Industry relative strength

Top Industries 1 month performance
Building – Residential Comm 14.5%
Medical – Outpatient HM Care 13.3%
Printing – Commercial 12.1%
Medical – Nursing Home 11.9%
Medical – Hospitals 11.6%
Textile – Apparel 11.3%
Telecoms Services 10.8%
Medical – Dental Supplies 10.8%
Aerospace – Defense Equipment 10.7%
Retail – Discount 10.5%
Bottom Industries 1 month performance
Steel – Producers -20.10%
Coal -16.40%
Mining – Silver -15.70%
Food – Meat Products -13%
REIT – Mortgage Trusts -11.20%

The importance of sector's belonging

  • Do not turn completely bullish or bearish on the whole market. Look at which sectors are bullish or bearish;
  • When you see a move happening in a sector, act upon it immediately, irrespective of the overall market direction. But do not act the same way on other sectors;
  • Confine your trading to prominent stocks in prominent sectors. If you cannot make money out of the leading sectors and stocks, you are not going to make money out of the stock market as a whole;
  • At any time there are only 3-4 groups leading the market.

Jesse Livermore

One of the most important observation of mine about the market is that even the worst stock in top sector will rally more than the best stock in lagging sector. Sector effect is as powerful as blowout earnings or relative strength.

Pradeep Bonde

Fast Moving Stocks

I have always asked myself what could drive a stock to rise substantially in a short time frame. What makes a stock to appreciate 30, 40%+ in a month. The catalysts are different. Some are fundamental (earnings), other are psychological (technical). I found out that the majority of these fast riders belong to one of the following seven groups:

1. Stocks of companies that received an acquisition proposal at hefty premium. Unless you are an insider or possess extensive knowledge about the trends in a particular industry, your chance of catching such a move is close to zero.

2. Beaten down stocks to levels, where they become an appetite bite for value investors. Such stocks have very high short interest on their float. I believe that bottom fishing is for investors with huge capital base and very long-term investing horizon. For everyone else the probability of catching a bottom is minimal.

3. Recent IPO’s of companies with solid earnings and sales growth, belonging to a currently hot sector. Companies that have key role in core industries.

4. Stocks of companies that have recently received FDA approval for a promising drug.

5. Stocks of companies that have recently received huge order for their products.

6. Stocks of companies that beat the analysts’ consensus estimate (if there is one) by a wide margin. Such companies report triple digit quarterly EPS growth and significant rise in sales. They come and blow out all expectations for the future. Market tends to respond enthusiastically to such news, sending the price of a stock in the sky on monstrous volume. A triple digit earnings’ growth is not sustainable and rarely lasts for more than several quarters. All I care about is, that during this period the stock doubles, triples and quadruples. The initial reaction to earnings’ surprise is indicative for the potential for future price appreciation of a stock.

7. Stocks, belonging to currently hot sectors. What makes a sector hot? It all starts when a company from that sector comes and reports substantial earnings’ growth than is unexpected. The company says that is very satisfied with its current quarter result and it mentions that due to positive changes in its industry environment, it expects to post even better profit in the following quarters. What happens after that? It is very likely that Wall Street will bid up stocks of other members of the same sector, even when the fundamentals of those other members are far from impressing. Investors’ expectation for future earnings is a key here.

I have noticed that 70% of all stocks that experience big moves in congested time frames belong to the last two groups. This is where I focus.