Our small, short position in Apple has produced a paper gain of more than $1,000 since Friday, when we advised the trade. We used a Hidden Pivot resistance at 133.43 that appears to have been well worth the wait, since it came within 35 cents of nailing the so-far all-time high in the stock, 133.78. The pivot also anticipated a doozy of a selloff ' a pullback of nearly $5, or about three-and-a-half percent, from the peak. (Click on chart to enlarge) While it's still too early to tell whether Apple's bull-market top is in ' and our hunch is strongly otherwise ' the goal of shorting a much-hyped high-flier without getting hurt has been achieved with little stress or anxiety. Like the magician who catches a speeding bullet between his teeth, our feat was ultimately just a cheap parlor trick ' i.e., finding a Hidden Pivot we could trust to arrest Apple's parabolic ascent. Now, to protect our gains, we've deployed a stop-loss at 131.92 for the hundred shares that remain in our position. Why there? Simply because a print at that price would create on the lesser charts the kind of bullish impulse leg that would telegraph new record highs to come. Newmont Demands Patience We've been less successful lately in Newmont Mining, which has risen only six cents since we bought the stock on Friday. Our bullish play initially got a boost from a simultaneous breakout in Comex Gold. The breakout was not unanticipated, as you could infer from the following analysis. It went out to Rick's Picks subscribers on Sunday night: 'Any rally that surpasses the tiny look-to-the-left peak at 662.00 shown in the accompanying chart would make August Gold start to look interesting, since that would create a subtly bullish impulse leg on the hourly chart.


