New up-trend or dead cat bounce?

GMI0/6
GMI-R2/10
T210852%

When the market has been in   short and long term down-trends, and then it   goes up 5% in four days (measured by the Nadaq 100 ETF, QQQQ) , one is left with the question of whether it is time to go long?   The truth is that no one knows for sure if the current rally is the start of a new up-trend or just a dead cat bounce. How we trade this scenario   has to be guided by what our trading rules tell us to do.

My rules tell me   that when we are in   short and long term down-trends   that I do not go long until both trends have signaled a new up-trend.   This means that if this rally is the start of a new up-trend, I will miss some of the gains, but such is the fate of the trend follower.   We follow defined trends until they end and a new trend is established.

With clear 20/20 hindsight, I realize now that last week, I was not focusing enough on the extreme bearish sentiment that   signaled that at least a bounce was likely.   First, the QQQQ declined seven days in a row–a   rare occurrence. The put/call ratio (number of put options traded divided by the number of call options traded) reached about 1.2, showing that option players were more likely to trade as if stocks would decline. This is a decent contrary indicator–at extreme values, these traders tend to be wrong.   The Investor’s Intelligence survey of newsletter sentiment, another contrary indicator,   shows that there are nearly as many bears as bulls.   Most of the time the bulls far outnumber the bears. And finally, the daily (10,4,4) stochastic indicator that I use to time trades was extremely oversold,   near zero.   Look at the daily chart of the QQQQ below (click on to enlarge) and you can see that market bounces tend to occur when the stochastic is around 20 (bottom horizontal line)   and starts to rise. I should probably not be looking to initiate short trades on the market when this stochastic is below 50, and certainly, not when it is near zero.   The stochastic acts much like the T2108 Indicator; it is sort of a pendulum of   market sentiment. The stochastic indicator works for ETF’s as well as individual stocks.

The stochastic reached its lowest reading of the year before the July 4th weekend break, and then started rising. I am now waiting to see if the rally will end after the stochastic rises to the high levels seen at other tops this year. It may take a few more days of a rally until the stochastic reaches overbought levels again, or it may never get up there….

The GMI remains at zero but the more sensitive   GMI-R is at 2.   The rise in the GMI-R occurred because there were more new highs than lows on Friday in my universe of 4,000 stocks and because the QQQQ has closed above its 10 day average.   There has also been improvement in the Worden T2108 Indicator (52%), and almost one half (49%) of the Nasdaq 100 stocks have their MACD above its signal line, a sign of short term strength. But we remain in a QQQQ short term down-trend, now having completed its 10th day.   And the QQQQ and SPY have now closed below their critical 10 week averages for 10 weeks.   I find that I only trade growth stocks profitably on the long side when the QQQQ closes above its 10 week average.

So, according to my trading rules, I must remain mainly in cash and a little short until my indicators turn.

9th day of QQQQ short term down-trend;

GMI0/6
GMI-R2/10
T210845%

The down-trend continues for now.   We have had a bounce up from the bottom of the 8.6% decline in the QQQQ that began on June 21.   That decline took the QQQQ to a closing low below the closes on the day of the flash crash and the two subsequent declines in May and June.   Now we have to wait to see how far this bounce can go.   If it stalls out before the June 21 peak (at the 50 day average, dotted green line), the next decline could be quick and furious.   On the other hand, if the rally can surpass that peak, we could get a new up-trend.   For now, the daily and weekly trends remain down. Click on chart below to enlarge.