Blog Post: Day: Day 14 of $QQQ short term down-trend; Where is $QQQ likely to bottom? See how technical analysis could have helped you to avoid the $FDX debacle

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Will QQQ stop at the June low or will it decline to the trend channel line (237.47) and former green line top or go further below?  Note  the  above  average  volume  last week when QQQ declined.

FDX gapped down Friday after the company announced they were withdrawing guidance and feared the whole world was entering a slow down. Anyone who understood basic stage analysis would have exited FDX in August 2021 when it closed below its 30 week average (red solid line) and entered a Stage 4 down-trend. As long as the 30 week average is declining, I am out of a position or short.

FDX was also recently in a weekly BWR down-trend.

 

The GMI remains at 1 (of 6) and on a RED signal.

Blog Post: Day 13 of $QQQ short term down-trend; weekly chart of $DIA suggests re-test of last June’s lows; how to discern a market bottom–it’s easy with a weekly 10:30 chart!

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Market could fall to last green line break-out at 295.87 (GLB) which occurred after the pandemic decline,  in November, 2020. A decline below that green line could induce heavy selling and a market bottom. But we do not need to predict, just to react after a bottom is firmly in. But how  will  we  know  that?

Looking back to the 2020 bottom, this weekly 10:30 chart of DIA shows how to discern a bottom. The 10 week average (dotted line) turns around and climbs above the 30 week average. Once that happened one had 1.6 years to ride the up-trend until the 10 week average closed back below the 30 week, see chart below.  One does not have to catch the bottom. Wait until it is in place before risking one’s fortune by going long.

Here are similar charts for QQQ and SPY. Same patterns. So sit back in cash or treasury bills and wait. Sitting is the hard part, as Jesse Livermore more eloquently said. (The gray line in the charts is the weekly closing price.)

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For you skeptics, here is the 2009 bottom in QQQ. There was an earlier head fake in 2008. When that happens you get in and then exit when it fails. The gray line should remain above the 30 week average. In 1929, Bernard Baruch got in and out of the market several times until he correctly nailed it by going short.

 

Not using charts before one invests is like driving to an unfamiliar location without a GPS, or waze……….