Investments

Weak Coffee

Starbucks has had a wonderful run over the past 5 years, rising more than 200%. Over this time frame it, as you can see below, went through two major upward thrusts and (now) three consolidations. Each of the prior consolidations lasted about a year. The first one in 2012 was more had a more downward direction as it lost almost 30%. The second one which started at the end of 2013 was more of a sideways move as it lost just 17%. The good news for SBUX investors was that each consolidation resolved to the upside.

Fast forward to today and you can see the weakness in price and the fact price is stuck in another consolidation. Looking like the last sideways consolidation (at least so far) as it has muddled along for not quite a year and has lost 16%. RSI momentum in the upper pane shows this is the only consolidation that started off with a negative divergence warning. Also, price has formed lower highs with each thrust higher while the $52-$53 area has acted as significant support. Finally, the descending triangle pattern that has formed warns of continued weakness.  Those long SBUX need to be concerned that while the current level has held 4 times in the past, the more times price touches a level the higher the probability it will break through (in this case to the downside).

All in all, like so many stocks right now, SBUX is at a crossroad. A break above the descending triangle resistance line and we are likely off to the races and in for another big run higher. A break below (red) support with confirmation, a test of the ~$41 level, some 20%+ lower is the pattern's projected downside target.

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Those already owning SBUX need to keep a close eye out for a breakdown below both (red) horizontal and blue rising support as that would provide a high probability we see weaker SBUX prices ahead.

Beast Mode

Acacia Communications (ACIA) has been in beast mode since it IPO’d back in May of this year gaining more than 350% (from peak to trough) in 3 short months. Since it peaked, it has been consolidating sideways, digesting its gain and setting up for its next move.  Any time price consolidates it has the option to continue or reverse. Which way will ACIA go?

On the bearish side, the current consolidation has formed a symmetrical head and shoulders bearish reversal pattern with negative divergence which if confirmed has a target below some 29% lower, filling the gap.

The bullish interpretation is the recent consolidation is needed to set up for a push higher. Instead of the consolidation being a head and shoulders bearish reversal pattern it could easily morph into a bullish flag continuation pattern once confirmed with the conservative upside target some 100% higher.

As always there is a way to interpret any movement as both bearish and bullish, depending upon your bias. Since bias is one of, if not THE, biggest investment problems it is imperative to be agnostic when investing and wait for confirmation and have a plan in case you are wrong.

The stakes and return on this investment is big so it’s important to get it right. For me a close and hold above prior $128.73 highs is the confirmation I would be looking to go long. If, on the other hand, price closes and stays below the red horizontal support line at $102, I would expect a quick and violent decline back to fill the open gap below so those who feel comfortable shorting could initiate a position then. While price is stuck between the upper and lower boundaries I am happy to sit and watch the bulls and bears fight it out.

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Small Cap Struggles

One of the first things I learned as a market analyst is to keep your eyes on small cap stocks. They are usually the first out of the gate in a burgeoning bull market and the first to fall at the commencement of a bear market.  As such, whether I am invested in them or not I watch closely for hints on expected future broader market behavior. As of right now while they have had a strong short term run, small caps have yet to confirm the broader market bull thesis by making new highs.

 In the weekly chart below you can see the current price sits just below the prior high made in June of last year. As such and as of this instant we have formed not only one lower low but also one lower high. Additionally you can see the head and shoulders pattern that has developed at the same time negative divergence has formed on RSI momentum.  If you are bullish this is not what you want to see. Looking to the left half of the chart you can see the last time this same set up occurred was in 2008 where the market subsequently dropped 60%. The target of this pattern if it were to play out is a slightly less gut-wrenching 50%.

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With the charts warning of potential serious trouble is it time to sell everything, batten down the hatches and crawl into your fallout shelter? Probably not. A small 1% rise and hold will invalidate the topping pattern while further strength can easily wipe out the divergence.  This market, for whatever reason, continues to defy gravity and ignores all fundamental reasoning. As such, it is likely the small caps, like many other sectors, corrected and are playing catch up to the broader market. If this is the case, and we will likely now in the few weeks, this is one more feather in the bulls cap and further confirmation the trend is up (until it isn’t) so don’t fight it. 

Time for a Commercial Message

While the markets bide their time waiting for the Almighty powerful Oz of the banking world’s economic statement release this morning (11 am PST), I thought there is no better time than now for a teachable moment. You quite often hear me speak of reversion to the mean (rtm) being one of the most powerful forces in investing. As it turns out 2016 is a big mean-reversion year. Take a look at the performance of the 10 best performing S&P500 stocks from 2015 year-to-date. On average, those 10 stocks were up 72% in 2015. In 2016, their average return is lagging the S&P500 by being up 4.3%. One of them was acquired in September 2015, so I am showing only 9 for 2016.

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Take a look at the 10 worst S&P500 performers of 2015. On average, they lost about 60% in 2015. Year-to-date, they are up 17%.

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Like everything in investing, mean reversion doesn’t always work (I still have my shares of General Buggy Whip Co. that I was sure would eventually get back above $10). Nor do you know when the reversion will actually start so timing is always a challenge.  Regardless, great investors should keep good companies that are well managed and whose stock prices have punished on their radar. At some point in the future these types of rtm opportunities can have explosive growth and as such deserve a place in everyone’s portfolio.  

I can’t wait for 11:01 so the markets can return back to their regularly scheduled programming.