Here's a Profit Play for a Shaky Earnings Season Kickoff

This week, it's all about "TBTF" banks - as in, "too big to fizzle."

There's a lot riding on the financials, but I'm looking at pharma and healthcare, too, and I'll tell you why in a minute.

Fact is, this is one of the most important earnings seasons in recent memory, and investors are flat-out worried that it'll be one of the worst earnings seasons in recent memory.

JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE: JPM) officially kicked off Q1 earnings season on Friday with a welcome revenue beat that nudged stocks gently upward for the day.

On the other hand, Bank of America Corp. (NYSE: BAC) reported a bumper crop of profits on Monday, but the shares slumped anyway because CFO Paul Donofrio voiced concerns about the slowing pace of interest rates - a big driver of bank profits.

Same deal with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GS): It had a convincing earnings beat and a tasty dividend hike, but a drop in trading revenue sent the shares lower.

That shares didn't necessarily take off is a pretty good indicator of the worry out there in the streets. Freaked-out investors are punishing stocks for "sins" they might've forgiven two or three quarters back.

Me? I'm not sure it'll be the worst earnings season in years, but it's certainly going to be the one of most eventful.

Because, remember, it doesn't matter if a stock goes up or down on good or bad earnings. It just has to move...

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Positive Earnings Might Not Cut It This Week

Where the banks are concerned, there's a little more to it than hard numbers. Investors will be looking and listening for remarks from the banks' principals about the state of the wider economy.

Any - any - comments in the earnings releases and calls that address the financials' expectations for credit losses could be a market mover.

BOOM! Thirty-three stocks could explode on April 23, potentially creating monumental new wealth. Announcements can cause price explosions of 439%, 1,530%, and even 2,150% bigger than a normal "up" day in the markets. Learn how to get my earnings playbook here...

JPMorgan's comments on Friday, for instance, eased worries that we're on the brink of a recession. Comments from Bank of America's chief financial officer, Paul Donofrio, about slowing growth in interest rates, while not great news for the bank's profits, should give the markets confidence that monetary conditions will be easy for the foreseeable future.

But the trend here is downward, and since the trend is our friend, we should be on the lookout for short-side opportunities for the time being.

As I write this, UnitedHealth Group Inc. (NYSE: UNH) released an earnings beat and a raised forecast and still got clobbered to the tune of 3.6% as of midday after trading lower since late last week. I'm still not convinced we've got a compelling short here, though.

Pharmaceuticals make a much better short case, and I'll tell you why.

The sector is up 10%, which "feels" healthy, but the S&P 500 is looking at returns of 17% over the same period, which puts pharma's performance in a not-so-rosy light.

Among the sector's heavyweights, we've got haves... and have-nots.

One of the have-nots is Mylan NV (NASDAQ: MYL). The generic and specialty pharmaceutical company is registered in the the Netherlands and operates globally.

My screen is showing me a decidedly bearish signal as shares break down beneath their critical support at $27. My same proprietary system predicted an MYL plunge from $32 to $27, by the way, so I'm liking the odds for short profits.

I'm issuing a unique trade recommendation to my subscribers on Mylan (click here to learn how to get it), but anyone can short this stock - or the entire pharmaceutical sector as tracked by the SPDR S&P Pharmaceuticals ETF (NYSEArca: XPH). As for Mylan, I've got a target of $22, which would hand you a double-digit profit - or possibly much more if you leveraged it with a put option.

Quick - Get My Q1 Earnings Playbook BEFORE April 23

Hundreds of companies are set to report earnings in the coming weeks, but only one sector may be worth your time (and money). I've pinpointed exactly which stocks in that sector are the strongest - and the most likely to produce market-crushing returns - in the Q1 earnings playbook. Follow along, and you could be raking in $30,000 in the next 10 weeks. Learn how to claim your copy here.

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About the Author

Chris Johnson (“CJ”), a seasoned equity and options analyst with nearly 30 years of experience, is celebrated for his quantitative expertise in quantifying investors’ sentiment to navigate Wall Street with a deeply rooted technical and contrarian trading style.

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