Home—Online trading—Spread betting explained—Spread betting blog—Will today’s results crush Apple?
Jan 23, 2013, 04:16
Posted byJohn C Burford
Comments (3)
Wonder-company Apple has been a terrific market for my trading methods since last year. Today I will show you how I used my methods on Apple, and how you can use them profitably in many individual shares - as opposed to the stock indexes, such as the Dow.
Who has not heard of Apple? Maybe a few Martians, but the ubiquitous company has been responsible for the worldwide rise of smart mobile phones with the famous iPhone leading the way.
But this device now has serious competition for the first time, and many are negative on the share.
Let’s back up to last year when I first started following it.
(Click on the chart for a larger version)
In 2011, the share price consolidated up to the summer, and then broke above the resistance area shown by my first pink bar. The classic entry was at the first red arrow in the $350 region.
The rest of the year was spent consolidating that gain, and then it made a similar move above resistance (upper pink bar), and another entry was indicated (second red arrow) in the $430 area.
By now, the market was showing the classic signs of a bull market with higher highs and higher lows.
It then entered a manic phase! The run-up to the $650 area was very swift.
As we all know, such exponential runs are not sustainable, and the market fell back to correct the overbought condition.
Of course, it is almost impossible to predict when and where the turn will come before the event. As traders say, “Never try to pick tops or bottoms”.
The market came off the high in three clear waves – and with a positive-momentum divergence at the C wave low. Here is a close-up:
That was the signal to buy again near the C wave low.
One method I sometimes use to enter in this situation is this: towards the C wave low, the market was making new lows every day (red candles). Then, we had our first green (up) candle.
My entry method is to place a buy order just above the high of the previous day and adjust it downwards every day until I get a fill. The likelihood is that I have caught the actual C wave low and can expect a resumption of the main trend (up).
The C wave low was the low of the corrective move and the market moved smartly back up and made new highs and hit the $700 level.
It was then that the bullish chorus was at its loudest!
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But as it hit the $700 level, I noted a big warning sign – there was a massive negative-momentum divergence forming (red bars). If the market could not rally swiftly towards $1,000 - and so eliminate this divergence, the odds would favour a decline.
My line in the sand was the pink bar – the previous minor lows. If this support could be broken, the odds for a decline would really rise and disappoint the bulls.
I confess I do get satisfaction when I can do this! That’s the competitiveness in me. I have to call it what it is – a bias, something traders shouldn’t indulge.
With the possible (at this stage) top at $700, I could draw in possible tramlines – the upper one connecting the two major tops, and the lower one connecting some major lows.
Let’s see how it developed:
The market broke the tramline convincingly, then came back for a classic kiss.
That was another fine entry point for a short trade!
So now, we are carrying two short positions – one in the $660 area and the other around $580.
So where is my target?
Time to draw in my third lower tramline:
And here it is, showing my price target around $480 along the tramline.
So, let’s fast forward to today:
Bull’s eye! Last Tuesday, the market hit a low of $483 right on my lower tramline.
That is where profits were taken for a very nice trade made possible by the simple application of my methods. And incidentally, without any notice taken of the reams of commentary on the company and its products.
In fact, if I did not know I was trading Apple, it could have been almost anything. And it would have made no difference to the end result!
So what is the picture as I gaze at the chart?
I note the clear A-B-C down to the $480 level (green bars) and the clear positive-momentum divergence (red bars) at current levels.
This is the mirror-image of the set-up at the tops!
Time to look for a long trade, methinks.
Here is the hourly chart:
The market has gapped up off the $480 low, has moved back down to test this gap, and yesterday has broken above my tramline. It’s heading for the other gap just above the $510 level.
This tramline break appears genuine to me, and so I have a long position with a protective stop in the pink zone below the most recent minor lows.
Remember, the major trend is still up and that is the way to trade most of the time.
Later today, Apple will release its latest results. Many are predicting dire things. The mood music has turned very negative on Apple – not surprising after the $220 fall off the September $700 high – a decline of over 30%.
Remember, the news follows the markets!
Many are citing the death in 2011 of Steve Jobs, who turned the company around and created a monster cash cow, as well as the strong competition now appearing. They believe the best is over.
We shall see.
• If you’re a new reader, or need a reminder about some of the methods I refer to in my trades, then do have a look at my introductory videos:
• The essentials of tramline trading • Advanced tramline trading • An introduction to Elliott wave theory • Advanced trading with Elliott waves • Trading with Fibonacci levels • Trading with 'momentum' • Putting it all together
• Don't miss my next trading insight. To receive all my spread betting blog posts by email, as soon as I've written them, just sign up here . If you have any queries regarding MoneyWeek Trader, please contact us here.
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Leave a comment
(24 January 2013, 10:28AM) Complain about this comment
I hope your followers did not take your advice to go long. The protective stop is a misnomer in this instance as the drop occured post market and will gap down. The trade will be stopped out at the opening price today not at your protective stop level leading to a substantial loss.You need to learn to take sentiment into account when trading Apple. Their results were fine, but the market just wanted more.Compare with netflix to see how much sentiment and expectation can affect the way a stock reacts to results.My advice - don't trade around earnings releases, it's simply a 50/50 gamble you have no edge. Wait for the dust to settle then buy/sell the over-reaction accordingly.
(24 January 2013, 11:31AM) Complain about this comment
Good point Chris Stone. This oft-repeated mantra that "the news follows the markets" is trite. It also risks leading those readers that actually follow your advice into trouble. It is true about 50% of the time, i'd say. Apple released earnings last night (news), and the stock was down 10% after hours (market). How is this not a case of markets following news? There are tomes and tomes worth of other examples. On a separate note, since you talk of biases, do i detect a heavy dose of hindsight bias throughout this comment? Funny that we never hear of any of these genius trades before they are placed.
(25 January 2013, 02:49PM) Complain about this comment
I saw a very interesting discussion recently about the day that Apple closed at exactly 500.00 at the exact correct date and exact correct time so that all the calls and all the puts on options which expired that day were worthless. The chances of that happening by chance are absolutely miniscule.Blatent market manipulation?This video explains very wellhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=xi5Mubnxy1Y#t=366s
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The trades on this blog are all 'closed', past trades. These aren't trades for you to copy, they are there to teach you some useful trading tactics for your own spread betting. And always remember: spread betting carries a high risk to your capital as you can lose more than your original stake.
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