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Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Graphs - $twtr

Numbers look solid. Good revenue growth, stable GM (but want to see them in the 70s) and reduced yr-yr operating losses. 

AH punishment is dumb.






Thursday, July 23, 2015

Graphs - $amzn shuts up bears, hard

Increasing revenues, margins and a profit. Yes, profit. Deserves its move.






Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Trades - $aapl dumb sell off

Better margins. (Beat guidence.)


Cash at all time highs.

iPhone has room to expand share.


This looks like a buying opportunity 







Graphs - $yhoo decent report

GM slightly declined again, but revenue growth seems to be outpacing cost. Need another quarter or two to confirm, but recovery seems present. 




Monday, July 20, 2015

Charts - $ibm waiting for Godot

Waiting for ibm to turn around is like waiting for Godot. I mean, wtf almost every quarter was a miss with Rometty at the head. The numbers are not moving in ibm's favor. The bigger question is where will the dust settle. Given how bad the numbers were, 160 would not be surprising.




Graphs - $ibm

Moving in the wrong directions. Even gross marnings, when normalizing for legacy hardware, wrong direction. 




Sunday, July 19, 2015

Charts - $bac

Sitting on a triple top, waiting to break out toward 20. In a rally condition, the 9sma on the weekly is in play.


BAC is also near a very strong multi-year resistance.



Friday, July 17, 2015

Graphs - $googl $goog

Gross Margins keep rising. 


As is revenue and operating income. 


Clicks look encouraging from a quarterly perspective. 


Tax rate: 





Thursday, July 9, 2015

Chart - $aapl

If your in the Carl Icahn camp, and think aapl is like nflx before its triple bagger, then your loading up. If your a TA peeps, now looks pretty interesting. Before 2012, aapl would follow a consistent uptrend. And one moving average stuck out, the 38sma via the weekly. The stock is now on this Fibonacci number.


PS: i am of the belief that aapl will be the first true, sustained, trillion dollar company.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Market Thought... Greina Greece and China

The double whammy: the hellenic economic choke hold and the table tennis chinese equities market.

The Euro Zone wrestling match will soon come to an end. Caution thrown into the wind with the European Elite claiming to has "thought of everything" when considering a greece exit. The arrogance of such an assumption is mind boggling. There is no such thing as no risk. But hey, what do a bunch of technocrats have to loose if they haven't thought of everything and cause a financial crisis of epic proportions? Last time they did it it caused World War 2. There are estimates that suggest a potential $1.4T (yup, trillion) in damages. (Not to mention on a humanitarian level, a group of people are and have been causing the suffering of millions of people in the developed world. Fucking shameful.)

Then there is China. Miss Market is a fickle bitch, and rarely controllable. Respect her, let her be and nurture her desires, and she will reward you greatly. Back in December, it started to take off. Nowits simply approaching its pre-dec trendline.


The Weekly chart better illustrates the exaggeration ofthe upswing.


A look at the monthly doesnt really inspire worry. Classic resistance.


Nothing in these charts inspire a high degree of fear. Its typical over heated scenario, and classic extreme pull back. The aspect of this that does inspire fear are the actionsmof the central gov trying to manipulate non concerning action. Beggs the obvious question: Why?

I dont know. All I know is the level of danger when there is an equity market ~70-80% retail folks, that are now able to leverage their homes as margin to trade equities!?!?! A stability fund with the backing of the market regulator and central bank, already looking destined to fail. A suspension of trading for about 1/7th of its entire market! ($1.4T, coincidentally enough. But the 1/7th stat may have been before the $3.2T in losses.)

China has ample reserves to wobble along for a while. The bigger concern in china, given the large retail investor presence, is the effect of the losses on the transition to consumerism.  

Either why, we got technocrats trying to convince us all will be okay. These people have mastered the control of the uncontrollable, and have gained this omniscient ability to think of everything.