Apple (AAPL) is a remarkable company. Nobody is more innovative. Nobody is more creative. And nobody is more effective at getting millions of consumers to trade stacks of hundred dollar bills for shiny technological gizmos.
Shareholders have been richly rewarded. AAPL shares are up 360% in just two years, and the stock is trading within spitting distance of a new all-time high.
Indeed, the company is firing on all cylinders. But after yesterday’s action, I have to ask… Has AAPL peaked?
Stop laughing. It’s a reasonable question.
[ad#Google Adsense]For the past couple years, every time Apple introduced a new product, its stock rallied to a new high. Every new iPhone boosted the market cap. The release of the original iPad launched a series of new all-time highs for the shares. And every time… every single time… there were plenty of analysts and talking heads suggesting the stock had run too far, too fast, and was near a peak.
But not Wednesday.
On Wednesday, Apple unveiled the iPad 2 – the newest weapon in its technology arsenal. It was a big, big deal… a media circus. Steve Jobs even rose from his sick bed to make the introduction.
This time, however, AAPL didn’t make an all-time high. Oh sure, it rallied three bucks right after Steve Jobs hit the stage. But the stock is still a good 10 points below its high from last month. More noticeable, however, is the lack of anybody, anywhere, willing to say anything bearish about the stock.
Allow me…
All the hype over the iPad 2, and the virtual media love-fest surrounding Jobs’ return to the corporate stage should have been enough to push AAPL to a new all-time high. The fact that it didn’t, suggests the stock is tired and in need of a rest. The following chart suggests the same thing…
As you can see in the chart above, the stock is tracing out a potentially bearish head (H) and shoulders (S) pattern – which signals the reversal of a trend from bullish to bearish. If AAPL breaks below the rising support line, currently at about $340, the pattern projects a move all the way down to $320.
It’s always dangerous to buy into a stock just as the media is hyping a new product or a new technology. The unveiling of that product usually marks at least a short-term peak in the company’s shares. Apple, however, has always managed to avoid that curse.
It doesn’t look like it’ll avoid it this time, though.
A drop below $340 will be the sign that the short-term trend has changed for AAPL. Aggressive traders can look to go short at that level.
Anyone looking to buy the stock should wait for something around $320.
Best regards and good trading,
— Jeff Clark
[ad#jack p.s.]
Source: The Growth Stock Wire