The Wagner Daily ETF Report For June 26 |
By Deron Wagner |
Published
06/26/2008
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Stocks
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Unrated
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The Wagner Daily ETF Report For June 26
Stocks traded higher on yesterday's open, moved in a tight, sideways range through mid-day, then exhibited the usual post-Fed volatility later in the afternoon. As largely anticipated by Wall Street, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) left interest rates unchanged at 2.0%, and signaled they could raise rates in the future, but not necessarily anytime soon. Although the major indices initially surged higher on the announcement, they retraced their post-Fed gains into the close. When the dust settled, all the main stock market indexes except the Dow Jones Industrial Average had advanced. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.6%, the S&P 500 0.4%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was flat. The small-cap Russell 2000 and S&P Midcap 400 indices rallied 1.2% and 0.7% respectively. The S&P 500 and Dow Industrials closed in the bottom third of their intraday ranges, as the Nasdaq came to rest near the middle of the day's range.
Total volume in the NYSE rose 4% above the previous day's level, while volume in the Nasdaq conversely receded 4%. The higher volume gain of the S&P 500 technically means the index registered a bullish "accumulation day." However, realize the increased turnover occurred during the sell-off of the final forty-five minutes of trading. This essentially invalidates any bullish signal to be gleaned by the price-volume pattern. The Nasdaq showed more promising price action, but volume in the tech-heavy exchange was lackadaisical. Advancing volume in the NYSE exceeded declining volume by a margin of 2 to 1. The ratio in the Nasdaq was positive by more than 4 to 1.
The U.S. dollar sold off immediately following yesterday's Fed announcement, causing the CurrencyShares Euro Trust (FXE) to rally back above its 50-day moving average. Though the euro has been correcting for the past several months, the daily chart is looking as though FXE could resume its long-term uptrend in the near future. Specifically, notice that FXE is about to break out above its intermediate-term downtrend line that has been in effect for the past ten weeks:

A move above yesterday's high would cause FXE to break out above the downtrend line illustrated above, triggering a potential buy entry. A protective sell stop could be placed just below yesterday's low. If FXE falls below that level, it will have failed its breakout and lost support of both its 20 and 50-day moving averages.
Going into today, we don't have a lot of ETFs on our radar screen for potential new trade entries. Rather, we want to give the stock market a day or two to show its real reaction to the Fed meeting. Typically, the initial direction stocks move after a Fed meeting is just a knee-jerk reaction that reverses in the opposite direction two to three days later. As such, we don't want to be too aggressive without the market first showing its hand a bit. Further, trading was already choppy and indecisive before yesterday's announcement on interest rates and economic policy. Breakouts in both directions have been failing a day or two after they trigger a new ETF trade entry, keeping both bulls and bears on their toes. Be careful not to overtrade and churn your trading account in such conditions.
Open ETF positions:
Long - TAN, UWM (only half position now) Short - SLX
Deron Wagner is the Founder and Head Trader of both Morpheus Capital LP, a U.S. hedge fund, and Morpheus Trading Group, a trader education firm launched in 2001 that provides daily technical analysis of the leading ETFs and stocks. For a free trial to the full version of The Wagner Daily or to learn about Wagner's other services, visit MorpheusTrading.com or send an e-mail to deron@morpheustrading.com.
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