Apple Analysis: When Leaders Don't Lead
You’ve gotta love this game! Right is left and up is down! Well, Tuesday night Apple (AAPL) reports blowout earnings, and then sandbags on guidance. Ok, no surprise there! But then, the world turned inside out, because Apple rallied!
I figured we rallied because Apple’s CEO, Steve Jobs, cast a spell over the audience as he pumped the iPhone! By the time he was finished with them, they forgot all about the crappy outlook.
So, I went to bed feeling kind of queasy, like I just lived through some sort of surreal sideshow on the Twilight Zone. I wasn’t expecting a whole lot the next day. I figured if Apple extends the rally into the next day great, I’ll just wait for some topping action, see what the market holds and look for some short plays.
And if Apple doesn’t extend the rally, then no harm, I’ll just sit it out and see what the market will Bear (pun intended).
Well, it turns out that yesterday was a pretty crappy day. We started with futures way down, and things just got worse from there. The Dow had its 7th worst day in history, dropping dropping over 500 points, just under 6%. The S&P didn’t do any better dropping just over 6%, while the Nasdaq had a tough day as well, dropping 81 points at just under 5%.
Apple held most of its gains from the night before, at least in the beginning of the session, and even had a mini rally, but it was all down hill from there. Apple gave back the 12% it grabbed in after hours Tuesday night, and if it wasn’t for the surge in the last half hour of trading, it would have given it all back.
So if you’re a perma-bull you probably got a bit of a charge out of that eleventh hour rally, but don’t get too giddy, because all you have to do is step back and look at what happened. The indexes broke down big time. We closed below trend support of 910 on the S&P and 8650 on the Dow, that’s extremely bearish. In fact, the S&P closed on a new low for this Bear market at 896!
The Tech sector is getting hammered, it’s in full breakdown mode. And the Leaders of Tech, Apple, Google (GOOG), Research in Motion (RIMM) and Amazon (AMZN) all refuse to lead. Not one of these companies can sustain a rally, they’re up one day, then down the next. And when the leaders can’t sustain a rally, neither can the broader market.
Market breakdowns are confirmed with two important indicators, volume and breadth. What I mean by breadth is the number of companies participating in the decline. So, when you have a down market and the volume is at least 20 percent over the average volume, and the number of declining issues out numbers advancing issues, then that’s your confirmation. And today, the Nasdaq traded over 2.6 billion shares, where the average shares traded is usually around 2.1 billion. Also declining issues outstripped advancers by a whopping 6 to 1! That my friends is a classic breakdown!
So the problem for the Bulls is that they’ve lost these critical support levels. And the Bears won’t give them up without a mighty fight, they’ve got all the weapons on their side and they’re playing on their home turf. The only thing that the Bulls can hope for is the occasional good piece of news, that can spark a violent mini rally. But like all the rallies before, it will fail.
We still haven’t seen that classic capitulatory bottom, where the market gaps down, then rallies back on huge volume and breadth. But this is no ordinary Bear market, and so I don’t expect that we’ll see an ordinary bottom. It may take several such events, and it may happen over a lengthy period of time.
Stock position: None.
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This article has 15 comments:
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thomasf
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2 Comments
Oct 23 09:59 AM-
AVG
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4 Comments
Oct 23 10:33 AMseekingalpha.com/artic...
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typopolice
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7 Comments
Oct 23 10:56 AMHe also told everyon to bail at $90 between 10/4-10/6, scaring everyone and telling people he called his dad and told him to go to cash..then watched the stcok move to $115 while him and his sheep sat on the sidelines. His flock is dwindling as they go broke on his advice.
He is selling a new service on his site though, can't wait to see how that turns out for everybody--practically risk free!!
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Shorting Should be Banned
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137 Comments
Oct 23 11:25 AMEvent with the 'poor' guidance AAPL should be at $120.
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deasys
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24 Comments
Oct 23 12:20 PMIsn't this an exciting turn of events, Zach? Let's game this market all the way down to ZERO! Go, Bears!
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Zach Bass
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82 Comments
My Website
Oct 23 12:27 PMIt was all pure emotion. Investors are looking for any glimmer of hope to hang themselves. Trying to rationalize these itty bitty rallies is foolish. Things turn on a dime, until the volatility retreats, we're going to be stuck in this distortion field.
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chano
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30 Comments
Oct 23 12:39 PM-
pabs
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30 Comments
Oct 23 12:46 PMmr bass clearly doesnt know what he's talking about and i doubt very much this is his full time job or indeed that he is capable of making money in this field
contrast this horrible content it with someone like the very talented andy zaky per the 'AVG's link above that actually provides informed analysis and opinion
i guess this is pile is the price we pay for democracy
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Zach Bass
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82 Comments
My Website
Oct 23 01:11 PMAndy Z. is an expert at analyzing company fundamentals. I do no such thing. I provide analysis based strictly on technical analysis. I think fundamentals have their place in longer term valuation, or comparative analysis, but quite frankly fundamentals are of little use for determining the direction of stock price, in all time frames (near, mid and long-term).
Determining the direction of stock price is what I do. Fundamentals can have some affect on price during certain events, it can also affect to a degree, a stock's level of resilience to market and sector moves. But the thing that determines ALL price direction is investor sentiment.
And that's what I do. I read investor sentiment and determine the most likely direction a stock will take. So if you don't believe in Technical Analysis or the analysis of Mob behavior, say so. But don't say that my analysis sucks because you don't understand it or that you think TA is a bunch of hooey.
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Infinite loop
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12 Comments
Oct 23 01:24 PMThis has been my most profitable year ever. I'm currently up over 160%. It's not hard to tell which way the market is going. It takes years for the market to rise, but 30 seconds for it to fall. Learn Behavioral Finance and you too can make a killing off of the weak minded, short-term thinkers.
Keep up the good work Zach.
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wallywonka
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7 Comments
Oct 23 03:37 PM-
Viswakarma
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9 Comments
Oct 23 03:40 PM-
Network Effect
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61 Comments
Oct 23 05:05 PMso my question to you is, should a stock have anything to do with the underlying asset? and if not, can you explain how the stock market is anything more than one big scam?
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Muzie
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103 Comments
Oct 23 06:08 PMIn one we put a whole bunch of imaginary companies where some monkeys put out imaginary earnings reports with random news. That's where we put all the TA freaks and they can argue all day whether we have a cup and a handle, a heads and shoulders or a black dove inside a tree stump.
Then in the other market we can put all the other real companies where people actually expect stock prices to have a semblance of a relationship with the company's income stream.
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bobthenoob
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42 Comments
My Website
Oct 23 08:05 PMI think Zach has turned into a Cramer wannabe. In the meantime, M$ goes up on the same bleak guidance while Zach like the rest, continue to ignore Apple's 75% YTY growth... apple20.blogs.fortune..../