div>
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Whether you as an investor believe in this kind of technical
indicator is a personal trading decision, but mathematical basis for the
impending Golden Cross has already been set.
If this indicator signals a buy for you, it may be worth making that
decision early rather than late. </div>
Linxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06231462343123561311noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8353841587582227178.post-20032881436982687902012-10-01T08:29:00.001-07:002012-10-01T08:29:09.000-07:00Mega Cap Power Rankings Week Ending 9/30/12A crazy, upside down week for the largest of the big caps. Everyone's favorite tech stocks took it on the chin from September 24 to 28, 2012.<br />
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10. Apple (AAPL) - Yes, it's wonderful, unstoppable, unless it shoots itself in the foot. A drop of 4.7% this week. It couldn't find its way through its own map crisis.<br />
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9. Microsoft (MSFT) 4.6% drop. Hmmm. Very close to Apple. You wouldn't think these would trade in tandem now. Look for a nice rebound in Mr. Softie if Apple recovers.<br />
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8. Royal Dutch Shell (RDS-A) - Down 3.0%. Another bad week for the Dutch. No power here.<br />
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7. Petro China (PTR) - More worries for the oil sector, even from the Far East. Down 1.5%. <br />
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6. Chevron (CVX ) Seems to be theme. Down 1.1%. I see little reason that this is going to turn around suddenly.<br />
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5. WalMart (WMT) - A down week for the overall market makes it's retail leader fall 0.5%. Steady and stable, a good long term play, you shouldn't worry about a one week move.<br />
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4. ExxonMobil (XOM) - Once again the best of a bad neighborhood. Down 0.5%, Worry that one is going to catch up to the rest of the group. <br />
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3. China Mobile (CHL) - Up slightly at 0.6%, Still running strong. Very little not to like here, unless the whole of China crashes, instead of just real estate and materials.<br />
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2. IBM (IBM) - weathered the tech storm nicely with a gain of 0.7%. Gained ground on Apple and Microsoft. They are really two different business models now. IBM more consistent and stable, a better long term holding. You don't have to be as concerned about picking a great entry point.<br />
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1. General Electric (GE) - A nice 0.8% return on a tough week. Number one two weeks in a row. It's been down so long it looks up. <br />
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<br />Linxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06231462343123561311noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8353841587582227178.post-40427084633933727962012-09-28T16:48:00.001-07:002012-09-28T16:48:28.699-07:00Do Stocks Turn on a Dime at the End of the Quarter?<br />
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There is a lot of discussion on how the end of a calendar
quarter impacts stock prices. Can you
use history to determine how prices are going to move at the end of March,
June, September, and December?</div>
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I used the SPDR S&P 500 (SPY) as a proxy for the market
and looked at the performance for the last 10 years (40 quarters) ending June
30, 2012, using Yahoo! Finance. My
thesis was to determine whether prices gained or lost on the first day of the
quarter, and additionally, whether the move was dependent on what happened the
previous trading day. That is, if the
market went down on the last day of the quarter, was there a pendulum swing
back up on the next day, or was there a continuation of the trend in the new
quarter. </div>
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<b>Results of the
Analysis<o:p></o:p></b></div>
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What I found was that no matter what happened in the last
day of the quarter, the SPY generally moved up on the first day of the new
quarter. </div>
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The SPY gained a total of 19.85 points for those 40
quarters, an average of just short of 50 cents per date. The price of the SPY fluctuated from 73 to
140 during that period. 28 of the 40 (70%) first days were positive,
and only 12 negative. </div>
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I tried to break it down to see if I could explain the down
days as a function of the previous trading day, (the pendulum effect) but the
results were inconclusive. </div>
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On days the market was down in the last day of the quarter,
the market was up a total of 6.09 points, but when it was up, the market
resumed going higher by 13.76 points. I
concluded it doesn’t matter much; the trend is generally up on the first day no
matte what the market did on the last day. </div>
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There are no doubt many reason for this phenomena, possibly
general enthusiasm for a new quarter,
new money flowing into the market, or something options related. The why isn’t as important as the ability to
predict the general trend. It is not
foolproof, but traders looking for an advantage often play the percentages, and
70% is a pretty good percentage. </div>
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Linxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06231462343123561311noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8353841587582227178.post-32092228536467079532012-09-27T05:04:00.000-07:002012-09-27T05:04:11.309-07:00Large Cap Power RankingsI heard Ken Fisher yesterday on CNBC Fast Money. The point he drove home the whole time he was on was that the bull market is half over, and historically, in the second half of bull markets, large cap stocks outperform. If you choose a basket of the 30 largest stocks, you will outperform the market.<br />
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Now, most investors can't afford to buy 30 stocks. You could probably find an ETF that did this, but most people are going to buy at most three stocks and hope. Even though Fisher is not a proponent of this at this time.<br />
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That said, below is a list of the US stocks with the largest market cap and a few comments.<br />
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1. Apple (AAPL) of course. Huge, growing very fast and the stock maintaining a low Price/Earnings ratio. Just dropped a quick five percent in price. What's not to like?<br />
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2. Exxon (XOM) - just a cash machine. The price of oil goes up and down, but XOM continues to make money. Up 25% on the year, with a good dividend.<br />
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3. Microsoft (MSFT) - a boring stock that is up only 17% in a really good year. Solid, though, and it's not likely you are going to lose money on it. Decent dividend just raised.<br />
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4. WalMart (WMT) - hated by critics, loved by consumers, ignored by investors. Just keeps selling stuff and making money. It has a 15 P/E that it may have to grow into.<br />
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5. General Electric (GE) is up 40% this year. They do everything, including make money. Nice dividend but pretty high P/E. Like WalMart, it make take some time for this to start going up.<br />
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6. IBM is only up 14% this year. It continues to generate big bucks from its services business. You really can't go wrong with it. It's not a high flyer, but it won't crash either.<br />
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I would rank them 1, 6, 2, 3, 4, 5 as of now. But, they didn't get to be this big by being bad companies, so they are still all buys.Linxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06231462343123561311noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8353841587582227178.post-15515112150999709672012-09-22T13:21:00.001-07:002012-09-22T13:25:30.777-07:00Megacap Stocks - Week Ending 9/21/12Today we look at the largest stocks on US exchanges and look at how they did in the last week. These are known as Megacaps, the biggest of the large caps (caps standing for market capitalization). For this ranking, I looked at the performance of the 10 largest market cap stocks<br />
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There are any number of ways to rank a list of stocks. For today's list, I chose relative performance over the last week.<br />
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<ol>
<li>The best performing stock of the week on this list was General Electric (GE), with an increase of 2.69%. GE hit a new high on Friday and still carries a nice 3% dividend. </li>
<li>Also having a great week is China Mobile (CHL) with a 2.25% gain. It's even more impressive considering how beaten down the Chinese stock market is overall. </li>
<li>Right behind is PetroChina Company (PTR) at 1.39%. US oil companies were down this week, but the China machine had a good upside. </li>
<li>You knew Apple (AAPL) had to be in here, right? Only (he he) a 1.2% gain. But that is on top of almost non-stop gains over the last three years. It would certainly make number one on most any other list. </li>
<li>Chevron (CVX) pulled in a 0.47% gain. Not shabby, as this would be a solid annualized 25% gain. </li>
<li>Microsoft (MSFT) had a small (0.06%) loss for the week. Mr. Softie is still hanging around a 52-week high, although it hasn't made huge strides lately. Carries a nice 2.6% dividend. Is this really a tech stock?</li>
<li>WalMart (WMT) dropped a paltry 0.07%. The market can't decide is a good economy is good for WalMart because people spend more or bad because it pushes people to spend money at other places considered to a little classier. </li>
<li>IBM lost 0.40%, Still near its high, many people think this should be bought on any dip. </li>
<li>Exxon Mobil (XOM) dropped 0.41%, no doubt related to the sudden drop in crude later in the week. </li>
<li>And rounding out the top 10 is Royal Dutch Shell (RDS-A) with a significant drop of 1.34%, triggered by a large gap down on Thursday following crude oil. It actually recovered some on Friday to mitigate the losses. </li>
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An interesting week for the big boys. Proving that you can't just buy or avoid a sector, or you will miss out on profits. </div>
Linxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06231462343123561311noreply@blogger.com0