Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Tuesday's Prospects

On Monday, July 28:

Of 3,995 stocks and exchange-traded funds in my analytical universe, 59 mid- and large-cap symbols that are traded on the major American stock exchanges broke beyond their 20-day price channels, 13 to the upside and 46 to the downside.

Thirty-six major-exchange small-cap symbols broke out, two to the upside and 34 to the downside.

Ten over-the-counter symbols broke out, four to the upside and six to the downside.

Six mid- or large-cap symbol traded on the major exchanges survived my initial screening, four having broken out to the upside and two to the downside. Two of the bull signals and one bear signal were produced in response to earnings announcements and will require confirmation under the reset day rules.

One small-cap major-exchange symbol survived initial screening, having broken out to the downside.

Two symbols traded over the counter survived my initial screening, both having broken out to the upside. One was produced in response to an earnings announcement and will require confirmation under the reset day rules.

One large-cap symbol survived screening for inclusion on the supplemental list of high-volume large-cap potential bear plays, having met the earnings exclusion test with sufficient open interest on its options, regardless of historical odds.

I shall do further analysis of the surviving symbols on Tuesday, July 29. 

The next round of earnings began July 8 with the announcement by AA. Under the exclusion rule that forbids me from opening new positions in stocks within 30 days of an earnings announcement, increasing numbers of symbols will be removed from my prospective trades list during initial screening.

First-round survivors: Regular rules

The lists are sorted in descending order by average yield. Regular rules means that confirmation will require trading above the 20-day price channel breakout level.

Potential bull plays

Mid-, large-
cap
ABAX
KEP
Small-cap

(none)
OTC

WYNMF

Potential bear plays

Mid-, large-
cap
GES
Small-cap

VMEM
OTC

(none)
Large-cap
supplemental
SDRL

First-round survivors: Earnings Reset-day rules

The lists are sorted in descending order by average yield. Rules for a breakout immediately following an earnings announcement require that confirmation on the following trading day, Reset Day, require that the price be beyond the Reset-Day 20-day price channel.

Potential bull plays

Mid-, large-
cap
MCY
ROP
Small-cap

(none)
OTC

RBGLY

Potential bear plays

Mid-, large-
cap
ONB
Small-cap

(none)
OTC

(none)
Large-cap
supplemental
(none)

Methodology

The symbols are sorted into three groups and all have analyst coverage through the stock-ranking company Zacks. The groups are:
  • mid- and large-cap stocks as well as selected exchange-traded funds listed on major exchanges,
  • small-cap stocks on major exchanges,
  • mid- and large-cap over-the-counter stocks.
The small-cap group is further selected to ensure a minimum market capitalization of $1 million and a Zacks ranking of neutral or more bullish. (Small-cap stocks rarely have sufficient liquidity to allow a bear trade.)

I then screen the symbols for historical odds of a profitable signal in the direction of the breakout for the past 12 months.

If the odds of success are greater than 50%, I next screen for the absence of an earnings announcement within the next 30 days.

For bear signals, I also screen to ensure the ability to do a trade because of the presence of options.

I sort by the results in descending order by the average yield on signals in the direction of the breakout in preparation for the second round of analysis after the opening bell.

-- Tim Bovee, Portland, Oregon, July 29, 2014

References

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

Elliott wave analysis tracks patterns in price movements. The principal practitioner of Elliott wave analysis is Robert Prechter at Elliott Wave International. His book, Elliott Wave Principle, is a must-read for people interested in this form of analysis, as is his most recent publication, Visual Guide to Elliott Wave Trading

Several web sites summarize Elliott wave theory, among them, Investopedia, StockCharts and Wikipedia.

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.
License

Creative Commons License

All content on Tim Bovee, Private Trader by Timothy K. Bovee is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Based on a work at www.timbovee.com.T

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