Posts Tagged ‘daytrading’

How Can Options Unraveling Make You Money

Friday, June 17th, 2011

We just completed options expiration week, and triple expiration at that (options, index futures, and commodities).

On item that I try to point out every options expiration week is the importance of options unraveling, which typically occurs mid-week, most commonly on Wednesday. What is unraveling? It’s the point where the big players close out their options positions that are in the money as time is running out. This has big implications for moves in the market, and it therefore often causes the biggest move of the week.

The key to making money off of this phenomenon is to understand what it is, then to know when to expect it, then to identify when it is occurring, and then to take advantage of it by increasing your odds.

The secret to unraveling is the following: when it happens, the market picks a direction sometime after the first hour of play, heads that way on volume, and never really reverses. In other words, if you see unraveling happen, you know what direction to stick with all day long.

So, that’s what it is.

When do we expect it? Usually mid-week, most commonly Wednesday, of expiration week, after the first hour. So, that’s when I watch for it.

How do we know we get it? A move will start, and VOLUME WILL REMAIN HIGHER THAN NORMAL midday.

What do we do once we spot it? Have great confidence in sticking with that direction into the close.

Here’s Wednesday with the first hour boxed off on the broad market futures after a gap down:

So from this point, if we’re going to get unraveling, we should see a move begin to occur and volume stay up. Do we get it? Here’s the shot after another 30 minutes:

Note that we are breaking lows at a time of day where things are usually slowing down, and volume is up. But, that could be just one bar of volume, does the volume hold? Let’s jump a little further ahead and compare the volume midday to what we saw the prior two days:

Yes, indeed, volume is staying up as the market is selling off.

So, we expected it on Wednesday, now we have it, what do we do with it?

Well, the unraveling move is down. Most other days recently, we have seen a return to the midpoint of the session after lunch on light volume. I wouldn’t expect to get that move now. I would focus on any rally failing and looking for shorts.

So as we come back from lunch, the market starts to tick up. I told subscribers that I didn’t think we’d get back up to the midpoint with the rally:

And, in fact, we did not. Everything failed as expected:

What does that do for me? It keeps me looking for short entries throughout the second half of the day with little concern that that is the correct direction. I focused on AMZN:

And SINA:

Both of which worked great.

Sometimes, trading is that easy, and you need to focus on those easy moments. Unraveling only happens once a month (and sometimes, it really doesn’t happen at all in any convincing fashion). Still, when it happens, we expect, identify, and then act with confidence.

COT 3-18-11

Monday, March 21st, 2011

Hi Traders,

A good Monday to you! I have to admit, it was an amazing Tampa Bay weekend; I mean, it was the perfect illustration of “why” this time of years our state fills-up with out-of-staters driving very large cars, doing below the speed limit and with one directional flashing on, then off, then on, then… for miles and miles on any Florida Interstate. Yes, we love them. And, yes, May will be here soon.

Okay, the COT charts are here: http://www.tradesight.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/COT-3-18-11.pdf

Everything we discussed previously (as in last time) has continued in the same direction this past week, meaning if a currency was at extremes between the commercials and specs then, it is more extreme now. If it was in the middle of a move toward extreme levels, the direction hasn’t changed. And, if it was in a state of confusion, like the yen, it still is.

I will note that if one is looking for dollar bull, you’ll probably have to pay a private investigator to find one for you. To excerpt one of my letters: “Everyone is bearish on the dollar. Many newsletter writers are bearish on the dollar. Magazine headlines scream warnings of a dollar disaster. Financial TV talking heads are universally gloomy on the greenback. And while I agree with them over the long term, we’re ready to see a big dollar rally (and a euro fall) in the short term.”

My point, exactly. So, I suggest one continues to note what the COT charts are telling us while keeping an eye the price charts for longer-term setups (i.e., daily and 4-hour).

Cheers and great trading,

Clay

COT 3-12-11

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Hi Traders,

What an awesome weekend here in Tampa Bay… and that’s all I’ll say just in case it’s cold and nasty where you are. Okay, that and… Hold on, summer is coming!

Okay, the COT charts are here; feel free to grab a copy of the sheet music and sing along.

The commodity currencies AUD and CAD are starting to push the “extremes” limits, especially the latter. Remember, though, even when this occurs, it can take some time for the spot FX market to change gears; these readings are best used as a heads up. NZD, though a member of the commodity currency team, keeps getting sold by the specs and bought buy the commercials. And, it’s nowhere near extremes, so this could go on for a while. You might take a look at all three charts and note the difference.

The Swiss Franc and euro charts show the commercials 180-degrees apart; the commercials have been selling and the specs buying, though this may be changing soon, especially considering what’s going with the EU’s PIIGS. I mentioned this last week, so I won’t kick that dying horse–that said, I never understood why anyone would consider kicking a dying horse, anyway.

The pound is beyond extremes, having turned around a couple of weeks ago. The commercials are buying, though not with conviction, and the specs are selling, though not with any sort of conviction, either. GBPUSD bounced off a monthly pivot last Friday and made a nice move higher. Will it head to 1.6400? Absolutely… unless, of course, it doesn’t. GBPJPY and GBPCHF, like GBPUSD, found support (see daily price charts) and, by the looks of things, the market is considering where to take these pairs next. If the most recent daily highs are taken out, I anticipate this happen with less momentum, which is a signal for a turn (think “divergence)). Keep an eye on the daily highs.

The market is in a state of confusion about the yen. And, with the tsunami, it might take a little longer for conviction to enter the picture. Standby to standby.

The USD Dollar Index shows the commercials and specs180-degrees apart, which, when considering the swissy and euro charts, makes sense. Correlate these with the price charts and the extremely negative USD sentiment, and we’re seeing the makings of an about-face.

Gold and silver are an interesting couple. The small traders and specs are buying gold again, but with silver making these most recent highs, it appears they’re concerned and not sure what to do. That said, unless one’s an aggressive trader, shorting silver now would, in my opinion, take a lot of guts and the willingness to be wrong if the market continues higher. Remember the old adage, “The market is never too high to go higher, or too lower to go lower.” That, and, “Trade what you see.”

That’s it for this week.

Cheers,

Clay

COT: 3-4-11

Saturday, March 5th, 2011

Hi Traders,

A good Saturday morning to you. It’s a little overcast here in the Tampa Bay area, but yesterday was FANTASTIC, so I’ll put up with some cloud cover. At least it’s warm enough to wear shorts and flip flops!

On to the COT but first, get this weeks charts HERE.

The small traders and specs have been buying the aussie and looney; as commodity currencies, it’s no wonder, especially with oil going through the roof this week… and the commercials were sellers (hey, the specs and smaller traders have to buy from someone). That said, the looney (i.e., CAD) is at extremes and the aussie is real close. Look for a 180-degree differential, which usually presages a turnaround. The kiwi, however, didn’t benefit, and small traders kept on selling.

Other pairs at extremes are the swissy and euro, and the pound has turned the corner. This is a good time to start looking for a longer-term move setting-up in the opposite direction. Depending on one’s risk tolerance and whether they’re an active, swing or position trader, entries might already be in place. But, especially for active traders, Friday was Non-Farm Payrolls, which creates some chop and, if stops are too tight, you run the risk of getting a whipped around. This next week may offer some good entry opportunities in the shorter timeframes. Keep your eyes open.

Note the US Dollar Index. Specs (green line) and commercials (orange line) are at extremes. AND, finding a dollar bull right now is about as easy as trying to find a politician you’d want take home to meet your mother. But I digress…. The point is, right now the consensus is 99% dollar bears. O’ to be contrarian ;- ) If you’re not sure what this means, please see my post this week covering the topic–or just post a message and ask. Anyway, take a look at the COT chart.

What can I say about the shiny metals? The specs and short term traders are buying, which means the commercials are selling. While I don’t know where the top is (especially with silver–though it did hit my target near $34.80); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES I have to ask: “If it’s the end of the world and, the commercials being the “smart money”, why would ANYONE be selling? I mean, if you knew there weren’t anymore macadamia nut white chocolate chip cookies, and you LOVED, LOVED, LOVED macadamia nut white chocolate chop cookies… I mean you just couldn’t live without ‘em… would YOU sell any of your stash?

Okay, maybe “insulin” is a better metaphor. Bygones. Still, you get my point.

That’s it for this week.

Be well and keep living large!

Clay

COT 2-25-11

Saturday, February 26th, 2011

Hi Traders,

An awesome Saturday morning to you! For some reason, I was up at 7:15, today. I have no idea why, but I’m not complaining! Nope, I have tons to do, including preparing this week’s COT report for you guys. So, I better get busy ;-)

This week’s COT charts are here

Gold and silver climbed this week, with silver hitting highs. Who’s buying? The small guys and specs. Hmmm… what does that tell ya? It tells you the commercials, those groups with more money than the Fed can print in a month, are selling. They’re selling gold, too, while the small traders are buying it up like my ex-mother-in-law used to by Beenie Babies (she had boxes of those things… don’t ask me why).

So, are these to shiny metals at a top? If you look at the gold chart, not the specs (green line) and commercials (orange line) were 180-degrees out not too long ago, which often presages a turn-around. Silver isn’t showing the same thing, however. Instead, there’s plenty of room before the “180-degree” indication comes into play. So, keep watching.

When it comes to the commodity currencies, the CAD is at extremes, which, as you know, is a heads up (see above explanation). The aussie isn’t at extremes, and is sort of treading water. AUDUSD keeps hovering around parity and it appears the specs and small traders aren’t sure where to go next. I mean, it’s sort of a game of “Do or Dare”. It makes sense to; after all, after such strong run-up to parity, do you want to be the guy who bets the aussie will go EVEN higher… before a correction, that is? NZD is has the specs and commercials at a standstill. With all the bad news there, lately, a longer-term “watch and see” attitude just seems prudent. Not exactly rocket science.

The pound is coming off extremes between the commercials and specs. As I mentioned last time, we might see another push north to the 1.64 area (GBPUSD); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES although it’s really struggle at current resistance. Based on the COT reading, whether prices move higher or not, a change of direction is in the air.

Nothing new to report on the yen or euro, BUT a look at the US Dollar Index shows the commercials and specs are 180-degrees apart. As I’ve said before, there’s a better than good chance, in my opinion, that USD will gain strength as we head deeper into the year.

“Huh?”, say some. “But what about all the bad press and crazy stuff the gov’t is doing… you know, the out-of-control” spending and budget cuts and lay-offs and, and, and….”

Well, as you might have observed, whenever sentiments are at extremes, this is usually when markets turn. Remember internet stocks and real estate?

Okay, that’s it for now. I hope your weekend is rockin’.

Be well and live large!

Clay

2010 End of Year Report for Stocks and Forex

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

Every year, at the end of the year, we recap the market action for the just-completed year and discuss how our various services did. If you go back and look at prior year-end reports, I would say that we have done a fairly good job of anticipating what the year ahead holds as well.

For example, at the end of 2007, with oil rising above $80 a barrel and holding for the first time, we predicted a sharp decline and rocky 2008. That of course later turned into the banking collapse late in the year, which certainly was more extreme than we had in mind, but nevertheless, the prediction was a good one.

At the end of 2008, with the stimulus bill just passed and a new administration in town and the VIX just hitting a record spike, we predicted that 2009 would be one of the strongest up years in history, rivaling years like 1932 and 1933 when the government finally took steps to try to rectify the Great Depression. 2009 ended up being a huge year to the upside, and our calls did well again.

At the end of 2009, our goals for 2010 were much more moderate. We were looking for a small pause in January, another push higher, a 20% correction at some point in the year, and then a strong back end of the year, “hopefully with about a 35% push up.”

How did those items play out? Let’s look at our favorite index, the NASDAQ 100 (NDX):

Pretty much got everything we wanted along with a modest 17% rise for the year on the index overall. No complaints.

The broader S&P 500 index was a little more moderate, showing a 10.5% gain for the year:

While things have settled down to more “normal” market returns after the run of 2009, there’s nothing to complain about here on the stock market side.

As I go through the rest of the various index charts, I’ve drawn a line from the start of the year to the end so you can see the net gain/loss.

The SOX performed well:

As did the Biotechs:

Banks finally had a decent year, although it should be noted that they did NOT close out at the high of the year like just about every other equity index did:

Part of what kept this year from posting a better rebound was the European debt crisis, which amplified during the middle of the year and definitely caused some concerns. This had an impact on gold, which we don’t really trade, but clearly didn’t create the bubble burst that we had been looking for coming into the year:

I will say this. If you look at a weekly chart of gold, the higher it goes, the worse the ultimate breakdown will be at some point, just like oil in 2008. The fact that it is a commodity doesn’t change the concept:

Treasuries barely made out a positive year after rallying harder mid-year during the peak of the European concerns:

Oil also was higher, although it had the narrowest range in five years ($20 a barrel in range):

It’s also stuck around the 50% retracement of the collapse in 2008:

Oil will be important to watch in 2011. The “new normal” for oil after the last three years is that $100 a barrel is the “danger zone” that can again impact the global economy. Unless we start to see a bigger shift away from oil to other energy resources that meet our global needs, oil over $100 a barrel will be bad news and could be yet another major factor (there are several, we will discuss below) that could hurt the economy.

Before we get into Forex, let’s look briefly at some of the key stocks that we trade regularly did for the year.

AAPL remains my favorite trader, although it accounted for only 18% of my trades, which is a sharp drop from the last two years, owing more to the fact that there are other great active vehicles. It certainly had an up year and might suffer a bit in January as people can finally sell in 2011 and not pay taxes until 2012:

GOOG is another favorite, and while it remained great from a trading perspective, it had a down year, which is interesting to note. If this is a base, be on the long side of it when it breaks out:

AMZN rose in my list and had a strong up year:

RIMM suffered some issues as the Blackberry OS lost market share to Android in particular, but it still has great trading moment:

The real newbie from an active trading perspective was NFLX, which posted a massive 300% year and started trading much higher volume, making it a great intraday trader. This one benefits finally from Blockbuster getting the final nail in the coffin:

So how was the Forex market this year? In last year’s report, I said that we had more confidence that the US Dollar Index would post an up year and ultimately hit the 84-86 level. That move happened much earlier in the year than we were expecting as the Dollar was looking very strong right up until the European crisis really kicked in:

The Dollar still posted a positive year and if you back out the chart more, it is significantly higher than the low in the summer of 2008 as the banking crisis came into full swing (despite the fact that the news media has spent the last two years talking about the US Dollar getting weaker). You can also see that it now has a specific uptrend line in place from 4 points over two and a half years, although there is also a declining trendline in the shorter term, giving us a total wedge:

Those lines will be important to watch.

Looking back at the US Dollar daily chart, from a trading perspective, we like to see good ranges AND good movement for the majority of the year in Forex. Extended periods of flat and/or extended periods of lower ranges make trading more difficult. Here’s the chart again:

As you can see, this year started out terrific, with a big move up (and great ranges) from January through May and then a big move back down through the end of July. August and September were much slower and flatter (both had about two days that accounted for the whole move of the month); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES which is common for those late summer months. Things resumed in late September and continued until the last three weeks of the year, when the Holidays kicked in.

Overall, I mark this as a great year in Forex, better than the last two, as the only points where things slowed down were the ones based on seasonality that we see each year (August, September, December). Most of the rest of the year saw both decent ranges AND some actual price movement.

Average Daily Ranges on the pairs changes quite a bit during the year. The EURUSD increased. One year ago, the six-month trailing ADR was 133 pips a day. It’s currently around 155 pips. We also saw increases in the AUDUSD and NZDUSD. However, the GBPUSD dropped from 182 pips a year ago to 155 today, making it an equal trader (if slightly more expensive) to the EURUSD. Something like the GBPJPY dropped from 232 pips per day to only 155, which is a major shift downward for the cross pairs.

Expect to see a bigger range of calls this year with the EURUSD, AUDUSD, and NZDUSD called more frequently. Over 85% of our main calls in 2010 were on the GBPUSD. We did start actually tracking our results for our main Forex calls (which really shouldn’t be the sum of how you use the Levels if you have been trained properly) in September. Next year, we’ll have a full year of results, but for now, let’s just use the fourth quarter net to keep things rounded. From October 1 to December 31, there were 102 Forex calls in the Messenger that triggered. 57 worked for some gain, which is 54.2%. The net pips using the entries (adjusting for spreads); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES initial stops, first targets, and adjusted stops for those that triggered was 1045 pips. Nothing to sneeze at.

If every year in Forex looked like this one, particularly the first half of this year, then we’d all be happy. Overall, the net results of the entire year should be over 5000 pips, and I may even go back through all of the calls at some point and get the exact number.

How did our stock trading go? Another great year. We continue to find daily patterns that work great while also giving almost daily calls in the top traders that work. Now that we put our daily results into the free Blog part of the site for all to see, there are people tracking the results. Evidently, we’re hitting between 65-70% winners, and that doesn’t account for the fact that our losers are kept very tight and some of our winners run big.

One big factor for successful trading is always volume. We like to see the NASDAQ trade 2 billion shares a day or more, and while things typically lighten up in the summer, we definitely saw a “tale of two markets” from a volume perspective this year.

Here’s the day-by-day NASDAQ volume chart with a 10-day moving average line, and you can see that for the first half of the year, the average never really dipped under 2 billion, and we had a lot of days between 2 and 3 billion, with a peak day of 4.2 billion. That’s all great. Things dipped in the summer, and while we had many days between 2 and 2.5 billion after that, the moving average struggled around that 2 billion share mark, and then dropped off sharply as usual for the last weeks of the year:

In general, another great year for Tradesight, and we have made some site changes to put a lot of our results more “front and center” going forward.

So what’s the outlook for 2011? Murky. Much more murky than the last three years. While the line “don’t fight the Fed” continues to be strongest, I have a much lower outlook for the year in general. In the end, we’re traders, and we do a good job of monitoring market direction both in a broader sense but also in an intraday sense, which really is what matters most if you are a trader. There are certainly a lot of obstacles ahead that might be relative unknowns going forward, including:

Europe – What would a complete breakdown in the Euro do
The US Debt Ceiling – Not an issue unless someone is crazy enough not to raise it
Taxes – Need to go up at some point in some fashion if you want to fix our books as spending cuts alone can’t make the difference
The Deficit – This is clearly the big one and whether 2011 will be the year that kills the market from the deficit or not remains to be seen
Oil – Anything over $100 a barrel is a problem
Metals – Gold and others aren’t just an investment tool, which is something that I think a lot of people forget. They are used in Electronics and Semiconductors, and there is a global supply and demand for this that drives the price as well, and that demand is high, but at some level, the prices push end-goods out of reach

From a trading perspective, volume will determine how well we do. You only have to look at the last week of 2010, where volume dropped to an average of only 1 billion NASDAQ shares a day and nothing moved, to see how important volume is. Unlike about 8 out of the last 10 years where I was confident in my outlook, I’m not there right now for 2011. Obviously, we’ll have up and down periods, and I suspect the volatility will be good with all of the potential news on the landscape, and that alone could be enough. If someone put a gun to my head and said “Will the year be green or red in the end,” I think I’d probably pick red, but again, that does something that you’re never supposed to do in the markets: Fight the Fed.

With QE2 out there and interest rates likely to remain low, savings finally slowing (which means people are spending); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES and signs that construction spending is on the mend, there are certainly positive inclinations out there about the economy, but it is very possible that the markets have already factored them in and there are too many things that could “ruin” the recovery for any significant rise from here. A lot of people don’t like QE and QE2, but the reality is that they are designed to cushion the blow and give up some of the longer term “bubble gains” that we might get down the road while preventing a worse catastrophe up front.

Unemployment is always the lagging indicator and should not be viewed as what is going on in the economy. There’s no doubt that even the deeper version of unemployment data have not reached the Levels that they did in the Great Depression, but the loss of jobs in 2007 and 2008 has not recovered, as it was the deepest decline in 40 years. I have said before and I will say again now: My bigger concerns about unemployment is that we have outsourced so many jobs that we might end up in a position where the economy can run at a 3-4% GDP growth rate, the stock market can run, a lot of people will get rich, and corporations will be profitable, but unemployment won’t drop much. I’ve said before that we might need to get used to a headline 8% rate as the “new norm” in a couple of years.

So, I don’t use it as the measure of what is going to happen in the stock market. If you did, the stock market should be about 50% lower than where it is. Fed trumps unemployment data because one is a controlling factor and one is a short term symptom of the problem.

What I do hope for in 2011 is that we have the 20-25% pullback and the 20-25% runs that make for great trading environments, and I suspect that we will get that. Watch for March to be a key month as the government hits the Debt Ceiling limit. Any move toward defaulting on the full faith and credit of the US government after over 200 years or any move that results in a government shutdown would bring spending to a halt, and probably kill a couple of years of economic growth in the process. These are all important factors in the activity of the stock market, and even the Forex market. A professional trader has recognize this and be on the lookout.

Have a great 2011 and thanks for stopping by.

Forex Calls Recap for 12/28/10

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

Two winners, including one that is still on at the moment, on the EURUSD as we finally traded average range again. Too bad it was in both directions instead of just one, but I’ll take it.

New calls tonight and Chat again. Probably not much after tomorrow.

EURUSD:

I was half size still, so the early long trigger at A was quarter size for me. Hit first target at B, raised stop and stopped at C. In the morning, the short set the trigger at D, triggered at E, and hit the first target at F. Still holding short with stop over Pivot entry:

GBPUSD:

Forex and Stock Market Preview for Last Week of December

Sunday, December 26th, 2010

Cautioning traders about rough environments has been one of the cornerstones of Tradesight’s approach over the last decade. A lot of newer traders get so excited about trading that they don’t recognize that not all days are equal and provide equal opportunities. The Holiday season is one of those periods.

While we saw some light action last week, the outlook for the final week of the year is even worse, though it might not be apparent to the novice’s eye. Some people assume that the banks have shuffling left to do for the rest of the year, but the reality is that most of that is done. In the stock world, the funds and banks have the positions that they want to show for their end of year statements. They can’t move massive positions in a day or two, so they can’t wait until December 31. All they want at this point is price stability.

Add to that the fact that a lot of retail traders are on vacation, and this year, much of the East Coast is blanketed in the worst blizzard in half a century, and there are ample reasons that nothing great will happen. The last week of the year typically sees a 20% drop-off in stock market volume on average from the rest of December, and December so far has only averaged 1.7 billion NASDAQ shares, which is already 300 million lighter than normal. A 20% drop takes us down to 1.5 billion or less. It is often said that 800 million shares of trading volume each day is just institutions trading back and forth to each other with automated trading, so the real difference between a 1.4 billion share day and a 2.0 billion share day (the average over the last few years) is really the difference between 600 million and 1.2 billion in real trading, and that’s a big difference. You don’t see good trading activity without the volume.

Meanwhile, in the Forex marketplace, activity is about the banks, and the reality is that even though the United States doesn’t know how to relax and take a day off, the rest of the world does, and much of the rest of the world is just as relevant to overall activity and volume. US rules state that the US Stock Market and Banks must be open on December 31 for a full day unless it is a Saturday or Sunday. This is because 70 years ago, people needed the full day to be able to make final adjustments for the tax year. It’s an outdated rule, and because of it, we don’t close, but we might as well. Let me give you a preview of the week globally.

Monday:

New Zealand, Australia, Great Britain, and Canada all half full day bank Holidays to continue observing Christmas. Without them, the Forex market is not going to be active.

Tuesday:

The same four continue to have bank Holidays. Remember that while New York is active for trading and banking, Great Britain is the center of Forex. Meanwhile, the snowstorm on the East Coast also crushes New York.

Wednesday:

No bank Holidays. There also isn’t much for economic data.

Thursday:

No bank Holidays, but it is the day before New Year’s Eve and people are already heading out to get where they want to be for New Year’s.

Friday:

Japan, Italy, and Germany have bank Holidays for the New Year, although the rest of us, including the US, save the bank Holiday for Monday (even though the stock market will be open).

So realistically, it’s Tuesday of next week (January 4) before the world is all back to work, and we might see Forex pick up then. Stocks usually take until day THREE of the New Year, so expect that Thursday, January 6, and it could be to the downside pretty hard if the first three days are up.

Meanwhile, the benefit of being a trader is being able to take time off and enjoy life and family when the markets aren’t doing anything. As much as we hope to see you in the Trading Lab, there probably won’t be much to see there.

Using The 24-hour VWAP Tool for Forex Trading

Thursday, December 16th, 2010

There are a variety of ways to use the 24-hour VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price) as we teach it. This is a unique tool to Tradesight in the FX arena (although commonly used in stocks and futures). The importance of the VWAP level as it moves throughout the session can never be overstated.

One of the ways to use the tool is to wait for the market to start to get a move and have it bounce once or twice off of the VWAP. Once that happens, you know that the market has addressed the VWAP for the evening and is using it. This happened last night fairly early on the GBPUSD. Keep in mind that these charts are MST time zone, so two hours earlier than EST.

As you can see here, the GBPUSD got two bounces precisely off of the purple VWAP line at point A, just as it was starting to curl up:

From this point forward, each TOUCH of the VWAP can be traded by then buying if the pair trades above the high of the 5-minute bar that touched the VWAP or shorting if the pair trades below the low of the 5-minute bar that touched the VWAP. So, here’s the next touch of the VWAP an hour later, and I’ve drawn black lines at the high and low of that bar:

In this case, it turns up, and the buy point is the black line, but you can see how it played out, running up about 30 pips and stalling at the Value Area Low level:

About an hour later, we roll back to the VWAP and get another “touch” bar, and I’ve marked off the high and low again:

The next move takes out the high of that bar:

And that leads to…another run up just over the highs of the prior push and another winner:

SIX HOURS later, the GBPUSD comes back down to the VWAP and touches it. This charts shows the “touch” bar and then the next bar, which triggers to the short side by moving under the black line:

This leads to about a 25-pip move downward to the LBreak level. Note that we get a 9-bar Seeker setup on that move down against the LBreak red line, which coils the spring for the move back up:

And that move back up looks like this:

Very technical action all night on the GBPUSD despite light ranges.

COT 12-10-10

Monday, December 13th, 2010

Hi Traders,

It’s “Brrr cold” here, in Tampa Bay: a balmy 44-degrees… and it’s not even 7:00 pm. Yes, it may be time for a move south. And, that’s about all I can say about that. Okay, let’s stop messing around and get to the COT.

Click on this link for the latest COT charts.

The US dollar has lost a little footing, but overall, the markets only look like they’re correcting, meaning, I believe the dollar will continue to move higher. From a fundamental view, while the US economy isn’t exactly on solid ground(the understatement of the year?); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES Europe, with Greece and Ireland having already been thrown a life jacket, Spain, Portugal and Italy are off the boat and furiously treading water. And, this is what everyone is looking at. So, the US is kind of “off the hook” for the moment, or at least not in the spotlight. Note the specs are selling the euro and the commercials are buying right now (this is not just euro vs. USD, but all other currencies).

Two commodity currencies (AUD and CAD) can’t really get traction, especially CAD, which is flummoxing, as neither the commercials nor specs appear certain about what to do. The aussie is a little less confused, but not much. After hitting parity with USD, and with little surprise, it moved south. Currently, though, the specs look like they’re gunning for the November highs. That said, it doesn’t look the same for the USD vs. CAD. The third commodity currency, NZD, has behaved perfectly. When the commercials and specs where 180-degrees apart, price reversed and the move has been very clean so far.

The swissie had turned, with the commercials buying and specs selling, but the current charts show a shift in sentiment. The yen while not as pronounced, is in the same position. The pound is another story; the specs are selling and the commercials are buying. pretty clear, according to the charts

Gold and silver are trying to move higher, though, with silver, the specs and commercials are holding right now. The chart shows the specs buying gold last week and the commercials selling it, and I’m watching to see if the last highs will be broken. The double top (November’s high and December’s high–so far); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES came with bearish divergence; so, momentum is declining as price approaches these highs, telling us that specs are skittish.

That’s it for now.

Stay warm, and trade to trade well,

Clay

Stock Calls Recap for 12/13/10

Monday, December 13th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

SNDK triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and worked enough for an easy partial:

HANS triggered short (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, AMGN triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked great all day:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His FFIV triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His CMG triggered short (without market support in this case, went a little early before the market rolled) and it worked great anyway:

His AIG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Add it up and you get six trades that triggered with market support, and all of them worked.

Stock Calls Recap 12/06/10

Monday, December 6th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

From the report, RMBS gapped way over the trigger, no play.

KIRK triggered long (without market support due to opening five minutes) and didn’t work:

CTCM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, RIMM triggered long (with market support) and didn’t work:

AMZN triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s NFLX triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for a partial:

Again, with the market so flat, you shouldn’t have been pushing anything today. Technically, we had four triggers with market support, and only two worked at all.

Stock Calls Recap 12/3/10

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

From the report, the top pick in GNTX triggered long (with market support) and worked beyond great:

TTWO triggered long (with market support) and worked:

ISIL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

LIFE triggered long (with market support) and worked:

VPRT triggered long (with market support) and worked:

LLEN triggered long (with market support) and worked great too:

CENX triggered long (with market support) and didn’t do anything at all, but didn’t go against either:

In the Messenger, AAPL triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s NFLX triggered short (without market support) and worked great:

That brings us a total of 8 triggers with market support, 7 worked great and 1 barely moved. Just a great session.

Tradesight Market Outlook for 12/1/10

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Tuesday was a typical month end mess. Gap down, then recover and the ultimately lots of white noise and nothing much to show for it. The market is bending but not yet breaking. The daily candle was both a downside CPS and also a camouflage buy signal which means that neither side has full control. The 50dma remains the key nearby technical level. Note the key neckline (aqua) that has been added to the chart.

Naz was much weaker than the broad market losing 28 on the day. Key support remains at the static trend line and 50dma.

Multi sector daily chart:

The XAU was the only sector green on the day, up 1%:

The XBD broker-dealer index is 9 days down and finding support at the 200dma. Look to this sector for upside continuation opportunities if the market starts higher again.

The OSX continues with the handle like price action.

The BKX remains in the recent range, nothing new until this area is exited.

The BTK is leaking and close to the low of the recent range.

The SOX is finding support at the 10ema. The April highs remain the level to take.

Gold was higher on the day by about $20 which is the high of the left shoulder.

Oil diverged from the OSX and was much lower on the day. Keep in mind that at this stage in the cycle, the underlying stocks should lead crude futures not the other way around.

Tradesight Market Outlook for 11/30/10

Monday, November 29th, 2010

First touch—Monday was the first interaction with the 50dma (red) since the first trading day in September. This will be an important area of interest for days to come. The 50 should provide support when it’s first tested and would be a strong confirmation of a change in trend if lost. There are a couple of ways to look at the recent trading action. The bull case is that price is consolidating in the area of the prior high (April) possibly making a handle to breakout. The bear case is that the “look see” above the April high was a failure and the price pattern is making a head and shoulders supported by the MACD sell condition. Time will tell but for now the 50dma is the big man on campus.

Naz closed the gap from last week and was unchanged on the day. Note that there is still one open gap open just under the 2100 level.

The NYSE cumulative A/D line took a pretty good whack last week. The current area of interest is the breakout level at about 1525. This is key support and the loss of 1525 would indicate a failure.

The 10-day Trin remains oversold at 1.36 which implies that the market has available energy for upside movement.

Multi sector daily chart:

The OSX was the top sector on the day. The pattern still has cup and handle potential so set an alarm for a break over 230.

The BKX was stronger than the market, finding support near the old lows. Price has been boxed up for about 4 days so a breakout of the pattern could be strong.

The SOX was slightly higher on the day gearing up to challenge the old high. Note the maturity of the current SEEKER countdown at day 10.

Oil was very strong and will surely breakout if the OSX makes new highs:

Gold continues to hover perhaps tracing out a head and shoulders. The first clue will be the loss of the 50dma.

Tradesight Market Outlook 11/24/10

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010

The SP lost 20 handles on the day, mostly from the news driven gap. The previous fair value area of 1198 has left an island pattern and trapped the buyers from that level. Key support remains at 1170(50dma).

Naz was lower by 35, closing right at the 3 day low. Naz has a stronger pattern than the SP because it doesn’t have the island condition. The common piece in the construction is the large gap open below.

Multi sector daily chart shows the persistent weakness in the banks:

The Dow/Gold ratio is getting back near range low on the chart which illustrates the preference of gold over large cap stocks. A break to new lows in the ratio would be very bearish for stocks. In a secular bear market the ratio usually gives readings well below 5.

The 10-day Trin has recorded an oversold reading exceeding 1.35. The broad market is now oversold enough to support a multi day advance if it so chooses.

The SOX was the strongest sector but merely posted and inside day. Nothing new technically but there was notable relative strength on a weak day.

The XAU was also relatively strong vs. the broad market, posting an inside day.

The BKX recorded its 9th day down. Downside before some order of bounce or consolidation is not likely.

The OSX was the weakest sector losing a full 2%. A cup and handle is still in play unless 215 is lost.

Oil continues to have key support at 80.

Gold was the strongest asset class bucking the dollar strength.

COT 11-19-10

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

Hi Traders,

What an awesome weekend here in Tampa Bay. I mean, the weather couldn’t be any better! 80-degrees, sunny, low humidity… geez, it’s no wonder this place will be packed with out-of-state license plates next week and what normally is a 20-minute drive will take 40.  Oh well. I’m not complaining. Bring it on!

Okay… the COT.

The euro and pound have come off of their extremes between the commercials and specs. And, you might have noticed both EUR-USD and GBP-USD moving south. This is because the specs are selling and commercial are buying; based on past discussions, this shouldn’t have been a surprise. We’re seeing the same thing with the yen, silver and gold.

The looney (Canadian dollar) and Aussie dollar are off of their extremes after beating the tar out of USD. While NZD is still at extremes, which presages a turn-around. Interestingly, the US Dollar index is sort of in a knot; but, the dollar is gaining some strength which is clearly seen in EUR-USD. Is a dollar rally coming? Maybe. Based on the current price action, it appears this is the case. We need to hold on and pay close attention, especially swing and position traders. Intra-day, there have been and I believe there will continue to be good trade setups, regardless of whether a longer-term rally materializes, or not.

View this week’s COT charts here.

Be very well!

Clay

Tradesight Market Outlook for 11/22/10

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

The SP recouped some very large midday losses to settle for the third day at almost the same level. 1198 has been the recent draw and will be a very important level when the range is resolved. If price moves higher this will be an important support area and if price declines 1198 will be formidable resistance. Note that the MACD is negative but has not touched the zero line which could be important unfinished business.

Naz was bifurcated from the broad market. Monday the Naz gained 21, which was a 5 day high, while the SP could only mange to close even. Price remains above the April highs and could easily challenge the YTD high. The notable flaw with the current construction is the open gap around 2100.

Energy names dominate the daily relative performance chart while the financials continue to lag:

The 10-day Trin has yet to record an oversold reading of 1.35+ but has recharged and worked off the September overbought reading.

The XAU was top gun +1%. The trend remains positive above all 3 moving averages. Note that all 3 of the moving averages are pointing higher.

The SOX was the top Naz sector and is very close to recording a new high close on the move. The pattern is 3 days up into prior resistance so a measuring day Tuesday could be in the cards.

The OSX would provide excellent leadership if it can break through the current double top. As noted in previous reports, the chart may want to take some time and trace out some kind of handle here.

The financials were the laggards today. The BKX lost 1.5% settling near the low of the quarter. The pattern is 8 days down and should want to either pause or bounce.

Is gold making a head and shoulders top?

Oil was lower, settling in the previous comfort zone.

Forex Calls Recap for 11/22/10

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

The streak continues, and November is now officially a great trading month for us. Two new winners, very clean, to start the short week. See GBPUSD below in particular. Most pairs exceeded average daily range, which is good.

Here’s EURUSD:

USDJPY:

GBPUSD:

Triggered long nicely at A, hit first target at B, stopped second half under Pivot at C unless you were awake to adjust (I wasn’t). Triggered short at D, hit first target at E, still holding second half with a stop over LBreak red line:

AUDUSD:

Check out the clean Value Area play (from top light blue line to lower one):

GBPJPY:

Value Area worked here as well:

EURJPY:

And another Value Area that worked:

Stock Recap 11/19/10

Sunday, November 21st, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

ESRX triggered long (with market support) and worked fine:

MXIM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

OVTI triggered long (with market support) and worked:

In the Messenger, Rich’s BIDU triggered short (with market support) and didn’t really work:

His FCX, however, triggered long (with market support) and worked great:

GOOG triggered short (without market support) and worked:

Rich’s CRM triggered long (with market support) and worked:

His NTAP triggered late in the day without market support and only went a dime, so it’s a wash, no harm, no good.

In total, that’s six triggers with market support, and five worked. Several worked really nice. Very good for options expiration.

Market Index Preview for 11/18/10

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

The SP posted an inside “measuring” day. This is very typical action following an impulsive move such as the prior candle. Just like 2 days ago, the pattern has energy stored in the pattern and can move forcefully when the range is resolved.

Naz also posted an inside day which has the same implications as the pattern in the SP. The static trend line (red) and then the April highs are the nearby support levels.

Below is the very long term monthly chart of the NDX100. There is a very key area just overhead. This is both resistance and a major breakout level. Set an alarm for 2239.

The financials remain very weak vs. the other major sectors.

The OSX was top gun up 3 on the day. If things play out the pattern could be setting up a cup and handle.

The XAU was little changed, posting an inside candle. The GDX etf closed at $58 which could be the strike peg for expiration and trap price.

The SOX used yesterday’s low for support. Set an alarm for a break under 372.25 which would be a bearish continuation.

The computer hardware index, the HWI, settled below the 50dma. With the SOX weak, this needs to be watched closely.

The BKX was the last laggard. Price is back below both the 50 and 200dmas likely just basing.

Oil suffered further liquidations. 80 was the low of the prior trading range so look for support there.

Gold did very little but notably outperformed most other commodities (cotton was limit down). Keep an eye on the key support around 1320 (static trend line).

Stock Recap 11/16/10

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Off of the report, CSCO triggered short (with market support) and worked great (especially for CSCO, which isn’t a big mover anymore):

In the Messenger, Rich’s GOOG triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His AAPL triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His NFLX triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

His JOYG triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work:

Another AAPL call triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

Rich’s AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked for a point:

Rich’s JOYG triggered short (with market support) and worked:

GS triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

And Rich had an additional late GOOG short (with market support); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES which worked enough:

All together, that’s eight trades that triggered with market directional support and seven of them worked great.

Stock Recap 11/15/10

Monday, November 15th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Off of the report, AUXL triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

SGEN triggered short (with market support) but did so little in either direction that I’m going to not count it for or against, which is rare:

In the Messenger, FSLR triggered long (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s F triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

COST triggered long (with market support) and worked enough for an easy partial:

GS triggered long (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

AAPL triggered short (with market support) and also went dead flat, so we won’t count it either way as well:

That’s five triggers with market support, but in an unusual set of events, two don’t count as winners or losers. Of the remaining, two worked and one didn’t.

Tradesight Stock Recap for 11/11/10

Friday, November 12th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Nothing triggered off of the main report, which isn’t a surprise given the Holiday action.

In the Messenger, AAPL triggered long (without market support, just barely) and worked huge, my big winner of the day and all that I needed on a Holiday:

Rich’s AMGN triggered long (without market support) and didn’t work until later:

There was an AAPL short but it triggered in the last 15 and didn’t have time to do much.

All told, no trades triggered with market support, so even though it was a very nice day for me with AAPL (over 2 points to the final exit at the gap fill area); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES there is nothing to measure based on the calls.

The AUDUSD with Average Daily Range and the Seeker 9-bar Tool…

Thursday, November 11th, 2010

Even with the Veteran’s Day holiday, there were still opportunities for great setups leading to small winners in the Forex marketplace today. One such pair that saw a classic setup was the AUDUSD.

At Tradesight, we like to look for combinations of key technical tools creating a confluence of events that lead to high-probability play. We use the Average Daily Range tool to determine the extension point that is often a pause or reversal point for a pair. For example, the AUDUSD trades 134 pips per day, based on the average range of the last six months. That means that once the high to low of the day reaches 134 pips across, you often get a pause or reversal.

Another tool that we use is our Seeker tool, which seeks out 9-bar extension criteria using a special counting technique. Often, once a forex pair, futures contract, or stock reaches the ninth bar of the count, it is extended and needs a relief move in the other direction.

When you combine the Average Daily Range concept with the Seeker tool, if you can get them to line-up, it gives you a high-probability entry. So let’s look at the AUDUSD in 5-minute bars over the last 24 hours.

AUDUSD

AUDUSD

Notice the spike at A on news that set the high of the session. The dashed green line anchors to that high as the Average Daily Range high of the day. That then causes the dashed red line to draw 134 pips lower, which gives us a potential exhaustion point based on the range. If the AUDUSD can hit that line, it will often make some sort of move back the other direction.

It does eventually hit that line at B, which is also a 9-bar move down from the Seeker tool (note the green count below the candles). This also represents a shot at reversal.

Going long off of that level based on the combination of the ADR and the Seeker led to a move higher, as we would expect. In addition, with the Holiday, it is even less likely that the AUDUSD could have moved further than the ADR.

Tradesight Market Preview for 11/11/10

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

On a closing basis, the SP reclaimed 4 handles from yesterday’s tankage. Price is still boxed up in the recent range with Wednesday’s low not quite closing the open gap below.

Naz posted a wide ranging day with little change. Post market, the CSCO earnings and guidance were disappointing and the Globex futures have declined to the Wednesday low. There will be a gap to work with for Thursday’s Veterans’ day session.

Multi sector daily chart:

The XAU was top gun up 2.4%. While this is favorable for the bulls, price didn’t record a new high and there is still a bearish candle at range high.

The BKX was up 2%, the 200dma remains the break level.

The OSX closed at a new high on the move, and just shy of a new high close for 2010. Keep in mind that this could be a double top and need some order of retracement.

BTK remains boxed up:

The SOX remains between fibs and is still badly lagging the performance of the NDX100.

Oil broke to new highs for 2010:

Gold is one gap down away from a selling episode; it’s just a question of from where it happens. Here or much higher after a blow off?

The VIX is now 5 major waves down:

Stock Pick Recap for 11/10/10

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

From the report, AEIS (with market support) didn’t do anything either way:

THOR short (with market support) didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s AAPL triggered short (with market support) didn’t work:

But the later trigger in AAPL at a lower price (with market support) worked enough for a gain:

Rich’s PCLN short (with market support) worked great:

Rich’s LVS (with market support) worked great:

The afternoon AAPL long (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

But the AMGN long (with market support) didn’t:

And the AMZN long (with market support) was a dead even wash:

So that totals up eight triggers with market support, 2 of which literally did nothing either way. The others were split, 3 worked and 3 didn’t.

Stock Picks Recap 11/09/10

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Amazingly, nothing triggered off of the report.

In the Messenger, GS triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s NFLX triggered long (without market support) and worked:

AMGN triggered short (with market support) and worked, although it didn’t go far:

Rich’s MEE triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

FSLR triggered short (with market support) and didn’t do much, but certainly didn’t go against the trade:

Rich’s SLW triggered short (with market support) and worked:

So six trades triggered with market directional support at the time of the trigger, and all six worked.

Stock Picks Recap 11/08/10

Monday, November 8th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Off of the report, we had several trades trigger in the opening five minutes, so they had no market support as it is not yet determined.

WBSN (without market support in the opening 5 minutes) triggered long and worked:

GXDX (without market support) triggered long and didn’t work, but it held in the money for hours to give you time to adjust stop tight or get out:

LULU (without market support in the opening five minutes) triggered long and worked:

DNDN (without market support in the opening five minutes) triggered short and worked:

In the Messenger, AMZN (with market support) triggered short and worked:

Rich’s LVS (with market support) triggered long and worked:

RIMM (without market support) triggered long and eventually worked, technically swept it once first, no market support either way:

Rich’s MEE short (without market support) triggered and worked:

Rich’s AKAM long (with market support) didn’t work:

AMZN long (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

So a lot of trades triggered, and the ones off of the report worked great. However, due to a fairly flat day and some very early triggers, only 4 trades triggered with market support. Three of those worked.

Stock Picks Recap from 11/04/10

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

SYNA opened at the trigger, pulled back to fill the gap, then triggered (with market support) and worked:

NTRS triggered (no market support due to opening five minutes) and worked:

FITB gapped over, no play.

In the Messenger, Rich’s BIIB long (with market support) triggered and worked:

GS short (without market support) didn’t work, but the long (with market support) did:

WFMI triggered long (with market support) worked:

Rich’s AAPL long (with market support) worked for over a point clean:

AMZN triggered short (without market support) and had a rough start but ultimately worked (was against the market anyway):

And Rich’s FCX long (with market support) worked:

That totals six triggers with market support, all of them worked.

Stock Market Index Preview for 11/4/10

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

The SP moved to another new high adding 4 on the day. Price settled right at the risk level from the exhaustion signal. If that level gets taken out, then the April high of 1216.50 is in play.

Naz was higher by 14 decisively closing at a new high. As of today’s close, the pattern is 9 days up completing the 9-13-9 pattern.

Multi sector daily chart:

The BKX was top gun up 2% on the day. A DTL (red) had been added to the chart. This defines the current down trend. A close above the DTL will be the first indication of a reversal. Confirmation would be a settlement above the 200dma (aqua).

The SOX settled right at the static trend line. The pattern is at key resistance an has just completed a 1-9 setup.

BTK was slightly stronger than the broad market but remains range bound. There is nothing new technically because it didn’t close above the prior high of the move.

The OSX was higher on the day but didn’t trade above Tuesday’s high. Today’s candle recorded the 13th bar of the exhaustion run. A price flip or close under the 10ema will validate the sell signal.

The XAU was last laggard and was a source of funds. This is a very crowded long trade and needs to be monitored for short opportunities.

Oil broke above the prior high:

Gold was lower on the day with the 13 exhaustion signal still on deck.

The big action on the day was in the bond market. Following the FOMC announcement, the bonds got hit very hard. In the chart below the TLT which is etf for the long dated US Treasury bonds broke to new lows and had a huge volume spike. Money rotating out of the bonds and into stocks would be a very important development. The money flows into bonds has been huge while there has been no money flowing into stocks.

Forex Picks Recap from 11/03/10

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

A loser and a bigger winner overnight, and then what ended up being a non-reaction to the Fed’s QE2 announcement. See GBPUSD below.

New calls and Chat tonight. Two more trading days until US time change. But who’s counting.

Our calls were in the GBP/USD, one long and one short as usual. Both entries were through our proprietary Break levels (red lines on the chart). The short triggered (point A) and did not work (our stops are 25 pips); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES but the long triggered (point B) and worked great, hitting our first target at R1 at C and then on to R2. Final piece stopped based on our adjustment at D in the morning:

None of the other pairs had a trigger that we called, and there were no Value Area plays.

Stock Picks Recap 11/03/10

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Not much off of the calls in the report given the day’s flatness and malaise ahead of the Fed.

From the report, WFMI triggered long (without market support); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES and didn’t work:

In the Messenger, Rich’s OPEN short (without market support as it was in the opening 5 minutes) worked:

AMZN triggered short twice (both with market support); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES didn’t work the first time (what we call a “sweep”) and worked the second:

Meanwhile, Rich’s AMZN long idea later in the day (with market support) worked great, very clean after Fed:

His MGM triggered long (without market support) right at the Fed and didn’t work:

In total, only three triggers with market support, and two of them worked.

Tradesight Market Preview for 11/03/10

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

The SP made a new high and new high close on the move adding 10 handles. The 13 exhaustion signal is still active until price exceeds the risk level (magenta). Expect a gap tomorrow morning after the ADP number is released premarket.

Naz advance 21 making a new high on the move. The Seeker is 8 days up in a new setup which means that if the pattern prints the 9th candle the chart will have a 9-13-9 in place. The typical setup for a reversal is just the 1-9 setup phase, followed by the 1-13 countdown phase. After the completion of the two phases price will usually reverse. However, sometimes in a very bullish move, just the two phases are not enough to reverse a very strong trend. This is when the first two phases need reinforcement from a third phase. A third, reinforcing phase is about to complete and will do so as soon as the 9th green bar prints and completes the third phase of the run.

Multi sector daily chart:

Just for perspective, take a look at the very long term monthly chart of the Dow. The Dow has major, major resistance at the 11,500 area. At all three points on the chart, A, B and C this area is stiff resistance and is also the real breakout. A new secular bull market will be in the delivery room above 11,500 and born when a new high above 14.192 is recorded.

The OSX was top gun on the day, plowing new high ground. The next level that will come into play is the 2009 high just overhead.

Nothing much to take away from the action in the BTK, the pattern is still range bound.

The Dow Jones transport index is right at the prior high. The Dow Theory crowd will be monitoring this closely.

The SOX posted a small gain on the day. Set an alarm for a break over the Q2 highs 377.50 (arrows). Since price is coming into a static trend line and is also 8 days up, this is a very likely area for some corrective activity.

The XAU is now 10 days up in the exhaustion countdown.


The BKX was last laggard and remains a source of funds. Keep in mind that when the dollar sees some strength again they will come for the bank stocks.

Oil closed near the high of the recent range and also recorded a new high close for the move.


Gold continues to grind in the area of the retest of the prior high. The 13 exhaustion signal remains on deck.

Tradesight Stock Picks Recap for 11/02/10

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

The market was so flat today that just about everything could be viewed equally as having or not having market support since nothing happened at all.

ASIA triggered (with market support); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES worked great:

TTWO triggered (with market support); INSERT INTO `wp_posts` (`ID`, `post_author`, `post_date`, `post_date_gmt`, `post_content`, `post_title`, `post_category`, `post_excerpt`, `post_status`, `comment_status`, `ping_status`, `post_password`, `post_name`, `to_ping`, `pinged`, `post_modified`, `post_modified_gmt`, `post_content_filtered`, `post_parent`, `guid`, `menu_order`, `post_type`, `post_mime_type`, `comment_count`) VALUES was working, no problems, but ran out of time:

In the Messenger, Rich’s NFLX (no market support due to triggering in opening 5 minutes) worked nice:

COST triggered short (with market support) and didn’t work:

Rich’s FTNT triggered short (with market support) and worked:

His WYNN long triggered (with market support) and worked, although late in the day:

So the results once again, 5 trades triggered with market support, 4 worked.

Tradesight Stock Picks Review from 10/29/10

Sunday, October 31st, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

Hard to measure market direction on a day that was so flat and inside a 5 point range on the ES, but we will use the tool and go from there.

NVLS triggered long (with market support) and worked:

XRAY triggered short (without market support) and worked enough for a partial:

In the Messenger, Rich’s FSLR (with market support) triggered long and worked for over a point and a half, which is more than enough for a partial:

GOOG short (without market support) worked:

GS short (without market support) triggered late in the day and worked:

Rich’s V long (with market support) worked:

In total, three trades triggered with market support and all three worked despite the slow session.

Tradesight Small Cap Picks Review for Fourth Week of October

Friday, October 29th, 2010

We had three trades trigger off of the Small Cap report for the second half of the week. Two worked great.

VLNC didn’t work:

ANAD worked terrific, nice move for a $6 stock:

TQNT worked great too, clean move:

There are three calls for the new report to start November.

Tradesight Stock Picks Review for 10/27/10

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

VRTX triggered (without market support) but ended up working fine once the market did turn up in the afternoon:

ASIA triggered long (with market support) and worked for more than an easy partial:

PRWD triggered (without market support) and didn’t work:

CAVM triggered (without market support since it was in the first 5 minutes of play) and worked, including a huge move in the afternoon:

ADTN triggered short (without market support) and worked, especially once the market turned to the downside a little later:

In the Messenger, AMGN triggered (with market support) and didn’t work (we need $0.20 for a partial, didn’t quite get there):

COST triggered short (with market support) and worked:

AMZN triggered short (with market support) and worked:

Rich’s EQIX triggered short (with market support) and worked for $0.50, an easy partial:

His NFLX triggered short (with market support) and worked great:

His FCX triggered short (with market support) and worked:

A beautiful pattern in EBAY waited until the last 6 minutes to trigger, so we won’t count it:

No other calls triggered. That totals seven trades that triggered with market support (those are typically the ones we suggest taking) and six worked at least for a partial, most of them much better.

Tradesight Stock Picks Review from 10/26/10

Tuesday, October 26th, 2010

Off the report, ROST triggered (with market support) and went enough for a partial but that was it:

GPRE (with market support) did a little better and stayed in the money all day:

AVGO (with market support) also worked fine:

TIVO (with market support) didn’t work:

GSIC (with market support) worked:

XRAY (with market support) didn’t work:

MBFI (without market support) didn’t work:

In the Messenger, COST (with market support) worked:

FSLR (with market support) didn’t work:

AIG (with market support) triggered very late, worked, but didn’t have time to do much:

AMZN (with market support) worked enough for a partial:

As usual, we sum it up comparing the win/loss ratio on the trades that triggered WITH market support. Ten trades triggered with market support. Seven of them worked, three did not. Only a couple of the trades went far in a dull day in the market after the first hour.

Tradesight Stock Market Preview for 10/26/10

Monday, October 25th, 2010

The SP gained 2 points on the day. Some possible technical damage was done because the day’s candle settled under the opening price. This is always a cause for concern at range high which is the current condition. The 13 exhaustion signal is still active since the risk level (magenta line) remains unchallenged.

Naz advanced 4 handles but like the SP, it has the same potentially bearish condition. Price was higher on the day but settled below the open. This price pattern is sometimes known as a camouflage sell signal.

Multi sector daily chart, note the relative weakness of the banks:

The XAU was top gun, up 3 on the day. Since the price channel has suffered a downside beak, the chart is short-term bearish until new highs are recorded. The May highs would be a reasonable retracement objective.

The SOX was the standout performer for the Naz side. Price broke above the recent highs and held most of the gains on the day. The 2009 high is the next price objective.

The OSX remains trapped the recent price range. There is nothing new technically but the lack of performance in light of Monday’s weakness in the $US is of concern.

The BKX continues to feel the wrath of the weak dollar. This group continues to be a source of funds. Index member and financial leader BAC recorded an new 52 week low.

Oil remains boxed up:

Gold has retreated back into the price channel but has yet to settle below it. Until the price channel is broken, the recent price action is corrective and not a reversal.

Tradesight Stock Trigger Recap for 10/25/10

Monday, October 25th, 2010

It was one of those sessions where everything that triggered worked, even without market support.

Off the report, our Top Pick ADSK (with market support) worked great:

ATHR gapped over the trigger, no play.

In the Messenger, RIMM (with market support) worked great:

AMZN (without market support) short worked great for the gap fill:

There were several other calls made, but none of them triggered in what ended up being a flat afternoon. So that’s 2 for 2 nice winners that triggered WITH market support.

Tradesight Futures Calls Update

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Our futures calls service continued to deliver this week with another 3 out of 3 winners Thursday morning, bringing the total for the week to 8 winners out of 10 triggers. I’d like to focus on one of today’s calls from an educational perspective, which was an NQ using a key Value Area level in a unique way.

Typically, in the futures and Forex markets, we use Value Areas for entry the first time of the day that the Value Area is breached. However, that doesn’t mean that the levels can’t be useful later in the session, particularly if the number is addressed by the market. Let’s go through four charts that outline today’s NQ call in 1-minute bars. In the early action, the NQ opened above the light blue (cyan) Value Area High line and breached into the Value Area at A:

NQ

This was not a trade call that we made. However, about 15 minutes later, the market again address the Value Area High level almost exactly and bounced off of it:

NQ

This means that the market has once again identified this key Level, which we had coming into the session, as support or resistance (in this case, support). From there, we made a call that is good for the rest of the day, which was to sell short the NQ at 2092.50 with a stop over 2095.50 and a first target to cover half at 2088.50.

More than an hour later, the NQ came back and again EXACTLY addressed the Value Area High level at point C on this chart:

NQ sets VAH again

These are the types of trades that you don’t want to miss if they trigger, and here’s how it went once it did:

NQ Trigger

The move from A (trigger) to B (around S1) was more than enough to hit our first target and adjust our stop on the second half of the trade. Note that the low was also called precisely by the 13 count off of our Tradesight Seeker tool.

As usual, you can get a two week trial of the calls. Come back this weekend for the launch of our brand new website, Tradesight 4.0!

ES Setup and Recap from 10/20/2010

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

Mark had a terrific call today in the ES from our Futures Calls Service, which has been on a nice roll this week, winning 5 out of 7 triggers.

The early market action today played with several of our key Levels, and Mark waited for the opening half hour range to complete and establish. He then noted that the low of the session was essentially the Pivot and the high was a point that left plenty of room to the R1. Our first target is always 6 ticks. The black lines on this chart denote the high and low of the opening range that he used for long and short entry calls:

ES

Note that one of the keys is that you have enough room after either entry before another expected support and resistance point. We’ll focus here on the long side, as that is the trade that triggered.

The market headed up and the ES exactly addressed this level again, which is what we call “setting” the level:

ES

That improves the call. We’re risking 6 ticks plus a 1 tick spread here on the entry, and we have more than 6 ticks until the R1 level if it triggers, which it does. It quickly runs to R1, taking us out of half of the trade and making for a no-lose scenario as we move the stop under the entry:

ES

From there, you continue to raise stops until you get stopped out of the trade as it plays out during the day:

ES

As the market enters the better half of the year from a trading perspective (October through April) and as we prepare to launch the new Tradesight 4.0 website, expect a lot more recaps like this.

Tradesight Market Preview for 10/20/2010

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

BANG! The correction begins. The SP broke hard, losing 14 on the day. In so doing, the 13 exhaustion signal has qualified. Price settled under the 10ema and also recorded a price flip. The price flip is noted on the chart because today’s close was below the close 4 days ago.

Naz lost 27 but did not record a price flip or settle under the 10ema. Note on the chart that the low of the day was right at the April high. This will be a very key short term area. A settlement under this area puts 2k in play.

Multi sector daily chart:

The BKX was one of the strongest sectors on the day. This is of only small comfort because how badly the index has lagged the broad market over the last couple of weeks.

The SOX closed under the 200dma and on the south side of the recent trading range. If price breaks under the DTL (blue) the 2010 low will be in play.

The BTK collapsed right back into the trading range. This means the recent breakout is still not qualified.

The OSX, in the crosshairs of rising interest rates in China, got hit very hard. The 200 level is near term support.

The XAU finally got what it had coming. A full fledged profit protecting whipping. This is a meaningful break. The May high and 50dma around 190 will be a key area and potential first trade-to-target.

Gold got crushed, down $35 on the day. If price crosses and loses the lower channel line, then the June high breakout is in play.

Tradesight Stock Calls Summary from 10/19/2010

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

We’re adding a new feature to this section of the report daily. With each stock’s recap, we will include a (with market support) or (without market support) tag, designating whether the trade triggered with or without market directional support at the time. Anything in the first five minutes will be considered WITHOUT market support because market direction cannot be determined that early.

KLAC (with market support) triggered long, didn’t quite go enough for a partial:

AMGN (with market support) triggered long and did:

FFIV (with market support) short worked great:

In the Messenger, Rich’s early SNDK (without market support) call worked for over $0.50:

His IBM (without market support) didn’t work:

My AMZN (with market support) long call worked nice:

Rich’s BRCM (with market support briefly) swept:

His RGLD (with market support) worked:

His NEM (with market support) didn’t work:

Our AAPL call worked long (with market support) and then my AAPL short (with market support) worked after lunch:

So out of the nine trades that triggered with market support, 5 worked big, 2 worked enough for a partial to become no loss, and 3 were small losses.

Market Outlook for October 19, 2010

Monday, October 18th, 2010

The SP made a new high close on the move, adding 3 points to the intermediate rally. The 13 exhaustion remains active but has yet to qualify itself. To qualify the signal, price needs to either close below the 10ema or register a “price flip” by closing below the close 4 bars ago.

Naz was weaker than the broad market, losing a small fraction on the day. Price has settled above the risk level (magenta line) so if Monday’s high is exceeded by on tick the sell signal will have failed.

Multi sector daily chart:

The weekly cumulative NYSE A/D line remains very positive. This indicator usually leads price by weeks or months.

The 10-day Trin remains much closer to the overbought area than the oversold threshold.

The BKX was the top performing sector closing up 3%. The chart is still technically negative until price exceeds the recent range (approximately the 200dma).

The BTK has finally broken out of the trading range. Since a great deal of time was spent in the consolidation, there could be multiple days’ worth of price advance.

The OSX did little and is currently having trouble with the 210 level.

The XAU has declined to the bottom of the recent trading channel. If price begins to rollover and follow through then the recent static trend line will be in play. Note that the MACD looks vulnerable.

The SOX was the weakest major sector. Price continues to badly lag the SPX and NDX. Price broke out above the DTL but has been very reluctant to get upside momentum.

Oil had a strong day, especially considering the early strength in the US dollar.

Gold remains positive but very extended. A sharp correction could be very close at hand.

Tradesight Stock Triggers from October 18, 2010

Monday, October 18th, 2010

No triggers off of the report, but a great session overall in the Messenger. Note that market direction matters…and it was UP all day (see below).

Rich’s BIDU out of the gate worked great:

RIMM short (against market direction) didn’t do much:

FSLR long worked great:

Rich’s FFIV short was a huge winner and the one short that worked despite the market (which is why we try them all and keep tight stops):

GS long worked great:

EBAY short (against market direction) didn’t work:

Rich’s FAS worked:

Rich’s CRM short (against market direction) didn’t work:

Forex Special Weekend Report Topic Log

Sunday, December 26th, 2004

10/10/2010 – The Final Tradesight Forex Educational Report and the Launch of Tradesight 4.0
10/03/2010 – September Forex Results
09/26/2010 – Daily Chart Breakouts
09/19/2010 – Competing Timeframes
09/12/2010 – CFTC 50:1 Ruling and It’s Implications
09/05/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
08/29/2010 – iPads and More
08/22/2010 – Trade Walkthrough Series Part 2
08/15/2010 – Trade Walkthrough Series Part 1
08/08/2010 – Dull Market Trading Example
08/01/2010 – New FX Levels Tool, ADR Historic Tracking, and R3 and S3
07/25/2010 – A Discussion of Trade Robots
07/18/2010 – No Report, Weekend Educational Event in San Antonio
07/11/2010 – The Importance (Again) of Ranges
07/04/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/27/2010 – FOREX Volume – Summer is Here
06/20/2010 – Intro to Futures
06/13/2010 – Using Different Tools in Different Ways
06/06/2010 – Current State of the Dollar Index
05/30/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
05/23/2010 – Money Supply Discussion (Part 2 of 2)
05/16/2010 – Unemployment Discussion (Part 1 of 2)
05/09/2010 – Trading is About Probabilities
05/02/2010 – Additional Seeker/Comber Discussion
04/25/2010 – Tradesight Tools New Sound Alerts
04/18/2010 – Forex Ramblings
04/11/2010 – Guaranteed Stops in Forex
04/04/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
03/28/2010 – Post-Healthcare and the Market
03/21/2010 – No Report (Personal Vacation)
03/14/2010 – Average Daily Range Discussion
03/07/2010 – Two Key Examples with the Seeker Tool
02/28/2010 – Comparing Three Trading Styles
02/21/2010 – Short Term Analysis of the US Dollar Based on Higher Rates (post-Fed raising Discount Rate)
02/14/2010 – No report for Holiday weekend
02/07/2010 – Current State of the US Dollar
01/31/2010 – Thoughts on the New CFTC 10:1 Proposal
01/24/2010 – Technology Update (Trading Computers)
01/17/2010 – No report for Holiday weeked
01/10/2010 – Some Uses of the Seeker Tool
01/03/2010 – 2009 End of Year Recap
12/27/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
12/20/2009 – Overview of a Profitable Trading System
12/13/2009 – Back Side of the Wedge
12/06/2009 – Why Trading Less is More
11/29/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
11/22/2009 – Current State of the US Dollar and Forex Pairs
11/15/2009 – Find the Trade, Not the Pair
11/08/2009 – Not Reacting to Sunday Gaps
11/01/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
10/25/2009 – Tradesight Comber Review
10/18/2009 – Current State of the US Dollar
10/11/2009 – Putting in Early Orders
10/04/2009 – Introduction to Tradesight Seeker and Comber Tools for FX
09/27/2009 – Rich’s Intro to Tradesight Comber Tool
09/20/2009 – Trade Entry Parameters
09/13/2009 – Seeker Counts and the Charts Going Forward
09/06/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
08/30/2009 – Current US Dollar Index Setup
08/23/2009 – Summer Term Review 5: Stop Adjusting
08/16/2009 – Summer Term Review 4: Minimum Risk with Spreads
08/09/2009 – Summer Term Review 3: Staggering
08/02/2009 – Summer Term Review 2: Fading
07/26/2009 – Summer Term Review 1: Setting the Level
07/19/2009 – Current US Dollar Index Setup
07/12/2009 – Intro to Timeframes and the Tradesight Seeker Tool in FX
07/05/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/28/2009 – Mid-Year All-Market Update
06/21/2009 – An Update on Forex Broker Execution
06/14/2009 – First Glimpse of the Tradesight Gann Tool
06/07/2009 – Classic 9-Bar Move Against an ADR
05/31/2009 – Fading Key Levels in the Summer
05/24/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
05/17/2009 – Three Key Terms and What They Mean
05/10/2009 – Other Reasons to Watch the Value Area
05/03/2009 – The Current State of the Market
04/26/2009 – Advanced Look at Tradesight Seeker Tool
04/19/2009 – The Psychology of Trading and Stops
04/12/2009 – No Report For Holiday Weekend
04/05/2009 – Tradesight FOREX Average Daily Range Tool
03/29/2009 – Technology Report
03/22/2009 – A Week of Risk/Reward Recaps
03/15/2009 – First Target Risk/Rewards
03/08/2009 – The Impact of Daylight Savings Time
02/29/2009 – The Pivot
02/22/2009 – EUR/USD Session Walk-Through
02/15/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
02/08/2009 – Federal Stimulus Bill
02/01/2009 – Website Moved Over Weekend – No Report
01/25/2009 – Tradesight Archives vs 6-Hour Course
01/18/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
01/11/2009 – The Importance of Spreads
01/04/2009 – 2008 Year in Review
12/28/2008 – No Report for Christmas Holiday
12/21/2008 – End of Year Trading Tools Advice
12/14/2008 – 9-bar Counts on 15-minute US Dollar Index
12/07/2008 – The Current State of the Dollar Index and the Market
11/30/2008 – No Report for Thanksgiving
11/23/2008 – The Importance of the US Dollar Index
11/16/2008 – Gaps in Forex
11/09/2008 – Signs of Life
11/02/2008 – Election 2008 Report
10/26/2008 – A Reminder of What We Do
10/19/2008 – Spreads in the Bank Crisis
10/12/2008 – No Report for Veteran’s Day
10/05/2008 – Follow Up On “Going Full Size”
09/28/2008 – When To Increase Size
09/21/2008 – The Federal Bailout Package
09/14/2008 – Margin Leverage in Forex
09/07/2008 – Sitting Out
08/31/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
08/24/2008 – Current State of the US Dollar
08/17/2008 – Current Comparison of ECN versus Deal Desk Platforms
08/10/2008 – Why Don’t We Call More Trades
08/03/2008 – The Big Three Economic Numbers Each Month
07/27/2008 – More room on Cross Pairs
07/20/2008 – Technology Leaps, Non-Market-Related
07/13/2008 – Value Area Follow-Up
07/06/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/29/2008 – Setting Expectations and Adjusting Size
06/22/2008 – Adapting to Slow Markets
06/15/2008 – End of Week Bank Moves
06/08/2008 – Taking a Retest of a Trigger
06/01/2008 – Using Common Sense in Combining Strategies
05/25/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
05/18/2008 – Analysis of US Dollar Index and the Ten Pairs
05/11/2008 – Dull Markets
05/04/2008 – Trade Size
04/27/2008 – Tradesight Messenger 2.0 Launch
04/20/2008 – Consolidation Patterns
04/13/2008 – Why I Love This
04/06/2008 – Tri-Star Levels
03/30/2008 – Status Update on US Dollar
03/23/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
03/16/2008 – Fading Key Levels Early
03/09/2008 – Demark Counts on the 15-minute
03/02/2008 – End of Week Bank Moves
02/24/2008 – Appropriate Triggers Based on Time Zones
02/17/2008 – President’s Day Weekend (no report)
02/10/2008 – Trailing Stops Redux
02/03/2008 – Dual- and Tri-Star Levels
01/27/2008 – Current State of the Forex Markets
01/20/2008 – Martin Luther King Weekend (no report)
01/13/2008 – Daily Expectations
01/06/2008 – Why Average Daily Range Matters
12/30/2007 – 2007 End of Year Recap
12/23/2007 – Christmas Weekend (no report)
12/16/2007 – When To Trade Full Size
12/09/2007 – Current State of the US Dollar Index
12/02/2007 – Personal Comments About Working With EFX
11/25/2007 – Thanksgiving Holiday (no report)
11/18/2007 – Omega Part 4 -
11/11/2007 – My Strategy
11/04/2007 – Omega Part 3 – The New EFX Website
10/28/2007 – Omega Part 2 – The Quote Board and One-Click Trade Management
10/21/2007 – The NFA
10/14/2007 – Omega Part 1
10/07/2007 – TDFX, MBTF, and EFX
09/30/2007 – Key Point in the US Dollar Index
09/23/2007 – Trailing Stops
09/16/2007 – Waiting for a Candle to Close
09/09/2007 – Current Position of the US Dollar Index
09/02/2007 – Labor Day (no report)
08/26/2007 – Member Firm Net Capitalizations
08/19/2007 – Tradesight’s General Mentality on Forex Trading
08/12/2007 – R2 and S2
08/05/2007 – Expectations of August
07/29/2007 – Current State of the US Dollar Index
07/22/2007 – Piecing Into Trades
07/15/2007 – Overtrading
07/08/2007 – Fourth of July Holiday
07/01/2007 – Differences between ECN and non-ECN charting
06/24/2007 – Tradesight History
06/17/2007 – When to Enter Your Trades
06/10/2007 – Poll Question about Which Pairs to Add to Levels Service
06/03/2007 – Tradesight Levels Policy with FX Ticker Trading Lab and Intro
05/27/2007 – Memorial Day Weekend
05/20/2007 – Intro to Tradesight – Redux
05/13/2007 – Current State of the Pairs
05/06/2007 – The Big 3 Economic Numbers – CPI, Trade Balance, Non-Farm Payrolls
04/29/2007 – Implications of Gross Domestic Product
04/22/2007 – Vacation
04/15/2007 – GBP/JPY
04/08/2007 – Good Friday/Easter Holiday – No Report
04/01/2007 – Demark US Dollar Index update
03/25/2007 – FX Ticker Introduction
03/18/2007 – The Other Trouble With Averaging
03/11/2007 – FX Ticker Market Page
03/04/2007 – Current Look at the US Dollar Index
02/25/2007 – Deal Desk versus Non-Deal Desk Charting
02/18/2007 – President’s Day Holiday (No topic)
02/11/2007 – Current Status of Advanced Orders on EFX
02/04/2007 – Why “Errors” Seem to Never Work in Your Favor in Forex
01/28/2007 – Ranges in the Second Half of 2006
01/21/2007 – Playing Between the Breaks on the AUDUSD
01/14/2007 – Why We Don’t List Trades for US Holidays
01/07/2007 – Tradesight changes related to FX Ticker launch
12/31/2006 – End of Year Summary of All Markets
12/24/2006 – Christmas Holiday
12/17/2006 – Chart Analysis #4
12/10/2006 – Chart Analysis #3
12/03/2006 – Chart Analysis #2
11/26/2006 – Thanksgiving Holiday
11/19/2006 – Chart Analysis #1
11/12/2006 – Current State of the Forex Market
11/05/2006 – Election 2006

10/29/2006 – Why You Should Never Average Down (especially in Forex)
10/22/2006 – Demark Studies and TDFX quotes
10/15/2006 – US Dollar Breakout and Current View of the Forex Pairs
10/08/2006 – Pivot Plays Continued
10/01/2006 – New Trade Type: Pivot Plays
09/24/2006 – What is a pip?
09/17/2006 – Subscriber Q&A
09/10/2006 – Measuring the Odds
09/03/2006 – Labor Day Weekend Break
08/27/2006 – Stop, Limit, and Stop-Limit Orders
08/20/2006 – The Spreads of EURUSD vs. USDCHF
08/13/2006 – Where To Start Entries Beyond the Trigger
08/06/2006 – Forex Pro Release and Update
07/30/2006 – Current Outlook on the Forex Market
07/23/2006 – Forex Pro Update and ECN Discussion
07/16/2006 – Oil and the Forex Pairs
07/09/2006 – Vacation
07/02/2006 – Three Types of Trailing Stops: Wide, Medium, and Tight
06/25/2006 – Trend Plays
06/18/2006 – Things to do if you are awake 24 hours a day trading forex
06/11/2006 – Trading one system for a year
06/04/2006 – Deal Desk Trading: A-list versus B-list clients
05/28/2006 – What the Tradesight/EFX Front End will have later
05/21/2006 – First look at Tradesight/EFX Front End features
05/14/2006 – Value Area Refresher and FXTicker.com
05/05/2006 – Why Forex is best traded with automation
04/30/2006 – Trading All Markets
04/23/2006 – New EFX Function: Measuring stops by bid or ask?
04/16/2006 – Two conflicting views on trailing stops
04/09/2006 – Current Outlook on the FOREX Pairs
04/02/2006 – The Tradesight Front End Preview
03/26/2006 – Trading Rangebound Markets
03/19/2006 – Trading “News Events”
03/12/2006 – Update on Trailing Stops – Part 2
03/05/2006 – Update on Trailing Stops – Part 1
02/26/2006 – Current State of the FOREX Pairs
02/19/2006 – Why Risking 50 to Make 10 is Wrong
02/12/2006 – Key Times of Week
02/05/2006 – Extra trading calls and hours in the Trading Room
01/29/2006 – FOREX Terms and Concepts That MUST Be Understood (Part 3 of 3)
01/22/2006 – FOREX Terms and Concepts That MUST Be Understood (Part 2 of 3)
01/15/2006 – FOREX Terms and Concepts That MUST Be Understood (Part 1 of 3)
01/08/2006 – Goals of the Tradesight FOREX Service
01/01/2006 – 2005 Year in Review link

All Reports Prior to January 1, 2006, can be found by clicking on the Forex link under Report Archive (Pre-2006) in the Navigation Menu on the left of your Tradesight screen and then going back to these dates:

12/25/2005 – Christmas Holiday, no report
12/18/2005 – Entering a trade late
12/11/2005 – EFX adds Stop Limit + Trailing Stop Orders
12/04/2005 – How much money you are using on a trade
11/27/2005 – Using tight trailing stops for extra pieces of the trade
11/20/2005 – Trade trigger proximity
11/13/2005 – Analyzing Ranges and Their Importance
11/06/2005 – The Importance of the Pivot
10/30/2005 – Complete discussion of Value Areas
10/23/2005 – Current state of the FOREX markets
10/16/2005 – Changing orders on EFX
10/09/2005 – Dual entry level trades
10/02/2005 – Analysis of one-year track record
09/25/2005 – Trading on Sundays
09/18/2005 – Trailing Stops
09/11/2005 – Why A 2-Rated Trade Can Work Better Than A 5-Rated Trade
09/04/2005 – Brief Topic: The Coming Weeks
08/28/2005 – August
08/21/2005 – Trade Entry Shorthand
08/14/2005 – Value Areas Continued, including Time of Day
08/07/2005 – My Pet Peeves…Hedging and Fixed Spreads
07/31/2005 – Intro to Value Areas in FOREX
07/24/2005 – Subscriber Q&A 20 Questions
07/17/2005 – Why the Pairs are Largely the Same Each Night Based on USD
07/10/2005 – Most Important Feature of the New Platform
07/03/2005 – Three Pieces of a Trade
06/26/2005 – Anticipating Spreads at Time of Entry for Order Placement
06/19/2005 – USD strength analysis
06/12/2005 – Three EFX Announcements
06/05/2005 – Scalping and USDCAD/AUDUSD trades
05/29/2005 – Holidays and Spacing of Orders Past a Level
05/22/2005 – How to Find 4- and 5-rated trade calls and what are Break levels
05/15/2005 – EFX New Platform Order Entry
05/08/2005 – Levels as Areas and Order Spreading
05/01/2005 – Further discussion of trade size
04/24/2005 – Order diversity/staggering entries and exits
04/17/2005 – Trade Call Format and the Reasons For It
04/10/2005 – Dual Level Areas
04/03/2005 – Brief discussion of cancelling orders ahead of certain economic news
03/27/2005 – Why no-range days our the worst for our style of trading
03/20/2005 – Time and Sales in FOREX
03/13/2005 – General comments on stops on 4- and 5-rated plays
03/06/2005 – Shorting against resistance
02/27/2005 – New platform versus old systems
02/20/2005 – Trade size versus trade rating
02/13/2005 – A discussion of range expansion
02/06/2005 – Percentage of account allocation
01/30/2005 – A few comments on narrow ranges
01/23/2005 – Update on EFX platform (LOL)
01/09/2005 – Putting in trades on all of the pairs
01/02/2005 – Intent to swing versus “willingness” to swing
12/12/2004 – Brief discussion of chart pattern plays
12/05/2004 – Raising size for the 4- and 5-rated plays
11/28/2004 – Bank Interventions
09/12/2004 – Specific comments about use of the service
07/11/2004 – 07/22/2004 – First Ten Reports, Overview

Stock Special Weekend Report Topic Log

Sunday, December 26th, 2004

10/09/2010 – The Final Tradesight Special Weekend Stock Report and the Launch of Tradesight 4.0
10/02/2010 – End of Quarter Window-Dressing
09/25/2010 – Stops and Partials
09/18/2010 – The Current State of the Market
09/11/2010 – Rich’s Discussion of 9/11
09/04/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
08/28/2010 – Ipads and More
08/21/2010 – How the Lightest Volume of the Week Translated into No Action
08/14/2010 – Checking Volume Measurements
08/07/2010 – A Value Area of the Last Week on the Markets
07/31/2010 – Updated Discussion of Usefulness of Futures and Data We Track
07/24/2010 – The Current State of the Market
07/17/2010 – Rich’s Discussion of the Flash Crash
07/10/2010 – Market Support Even on Gap and Go Days
07/03/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/26/2010 – The Summer Volume Game Has Shifted
06/19/2010 – Intro to Futures
06/12/2010 – The Current State of the Market
06/05/2010 – Why Market Direction Matters (A Reminder)
05/29/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
05/22/2010 – Money Supply (Part 2 of 2)
05/15/2010 – Unemployment Discussion (Part 1 of 2)
05/08/2010 – The VIX and the Strange Crash
05/01/2010 – GDP and Corporate Earnings: Post Earnings Season Analysis
04/25/2010 – Tradesight Tools New Sound Alerts
04/17/2010 – Recognizing Dullness
04/10/2010 – The Current State of the Market
04/03/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
03/27/2010 – Post-Healthcare and the Market
03/20/2010 – Rich’s Trading with Clean Charts and a 10-period Exponential Moving Average
03/13/2010 – How We Count Winners and Losers in the Review Section of the Reports
03/06/2010 – Tradesight Comber in Action on a 1-Minute Chart for Trade Management
02/27/2010 – Comparing Three Trading Styles
02/20/2010 – Rich’s Dow 10k and The Bond Market
02/13/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
02/06/2010 – Coming Back From Lunch – The Last Two Hours
01/30/2010 – The Current State of the Market
01/23/2010 – Technology Update (Trading Computers)
01/16/2010 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
01/09/2010 – How to Mentally Enter Your Trading Day and Make Adjustments
01/02/2010 – 2009 End of Year Report
12/26/2009 – No report for Holiday weekend
12/19/2009 – A Profitable Trading System
12/12/2009 – Outlook on Gold (The Bubble)
12/05/2009 – Rich’s Using the VIX and Advance/Decline Figures for Intraday Trading
11/28/2009 – No report for Holiday weekend
11/21/2009 – The Current State of the Market
11/14/2009 – End of Year Tax Run-ups
11/07/2009 – How to Handle Gaps on the Main Trade Calls
10/31/2009 – No report for Holiday weekend
10/24/2009 – Indicator Overdose
10/17/2009 – Trade Exit Rules
10/10/2009 – The Current State of the Market
10/03/2009 – Introducing the Tradesight Seeker and Comber
09/26/2009 – Rich’s Tradesight Comber Opening Discussion
09/19/2009 – Which Way Did They Buy Options Protection?
09/12/2009 – The Jobless Recovery
09/05/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
08/29/2009 – The Current State of the Market
08/22/2009 – The MOB (A Terrific Indicator)
08/15/2009 – Rich’s Tradesight Seeker Opening Discussion
08/08/2009 – The Health Insurance Conversation and What It Means to the Market and the Economy
08/01/2009 – Some New Things at Tradesight
07/25/2009 – Market Guidance versus Stock Picking
07/18/2009 – The Current State of the Market
07/11/2009 – Review of Eight Days of Core Earnings
07/04/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/27/2009 – Mid-Year All-Market Update
06/20/2009 – Outliers: Manager versus Stock Picker
06/13/2009 – Current Time of Day Beat of the Market
06/06/2009 – Rich’s Kondratieff Waves Report
05/30/2009 – New Page Layout for e-Signal
05/23/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
05/16/2009 – Gap Fills
05/09/2009 – Workshop Session
05/02/2009 – The Current State of the Market
04/25/2009 – Futures Average Daily Range Tool
04/18/2009 – Rich’s Discussion of Gap Fill Thresholds
04/11/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
04/04/2009 – Tradesight’s New E-Signal Tools
03/28/2009 – Technology Update
03/21/2009 – The Current State of the Market
03/14/2009 – Stock Settlement Versus Futures Settlement
03/07/2009 – Prioritizing Trade in This Market
02/28/2009 – The Three Parts of a Day
02/21/2009 – Current State of the Market
02/14/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
02/07/2009 – Stimulus versus Spending: The Employment Factor
01/31/2009 – Rich’s Discussion of Rotational Rallies
01/24/2009 – What You Want an Up Market to Look Like
01/17/2009 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
01/10/2009 – 2009 Sector Update
01/03/2009 – 2008 Year in Review
12/27/2008 – No Report for Christmas Holiday
12/20/2008 – Rich’s 2008 Year in Review
12/13/2008 – The Current State of the Market
12/06/2008 – Ranking Chart Patterns
11/29/2008 – No Report for Thanksgiving Holiday
11/22/2008 – Tops and Bottoms
11/15/2008 – The Triple Bottom
11/08/2008 – Discussion of Two Trades: AAPL and BIIB
11/01/2008 – Election 2008 Report
10/25/2008 – The Early Entry
10/18/2008 – Market Bottoms
10/11/2008 – Rich’s Intermarket Analysis
10/04/2008 – The Current State of the Market
09/27/2008 – A Reminder of What We Do
09/20/2008 – The Federal Bailout
09/13/2008 – Margin Calls
09/06/2008 – Setting and Retaking a Trigger
08/30/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
08/23/2008 – Preview of the Last Four Months of 2008
08/16/2008 – The Current State of the Markets
08/09/2008 – Rich Derrick’s “Tops Are Different Than Bottoms”
08/02/2008 – Firefox 3.0, Web 2.0
07/26/2008 – Chris’ Comments on Rich Derrick
07/19/2008 – Trading Technology
07/12/2008 – Afternoon Play and July Earnings
07/05/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/28/2008 – What “Return to the Mean” Means
06/21/2008 – The Current State of the Markets
06/14/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
06/07/2008 – More Market Directional Analysis
05/31/2008 – Update on Market Directional Tool
05/24/2008 – Trade Management: AMZN
05/17/2008 – Rich’s Calculating Measured Move Targets
05/10/2008 – A Perfect Chart Study: FFIV
05/03/2008 – Current State of the Markets
04/26/2008 – Tradesight Messenger 2.0 Release
04/19/2008 – Discussion on Earnings Releases
04/12/2008 – The Important of Volume
04/05/2008 – Q2 and Tax Season
03/29/2008 – Value Areas
03/22/2008 – No Report for Holiday Weekend
03/15/2008 – Update on the Market Directional Tool
03/08/2008 – Two Key Fibs in One Conversation
03/01/2008 – Rich’s Introduction to His New Market Reports
02/23/2008 – What Counts in the Trade Summaries
02/16/2008 – President’s Day Weekend (no report)
02/09/2008 – A Refresher on Market Direction
02/02/2008 – Tradesight 4.0 – New Changes to the Site and Reports
01/26/2008 – Current State of the Markets
01/19/2008 – Martin Luther King Weekend (no report)
01/12/2008 – Trade Execution
01/05/2008 – The First Three Days of a Year
12/29/2007 – 2007 End of Year Recap
12/22/2007 – Christmas Weekend (no report)
12/15/2007 – End of Year “Run-Up” Analysis
12/08/2007 – Current State of the Markets
12/01/2007 – Calling It From the Tape
11/24/2007 – Thanksgiving Weekend (no report)
11/17/2007 – Rich’s Pressure Signal Differential Indicator
11/10/2007 – Interest Rates, Oil, and the Fed’s Tough Spot
11/03/2007 – Current State of the Markets
10/27/2007 – The Factors in Buying Strength and Shorting Weakness
10/20/2007 – Volume and Holding Over During Earnings
10/13/2007 – Stops: The Basics
10/06/2007 – Construction
09/29/2007 – Fourth Quarter Discussion and Current State of the Markets
09/22/2007 – Triple Versus Single Expiration
09/15/2007 – Rich’s Discussion on The Repeal of the Uptick Rule
09/08/2007 – Mentality of New Traders
09/01/2007 – Labor Day (no report)
08/25/2007 – Current State of the Market: Into September and October
08/18/2007 – The VIX and the Market’s Future
08/11/2007 – The Global Credit Crunch
08/04/2007 – 3-Day Margin Calls
07/28/2007 – Current State of the Markets
07/21/2007 – NDX Floating Island
07/14/2007 – Tradesight Services Overview
07/07/2007 – Fourth of July Holiday
06/30/2007 – Rich’s Mid-Year Review: Things to Do More and Less Of
06/23/2007 – A Few Things You Might Not Know About Tradesight
06/16/2007 – Clean Charts to Skip
06/09/2007 – Volume Without Movement
06/02/2007 – Summer Doldrums
05/26/2007 – Memorial Day Weekend
05/19/2007 – Current State of the Markets
05/12/2007 – A Good Example of Automated Volume
05/05/2007 – NYSE vs. NASDAQ
04/28/2007 – Rich’s How to Stay in a Position
04/21/2007 – Risking Your PnL
04/14/2007 – Technology Update
04/07/2007 – Easter Weekend (No Topic)
03/31/2007 – The End of a Quarter
03/24/2007 – Factors in Determining What is Bold in the List
03/17/2007 – Current Look at the Market Heading into Tax Day (One Month Out)
03/10/2007 – Is Shorting More Risky (A Personal Story)
03/03/2007 – The Wake-Up Call
02/24/2007 – A Look Back at AAPL and the End of Year Tax Run-Up
02/17/2007 – President’s Day Holiday (No Topic)
02/10/2007 – Get Involved When the Trading is Good
02/03/2007 – Fed Funds and Tradesight Fed Funds Calculator
01/27/2007 – The Current State of the Market
01/20/2007 – The Windows Vista Factor
01/14/2007 – Different Types of “Range” Breakouts
01/06/2007 – Leveraged Instruments
12/30/2006 – End of Year Summary of All Markets
12/23/2006 – Discussion of Trading in the Last Week of the Year
12/16/2006 – Rich’s CPS Discussion (Continuation Pressure Signal)
12/09/2006 – What It Takes to Begin Trading
12/02/2006 – The Mental Bliss of Never Being Buried
11/25/2006 – Thanksgiving Holiday
11/18/2006 – The End of Year Tax Avoidance Run
11/11/2006 – A Trading Day
11/04/2006 – The Election and Ramifications
10/28/2006 – Rich Derrick’s Report on Daily Market Preparation
10/21/2006 – Triple Volume
10/14/2006 – Inflation and This Week’s FOMC Minutes
10/07/2006 – Size Parameters
09/30/2006 – Examining a Trade – YHOO
09/23/2006 – How a Win/Loss Ratio Factors into Your Returns
09/16/2006 – Current State of the Market and “Looking Back” on a Bottom
09/09/2006 – Volume is on the Other Side of the Trigger (example)
09/02/2006 – Rich Derrick’s Labor Day Top Ten Tips for Becoming a Successful Trader
08/26/2006 – The Fruit Stock (AAPL)
08/19/2006 – Sixteen Years
08/12/2006 – Current State of the Market and Overall Thoughts
08/05/2006 – Patience
07/29/2006 – August
07/22/2006 – Subscriber Q&A
07/15/2006 – When to Make Money in Which Direction
07/08/2006 – Rich’s QQQQ Position Challenge
07/01/2006 – Vacation
06/24/2006 – Tips on Trading A Light Volume Market
06/17/2006 – Rich’s Pattern Recognition – The 7/11 Candle
06/10/2006 – Priorities
06/03/2006 – High Beta Stocks
05/27/2006 – Rich’s VIX and What It Means To Your Personal Trading Plan conversation
05/20/2006 – Trading with Indicators
05/13/2006 – Current State of the Market: Bubbles and How Crashes Start
05/06/2006 – Viewing Gaps
04/29/2006 – Trading All Markets
04/22/2006 – How to Use Scalp Ideas
04/15/2006 – What Do You Think I Can Make?
04/08/2006 – Current Market Outlook
04/01/2006 – Rich’s Trading Reversals Discussion
03/25/2006 – The No-Danger Trades
03/18/2006 – Mapping Out a Quarter
03/11/2006 – Treating Longs and Shorts Equally
03/04/2006 – Targeting Money Goals Daily
02/25/2006 – The Back Side of the Wedge – Current Market View
02/18/2006 – Self-Contests
02/11/2006 – Viewing Risk/Reward in Terms of Odds of Success
02/04/2006 – Rich’s Beta and Volatility lesson
01/28/2006 – Current market setup
01/21/2006 – Lock in the Gain or Play the Rules?
01/14/2006 – Volume, Volume, Volume
01/07/2006 – Saving Money on Triggers by Watching the 5-minute Bars

All Reports Prior to January 1, 2006, can be found by clicking on the Stock link under Report Archive (Pre-2006) in the Navigation Menu on the left of your Tradesight screen and then going back to these dates:

12/31/2005 – Year In Review…2005
12/24/2005 – Rich’s Wave Analysis Intro, Part 2
12/17/2005 – The Learning Curve: Identifying Your Trading Style and Making It Work – Part 2
12/10/2005 – The Learning Curve: Identifying Your Trading Style and Making It Work – Part 1
12/03/2005 – The Current State of the Market
11/26/2005 – Rich’s Wave Analysis Intro, Part 1
11/19/2005 – Limit buyers/sellers versus active buyers/sellers versus hidden buyers/sellers
11/12/2005 – Why You Shouldn’t Use Hard Stops Unless You Have To
11/05/2005 – QQQQ Strangle concept
10/29/2005 – When to Take Early Entries
10/22/2005 – Rich’s ADX discussion
10/15/2005 – Why Volume is So Important in Trading
10/08/2005 – Taking a Little extra size to improve your trading
10/01/2005 – Optimizing Tradesight
09/24/2005 – Partial entries and Overcoming the “shorting” hurdle
09/17/2005 – The Current State of the Market
09/10/2005 – Trading for a Living
09/03/2005 – Rich’s Discussion on Setting and Testing Levels
08/27/2005 – What Makes the TSR Go to 5 or -5
08/20/2005 – Relying on the Chart
08/13/2005 – Risk versus Reward
08/06/2005 – Current State of the Market
07/30/2005 – Building Positions on Active Stocks
07/23/2005 – Preparing for the Trading Day
07/16/2005 – Rich’s Time Frames Discussion
07/09/2005 – Current Outlook on the Market
07/02/2005 – The Intent to Swing and Size Part 2
06/25/2005 – Swing Trading
06/18/2005 – Oil, Interest Rates, and the Market
06/11/2005 – Rich’s Reciprocal Range Play Examples
06/04/2005 – Subscriber Q&A
05/28/2005 – No report, working on lengthy subscriber Q&A
05/21/2005 – The Meaning of Options Expiration
05/14/2005 – The “Noise” Zone
05/07/2005 – Size and Percentages
04/30/2005 – Rich’s Four-Bar Termination Candles
04/23/2005 – Chart Pattern Discussion Part 2
04/16/2005 – Chart Pattern Discussion Part 1
04/09/2005 – Building a trade log
04/02/2005 – Current Market Overview
03/26/2005 – Panic Selling and the Big Picture
03/19/2005 – Rich’s Absolute Fibs
03/12/2005 – MB Trading order entry modules in E-Signal
03/05/2005 – Chris’ Screen Layout
02/26/2005 – Mark’s Value Area Description
02/19/2005 – Trade Management
02/12/2005 – Rich’s “Market Internals”
02/05/2005 – The Coming 24-Hour Marketplace
01/29/2005 – How much do specialists and market makers mess with your orders?
01/22/2005 – Trends, Confirmation, and Your Trading
01/15/2005 – Rich’s Nine-Bar Runs
01/08/2005 – What you should and shouldn’t do without market support

Prior to the Beginning of 2005, the weekend reports are in the Recap Archive after the Friday closing report

12/31/2004 – 2005 recap
12/24/2004 – No report for Holiday, preparing for end of year report
12/17/2004 – Charting and the pivot series
12/10/2004 – Rich’s VWAP discussion
12/03/2004 – The Tradesight Eyeball and a discussion of the three questions used at Tradesight to determine market direction for trading
11/24/2004 – Top Ten Things Unsuccessful Traders Say…Link to this Weekend Report Log for easy reference (posted Wednesday due to Holiday)
11/19/2004 – Current market environment and Fed comments about interest rates, inflation, and the trade deficit
11/12/2004 – Subscriber Q&A, about 25 questions
11/05/2004 – Rich’s description of different trade types, including time of day analysis for counter-trend trade calls
10/29/2004 – Advance comment on Election 2004 and its impact on the market
10/22/2004 – Report skipped in preparation for the lengthy Election report the following weekend
10/15/2004 – Why trading during the 8 days of core earnings is harder than any other time of the quarter
10/08/2004 – Rich’s report on market price gaps, gap fill thresholds, and market on close orders and their usefulness
10/01/2004 – Mozilla Firefox as an alternative to Internet Explorer
09/24/2004 – Combining trade management with the use of the Tradesight Messenger
09/17/2004 – Out of town, no report
09/10/2004 – Purpose of Tradesight: What it does and what it doesn’t do and how to learn the top-down approach to the markets
09/03/2004 – Short selling and covering part 2 – Naked shorting
08/27/2004 – Short selling and covering part 1 – What it is and how it affects chart action
08/20/2004 – August doldrums…why market volume matters for breakouts and breakdowns
08/13/2004 – Why do markets often rally into Presidential elections?
08/06/2004 – How rallies suck people into “buying dips”
07/30/2004 – Month-end window dressing
07/23/2004 – Current market outlook and commentary
07/16/2004 – All trades are not created equal…combining market action and chart patterns to adjust trade size and stop levels
07/09/2004 – No report…FOREX report launches
07/02/2004 – How to overcome the fear of increasing trade size
06/25/2004 – Analyzing market volume
06/18/2004 – A good example of how market volume affects trading intraday
06/11/2004 – Patterns that seem to work with a high degree of success don’t always translate into winning trading strategies
06/04/2004 – Why sloping trendlines don’t always help pick winning trades
05/28/2004 – Different types of trading that people do with the Tradesight reports
05/21/2004 – Tradesight introduction to FOREX
05/14/2004 – Why is volume getting lighter?
05/07/2004 – Oil prices and my Toyota Prius
04/30/2004 – Current market outlook and commentary
04/22/2004 – Why the market rally with the Fed announcement? (Report posted on a Thursday because of holiday)
04/16/2004 – How do you trade something like TASR?
04/07/2004 – How does Tax Day affect the market (Report posted on a Wednesday because of holiday)
04/02/2004 – Follow-up Q&A from subscribers…5 extra questions
03/26/2004 – Subscriber Q&A including retriggers, the three questions to determine market direction, and “clean” trading days
03/19/2004 – No report…prepping for the Q&A next weekend
03/12/2004 – Playing the short side after a period of long side play
03/05/2004 – Troubles with the unemployment number
02/27/2004 – Gap fills
02/20/2004 – A discussion on part of the mental aspect of becoming a trader
02/13/2004 – Brief discussion about options (Part 2)
02/06/2004 – Brief discussion about options (Part 1)
01/30/2004 – Share size versus account size…a conversation
01/23/2004 – Current look at some of the “bigger name” stocks in the market…the Generals
01/16/2004 – How long do you follow a pattern that never triggers?
01/09/2004 – Size needed to make a living trading
12/31/2003 – End of year report combining two weekend reports into one
12/19/2003 – End of year economic discussion…deficits
12/12/2003 – Year end tax-selling
12/05/2003 – Current market outlook and commentary
11/28/2003 – Why I created Tradesight
11/21/2003 – Chart discussion for breakout plays
11/14/2003 – Analysis of recent economic numbers
11/07/2003 – Swing trading breakouts
10/31/2003 – Top-notch chart patterns

Before this point, the weekend reports were attached to the beginning of the Monday Today’s Picks

10/27/2003 – How to analyze your results
10/20/2003 – How “late” you can take an entry
10/13/2003 – How “early” you can take an entry (cheating)
10/06/2003 – Why we started offering “first targets” instead of just “swing targets” in a changing market
09/29/2003 – Why you want to pay taxes as a trader
09/22/2003 – Is this another market bubble?
09/15/2003 – Charting (Part 2)
09/08/2003 – Charting (Part 1)
09/01/2003 – What is the Tradesight Swing Rating (TSR)?
08/25/2003 – Real estate
08/18/2003 – No report (out of town for seminar)
08/11/2003 – Average volume requirements for trading
08/04/2003 – Current market outlook and commentary
07/28/2003 – Trade size on small caps
07/21/2003 – Pure discussion about the three questions for determining market direction
07/14/2003 – Current market outlook and commentary for Q2 2003 earnings
07/07/2003 – 2003 Mid Year Update and Analysis
06/30/2003 – Economic data analysis
06/23/2003 – Subscriber Q&A session
06/16/2003 – Top FIve Things Successful Traders Never Think
06/09/2003 – Learning to trade yourself
06/02/2003 – VIX (Old VIX)
05/26/2003 – The psychology of selling winners early and holding losers too long
05/19/2003 – Current market outlook and commentary
05/12/2003 – The “retail rush” at the open
05/05/2003 – A few trading notes, including the importance of partial profits
04/28/2003 – A critical “area” of the market
04/21/2003 – Options trading for “less risk” than stocks
04/14/2003 – New traders and trade size
04/07/2003 – Comments about general use of the site for new subscribers
03/31/2003 – Current market outlook and commentary
03/24/2003 – Monday Morning Quarterbacking in the market
03/17/2003 – No report (out of town for a seminar)
03/10/2003 – Being a market maker
03/03/2003 – Purpose of Tradesight
02/24/2003 – Taking losses to make you a better trader
02/18/2003 – Macroeconomic influences on the market (on a Tuesday because of the Holiday)
02/10/2003 – The pre-war market…volume troubles
02/03/2003 – My trading system, circa early 2003
01/27/2003 – Answers to questions about the “trading learning curve” and “option size allocations”
01/21/2003 – Top-down approach to trading the market (on a Tuesday because of the Holiday)
01/13/2003 – Trading the small cap stocks
01/06/2003 – Discussion of the “fiscal stimulus package” proposed to Congress

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