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Monday 26 August 2013

Is the Australian Stock market due a correction?

The Australian share market has been on a fantastic run over the last 8 weeks rallying over 500 points, and maintaining trade over the key level of 5000. Can the market continue to push higher? or will the new season bring a correction? In the last few weeks more and more companies have had failed attempts at new highs and technically the ASX 200 is at an interesting level.

If we study the ASX 200 chart below, a closer look reveals quite a number of reasons a possible correction could be due. In March of this year the market had been on a 6 month rally (A) before pulling back below the 5000 level. This had been the second decent rally the market had made and encouraging signs for a third and possible final rally to commence before a more major pullback. The third leg (B) in April/May however showed no signs of the previous two and barely made new highs before supply hit the market, and major institutions closed their positions. There was a distinct shortening of the upward thrust, and demand that had existed previously had now waned.
 

 In June this year the market corrected falling 600 points before demand stepped in at the 4600-4700 level prompting the current rally the market has experienced. The market had fallen quite quickly, tried to rally, re-tested the demand line and rejected before rallying higher. The volume increased as demand overcame supply. The accumulation was confirmed when we witnessed another 500 point rally during July and August.   

Since mid to late August we have witnessed two small pullbacks and the market is either not ready to continue higher or there is distribution taking place. We are currently testing the resistance levels from March and as expected volume has increased with supply present at this level. The current pattern looks very similar to that of June/July with price re-testing the supply line. There are currently two key levels to observe, one being the most recent high (reaction high), and the low before the high (reaction low). The reaction low is very important as this is where buyers or demand was strong enough to step in and make new highs. If this level is broken, the balance of power could shift to sellers. If we maintain support at the reaction low level, we could see new highs made and upside momentum continue.

The final reason we may see a correction is that the point and figure chart below suggests the accumulation that took place in June/July; with an upside projection of 5160 has been satisfied. We may need to see cause (re-accumulation or distribution) built up at this area before price can either continue higher or sell off.
 
 
The market is currently at a critical point and it is often best to wait and react to the market then try and predict, and it is most important to have confirmation before jumping in. The technicals are pointing towards a correction but as we know the market is unpredictable and always willing to prove us wrong. The sentiment is still bullish until the reaction low is broken and lack of demand for higher prices confirms the trend.
 
By Mathew McCullagh.

Sunday 25 August 2013

When is a stock price considered value? - A case study in BHP.

For the majority of investors, the share price of a company is the standard at which they will value it's worth. The casual investor will flick through the paper and see a BHP or Rio Tinto at a certain price and instantly create an opinion based on history that the company is booming, struggling or even headed for collapse. They may say I remember when it was twice that price or they must be doing something right. Then there are the investors that will do a little more research, check some fundamentals, check the chart looks positive, read the news and hope the best the stock starts to climb higher. The traders that really succeed are those that can identify how the market cycles work and where value lies on the chart. I hear so many stories that a person buys a stock and instantly it falls and continues to do so until they decide enough is enough and they dump it. I hope this article will make you look at charts a little different and even improve your entries, as getting this right can take a lot of risk off the table and make managing trades a whole lot easier.

There are three laws that govern price movement of a stock. The laws of supply and demand, effort versus result and the final law of cause and effect. The most important of the three is the law of cause and effect when trying to establish value. The law simply put means for there to be an effect on price there first needs to have a cause created. The cause in this case is accumulation and distribution of a stock. If we can establish where large institutions are accumulating stock, we can determine where a stock is considered cheap or has a high probability of being worth a lot more in the future. If we can establish where large institutions are selling or distributing stock, we will have established where a stock is overvalued or our take profit area. Once accumulation or distribution has taken place, the balance of supply and demand becomes heavily one sided and the price will either move up or down creating momentum for a stock to trend.

If we look at a point and figure chart below for BHP, the accumulation and distribution areas are a lot more visible as all the noise is simplified. The noise is referred to all the small price movements that can make a chart look cluttered. The point and figure chart is made up of columns of "X"'s (up movements) and "O"'s (down movements). Each time the stock moves up a certain amount (box size) we add another X, and in this case that is 20c increments. We only start a new column of O's if the stock reverses a certain number of boxes and three is the most popular. So if the stock reverses 60c we would put 3 O's in the new column and if the stock kept falling we would keep adding a new "O" every 20c. The new column of X's would start if we reversed 60c higher, and the chart continues to form in this way. Theoretically if a stock continued to move within a range and did not reverse by more than 60c, you would have no need to create a new column and months of trading could be confined to 1 column. In reality this doesn't happen, but point and figure charts can be great for simplifying a chart.



If we look at item A on the chart, we see price appears to have been trading in a range with a base being formed. Accumulation is normally carried out over time in a narrow trading range, where price can be moved up and down allowing stock to be bought without tipping off the trading public that may lead price to rally prematurely before the supply has been fully taken out of the market. The one exception to this is when accumulation takes place over a few days or even one day if the news is so bad that the public dump the stock on fear and panic selling, and will normally lead to an over reaction. The smart investors will acquire as much as possible if they think the stock is fundamentally sound and will be able to recover from this minor set back. This happened with Qantas in June 2012, with record volumes sold and picked up by professionals, and the stock would rally from $1 to $1.90 over the next 10 months. The day of the panic would ultimately be the bottom of the downtrend and the day that most retail investors sold out only to watch it rally hard.

Point and figure charts will also allow a projection of price calculated by multiplying the base number of columns by the reversal amount. So in the case of Item A we see 9 columns (we do not count the breakout column of X's) by the reversal amount of 60c which gives us a $5.40 move higher. This is added to the last point of support (normally the low of the column of O's before the breakout), but a conservative calculation can also be made from the low of the whole pattern giving a range.  For these examples I have used the calculation from the last point of support. If we study the chart we can see how BHP was accumulated at Item A, re-accumulated at B, before being distributed at item C. The stock was also accumulated in D and G and distributed in E and F.

So how do we find value? To find value we have to first establish that the projection higher or lower has been accomplished, secondly that price is in an area of the chart where accumulation or distribution should take place and thirdly that we observe demand for higher prices or supply and lack of demand leading to lower prices. I will show you examples of areas of value for those looking to buy and those investors looking to short.

If we study the chart below, and assume that we have missed the majority of the move from July 2012 and are now open to the idea that the stock may be over valued and we are looking to short it. Once price moves higher out of the accumulation area in June-August 2012, we are able to construct a parallel trend channel by using two lows and an intermediate high. When price reaches our projection target of $38.58 (from the previous chart), we know the accumulation below and mark up has been accomplished. There are also further indications of shorting value as we notice that we have now seen two areas of the chart where the upper trend line (supply line) has been broken and the stock is overbought, there is a shortening of the upward thrust, there are signs of distribution taking place (supply) and we are also at a resistance level of October/November 2011.  The aggressive signal to short is item A where we see a large rejection bar with very little result (poor low close) from effort to push higher (increased volume and spread). The conservative short is item B where price had fallen heavily and tried to rally only to see low volume and a lack of demand for higher prices. The day in question was a small spread and the lowest volume for 15 sessions. If we look back at the point and figure chart we had a downside target of $31.70 (price fell as low as $30.58), with an entry of somewhere in the $38-$39 area, this was definitely an area of shorting value.



If we study the chart below and have taken profit after a great short, we would be looking to see if any buying or demand enters the market. We notice the stock price rally (April/May) and then pulls back into the same area in June/July. We have now seen price rally twice from this area and would now look for strength to return at this level again. If we look at the point and figure chart, the downside target of $30.81 has now been hit (at item G - P&F chart), and we look to see evidence of buying in this possible value area. We see a rejection off a key level on June 25, with a rather large increase in volume, wide spread, closing in the middle and very little downward result from effort. We may be witnessing demand off the bottom here. Three days later there is an ultra high volume bar on a very narrow spread, closing in the middle and price fails to fall lower over the next few days. We can now make a very low risk judgement that this is hidden buying. Price breaks the supply line and we see price rally nicely over the next 3 days with expanding volume and confirmation of the hidden buying is complete. The aggressive trader would have taken the close of the first breakout demand bar at $31.61, the conservative two days later at $32.84. If a stop was placed below the rejection bar at $30.43, this would have been a low risk entry bought in a definite area of value.



The most important decision a trader or investor will make is their entry. If they are successful in finding an entry that is of value, they will soon be in profit and they will find that the trade is a lot more manageable when playing from in front. If you have a poor entry and find yourself losing money from the get go, psychology will enter the game and when a trader is not thinking straight, mistakes are sure to follow. The buy and hold strategy can work over time, but why not get the best possible entry each and every time by analysing the chart and finding value in companies.

By Mathew McCullagh.
 

Tuesday 20 August 2013

Can AMP turn around its wealth protection business under the guidance of new CEO Craig Meller?



 
With the recent announcement and  appointment of new CEO Craig Meller, we look at the effects this may have on the technicals of AMP. Craig has been appointed to oversee the wealth management company, with his first task to improve the wealth protection and life insurance side of the business.
 
If you bought this stock roughly twelve months ago you would have been pretty pleased with its progress up until mid May of this year when it hit resistance levels from April 2011, and subsequently continued its downward slide all so familiar with long term holders. This was a strong buy in September of last year when we saw a pullback into an area of support, flipping previous resistance into support. This stock had been in an accumulation phase and in mid August we saw demand for this stock increase dramatically as price gapped up through the resistance on strong volume. The stock would run from the $4.30 area to $5.79 or an approximate increase of 35% in growth.
 

The up move was confirmed when the third leg failed to move with any force and we saw a shortening of the thrust. The resistance level from April 2011 was too strong and there was not enough demand to overcome the supply. The price has fallen strongly since then and the recent earnings news didn't help with several arms of the business struggling. We have seen a small rally as the price looks to close the gap after the gap down when the earnings report was issued. However the only way we will continue to move higher is if we see some consolidation and a cause built for higher prices at these levels followed by some strong demand.

The point and figure chart has been very useful in predicting levels the price may rise or fall too. If we look at the chart below, we were able to predict that price had enough cause built to reach to at least the $5.65 level. The stock was accumulated in May to August 2012 and when it broke out if we had of bought on the pullback to the $4.30 levels our target would have been the $5.65 region. Price had built enough cause to move $1.74 higher. The point and figure calculation is worked out by multiplying the number of columns the base of the accumulation is by the reversal amount (box size of 2c times 3 which is the reversal amount to start a new column), therefore 29 x 0.06 = $1.74.
 

If we look at the current situation when the stock was distributed in Feb to June 2013, we have two counts to work off which gives us a price range we may see some value for this stock. If we use the conservative count of 18 columns we are looking at $4.02 and the larger target of $3.48 (27 columns). Price fell to $4.16 after earnings in June and we have rallied since then, if this is just a pullback, price may well fall to $4.02 and beyond with the longer term target of $3.48 a possibility and a overall fall of 26% from todays close ($4.74). This would then look like a valuable investment at these prices.

Interestingly though if we look the weekly chart below, we are trading just above the underlying trend line that dates back to 2003. Price has been using this as support and we have already seen several bounces off it including the fall on earnings in June. If we take this into account if price was to fall to $3.48 it would mean breaking through this long term trend line and back to the area price fell during the GFC. The most important level looking forward if price does drift lower will be the re-test of the lows after earnings at $4.16, if there is some strong support there, $4.02 could indeed be the intended value. This is one to watch for sure, as this stock has been a lot higher in the past and only time will tell if new CEO Craig Meller can turn things around and bring back consumer confidence.



by Mathew McCullagh.
 


Monday 19 August 2013

Welcome to Informative Traders - Australian Stock Review Blog

Hi I'm Mathew, I live in Brisbane, Australia. I am passionate about stock and currency investment and have been for the last 5 years. I was introduced to the markets by a good friend and it soon became a passion. The art of charting and technical analysis came from an interest in figures, stats etc. as young boy growing up, and I am not surprised that I was finally attracted to this industry.

I run the website www.informativetraders.com where my main focus is on the educational process of charting and technical analysis. I am still learning and learn more and more everyday, but I wanted to help newer traders with the basics and even intermediate levels of analysis. I post articles, videos, charts and anything that may help traders starting out or those looking to find consistency.

I have purposely kept the website solely as an education with the forex currency markets as the instrument of trading, however being based in Australia, I am also studying the ASX and movements, news and trends of the Australian stocks. I have wanted to establish a blog for the ASX market for some time as I believe there are a lot of sites and blogs that comment on company announcements and stock movements but very few will provide a chart and explain the effects of them through technical analysis.

I will aim to look at the latest news and provide analysis on the top companies in the ASX, those that make up the ASX 300 and even penny poppers that may be looking at breaking out etc. The posts will be solely educational, they will not be stock recommendations, just the opinion of myself and Informative Traders.

I hope you enjoy the blog and look forward to interacting with investors and encourage comments to be posted, even requests for analysis etc.