Author: pebblewriter

  • A Broken Record

    Though it is getting a little monotonous, I’ll never get tired of saying that we’re about to tag our next downside target.

    The past two weeks of downside have been a great recruiting tool for chart patterns and this website in particular.

    A note to prospective members…we’re currently offering auto-renew monthly subscriptions at half-off the first month. To sign up, CLICK HERE.

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  • Beautiful Letters Aren’t Enough

    Add Xi Jinping to the list of luminaries who sent Trump a “beautiful letter” — most of whom were later mocked, scorned or fleeced.  The long and distinguished list includes Barack Obama, Kim Jong Un, Jimmy Carter, Shinzo Abe, James Clapper, Bill Belichick, Princess Di, Hatice Cengiz, et cetera, et cetera…  No word yet on whether Trump and Xi have fallen in love.

    Trump hasn’t yet resorted to name-calling, but isn’t it just a matter of time?  It couldn’t be any less effective than the hastily-concocted nonsense which lays out how the increased prices all Americans will pay under increased tariffs will benefit all of humanity — an attempt to spin Trump’s latest failure as a win.

    Tariff Man’s latest best words:

    Futures are currently off 12 points, paring a 24-pt deficit after VIX sent a shot across the bow at 5:30.
    Meanwhile, something happened today that hasn’t happened since December 13: the 10-day moving average crossed below the 20-day moving average.  It didn’t work out terribly well back then.The case for the breakdown of the rising white channel and drop to our 200-DMA target from last week keeps getting stronger.
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  • Time for Bulls to Get Nervous?

    SPX needed about 22 points downside to reach the support of its SMA50, a rising channel bottom, and a falling channel bottom.  ES, which finally reached our 2655 target from last week [see FOMC: Endgame] is currently off 30 points. At this rate, SPX will breach its support on the open, especially if USDJPY doesn’t bounce here at its new lows.Is it time for bulls to get nervous?

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  • A Crossroads

    A little over a week ago, SPX pushed to new all-time highs.  I had a hard time getting excited about the upside.  From the Apr 29 update:

    SPX has been melting up so long that I don’t think bears will rush for the exits if it tops 2940.91.  In fact, we might see some selling come in if it’s taken as a marginal new high on a truncated 5th wave. Still, a move above the Sep highs is technically bullish.  Trend followers will be compelled to go/stay long with the former highs as their stop. Personally, I would be very cautious in chasing it, keeping an eye out for rejection and shorting it if it drops back through 2940.

    After giving up 100 points since the top, ES is again closing in on our next downside target — the intersection of two channel bottoms and the SMA50.  Is this the end of the slide, or is there more to go?

    This has been a very well-managed slide, with ES tagging the top and bottom of a clearly-defined channel nine times since then.  While the talking heads sometimes get excited, the damage could have been much worse.

    Consider BA, which is arguably in the fight of its life.  Back on Mar 11, I charted the potential outcomes of the fallout from its MCAS disaster.  The most obvious targets were the .500 Fib which would close a large gap at 369ish, the SMA200 at 358, and the .618 Fib at 351.12.BA closed the gap easily enough, reaching 365.55 later that day.  But, it took almost two months for it to finally tag the SMA200 — which it did yesterday.  In fact, it even closed below the SMA200, suggesting that the .618 is also likely.Since BA has a large and active share repurchase plan, I can venture a guess at who was keeping the stock afloat in the midst of some very unsettling headlines.

     

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  • Bonds: More Where That Came From

    Despite the ample support markets are receiving from the algos (witness yesterday’s knee jerk reaction to VIX’s smackdown) our yield curve model continues to sound the alarm for equities.

    The only question is how long the delicate equilibrium can be maintained.  Rates can decline for many reasons. When due to central bank easing, for example, stocks  tick gleefully higher.  When it’s a response to fear, on the other hand, we can expect additional equity market instability.

    As the 10Y approaches our next downside target from Dec 26 [see: Update on Bonds] it would be wise to consider why rates are declining this time.

    Of course, the decline has been postponed repeatedly over the past 4 1/2 months.

    12-26-2018 Update on Bonds

    But, the bond market has a great memory.  It isn’t as easily fooled as equities.

    In other words, there’s more downside ahead for yields and stocks.

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  • VIX: Not So Fast

    It’s been 14 months since Trump tweeted that “trade wars are good and easy to win.”  Since its close that day at 2691.25, SPX has ranged 608 points — from its Dec 26 low of 2346 to last week’s high of 2954.

    We’re seen many factors play into that 608 point spread: countless breathless reports of an impending trade deal, a truly laughable GDP print, the FOMC’s humiliating retreat from normalization. The most impactful factor of all, however, was Mnuchin’s convening of the Plunge Protection Team.

    Though the decisions made during that call — so important that the heads of the Fed, SEC, CFTC, FDIC and OCC were called away on Christmas eve — will remain shrouded in mystery (minutes are not released), the outcome was obvious: VIX was crushed by 70%.

    Now that the narrative is fraying a bit, we’re seeing VIX regain some of its swagger.  As a result, ES is tagging successive new downside targets.continued for members(more…)

  • Was That It?

    Probably not. Although WTI got a nice bounce off our SMA200 target…

    …USDJPY’s initial pop above its SMA200 has quickly faded (again) and headed for lower lows……and SPX, after tagging our target at the channel midline, is set to run into resistance on the open.VIX remains a wild card, as always.  But, if its rising channel holds this morning’s test (13ish), it will soon be testing its SMA200 at 16.54, a 22% gain from current levels.

    If the channel doesn’t hold (the usual state of affairs) then we’re in for more meltup — which would shock absolutely no one.

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  • Not Exactly Reassuring…

    The markets weren’t exactly reassured by Powell’s testimony yesterday.  Bottom line, no one in their right mind buys the idea that we can have such strong GDP and wage growth but still need such accommodative policy. IMO, Powell was curt and sometimes downright evasive, which didn’t help matters.

    Stocks plunged to our initial downside target, closing well below the SMA10 (a rarity, lately) with additional downside potential this morning.

    AAPL tested its channel top and retreated.  As we discussed yesterday, this failure to break out has weighed on the overall market.continued for members(more…)

  • FOMC Day: May 1, 2019

    Today’s an important day for many reasons.  The FOMC obviously faces some important decisions regarding monetary policy – chiefly, how to maintain a dovish stance (i.e. keep stocks rising) given the recent blowout GDP data.

    Another important development, however, is high AAPL can pop on the open.  It reached as high as 213 overnight, which is significant.  This would put it at the top of the channel which signaled its dramatic swoon to within 2 points of our downside target last November — producing some pretty robust trading results.

    Members will recall it broke out of this channel in Aug 2018, following the steeper red channel to its Oct 3 highs [see AAPL: Engineering a Breakout.] When the breakout failed on Nov 12, it was followed by a breakdown of the red channel and the SMA200 — as strong a set of bearish signals as you’re likely to ever come across.

    Given that the correlation between AAPL and SPX is obviously so high, AAPL’s return to the top of the purple channel is a watershed moment for the meltup of the past four months. I can certainly understand Tim Apple’s decision to pull out all the stops at yesterday’s pep rally earning’s call, but a failure to break out again (215ish) could be troubling for the overall market.

    Meanwhile, futures are up sharply on the expectation that AAPL’s good fortune and the Fed’s infallible brilliance will goose the broader market.  It won’t…at least today.

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  • FOMC: Endgame?

    I can’t recall the last time we saw such a wide array of expectations regarding the FOMC’s next steps.  Like opinions, data has been all over the map.  Just this morning, Trump’s latest nominee for the Fed, Stephen Moore, insisted we could have 4% growth with no inflation going forward.  Total nonsense, of course.

    Futures were off by as much as 7 points overnight before a pop in oil futures brought them back to even.  They’re currently off about 2 points — about where we were yesterday morning at this time.

    If the rising wedge and SMA10 break down — likely, as the FOMC is rather boxed in — look for ES to test its rapidly rising SMA50, currently at 2846.50.Today, we’ll take a look at the big picture and try to discern what the charts suggest the Fed’s actions might be.

    First, a reminder as to where SPX/ES stand. As we discussed yesterday, a drop through 2940 — which it should do on the open — is a signal to short.  From there, we have multiple downside targets starting with the SMA10 at 2919, the SMA20 at 2901 and SMA50 and small white channel bottom at 2938.

    If the white channel breaks down, there’s little in the way of support until reaching the SMA200, currently at 2766 and rising slowly, followed by the 2.24 at 2703.62 in late May.

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