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October 19, 2009 at 10:27 am | | Comments 3

Why I’m Not Trading AAPL

AAPL is set to report earnings after today’s closing bell.  It’ll be the focus of attention at times both today and tomorrow as the dust settles post-news, but truth be told, I have no interest either way.noapple

Obviously it’s one of my trading rules to avoid stocks when they’re reporting earnings, as scheduled fundamental news simply carries with it no edge for me as a technical trader.

But I’ve had no interest in trading AAPL for a few months now.  Let me explain why.

The short answer is that AAPL simply doesn’t move enough. For a stock that’s highly liquid (over 15 million shares/day on average) and within sneezing distance of $200, it should move a lot.  And yet it doesn’t.  On an average day, it’ll see an Average True Range (ATR) of about $3.  There are stocks trading at a fraction of AAPL’s price which move that much and are still highly liquid, so why pay up for less movement?

Let’s take a look at the chart.

Over the past year, we’ve seen AAPL’s price rise dramatically, while its movement has shrunken dramatically.  ATR is a price-based measurement (not percent), so as price gets higher and higher, often times we’ll see ATR expand along with that.  That’s not the case with this stock.

aapl-10192009

StockFinder Chart courtesy of Worden

Anytime you’re trading the high-priced stocks, do your best to gauge whether there’s enough movement there on an average day to justify an entry.  Others like GOOG, CME, and BIDU all are higher-priced than AAPL, but on a relative basis (when comparing ATR) they each move considerably more than AAPL.

At some point, AAPL will be worth trading again, but on an average day right now, the moves are just too limited to warrant an entry.

Thanks for stopping by and I’ll see you here soon with more. Until then…

Trade Like a Bandit!

Jeff White

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  1. is a non-low ATR a prerequisite for any trade you buy? i never put much emphasis on it. can you make a video explaining the significance of ATR and whether its best to buy on a high ATR or just a rising ATR…thanks jeff…love the site…

  2. Hey Simon,

    Thanks for stopping by. Good question, btw.

    No a non-low ATR is not a prerequisite for a trade, I’m simply making the point that far less capital could be utilized for similar movement elsewhere. What I’m saying is that I don’t see the point of committing money to AAPL for the limited (relative) movement it offers, that’s all.

    ATR is not something I’ll base my trades off of, but it is a gauge I will look to on occasion when it seems a stock doesn’t move very much. Lately, AAPL in the high $180’s has offered very little movement for a stock of that price, which ATR visually depicts quite well.

    It used to move nearly 4x as much and was at 1/2 it’s current price, so that was far more bang for the buck than it has offered in recent months. Once that changes, it’ll be a better trading candidate.

    Jeff

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