In this week’s edition of What’s Moving In The Forex Market, Kurt Capra looks at the recent action in the USD/JPY and talks about it may have much bigger implications into the end of the year. He also provides a lesson on why you must be looking at multiple timeframes in order to objectively form a bias.
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In today’s Morning Call Express, Scott Redler welcomes us to a new month and talks about the sideways action we have seen in the SPX and what levels to look at for movement. He also looks at recent earnings names like AMZN and GOOGL along with a game plan for each. Scott also looks at the action in FB and AAPL.
Continue Reading -->By T3 Live Staff Come join us in a FREE webinar! Click here for the upcoming schedule. 1) The Sideways Shuffle Today we saw what many traders have been looking for; an up day in Oil. This is the first time in the last 7 sessions that Oil was able to close bullish. The S&P 500 was sideways, once again, but able to close near the top of the range, up 0.18%. It is closing in on a month since the last time the S&P has produced a 1% move or better. The Nasdaq outperformed, again, on heels of strong earnings from GOOGL and AMZN. Gold found its way to the top of the advancers’ column today, with GLD rising 1.05%. 2) Range Precedes Price Today, Jeff Cooper provided some insight into the action on DexCom (DXCM): Our old friend DXCM continues its runaway move. Note the Spike Volume Bottom in Feb that defined the washout when everyone who wanted out got out. The large range breakout on 7/19 on increasing volume saw DXCM reclaim 50 % of this years range. From that point, DXCM has been in runaway mode. Typically runaway moves don’t offer much in the way of daily pullbacks so using an Opening Range Breakout is a good strategy. Also buying on the first intraday pullback offers defined risk entry. Today for example DXCM gapped open, pulled back into the gap window and exploded higher. 3) In Weakness, Opportunity is Found Our friend, Kurt Capra provided an interesting take on yesterday’s bearish candle on Facebook (FB): So, Facebook (FB) reported earnings after the close on Wednesday leading to a gap up Thursday morning to new all-time highs. After dancing around the first 2 hours of the day, FB began to pullback into the gap. It proceeded all the way down, finally finding support at $124.00, leaving the daily chart with a large red candle. To most, that would be seen as bearish. But, if you look beyond face value, it is an opportunity to get long for a ride back to, and through all time highs. Why would this be case? Take a look at the hourly chart from today and you’ll see a pullback and double bottom. So, the red bar from Thursday was nothing more than a controlled pullback to support and the whole number ($124); nothing to be scared of. In fact, quite the opposite. To the trained eye, this is an opportunity to get long, from a great spot, and enjoy a ride back to, and through, all time highs. If fact, if you go back and look at the daily chart of FB, notice how many times red bars were negated within the next day or two? This is a powerful concept that combines multiple timeframes with pattern recognition; something all traders should intimately understand. P.S.- If a double bottom fails, it can be an even bigger opportunity…even in failure, there is opportunity!!
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By Michael Comeau 1) Lucky 13 for Facebook Yesterday after the close, social media giant Facebook (FB) delivered a massive earnings beat, sending shares as high as $133.91 in extended trading, or up 8.6%. The company is seeing significant growth in mobile, higher revenue from Instagram, and improving user engagement metrics, Facebook’s huge numbers weren’t exactly a surprise, since the company had beaten Wall Street’s earnings estimates for 12 straight quarters, making yesterday lucky number 13. This set the stage for a sell-the-news reaction, and Facebook finished well off the highs at $125.00 up 1.4% on the day. However, Facebook shares are still doing incredibly well in 2016 with a 19.4% year-to-date gain. 2) Jeff Cooper on Facebook’s Exhaustion Signal This afternoon, my buddy Jeff Cooper issued an interesting take on Facebook’s weakness: FB is poised to leave a large-range Gilligan sell signal if it closes at/near session lows. This is an exhaustion signal marked by a gap up to a new 60 day high with a close at/near session lows. AAPL is a different pattern as its earning’s gap was not a gap to new 60 day highs or 52 week highs or all time highs as is the case with FB. My takeaway is that institutions are scale-up sellers on pops. Tomorrow we get the reaction to two other FANG stocks (AMZN and GOOGL). If they react similarly to FB or don’t blow out expectations, there may be nothing left on the table to prevent a slide. 3) Another Day, Another Grind Given that crude oil is a major drive of equity market sentiment, I’ve been a bit surprised at how well equities have held up in the face of oil’s near-20% decline off the highs. And again today, we saw oil decline sharply… and stocks basically rolled their eyes. The S&P 500 went nowhere for the second day in a row, finishing at 2170.06, up 0.2%. In fact, the S&P hasn’t made a 1% move since July 8. Facebook and Apple’s (AAPL) small gains today helped the Nasdaq outperform. Biotechnology led the decliners’ column today, with the S&P Biotech ETF (XBI) falling -0.5%. Energy stocks were down on oil’s decline, with oil service names showing notable dips. P.S. My partner in crime Kurt Capra is hosting a FREE trading webinar after the close on Tuesday, August 2, 2016. Click here to sign up
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In today’s Morning Call Express, Jeffrey Cooper discusses his thoughts on the recent moves in names like AAPL and FB and the fact that the SPY remains in its 2-week range. He also questions if this range is going to play out similarly to late July of last year. Jeff also talks about the recent action in oil and how it may play into the next move for the market.
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Yesterday after the closing bell, T3 Live Chief Strategic Officer appeared on Fox Business News to discuss earnings season.
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Global markets are flashing slightly red this morning despite yet another whopper of an earnings report from Facebook (FB). Facebook is around $130 and making new record highs, and I’m asking myself why I ever sold this stock. It’s especially impressive in the face of Twitter’s (TWTR) struggle to just meet its own guidance. NDX futures are slightly in the red, as are SPX futures. Overnight, Euro-area economic confidence beat expectations and German and Spanish unemployment declined. We’ve talked extensively about how post-Brexit data has been beating expectations, and the trend continues. Of course, this plays right into a conversation about the Fed because the Brexit has been a source of concern. Yesterday, the Fed said it is less worried about near-term economic risks, which wasn’t a total surprise given the aforementioned data trends. Some folks are attributing today’s little slump to the Fed’s little hawkish twist, but I’m not buying that for 2 reasons: 1) The dollar actually FELL and gold rose after the release of yesterday’s Fed statement, showing that traders still think the Fed’s going to move slowly. The perceived odds of a Fed rate hike have risen, but perhaps not enough just yet. The dollar and gold are also following through on yesterday’s moves. 2) We’ve come a long, long way. The SPX is up 166 handles from the post Brexit lows and the FTSE 100 is up even more on a percentage basis. (see chart) This little sideways grind feels more like run-of-the-mill digestion, which I think could continue. I see August as being similar to the April-May snoozefest that bankrupted hordes of aggressive put options buyers. SPX barely budged yesterday, but there were some positives below the surface. Tech (inspired by Apple’s (AAPL) big earnings report, biotech, and small caps al did quite well, even with another big drop in crude oil. Crude oil is an important driver of risk sentiment and fundamentals (it heavily impacts earnings and high-yield energy bonds), so I’m a bit puzzled at how the market yawned at a near-20% drop in WTI crude. The big question I’m asking now is whether the good news we’re getting (solid economic data, huge earnings from AAPL and FB) is coming just in time for a short-term top. In my mind, price leads news (or as Mr. Jeff Cooper says, the news breaks with the cycles), so I’m wondering if this nice little streak of happy news is justifying all-time highs after the fact. We’ve got Amazon (AMZN) and Google (GOOGL) hitting after the close today. Should both of them beat, it will be interesting to see if that inspires real buying. For now, we still feel stretched and sentiment is positive, but you can’t argue with price — the bulls are holding strong. Good luck friends.
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Want to start trading like a pro? Then click here. Trust me. By Michael Comeau 1) Apple Wins, Bears Cry As I wrote yesterday, expectations appeared to be very low heading into Apple’s (AAPL) Tuessday night earnings report. The numbers confirmed that suspicion as Apple reported better-than-expected revenues, earnings, and iPhone unit sales. The company also delivered very strong revenue guidance, which indicates that iPhone sales are holding up much better than the bears have expected. Apple shares ripped 6.6% to $103.03 today, helping to push the Nasdaq Composite and Nasdaq 100 indices to within striking distance of all-time highs. And let’s give Warren Buffett some credit — he disclosed his stake in Apple in mid-May when Apple hit its 2016 low. 2) The Bull Returns… Sort of Equity markets were a little odd today. Apple set off a rally in the Nasdaq and the widely-watched biotechnology was very strong, but the S&P 500 barely budged. The index fell -0.1% to 2066.58 — not exactly a barnburner! Oil prices and energy stocks slumped on higher-than-expected oil inventories, and we also saw weakness in utilities, real estate, consumer staples, and transports. Overall, the action felt like run-of-the-mill digestion, though with a clearly bullish tinge. If biotech makes another run like this tomorrow, we could see the S&P hitting new highs and the Nasdaq finally making its own new record. 3) Fed Schmed As expected, the Fed left rates unchanged today and issued a somewhat hawkish statement. The Fed said that employment data points to an increase in labor utilization, and that near-term risks to the economic outlook have diminished. Initially, gold fell and the dollar spiked, which are consistent with a more hawkish Fed. However, almost immediately, those moves reversed themselves and gold ended up 1.6% higher at $1,349/oz at the equity market close. And the dollar ended up at daily lows. Presumably, traders still believe the Fed will move very slowly as Fed Funds futures indicate that the next rate hike won’t happen until well into 2017.
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I’ve been a long-time bear on Twitter (TWTR) and the company’s lousy quarter just reinforced the fact that it has 2 major problems: 1) User Experience As I’ve said before, unless you have a lot of followers, Twitter isn’t much fun. You don’t get much engagement relative to platforms like Facebook (FB) and Instagram. Meanwhile, go out and find any teenager and ask them what platforms they’re focused on. They’ll say Snapchat and Instagram, which offer more engagement, are easier to use, and are just plain more fun than Twitter. Not everyone can come up with clever one-liners, but everyone can take a selfie or shoot a quick video. This has to change. Twitter has to become FUN to use. 2) Guidance I’m baffled by Twitter’s inability to set its guidance bar low enough to generate real beats. For Q2 (reported yesterday), Twitter guided for $600 million in revenues. At the time (4/26), that was 12% below street estimates. And Twitter only beat it by $2 million in revenue! In Q1, Twitter actually failed to hit its own guidance, even though its guidance was 5% below street expectations when issued. Any smart company offers guidance low enough to beat. So if Twitter can barely beat its guidance, it says 1 of 2 things: either they continually overestimate their own revenue momentum, or they need to take investor relations 101. Given that their CFO is a former high-profile Wall Street analyst, I think it’s the former. Now if Twitter can’t beat its guidance for Q3 — which implies just 7% revenue growth — we’re looking at a single-digit stock unless it gets taken over. Perspective We have to remember that at one point, Facebook (FB) — the undisputed king of social and perhaps the greatest digital ad platform the world has ever seen — was at one point down and out. So a turnaround can’t be completely counted out, assuming Twitter can drastically improve its user experience. (I don’t have faith myself) That’s the first step to getting the numbers to turn, though throughout history, I can’t remember a single successful turnaround of a social media platform. Friendster… nope. MySpace… nope. AOL… nope. Google+… nope. For now, this chart below tells you everything you need to know about Twitter: It plots the 2017 consensus revenue forecast (red line) against Twitter’s stock price since the IPO. This is a good illustration of the trend of growth expectations for the company. In early 2015, analysts expected over $5 billion in 2017 revenues. Now they’re forecasting under $3 billion. That red line needs to start going up. Soon.
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I was worried about Apple’s (AAPL) quarter the way everyone else was. But with very sour sentiment, I made a plan to buy if it could get and stay above $100-$101. I did that live on the VTF after-hours. Let’s take a look at the chart: Getting in was step 1. Now we’ll see if it can hold that area moving forward, and we’ll see what kind of levels the intraday action gives us. Step #2 is to reclaim the 200-day moving average around $103.75, and then hold above that for a few sessions. Step #3 would be to break the downtrend that has plagued the stock for well over a year. If that happens, Apple can turn into a tailwind for the next few months. I’ll continue updating you with key levels so we can effectively navigate the action together. If you’d like to trade with me live, take a FREE trial to the VTF.
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