|
I know that
many of you following my commentary and techniques have not been
using our short-sale criteria diligently or properly. Investors
should realize that so far this year our short-hedges have contributed
half of our total profit -- and if we get new lows in the Nasdaq,
Dow and S&P, I would expect shorts to make up the vast majority
of our profits this year. For this reason, I want to review the
criteria listed in my book, and in my 10-week trading course, with
regards to short sales. I also want to cover how we adjust this
strategy if a real bear market appears so that you are ready and
able to pounce on the fast profits that shorts in a bear market
can create.
Each week I
comment on all stocks that meet our upfuel criteria and have broken
out of valid 4+ week flags or cup-and-handles, as well as all stock
that meet our downfuel criteria and have broken down out of valid
4+ week down-flags and down cup-and-handles. Let's review those
criteria, which we use in all market environments. If you also need
to review how we use breakouts to determine exact entry and exit,
please review my 10-week trading course, available to all TradingMarkets.com
subscribers.
Criteria for
finding short-sales with minimum downfuel:
1. Earnings:
Either
(a) a decline
in annual earnings and an estimate of either an annual loss or
another decline in annual earnings, plus two down quarterly earnings
or two negative quarterly earnings; or
(b) two quarterly
earnings down 40% or more, or two negative quarterly earnings
with acceleration in the decline; finally if either criteria "a"
or "b" are met, the stock remains a short-sale candidate from
an earnings criteria standpoint as long as quarterly earnings
continue to be lower than year earlier quarters or continue negative.
(For maximum fuel, either the above are met or a stock has two
quarters in a row of declining earnings and declining sales, and
a price/sales ratio (P/S) >10 and PE>S&P's PE.)
2. Runaway
technical market characteristics down are displayed on the daily
or weekly chart.
3. EPS and
RS rank both <50.
4. Yield 5%
or <. (For maximum fuel must = 0.)
5. Debt --
must have some, the more the better, over 100% ideal. (Max. Fuel
>99.)
6. Funds --
must have some institutional ownership, >30% is optimum. (Max. Fuel
>20.)
7. The worst
or second-to-worst rating by Value Line, Zachs, or Lowry's rating
services.
8. (Max. fuel
only -- must be a clear bear market in stocks if stock is related
to market -- according to Chartist, BCA, bond/bill/index rules,
or PSL systems.)
9. (Max. fuel
only -- forming or formed weekly or monthly pattern of Double Top,
failed rally, or Head-and-Shoulders Top and P/S >10.)
This allows
us considerably more flexibility to adjust our portfolio to the
U.S. market. We can create a fully hedged fund -- or adjust our
short positions to offset as much of our long U.S. exposure as the
market environment dictates. As Julian Robertson said, "Our goal
is to own the best companies and be short the worst companies."
Over the last decade, our short criteria have helped us to: 1) determine
when the U.S. market is starting to weaken as these stocks usually
begin to accelerate down just before a broad market; 2) effectively
hedge a broad decline as these stocks tend to under-perform our
longs and the market during corrections in particular; 3) profit
from a bear market, rather than be chewed up by it; 4) clean-up
from a two-way market environment where some stocks are still moving
up or down and others are moving consistently in the opposite direction,
as usually develops during transition periods when the major trend
is changing; and 5) get advance notice of when serious changes in
the market are occurring (as we were able to take 1/3 profits on
everything in early March of this year) because we're watching the
action of both the weakest and strongest stocks in terms of their
respective trends. Thus, while we do not recommend a fully hedged
portfolio at all times, we do recommend covering part or all of
your long exposure via shorts during times when the interest-rate
environment is neutral - negative, when the U.S. technicals are
poor, or when overvaluation is extreme enough that systemic market
risk is unusually high, but an all-out bearish signal has not yet
been given. Only when the U.S. and most global markets have generated
universal bearish signals, would we become net short as part of
our allocation strategy.
Like our longs,
investors should use flag-down breakdowns of 4 weeks or more and
valid cup-and-handle down breakdowns of 4 weeks or more as signals
of when and where to short stocks meeting the above criteria. As
you get more proficient at locating stocks that meet this criteria
and then looking only for trades in stocks meeting these criteria
and also breakdown out of valid patterns, you can refer to my weekly
commentary to confirm that we're finding exactly the same stocks
and that you're following the technique properly. In fact, that's
what my weekly commentary is for -- it's designed to help those
trying to utilize this specific technique to trade the markets.
Many investors at first had questions as to why a stock they thought
met the criteria wasn't included -- but as I've answered these questions
over time most investors following this technique for many months
studiously now understand that I am commenting on absolutely every
stock that meets these rigid criteria and that an investor working
hard on following this technique can have very nearly identical
results as the ones reported in my weekly column. Over the first
year-and-a-quarter or so, most criticism and commentary have come
from traders who have not thoroughly studied my courses and this
technique. So far, at least, I have not yet heard from or met a
trader who has tried diligently to follow this methodology religiously
who has not been very happy with his/her trading results.
We basically
exit short stocks on: 1) Positive turnaround in earnings; 2) whenever
their PE gets below their expected growth rate; 3) whenever they
violate their 200 MA by 10% or more; 4) take half profits on 40%
decline from entry and then begin using any high with six lower
highs surrounding it as trailing stop; 5) on every new low use ops
above correction high as trailing stop; 6) exit if Relative Strength
rank or EPS rank ever move above 50 from below it; 7) on any weekly
chart double bottom or head-and-shoulders bottom; 8) whenever the
stock reacts positively to what should clearly be negative news,
or on positive reaction to restructuring or new management.
Although the
odds are now tilting toward the current (5/00) environment being
a bear market, I am not solidly convinced that we are there yet.
It would take new closing lows in the Nasdaq, S&P and Dow below
their respective February-March lows before I will be fully convinced
that we are in another leg down of an ongoing bear market. I would
also like to see at least a week of consistent 20+ number of stocks
on our Bottom RS/EPS New Lows list, and a much higher concentration
of valid breakdowns in stocks on these new lows list. Similarly,
I would like to see a large concentration of specific industries
dominate the new lows lists. If we get all these factors coming
together, than for the first time since 1994, investors will need
to look for and allocate more capital to short selling.
The above "downfuel"
criteria for finding short-hedges is valid in a bear market, as
in a bull or sideways one. However, to maximize profit in a bear
market (assuming all of the bear market factors mentioned above
come to pass), traders should also look for major topping patterns
in former leaders running out of gas, for about half of their short-sale
exposure. As we get more of these patterns and more of our typical
short-hedge exposure, investors should add about 7% of capital per
new short trade and stop at about 24 positions. You basically let
the market determine the number of shorts and longs by how many
valid breakouts or breakdowns you get. Hold back on adding more
than two new positions short or two new positions long in any one
week. Theoretically, you could get to be 200% long or 200% short
in an extremely strong or weak market. To find former leaders running
out of bas, get our your Daily Graphs booklets or look at a huge
number of stocks on a weekly-chart basis. Screen for stocks that
are forming six month+ topping patterns such as Double Tops, Triple
Tops, and Head-and-Shoulders Tops over a very long period of time.
From this list of potential topping pattern stocks, look for over-valued
equities with a P/S > 3 (ideally >10) and with a P/E much greater
than the last year's earnings growth and much greater than the next
year's projected earnings growth. Next, from this smaller list of
potential shorts, look for stocks where earnings growth rates are
slowing down. The big money is made shorting major chart breakdowns
in stocks where expectations have been out of line with reality,
that are starting to disappoint investors that held those out-of-line
expectations. Only look for these stocks when you are very sure
that we're in a bear market. We'll try to point out some such issues
as examples, should we become convinced that a real bear market
is in progress, in our weekly commentary in the weeks and months
ahead.
Most traders
have only looked at our long-side upfuel criteria and buy rules.
Now is the time to review our short-hedge strategies and our aggressive
short rules for bear markets. By using these strategies along with
our long-side rules, investors can achieve smoother long-term returns,
higher long-term gains, and more consistent profits in their stock
trading accounts.
Mark Boucher
has been the manager of the Midas Trust Fund, Cayman Islands, since
1992. The fund was recently ranked number one in the world by Nelson's
World's Best Money Managers for its 5-year compounded rate of return
of 26.6%.
A
Trader's Nightly Regimen | Finding
The Best Fish In The Stock Ocean
Introduction To Volatility
| Learning Center
TheStreet.com
Home
©2000
TradingMarkets.com All Rights Reserved.
|