Happy Marvelous Monday!

I help teach people to earn money trading options. It isn’t hard.   I explain in easy-to-understand terms when I teach or write a book—like we are talking across the kitchen table.

The Nasdaq was down 2 days out of 5. It’s been mostly down for the past several weeks.  The last two week’s candles have been green. We will have to see if this is a change in the trend or just a positive week. If the bearish trend continues, we can look at buying Puts instead of calls.

For updates on previous trades, please scroll down.

I am going to focus on the NASDAQ on Mondays and call it “QQQ Monday”.  I will focus on QQQ which is the ETF covering companies traded within the NASDAQ Exchange Traded Fund. 

For today’s discussion, we will be looking at Invesco QQQ Trust, symbol (QQQ).

Before analyzing QQQ’s charts, let’s take a closer look at the ETF and its services.

Invesco QQQ is an exchange-traded fund that tracks the Nasdaq-100 Index™. The Index includes the 100 largest non-financial companies listed on the Nasdaq based on market cap. These companies are often cut-edge tech stocks and trendier companies.

The image below is Friday’s price activity.

This chart image is courtesy of FINVIZ.com a free website and gives a quick view of each day’s movement. 

This is an image from Friday where it was positive throughout most of the day.   The carpet shows a lot of green.  Many of the symbols with 4 or 5 letters are included in the QQQs- AAPL, AMZN, GOOGL, etc.

Fibonacci Exponential Moving Averages (EMA)

Exponential moving averages (EMAs) reduce the lag seen in simple moving averages by applying more weight to recent prices. The weighting applied to the most recent price depends on the number of periods in the moving average. We are applying 8, 21, and 55 weekly periods for our entry signals. EMAs differ from simple moving averages in that a given day’s EMA calculation depends on the EMA calculations for all the days prior to that day. You need far more than 10 days of data to calculate a reasonably accurate 10-day EMA.

There are three steps to calculating an exponential moving average (EMA). First, calculate the simple moving average for the initial EMA value. An exponential moving average (EMA) must start somewhere, so a simple moving average is used as the previous period’s EMA in the first calculation. Second, calculate the weighting multiplier. Third, calculate the exponential moving average for each day between the initial EMA value and today, using the price, the multiplier, and the previous period’s EMA value. 

Charting services like Stockcharts.com and your broker’s chart service figure these calculations for you.

As mentioned, entry signals are based on the use of 8, 21, and 55 weekly averages.  (8, 21 and 55 are Fibonacci numbers which are a special sequence of numbers which are added together- 1+1= 2, 2+1=3, 2+3=5, 5+3= 8, etc.  13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233, 377, 600…    As mentioned, we are zeroing in on 8 EMA (short term), 21 EMA (medium term) and 55 EMA (long term).

Let’s See Why This Signal Potentially Offers Potential Trade Info

Each candle on the chart represents price movement over a 5-day (week) period.  QQQ is apt to continue to drop or flatten out if the EMAs curl down, going lower.  The last several weeks price has been mostly down. However, the last two candles have been green. We will see if this continues.

The 8 EMA is crossing over the 55 EMA indicating a bullish trend. However, the 21 EMA is still not participating in an uptrend. We will keep an eye on QQQ’s movement over the course of the couple weeks.

Potential Call Profits for QQQ

General info:

Options often offer a smaller overall investment, covering more shares of stock and potential for greater profits, as well as making money when the price of a stock drops.

Possible trade:

I am typing this on Saturday.  If price continues to rise Monday or Tuesday, you could consider a Call trade if it moves above 360.

The stock price as of today (Saturday) is 359. If you bought one stock option, it would cost $359. If it moved to the expected $365 you would make $6 on your $359 investment.

If you were trading options and selected a 365 strike, Call option you would pay a premium of around $5.11 for the April 14th expiration.  If price rose to 365, the premium is apt to go up about $3.  Your premium of $5.11 plus $3.00 = $8.11 or a profit $300 for the 100-share contract. That is a profit of 59%.

Remember, you can take profit anywhere along the line, you don’t have to wait for the expiration date to sell.  It is often wise to take profit when it is earned, especially in a volatile market.

EMAs and line crosses are at the heart of most of my strategies. Many strategies come with a weekly newsletter listing numerous potential trade candidates.

I love teaching and sharing. It is my “thing”. 

Yours for a prosperous future,

Wendy Kirkland

PS-I have created this daily letter to help you see the great potential you can realize by trading options. Being able to recognize these set ups are a key first step in generating wealth with options. Once you are in a trade, there is a huge range of tools that can be used to manage the many possibilities that can present themselves. If you are interested in learning how to apply these tools and increase the potential of each trade click here.

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Past trade update:

Two weeks ago we discussed buying April 14th 320 Puts. The premium on 3/14 was $13.65. We will continue to monitor this trade.

Last week we discussed buying QQQ Puts but the price never got to the target entry. No trade would be taken.