Joshua Hayes Big Wave Trading

 

Sentiment Still Negative

April 17, 2008 | Leave a Comment

AAII and II sentiment numbers continue to show bearishness among market participants.  Whether its the media and/or consumer sentiment, market participants are feeling the same way about the market.  AAII saw Bulls at 30.37% and Bears at 48.69%.  While II saw Bulls at 37.8% and Bears at 38.9%.  II tends to be a more reliable indicator of Investor sentiment, but the AAII shows you the crowd is not very bullish. 

Continue to follow price and volume, we saw some volume yesterday and charts are beginning to look better.  This isn’t 2003 but we can deal with taking some gains here.

Market Speculator

Stocks Poised for a Positive Close

March 31, 2008 | Leave a Comment

Stocks are acting like they have support going into the quarters end.  The real issue here is with volume.  As of 11:35 volume appears to be lower than the run rate on Friday.  Not much support for the bulls here, institutional buyers are simply not stepping up to the plate to support this market. 

If we continue to move higher and on continued lower volume it will spell trouble for the market.  The lack of accumulation is not astounding nor is it surprising to me.  This was and still is a classic bull market bounce.  No volume and clearly driven by oversold, short covering conditions.

Tomorrow’s session should be more indicative of the action going forward.  Lack of volume the past week of action is indicating to me that more selling is just over the horizon. 

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DJIA Leads The Way As BSC Rocks The Stock Market On Mixed Volume; How Can This Be A Bottom Without A HUGE Surge In Volume On the Nasdaq And NYSE? It Can’t Be!

March 17, 2008 | 2 Comments

Please Note: Starting next week this free daily commentary will only be available at BigWaveTrading.net so be sure to check out the new FREE site sponsored by BigWaveTrading.com where Joshua Hayes and Market Speculator will be regularly posting some additional commentary about the markets.

Stocks gapped lower after a horrible announcement by JPM that they bought BSC for $2 a share. Now, while I don’t want to gloat on this, I just want to say that for the 100th time in my life I have warned a bunch of traders to not buy a certain stock and yet they still do it. There was one reader from Santa Barbara from RealMoney.com that attacked me 8 days ago for telling him BSC was a POS. Well here we are from $75 to $4 and yet still no apology. No, thank you. No, I am sorry. Just a big pile of nothing. From Eugj to BHCO to Gerard to WillPS to SCO to Geoffrey from Santa Barbara: all of these characters have called me out and told me that I did not know what they were doing and EVERY SINGLE TIME THEY WERE PROVEN WRONG AND EVERY SINGLE TIME I DIDN’T RECEIVE A SINGLE I AM SORRY OR THANK YOU. Is this what our world has come to? :(

Oh well, there is no doubt I have become a sensitive character in my old age and things like this bugs me now. I just don’t know how yet to act when it comes to responding to jackoffs that make themselves out to be major idiots. I guess I will learn to ignore it in the future. The exact same way I ignore going long any stock below the 50 day moving average or go short stocks above the 50 DMA.

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The Selling Continues With Stock Market Indexes Closing Near Their LOD; Charts Can Definitely Make A Difference!

December 15, 2007 | 1 Comment

Friday’s selling came on lower volume but one thing was very clear by the end of the day. The bulls have absolutely no juice and if a gigantic multi-Fed driven liquid injection in the market can’t keep the market up, I am not sure what people think will keep it up. Everyone knows that I only follow the charts to make my trades. And you better believe that is the truth. But sometimes you can look at the macro economy and combine what you see with charts to give you even more conviction than you normally would have with just the charts.

Recently it has become clear that the individual charts that have been showing up in my long scans are deteriorating to the point where there are no perfect charts, only a few green charts, and those that are looking strong are all in defensive industries. When I combine what I see in the long scans to what I see in the short scans, I can see that the numbers on the short scans are growing and growing and the ugliness of the charts are getting pretty nasty. This can be seen on the forums by looking in the area where I post all of my sells. If you notice a lot of stocks are showing up on the ‘nasty’ list.

These charts combined with the downtrends in all the indexes since the November top makes it pretty clear that we are going to be in a rough spot for quite a while. Now, I know some of you do not want to believe that and think that I am crazy. But I am telling you that I have been through enough good and bad and sideways market to have seen it all in the charts. I have also studied the market indexes in TCNet going back to the early 1900’s on the DJIA. So I have learned what bull markets look like, bear markets look like, consolidating markets look like, and even what it looks like when a bottom or top is forming.

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IBD 100 And IBD 85-85 Are Officially In A “Confirmed Rally”; Excellent Price Action Today Signals Bulls Have Indeed Regained Control Of The Market On The Short-Term

November 29, 2007 | Leave a Comment

The one thing this market should be teaching everyone right now, no matter if you are new or experienced is that it is always silly and stupid to marry either the bullish or bearish side. What we are seeing right now is a stock market that is going to do its best to make sure every single trader out there who is either a perma-bull or a perma-bear gets washed out by the wild (nothing compared to 2000-2002) crazy market.

I am seeing some traders starting to show signs of major fatigue which is a good thing for seasoned traders since the turning points usually come when everyone gives up. However, this time things are a bit different. We just put in what appeared to be–once again, for the third time–a real top in the market. This time, unlike the other two times earlier this year, the selling got every leader, including the horseman, and this time the only sectors that were escaping were only the sectors that do well in bearish markets. Medical, Drug, Biotech, Consumer non-durable, Defense, Food, Beverage, and Telco stocks have all been doing well but they haven’t been doing nearly as well compared to the good shorts in the weakest sectors.

Those big gains on the short side seemed to be confirming the topping market. However, something has happened that needs to force us to put our bearish mode on hold. If you have not taken profits or cut your shorts that have not been working already, well shame on you. You should have done that by now. I have told you over and over to NOT short oversold markets and to not short a rallying market until AFTER we hit resistance. So if you have been shorting heavy the past three days, shame on you.

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Stocks Close In The Green But Fail To Recover Much Of The Severe Losses From Yesterday; Where Did All The Nice Charts Go?

March 1, 2007 | Leave a Comment

Stocks gapped higher in the morning but soon lost those gains, off the back of three weak economic numbers. First Q4 GDP came in with a final revision of a 2.2% gain. That was much lower than the initial 3.5% reported and below 2.3% estimates. Then new home sales came in with a Y over Y fall of 16.6%. That was the worst fall in 13 years. Finally, the Chicago PMI fell to 47.9, below the neutral 50 mark, signaling that the factory sector is slowing down. However, Ben came to the rescue, with comments that the economy was “fine” and that the economy is showing “moderate growth.” This helped lift stocks off the lows, leading them to green closes. The tame gains, compared to Tuesday’s losses, however, shows that yesterday’s losses were more than just a one day “mistake.” This had to be disappointing to market bulls, even though they will not tell you it was.

At the close, stocks barely recovered any of their losses, with the SP 500 leading the way with a .6% gain, the DJIA followed with a .4% gain, the Nasdaq gained .3%, and the SP 400 and 600 gained .1%. This was not the kind of buying that inspires confidence that the selling from yesterday was a one day phenomenon. The IBD 100 gained 1.3% and the IBD 85-85 gained 1.2%. Both well below their 5.3% losses yesterday. Today was not bullish.

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Happy New Year!; Markets Produce A Distribution Day On The Last Trading Day Of 2006.

December 30, 2006 | Leave a Comment

Happy New Year!; Markets Produce A Distribution Day On The Last Trading Day Of 2006.
THIS IS THE VERY LAST FREE “DAILY MARKET ANALYSIS and NEW SWING LONGS/SHORTS” POST ON THIS BLOG.

On the very last trading day of the year, stocks decided to end the year on a slightly nasty note, offering distribution days across the board. There was no news catalyst on this Friday the last trading day of 2006. The only possible reason for the selling that was floating around the street was the fact that traders might not want to be long over the long weekend. My question is: wouldn’t they also not want to be short? Oh well.

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