The IPO Frenzy of 2019

All charts in this post are powered by MarketSmith

Traders are still hungry of crazy IPOs. The meat-alternative producer Beyond Meat (BYND) started trading today. Its IPO was priced at $25, it opened near $45 and it finished the day at 65 after tagging 75 intraday. A small float and a good story can make wonders for nimble traders in a bull market.

On a side note, have you seen the ingredients of BYND products? Artificial coloring, tons of chemicals, in general – generic easy to copy stuff that no health-conscious person would convert to. The market can be quite irrational in a short-term perspective and BYND can easily tag $100  but over the long-term, the market is a weighing machine and BYND is one heavy vegetarian stock that is very likely to go back below its IPO placement price of $25. I have no current position in BYND.

The price action in some recent IPOs has been pretty fascinating: PINS, TW, TIGR, ZM, JMIA, etc. LYFT has been the only dud among the recent public offerings. A small float can cause a lot of troubles if the stock market enters in a pullback mode. The same IPOs that double in a week or so, can drop 50% or more just as quickly.

For those who don’t know yet, a float is the actual number of shares that is currently available for trading.

Float = Shares Outstanding – Restricted Shares.

Most insiders are restricted from selling their shares in the first six months after their company goes public. This is why many new public offerings start with a float that is a small fraction of the total outstanding shares. For example, Pinterest currently has a float of 75 million shares vs 510 million outstanding shares.

Check out my two best trading books:

Swing Trading with options – How to Trade Big Trends for Big Profits

Top 10 Trading Setups – How to find them, hot to trade them, hot to make money with them.

Momentum Monday – Software Stocks Are Back In Play

All charts in this post are powered by MarketSmith

Bull markets correct through sector rotations; many and frequent rotations that can spin your head off if you try to keep up with them on a weekly basis. A couple of weeks ago, we saw capital leaving tech and healthcare and moving into the so-called “old-economy” sectors. Last week, we saw a rotation from hardware to software.

After a major rally, semiconductors are pulling back. Intel’s revenue projections are declining. Xilinx’s growth is slowing down. The semiconductor index (SMH) is up 33% year-to-date. A pullback is absolutely normal. All trends need pullbacks; otherwise, they cannot last long.

In the meantime, software stocks are finally waking up and starting to break out. Many of them are scheduled to report earnings in the next few weeks. Expectations are certainly quite elevated. Maybe, this is why we are not seeing a very enthusiastic market reaction to solid reports – AMZN, NFLX, MSFT, FB, etc.

Check out my two best trading books:

Swing Trading with options – How to Trade Big Trends for Big Profits

Top 10 Trading Setups – How to find them, hot to trade them, hot to make money with them.

Four Truths About Bull Markets

All charts in this post are powered by MarketSmith

After a 24% correction in the last quarter of 2018, the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) has fully recovered and hit new all-time highs. A new all-time high after a deep correction is not necessarily the beginning of a new bull market but here are four rules of thumb how to approach it anyway:

  1. The strong stocks that you want to buy on a pullback, won’t pull back to the obvious levels everyone wants them to. There’s a gap and go action across the board especially after strong earnings reports. It’s smart to develop a strategy that takes this price action into account.
  2. The biggest mistake you can make in a bull market is not being patient with your winners – don’t micromanage and overreact to every small fluctuation. Find one or two strong themes and try to ride them for as long as you can. Pullbacks in strong stocks are buying opportunities and excellent risk/reward setups during bull markets. Develop a way to take advantage of that.
  3. Some form of diversification can be helpful in a bull market. Many people forget that bull markets are low-correlation markets of stocks which mean there are good opportunities on both the long and the short side. Not all stocks rise in a bull market at the same time. While putting all your capital into just one or two stocks can help you achieve astonishing returns if you are correct, it can also lead to not making money in a bull market. You don’t need to own 500 stocks to be diversified. 7-10 are enough to do the trick.
  4. Bull markets often correct through sector rotations. While one leading sector pulls back 4-5%, another steps up to take its role leaving the market averages like SPY and QQQ relatively unscathed. Trying to be one step ahead of the constant sector rotation can spin your head and lead to overtrading, which can be a costly mistake. You can’t catch every single mini-rotation. Focus on making money in a couple of big trends that you have identified.

Check out my two best trading books:

Swing Trading with options – How to Trade Big Trends for Big Profits

Top 10 Trading Setups – How to find them, hot to trade them, hot to make money with them.