Time to Short the "Unsinkable" Stock By Adam Lass | Tuesday, July 5th, 2011 Technology stocks have always had trouble with the gap between promise and performance. One of my first gigs as a financial writer came about from this very problem. Advertisement China's Master Plan Stumbles They worked for 20 years to build the world's most wide-reaching — and potentially dangerous — monopoly... China's goal: To seize control of the world's consumer and military high-tech industries. What they didn't count on was a discovery made in the Arctic Circle earlier this year — a strike so gigantic, it sent China's master plan reeling. Find out who made this discovery and what's next for the resource valued at over $273 billion. The Promise... These days, the big promise is slates and cloud computing, which is all somehow completely different from last year's big noise about notebooks and net-based computing... or not. According to the geeks at Gartner (NYSE: IT), worldwide spending on IT is supposed to skyrocket in the second half of 2011. We're talking growth of 7.1% net for the year, with computer hardware and enterprise software slated to lead the charge with 11.7% and 9.5% growth, respectively. Better yet, cloud computing is supposed to advance at four times the rate of regular terrestrial computing. Now I must confess that I've frequently been accused of "not getting" tech stuff. But when I dug deeper into Gartner's numbers, I couldn't help but notice that all that wonderful cloud stuff is only supposed to account for some 2% of total sales in 2011. The problem is it's damned hard to understand most IT experts, who seem to speak some otherworldly language that consists entirely of acronyms. Check out the chart below of Standard & Poors' Technology Sector ETF (NYSE: XLK). It doesn't give a hoot about all that talk about clouds, slates etc...
Instead, it shows a clear set of stacked sell signals, including a double top at the top of trend, a broken 200-day moving average, and a reversal in the Money Flow oscillator. Using a Fibonacci Retracement Grid based on the 2008-2011 run-up, we can posit:
Quite frankly, it's that first drop that interests me the most right now, as it is so probable — what with five or more scenarios running to it or through it — and sizable enough to outweigh upside risk. And with the right leverage, it could generate substantial gains. Advertisement The FDA Likes It So Much... Right now, the Food & Drug Administration is evaluating a new method of replacing lost and damaged body parts. It involves growing new limbs and organs from donor tissue. And the FDA likes this $2.00 company's solution so much... The technology has been awarded seven years of U.S. marketing exclusivity and tax credits for clinical research expenses. This is for real. Learn about it today. The Mark I have on my desk an early report out of Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) on Verizon (NYSE: VZ)'s second quarter sales of smartphones. Let's not worry so much about how I got it, okay? Instead, let's focus on the rather intriguing disparity between sales of Droids (which are beating expectations) and Apple (NASDAQGS: AAPL)'s iPhones (which are slated to disappoint at just a tad below the 2.2 million mark). This falloff intrigues because unlike the cloud and all that crap, iPhones now represent some half of Apple's revenue these days. Seriously, this line of gadgets is pretty much the difference between Apple as a small boutique seller of pretty PCs and Apple as the tech behemoth. If the market for iThis, iThat, and iThe-Other-Thing is finally showing signs of saturation, then Apple could be in line for quite a tumble. And then there's that whole "Steve Jobs is dying of cancer" thing. But we don't even need that sort of super-dramatic issue to make some coin from a moderate drop. Leverage Looking to the AAPL chart, we see a similar set of stacked sell signals — including a rounding top, a breach of the 200-day average, and a money flow reversal.
Once again, we have at least three downside scenarios that all move to or through the F.-23.6% node at $310.54, which would make for a 7.34% loss from current price. Adam Lass | |
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Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Time to Short the "Unsinkable" Stock
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