All Entries in the "Technical Analysis" Category
Trading Roadblocks
September 29, 2011 at 8:12 am
Few things are as frustrating in trading as seeing a position start to take off, only to stop or reverse. When a trade hits the proverbial wall, it stops moving according to plan and quickly becomes dead money.
Nevermind the fact that you were long in the midst of an uptrend in the stock, and in a generally strong market environment. It’s time to bail out.
What if you had seen it coming?
Looking a little farther to the left on the chart can at times enable you to do just that. Sometimes we just get so fixated on the here-and-now pattern that we fail to recognize what might lie beyond. Overhead resistance looms like a roadblock, but without zooming out on the chart, you may never see it until it’s too late.
Due Diligence
As a short-term trader, I’m all about the recent price action. I care a great deal about how a stock has moved over the past 2-3 weeks, and every day of late. I’m gauging the volume, I’m looking for clean patterns, I’m designating my trading timeframe, and from there I’m able to project where the stock can go next if those patterns are confirmed.
But I don’t stop there.
Once I’ve identified a pattern, and made the corresponding game plan, my work isn’t finished. I still need to look at the bigger picture and take note of anything that might stand in the way of this stock running further. And I’m not referring to news which might break (although that’s particularly important during earnings season). What I’m referring to is potential resistance which the stock may have to contend with shortly after confirming the short-term pattern.
Exhibit A
For example, I recently discovered a bull flag pattern. I can project, based upon the pattern, where the stock could head to next if that pattern gets confirmed. However, a look at the bigger picture showed me a glaring issue with the trade: it didn’t have far to run before the next resistance would be encountered.
That congestion zone from a few months back was a major potential roadblock for the play. Although the short-term pattern could confirm, the stock may still not get through the next resistance zone. So, this is the kind of setup I’d only consider for a day trade rather than a swing trade, because the risk I’d incur for a swing isn’t in proper relation to the limited profit I’d make if resistance holds.
Here’s a look at the stock I’ve been discussing. I’ve erased the company name and ticker symbol, because it doesn’t matter. Rather, this is an example of how I evaluate potential plays.

A month from now, this flag may have confirmed and the stock might blow through prior resistance as if it were never there, but that’s not for me to decide. My job is to evaluate risk, and only put my money at risk when the potential for reward outweighs that risk by a considerable amount.
Taking note of potential roadblocks like this is one way I can ensure my risk/reward on each trade remains suitable. Occasionally I might regret not taking the play, but over the long haul, I’m preserving my capital for far better opportunities.
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast
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Which Side Are You On?
September 2, 2011 at 8:22 am
We’re in an interesting spot here, no matter which side you find yourself on. Both the bulls and bears have reason to believe they’re going to win this one, so let’s take a brief look at the arguments of each.
From the bullish perspective, we’ve just carved out a higher (incremental) low compared to the early-August low, which was confirmed by a higher high this week (including multiple closes above the mid-August bounce high). We’re now pulling back after a sizeable short-term run, possibly to fill the gap from 8/29. A change of direction begins with the creation of a higher low and higher high, and we’ve seen both of those get created. The worst is behind us.
Here’s the SPY daily chart with notes for the bullish case:

From the bearish perspective, this is a low-level (albeit wide) counter-trend consolidation following a major decline. Advances have not seen meaningful follow through…the 8/9 to 8/15 bounce was met with nearly a complete retracement, and the bounce which completed August is again coming under some pressure here. This correction is just getting started.
Here’s the SPY daily chart with notes for the bearish case:

Charts don’t lie, but at times like this it’s all about perspective. The next direction is in the eye of the beholder, and that’s exactly what makes a market. What’s your perspective?
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast
Follow TheStockBandit on Twitter or get our free newsletter to keep up!
Don’t Discount Daily Charts When Day Trading
August 31, 2011 at 9:16 am
The daily charts are where nearly all my trades originate. Whether I’m looking for a single-day move or one that lasts several weeks, I always at least take the daily chart into consideration.
Day traders often forget the value that the daily chart can bring. The conclusion is that it’s only suitable for swing trading or position trading, but the truth is that the daily chart can offer some good signals for entry and exit as levels are cleared or reached. Even better, those same levels can often add to your confidence in a day trade and help you stay in it.
Let me offer 3 examples from Tuesday’s session where the daily charts played important roles. On Monday night in the member area, I listed only 3 plays for Tuesday’s session, with each of them being day trade candidates. I’ll break them down one at a time with the initial setup, and then a look at Tuesday’s intraday chart where the daily level played a significant role.
First up was QIHU, which looked poised for a push higher after establishing both a higher low and a higher high in recent weeks. The pullback over the previous several sessions provided a clean descending trend line which I used as a pivot for getting long at $23.60. Here was the original setup:
QIHU pushed past that trend line and never dealt with it again, running initially almost 3% higher before pulling back but still holding above that same trend line:
Next up was GLNG, which had corrected and then settled into a multi-week narrowing consolidation pattern in the form of a symmetrical triangle. These patterns can break either way, and with a strong market and the upper trend line being challenged, I was looking long on a trend line break through $32.15:
GLNG triggered an entry as it cleared the $32.15 level, showing a nice initial pop followed by a pullback to test the breakout zone. To heighten the validity of the $32.15 level, the low of the pullback was $32.18, just 3 cents above it. From there, it ran again in the afternoon to clear the morning highs and get 4% beyond the morning trigger. Not bad for a few hours and no pain:
Last but not least was FSL, a little stock which had huge potential. It had just pulled back to test and hold the early-August closing low, and in recent days had stabilized just above that level. On Monday it saw expanding volume but only minimal progress as it edged past a descending trend line. I set a trigger for $11.25, which would be a multi-day high, to get long. Here’s a look at the pre-trade setup:
FSL triggered late in the day with a massive thrust higher once it cleared the $11.25 level, vaulting straight up to $12 to offer a very fast 6.6%. The move was fast and furious, but a quick payoff once the level was cleared:
A couple lessons from these trades…
A level is a level. Doesn’t matter if you found it on the daily chart or some other timeframe, the odds are it’s going to be evident across multiple timeframes. Recognize and respect that, because it could pay quite well. All 3 of these trades were winners, and each of them respected the level originally found on the daily chart.
Keep an open mind. Perhaps your preference for day trades is a 15-minute chart or a 30 or a 5-minute chart. That’s great. But keep an open mind about how trades might originate. Don’t resign the daily charts to something only multi-day traders consider. You’re missing out on several great opportunities per day by ignoring the daily charts.
Hopefully you found this walk-through helpful. If you want to know what I’m trading tomorrow, stop by the site and begin your trial to our stock pick service.
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast
Two Homebuilders to Watch
July 28, 2011 at 9:22 am
Homebuilder stocks have suffered for some time now, with most of them unable to make any lasting progress on bounce attempts. Many of them have been trending lower, but there are a couple of standouts I’m keeping my eye on.
TOL is the first, as it has been creating higher lows for the past year, grinding its way higher without really showing any momentum yet. It’s been caught in a range for the past few months, but is bouncing from support here and has room to work higher in the short term. Currently, there’s a pretty big wedge setting up on the chart, so I’ll be particularly interested to see which way it gets resolved. If it’s to the upside, it may be the start of some better price action as the stock again heads higher. Earnings are due out August 22nd according to Yahoo Finance.
Here’s a closer look at the daily chart:

PHM is the other, as it has been creating both higher lows and lower highs for many months now. In the near term, it has room to bounce within this wedge. On a longer-term timeframe, it could gather upside momentum once it clears the downtrend line, currently at the $8.30 level. It reported earnings this morning, so the news flow should be clear for a little while.
Here’s a closer look at the daily chart:

These are the kinds of setups I take a look at for position trades lasting weeks to months. The sector itself remains under some pressure, but these are the two in the group I’d consider on the long side if support continues to hold.
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast
Day Trade or Swing Trade? Progression of a Play
July 26, 2011 at 11:21 am
One of the things I’m asked about quite often is how I decide my timeframe for a good setup. Will it be a day trade or a swing trade?
That’s a great question, and it took me a long time to figure that out. I go in-depth in the Advanced Trading Course at TheStockBanditUniversity.com to explain it fully, but one component in the decision is the pattern quality. That’s going to encompass the risk associated with the trade, which means entries and exits are more defined by a cleaner, mature pattern vs. one which is simply building.
So rather than just talk about it, I wanted to show you an excellent example from last week of how a stock can go from being simply a day trade candidate to a swing trade candidate when the pattern matures.
I had run across CROX pulling back from its 7/7 high on 7/11. The uptrend was still very much intact, and this looked to be a potential dip to buy once the dip was completed. Here it was at that time:
CROX needed to be watched a little longer before a play was evident, as I wanted to be able to draw a clean trend line along the highs and then go long on a push through that trend line. Sometimes you have to wait on the market. It took a couple of days, but I finally listed it for subscribers on the night of 7/13 for a day trade the following day. It wasn’t a fully mature pattern, so I was only interested in grabbing the next pop if it occurred the next day (7/14). Here was the setup, which didn’t trigger (it stopped a few cents shy of clearing the trend line, therefore no trigger):
Despite not triggering an entry for a day trade, I kept CROX on the radar nonetheless. After two more daily bars had been painted on the chart, a cleaner trend line could be drawn, and the pullback had the appearance of greater stabilization. I then set up a swing trade since the pattern was more mature, the pivot was more evident, and a stop loss area was now well-defined. Here was the setup I posted for subscribers along with a $26.60 entry trigger price, a $25.70 stop loss (just beneath newfound support), and upside targets at $28 and $29:
From there, CROX triggered an entry on 7/18, dipped for a day on weak volume, then got back on the move. With Target 1 at $28, the stock stopped just a few cents shy of hitting that level on 7/21, creating a bearish engulfing bar. However, I stayed with the trade since volume didn’t confirm distribution, and the following day the stock blew through the $28 first target on much heavier volume.
CROX pushed all the way to Target 2, topping out exactly at $29 on Monday. That offered a nice quick 9% gain, allowing me to book a solid profit ahead of the August 1st earnings announcement (which I always avoid). Here’s a look at the final bar of my trade:
Several takeaways…
Allow setups to determine your trade timeframe. I’ve said it many times, but the smaller the pattern, the shorter the trade should last. Bigger patterns can be trusted for more, it’s just that simple. This started out as a day trade candidate but evolved into a swing trade setup after the pattern grew and matured.
Be patient as patterns build. I stalked this stock for several days before placing a trade. Waiting for stocks to “come to you” is the best way to improve your odds of success. Risk management is crucial, pattern awareness is important, and position sizing is not something to ignore. However, it all begins with making a limited-risk entry, so timing is everything. Don’t rush the process.
Monitor the volume in relation to the price action. This stock made a few moves which, based on price alone, would have made me wonder. The trigger day saw a weak finish. Four days into the trade a bearish engulfing bar could have spooked me out. But neither were confirmed by volume. Instead, I kept seeing volume expansion along with advances in price, which gave me conviction in the trade and allowed me to stick with it.
Stick with good trades and don’t get shaken out. Along with the previous point on conviction, staying with a good trade can be tough. The price action or the overall market activity can cause premature evacuation. Stick with your trade plan and what the overall trade is doing. If it pulls back but volume’s weak, stay with your existing stop. It could just be a head fake on the way to much higher prices.
Hopefully this walk-through helps you understand better how I determine my timeframe for a trade. Beyond that, this review should also give you some insights into managing trades along the way, because learning to assess how a trade is developing is a critical skill you must possess for trading success.
If you want to know what I’m trading tomorrow, stop by the site and begin your trial to our stock pick service.
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast
Just What the Bulls Need
July 20, 2011 at 11:41 am
I noted yesterday that we were getting an upside resolution to the bull pennant pattern in the S&P 500, and it was no doubt a big day. The point and percentage gains across the board were impressive, yes, but were still outweighed by the technical move.
Breakouts need to see follow through. Sometimes they need it immediately, and other times it just needs to happen soon after.
For example, a minor breakout really needs to be followed by some immediate strength to build on the breakout and prevent a failure. On the other hand, a major breakout doesn’t necessarily have to see second-day strength to prove its validity. In those cases, a day or two of digestion are perfectly fine.
That’s how I’m interpreting today’s price action. The market made great strides yesterday to leave the pullback phase it had been stuck inside of, and today has been pretty quiet so far. Because of the size of yesterday’s breakout, I don’t think it’s imperative that we see continued strength today. A day or two of rest are a healthy way to digest that move, particularly for the case of the bulls. It allows for some churning between profit-takers and those nibbling at shares, and it lets the market catch its breath before possibly making another run.
We’ll see how this plays out, but that’s how I’m viewing it at the moment.
Here’s a closer look at the S&P 500 daily chart:

This day of rest is also highly important for the charts of individual stocks, as sharper moves tend to lead to reversals rather than pullbacks. Keep that in mind as you work your watch lists.
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast
Upside Resolution
July 19, 2011 at 1:13 pm
The 7-bar pullback off the July 7th high has been a pretty methodical one, despite some wide-ranging bars and overnight gaps. Nonetheless, the pace of the pullback has been well-defined by the upper descending trend line, while the lower descending trend line has marked support.
Monday’s test of the lower trend line resulted in a temporary breach, but the S&P 500 recovered enough to reclaim that level by the closing bell. Not only did that erase a chunk of losses from earlier in the day, but it gave a bit of an exhaustion appearance on the daily chart.
Today we’re seeing widespread strength with a solid thrust back up through the upper trend line. This is marking a multi-day high, at least for now making it an upside resolution to the large bull pennant pattern which had been building.
Going forward, holding this breakout on a closing basis and seeing the bulls follow through on this advance will be key to making it stick. If it does, we’ve got ourselves a higher low on the daily chart, and recent highs could quite easy come into view soon.
Here’s a closer look at the S&P 500 daily chart:

The wide trading ranges are still intact for now, but a continuation of the summer rally which started at the end of June is certainly a bullish technical event. I’m currently long and eyeing more setups.
Trade Like a Bandit!
Jeff White
Producer of The Bandit Broadcast















