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chessNwine

Full-time stock trader. Follow me here and on 12631

1-900-ChipsWithDips…Or Worse

After hanging in extraordinarily well over the past few weeks, the chips are pretty clearly breaking down today. As you can see on an updated daily chart below of the SMH (ETF for the semiconductors), we have a high volume selling affair, pushing price below both a multi-month support trendline, as well as the 50 day simple moving average. Support is likely to kick in around $33.60, the lows from mid-late January, but if that does not hold you can expect a push down to at least the 100 day moving average.

Whether the broad market can continue to hang tough with the semis breaking down remains to be seen. However, we just lost a group that had previously shown relative strength.

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Is Carl Icahn Playing Liar’s Poker with the Stock Market?

Recently, there has been quite a stir about whether Carl Icahn is actually as bearish on the stock market as he seems to be, in light of a recent letter he wrote to his investors announcing he would return all outside capital. In essence, it appears that he is playing it safe, and does not want to bear the responsibility to limited partners in the event we see another market swoon.

Insider Monkey, however, believes that Icahn is actually quite bullish on the stock market. The excess cash could easily be used by Icahn to lever up his long exposure. He has also not really hinted at selling core holdings. Food for thought, indeed.

At any rate, courtesy of The PPT, here are Icahn Capital LP’s top holdings.

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It’s a Quagmire Out There

Continuing with my “quagmire” theme, this market remains indecisive and in flux. While crude oil may be the root cause of this choppiness, the recent trend-less nature of the market over the past few weeks should not be a huge surprise given the amount of ground the market has covered since last fall. After all, periods of expansion in the market are naturally followed by periods of compression. To be sure, the key issue is trying to discern whether we are at a major inflection point, or whether this is simply a minor pause in a bull market before we head higher. There can be no doubt that the bulls have been jaw-droppingy resilient, especially thus far in 2011. At the same time, I am not seeing as many high probability long setups ripe for the taking like I did during last November’s correction.

Hence, as much as I’d like to be “Action Jackson” and gamble it up here, protecting capital is still the top priority. All positions should be watched closely, with very little patience for losers. Indeed, we could easily see a few more days like today. In order for the bulls to get going again, my working thesis has been that we needed the intense price swings of the past few days to abate. Thus far today, we have a nine point range in the S&P 500, which is less volatile than the 20+ ranges we have seen of late.

At the same time, the Nasdaq Composite Index continues to dance along the 50 day moving average, and we know that the more a key support level is probed, the more likely it is to eventually give way. The battle lines are starting to be defined here, as bulls want the action to continue to quiet down as we near the apex of the symmetrical triangle shown below, while bears are looking to finally land a body blow in the form of convincingly breaching the 50 day moving average.

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CRUDE OIL’S BIG DAY OF RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE IN SAUDI ARABIA

With crude futures off their recent highs early Wednesday morning, there appears to be a bit of calm in the air before the proverbial storm or, in this case, spring. With the “Arab Spring” continuing to take hold in the Middle East, protests and Shi’ite marches are expected in Saudi Arabia during the now ubiquitous “Day of Rage” on March 11 and 20. Indeed, oil traders will be watching this situation very closely, as heightened political, social, and economic unrest is likely to cause similar types of spikes that we saw with Egypt and Libya headlines.

Of course, legendary commodities investor Jim Rogers is not convinced crude is rising due to tensions in the Middle East, so much as because “…the world is running out of known reserves of oil.” Either way, you can be sure that “black gold” will continue to be all the rage in the coming days.

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[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdzRHQHWPMk&feature=related 550 412]

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A Special Message to FNSR Longs

[youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szGzAxJ0fbw&feature=related 550 412] __________

All kidding aside, despite how promising many of the charts of the optical plays looked last weekend, I want to reinforce a concept that I have discussed numerous times: If you swing trade based on technicals, then holding full positions through earnings is a pure, weekend in Vegas, gamble. Technical analysis, at its best, can tell us what is currently known and legally knowable by the market. The less external variables you have at play, the more you can rely on technical analysis.

However, earnings presents a specific set of variables that can completely trump any chart you are looking at, as evidenced by the 36% post-earnings plunge in FNSR this evening, not to mention all of the brutal pin action plays like JDSU selling off hard in sympathy.

If you got caught with your hand in cookie jar, then cutting losses and moving on the next day is usually the best bet. You are better off, as a trader, wiping the slate clean and going back to basics. If you did not get caught in one those plays tonight, then you should do your best Bill Clinton imitation and “feel their pain,” so you can avoid making the same mistake in the future.

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