The Wagner Daily ETF Report For April 6
Traders returned from Easter weekend in a bullish mood, prompting the major indices to finally close at fresh 52-week highs, but lighter overall volume failed to confirm the breakout. The main stock market indexes opened higher, built on their early gains throughout the morning, then settled into a narrow, sideways range for the rest of the afternoon. The Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.1%, the S&P 500 0.8%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average 0.4%. In yesterday's commentary, we suggested mid-caps could show relative strength in the event of a broad-based breakout. Along with small-caps, that was clearly the case; the Russell 2000 and S&P Midcap 400 indices jumped 2.0% and 1.6% respectively. Each of the major indices finished near its intraday high.
Obviously, it was positive that the broad-based indices broke out above their recent trading ranges to score new 52-week closing highs yesterday. However, it was negative that such a key breakout occurred on slower trade. Total volume in the NYSE was 2% lighter than the previous day's level, as turnover in the Nasdaq receded 11%. In both exchanges, volume also remained below 50-day average levels. Mutual funds, hedge funds, and other market-moving institutional players apparently remained on the sidelines yesterday, while retail investors drove the market higher. Although lighter volume breakouts should not necessarily be avoided altogether, rallies that lack the confirmation of institutional buying cannot be blindly trusted. As we typically see several times a year, lower volume gains can swiftly be erased by just one round of higher volume selling.
On April 1, both iShares Gold Trust (GLD) and iShares Silver Trust (SLV) gapped above resistance of their respective four-month downtrend lines. But between the two commodity ETFs, SLV is looking better and showing more relative strength. While GLD is still stuck in a sideways range of the past several months, SLV has broken out above its March highs. Below, the daily chart of SLV shows the recent breakout above its downtrend line:
At its current price, SLV may be too extended to achieve a positive reward-risk ratio for new position entry. However, a pullback to new support of the prior downtrend line would provide an ideal, low-risk buy point into SLV. As such, we'll be monitoring the price action of SLV in the coming days for a retracement to support of the breakout, around the $17.25 to $17.30 area. To clearly illustrate the relative strength SLV is now showing to GLD, take a look at the "percentage change" chart that compares the relative price action of both ETFs over the past thirty days:
On the chart above, notice that SLV has rallied 14% over the past thirty days, while GLD has gained just 2.5% during the same period. More importantly, the overlay shows how SLV has just broken out above horizontal price resistance of its March highs, but GLD remains stuck in a sideways range. This chart confirms the relative strength of SLV over GLD, as well as the better pattern in SLV. Therefore, if the precious metals pull back to provide an entry point in the near-term, silver may actually shine better than gold. Because commodities often move inversely to the price of the U.S. dollar, one potential caveat to buying SLV is the recent strength of the U.S. Dollar Bull Index (UUP). Nevertheless, there have been numerous market cycles where both precious metals and the U.S. dollar simultaneously show strength. Yesterday, for example, UUP, GLD, and SLV all moved higher.
A spike the 10-year yield caused treasury bonds to plunge yesterday, causing many fixed-income ETFs to slice through critical levels of support. The iShares 20+ Year T-Bond (TLT) was one such example. As shown on the weekly chart below, TLT plummeted to a new multi-year low yesterday:
As TLT lost 1.7%, our position in the inversely correlated ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury (TBT) rallied 3.1%. However, because "short" ETFs use a daily rebalancing of their portfolio of derivatives to achieve their pricing, they typically underperform their underlying index -- only marginally in the short-term, but much more over the long-term. As such, we are simply following the chart pattern of TLT, rather than basing our technical analysis directly on the chart of TBT. Ideally, selling short TLT is probably better than buying TBT. Still, through buying TBT, traders with non-marginable cash accounts (such as an IRA) can still take a bearish position on the price of long-term treasuries (which is essentially a bullish stance on interest rates). If yesterday's bond market action was any indication, traders may be expecting the Fed to finally bump up the Fed Funds Rate in the near future.
Open ETF positions:
Long - FXI, UUP, IAI Short (including inversely correlated "short ETFs") - TBT, BRF
Deron Wagner is the Founder and Head Trader of both Morpheus Capital LP, a U.S. hedge fund, and MorpheusTrading.com, a trader education firm.
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