Year: 2012

  • Channeling VIX

    VIX has very nearly reached the channel mid-line, Inverse H&S and Crab pattern targets I posted back on April 18  [see: VIX at a Crossroads], though we’re 2 days behind schedule.

    Our IHS target was 28.10 and the Crab pattern target was 27.12, expected to occur on May 30.)  Friday’s high was a very close 26.71.  It’s close enough to be considered complete, but a little follow through Monday morning would tie things up in a nice neat bow.

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  • The End Game

    Although the attached is a presentation on the current status of our wounded economy — limping onto the field one last time, hoping against hope that the steroids will last another 15 minutes, it also describes the turn your relationship with friends and family will take when sharing with them your scary new world view after reading this presentation.

    Best read it when you’re not going to be around civilians for a while.  From hedge fund manager Raoul Pal of Global Macro Investors: The End Game.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Why I’m Buying

    ORIGINAL POST: 10:05 AM

    I’m a bit surprised the Plunge Protection Team didn’t protect 1292 (but I imagine it means a Fed governor or the Bernank himself will be making an appearance sometime this morning.)

    I had set a mental stop level of 1295 yesterday, given the ongoing weakness in the euro and inability of the market to close positive on the day.  Two schools of thought going into the NFP release this morning: (1) that they would manipulate it upward, as usual, or; (2) that a brutally honest (hence, depressing) number would clear the decks for QE.

    I think the enormity of the miss (69,000 vs 150,000 expectations) clears the deck — and then some.  From a charting standpoint, it doesn’t hurt that we just completed a bullish Crab pattern at the bottom of a pretty convincing looking falling wedge with the SMA 200 just below current prices at 1284.56.  So, I not only lifted my remaining stops as the market fell this morning, I am buying more here at 1287.

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  • A Walk on the Arithmetic Side

    I normally construct charts in log scale.  In general, I regard it as a more legitimate way of viewing time and price relationships.  But, I try to remember to check in on the arithmetic picture from time to time.

    Here are a few arithmetic charts to consider…

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  • This Concludes our Test…

    That should be it.  Remember yesterday [see: Dueling Bancos] we talked about the little channel being established while the market searched for a Point C.  The lower bound of the channel was 1304…

    I think the exact price is going to be hard to pinpoint, and will likely depend on the nature and timing of news from across the pond.   But, leading candidates are the afore-mentioned channel bottom around 1304 and the .707 Fib/red fan line (from Oct 2007) that intersect around 1309-1310.  A push any lower should find strong support at 1300.

    We’ve likely just bottomed out just below 1300 (1298.90) and should head back up now.  The RSI hit the channel midline, which should be its low point, too.

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  • SPX: The View from 30,000 Feet

    Our charts have grown fairly “busy” lately, what with harmonic patterns, chart patterns, fan lines, channels, etc.  I find it helpful every now and then to take a step back and examine those elements that have had the biggest impact in recent years — and are likely to continue doing so.

    In my opinion, the two patterns that have influenced prices more than any other are Fibonacci levels (primarily related to the 1576-666 decline) and fan lines.

    Note how strongly prices reacted to each of the Fib lines off the Mar 09 lows.  Every Fib level played an important role in providing support and/or resistance at pivotal points.  The .236 didn’t slow the advance much, but it provided much needed support after a 9% decline.  A tag of the .618 touched off a 17% correction (caught by the .382) and set the stage for the Gartley pattern completion at the .786 a year later.

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  • Dueling Bancos

    We pick up this morning where we left off last night…the Banco de España and the Banco Central Europeo duking it out through their respective mouthpieces in the mainstream media.  It reminds me of another famous dueling scene from one of America’s greatest movies (obligatory clip below.)

    From the WSJ, reports that the EU is  advocating a cross-border banking union to back stop those financial institutions which are: (1) in danger of failing, and (2) those whose host (as in a parasite’s target, not a provider of hospitality) country has already been sucked dry.

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  • The Spanish Fly in the Ointment

    Today was one of those kumbayah days when even lousy housing data, consumer confidence and Dallas Fed data couldn’t depress equity prices.  The market spent all day reinforcing my faith in our forecast.  Ah, those were the hours…

    As everyone knows, the euro zone whack-a-mole game has been focused on Spain lately.  So, the print-our-way-to-happiness bunch was understandably enthused when Spain announced they would truck $24 billion in Spanish sovereign debt over to failing Bankia — Spain’s second biggest bank — which would then exchange said debt to the ECB for something worth the paper it’s printed on.  Presto chango, ipso facto… the boo-boo’s all better.

    A perfect plan — except for one small detail:  the ECB wants nothing to do with it.  According to the Financial Times, the ECB wants Spain to implement (stop me if you’ve heard this one) a serious austerity plan and start living within its means — maybe even inject some real live capital.  (more…)

  • A Most Lenticular Market

    Looking at the markets these past few days, I’m reminded of the prize that comes in a box of Cracker Jacks.  Not a real prize, mind you — but one of those cheap little pictures where the image changes as you shift the angle from which you’re viewing it.  It’s called a lenticular image.

    Despite the uncanny accuracy of our forecasts these past couple of months, the road ahead seems to shift a little with every fresh look.  I can’t remember the last time I agonized over a forecast for an entire three-day weekend.

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  • Calm Before the Storm?

    Fridays before a holiday weekend have a tradition of being very, very quiet.  Today seems to be no exception.   Unless something weird happens, we’re aiming for a close around 1323, up a few points.

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