Thursday, July 18, 2013

Friday's (Monday's) Prospects

I'm trading from East Asia for the next few weeks, and the time difference with New York adds a day to the interval between breakout and the placing of a trade. This has played hob with the titling of recurring posts, such as Prospects and No Trade. The hybrid titling in this post is my solution: I would trade on Friday if I were stateside, but my first trading opportunity while traveling will be on Monday.


On Thursday, July 18:

Of 2,317 stocks and exchange-traded funds in this week's analytical universe, 88 that are traded on the major American stock exchanges broke beyond their 20-day price channels, 83 to the upside and five to the downside.

Fifteen symbols that are traded over the counter broke out, all to the upside.

The five highest-volume symbols to break out are MS, JPM, SRC, MTG and JCI.

Within my analytical universe, 4.5% of symbols gave bull or bear signals, up from 2.1% the prior trading day.

The ratio of bull to bear signals is 20:1, compared to 9:1 the prior trading day, an increase in the markets' bullish bias.

One of the major-exchange symbols survived my initial screening. It is UNF, to the upside.

None of the over-the-counter symbols survived my initial screening.

Twenty-nine symbols that survived the odds and yield analysis were excluded from consideration because they will publish earnings within 30 days of the breakout. The top five by volume are MS, JPM, MTG, RDN and RBS.

I shall do further analysis of the surviving symbol on Friday, July 19 for a potential trade on Monday, July 22.

The symbols I'm analyzing are mid- and large-cap stocks having analyst coverage, as well as selected exchange-traded funds. I screened them for...
  • the odds of a successful trades in the direction of the breakout since the present uptrend began on the S&P 500 weekly chart, on Oct. 4, 2011,
  • a yield adjusted by those odds of 5% or greater,
  • and absence of an earnings announcement within the next 30 days. 
For bear signals, I also screened to ensure the ability to do a trade, either because of the presence of options whatever their open interest or sufficient volume to allow for the short sale of shares.

My cut-off point for bullish bias is a ratio of bull to bear signals of 2:1 or greater, and for bearish bias, 1:2 or smaller, rounded to the nearest whole number.

References

My trading rules can be read here. And the classic Turtle Trading rules on which my rules are based can be read here.

Disclaimer
Tim Bovee, Private Trader tracks the analysis and trades of a private trader for his own accounts. Nothing in this blog constitutes a recommendation to buy or sell stocks, options or any other financial instrument. The only purpose of this blog is to provide education and entertainment.
No trader is ever 100 percent successful in his or her trades. Trading in the stock and option markets is risky and uncertain. Each trader must make trading decision decisions for his or her own account, and take responsibility for the consequences.

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