Two captains of the same shipPrevious part of the post: My Three Comrades: the Chart, the Screener, and the Watchlist
Now let's move on to the fundamental analysis. Remember in this post I gave the example that a joint stock company can be thought of as a hotel, and owning shares can be thought of as owning one or more rooms in that hotel. So, imagine now that our hotel has a terrible foundation with lots of holes in it. What would happen to such a hotel? Of course, it could collapse, dragging everything down with it. It would also affect the value of the stock, and in our case, the value of the rooms. Because no one will want to buy rooms in such a hotel, on the contrary, they will try to sell them at any price, and then the value of rooms (stocks) will go down.
The purpose of fundamental analysis is to understand how financially stable and profitable the chosen company is. Sometimes they say that a company has a strong or weak foundation - a generalized conclusion based on analysis of its financial statements. So, our task will be to find stocks of companies with strong foundations.
Let's go to "Chart+" and select "Indicators" in the upper toolbar. A menu will open for you, where on the left we will select "Financials". Here we can select data from company reports: Balance Sheet, Income Statement and Cash Flow. They are issued quarterly and annually. Accordingly, you can select any indicator from the statements, such as revenue, select the period - quarter or year, and add it to the chart. In this way, you can study the dynamics of this indicator over time.
In addition to the reporting data, you can add so-called multipliers to the chart. They are placed in the same menu after the "Cash Flow" > subsection called "Statistics". What is a multiplier and how to analyze the statements, we will discuss in our separate posts on the fundamental analysis, and now let's move on to the technical analysis.
Technical analysis is a search for recurring patterns on a price chart in order to predict its future behavior.
Let's go back to the time when candlesticks were invented. These charts appealed to traders so much that they began to look for repeating combinations of candlesticks, which served as signals of future price movement.
For example, there is a combination called "bearish engulfing" . When the market has a clear upward trend, and in one day, a massive bearish candle appears, the body of which closes the body and shadows of the previous candle - it can herald the reversal of the uptrend.
Or, if the market for three days in a row is drawn three black candles with massive bodies - they are called "three crows" . Traders interpret this as a sign that the downtrend is continuing.
Doesn't that sound like an omen to you? In fact, people have made up dozens of similar patterns and many more that, like weather forecasts, don't always come true.
You must have sensed that I cover this topic rather cursorily? This is due to the fact that I do not use technical analysis at all. That is, I do not make predictions based on recurring situations from the past.
I do, however, use one of the tools of technical analysis, which is the average value of the stock price over the year. Not to make predictions, but to have a guideline: when to buy and when to sell stocks of companies with strong fundamentals.
I will surely elaborate on this in my next posts, but for now, wrapping up the topic of technical analysis, I want to give one analogy.
Stock price movements can be compared to the sea: sometimes it is calm and sometimes it is subject to strong waves. An investor can be compared to the captain of a ship who has to decide whether to put to sea now or not (i.e. whether to buy stocks or not).
A captain who looks at the official weather reports and gauges is like an investor who uses fundamental analysis. And a captain who is only guided by omens and his gut is like an investor making a decision based on technical analysis.
You can be captain number two without me, but how to become captain number one is the subject of my blog.
SPY trade ideas
Investing in SPY in Oct 7th 2022 after a 27 percent fallSPY has fallen by 27% since Dec 2021 to Oct 7th, 2022.
Two similar percentages SPY has fallen are in:
1) May 2000 to Oct 2002 it fell by 47 percent.
If you bought SPY in May 2000, You would have had to wait till Aug 2007 for break even. Then again in Sept 2007 it fell by 57%. So in most likelihood, you would have had to wait till Feb 2013 to get the money back.
If you had purchased SPY after it had fallen a similar amount as this fall (27%), you would have bought SPY in Oct 2001. You would have got your money back in Oct 2004 and had a good bull run of 39% till Sept 2007.
2) Sept 2007 to March 2009 it fell by 57%.
If you had invested in SPY in Sept 2007. You would have got your money back in March 2013.
If you had purchased SPY after it had fallen a similar amount as this fall (27%), you would have bought SPY in Sept 2008. You would have got your money back in early 2011 and enjoyed a big bull run after that.
Midweek Watch 8/18 - $SPY / $QQQ LONGIm just looking for pullbacks into levels giving us a buying opportunity. I'm hoping if the $SPY could come into this 50D SMA. $QQQ also came in a little bit, coming right into the MP and let's see if it can pullback into this 50D SMA.
I do love the fact markets pulled back and really hope it continues to drop a day or two and sets up a really great opportunity for us.
Stocks vs Bonds & Copper vs Gold - Bounty for Global equitiesFellow Bountyhunters,
Two charts that tell us what can happen to the global equities is posted here.
Chart on left is the relative ratio of Stocks vs Bonds. One can see PRICE ACTION rising to the north after bottoming and testing some resistance as of now. If they breakout then we have a continuation and and this can possibly indicate continuation of the rise in equity markets.
Chart on right indicates the relative ratio of Copper vs Gold (Miners). Copper moving North is bullish for equities and it usually is a leading indicator of global economic health and this chart shows the relative ratio against Gold which is considered a safe heaven asset. Price action has bounced off of previous low but made a lower low and now making higher highs on its way to the North. If this continues we can expect a gala time with global equities.
Gold and copper tends to move in the same direction (Observe on multi year charts), but copper is more volatile unlike Gold and likely to react to fundamentals more quickly than gold.
This is an observation from my analysis of multi year charts and one must use this as a supporting information to increase allocation(IF) to equities vis a vis other asset classes.