Author: pebblewriter

  • Pardon Me, But Your Cracks Are Showing

    Just when I was about to lose faith in the ability of investors to recognize bad news when they saw it, something very rare happened yesterday.

    VIX, which has been beaten down most every day since Mnuchin convened the Plunge Protection Team in December, suddenly popped up above its 200-DMA.The futures executed a 51-pt reversal before someone realized how ugly things were getting and pushed the EMERGENCY button.  ES climbed back above the SMA10 just before the close, and is back above it now.  But, it’s still well below our sell signal — the .786 Fib at 2812.13.

    Incidents such as this accentuate the cracks in the technical picture which are becoming more and more apparent — even to the bulls.

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  • Same Ruse, Different Day

    For those who enjoy chasing the market higher on rumors of an imminent breakthrough on the China trade deal (coincidentally released shortly before futures open every Sunday) today is your kind of day.

    After retracing 78.6% of its late 2018 plunge last Monday, ES showed signs of a retreat.  But the latest news — this one planted with the WSJ — has put an end to that.  At what point will the algos ignore this ruse and pay attention to deteriorating data?

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  • Not So Glitchy

    The latest dismal economic news — which the market is ignoring in favor of unsubstantiated rumors of an imminent trade deal with China — is real personal spending which dropped 0.6% in December to a 10-year low.  So much for Mr. Kudlow’s retail sales “glitch.”

    Futures, of course, are much more interested in the latest VIX decline and USDJPY rally.  continued for members(more…)

  • Fireworks?

    As if yesterday’s Cohen and Powell testimony weren’t scintillating enough, the talks with North Korea broke down and a bevy of important economic data is due out this morning.  Will we finally see stocks take notice, or will VIX continue to keep the fireworks to a minimum?Advanced 4th quarter GDP is due out at 8:30 this morning.  Following disappointing retail sales and core capital goods data, few are expecting an improvement over Q3’s 3.4%. Consensus seems to be around 2.3%, though I’ve seen credible estimates at 2.1-2.2%.

    A miss could compound things for equities, which are already struggling after news that Trump packed his bags and walked out on Kim Jong Un.

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  • Powell: Day 2 on the Hot Seat

    Powell is likely to run into more aggressive testimony in his second day of congressional testimony.  Few House members rake in campaign contributions anywhere near as large as the average senator.

    Markets are generally quiet, especially after all the intraday damage control seen yesterday.  If he should stumble, of course, there’s a lot of dead air below current levels.

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  • Update on Bonds: Feb 26, 2019

    As Powell prepares for his Monetary Policy Report to Congress (10am, Watch Live), is he paying attention to the bond market?  Prodded by abysmal housing data… …ZN finally broke out.

    According to Kudlow, last month’s retail sales miss was a glitch.  What about the 10.5% YoY drop in single family permits or the 15.9% plunge in multifamily permits?  How about wholesale inventories that expanded at twice the expected rate last month?

    The bond market isn’t waiting for Powell to proclaim that the data has been anything but rosy lately.  With ZN breaking out, we can expect the next 4-6 weeks to be very interesting.

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  • Update on Oil & Gas: Feb 25, 2019

    It’s been two months since oil and gas reached our downside targets [see: Throwing the Game.]  Since then, WTI (CL) has bounced 36.4% and RBOB has bounced 30.6%.  CL has plowed through several upside targets since then, finally reaching our 57.48 target last Wednesday.  As we’ve discussed, it’s not just the chart patterns that suggested a reversal.  It’s also the economics of higher oil and gas prices which, as Trump reminded OPEC this morning, threaten the low-inflation narrative which makes a dovish Fed stance possible.

    We’ll take a look at whether this top is likely to hold and what the implications might be for inflation and interest rates.

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  • Update on VIX: Feb 22, 2019

    VIXploitation continues, as the “fear index” continues to drive stocks higher.  Yesterday’s collapse in the last 30 minutes… …was enough to shave 10 points off of SPX’s losses. Nothing new here.

    Note that ES’ previous pushes above its 2.24 Fib (dashed purple line) required that VIX dip to the yellow horizontal support at 16 (b, c and d.)  The latest, however, required a drop below that support.  In other words, it’s requiring more effort to effect the same result.Are investors finally catching on?  Maybe, just maybe, there’s more selling pressure from the carbon-based crowd than usual.

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  • Buy, Machines, Buy!

    I was on the road yesterday, so I listened to CNBC on XM while tooling around town. I lost count of how many pundits sounded downright angry about how the market was melting up. “It makes no sense!” they cried, citing countless statistics from plunging retail sales to plunging earnings expectations. Not one of them brought up VIX.In a market where most of the trading is by computers which are merely responding to preprogrammed signals (aka algorithms) it has become quite simple to nudge the market one way or another.

    Given that COMP has really struggled to get and stay above its SMA200, VIX is telling the computers to buy. It already got the ball rolling by plunging below its SMA200 and is now reiterating the signal by simply breaking down below the red channel bottom.This is a well-worn trick, illustrated best by the period 2015-2016. Every time SPX needed to get back above its SMA200 (in order to delay the 1823 tag until the channel bottom arrived in Feb 2016)……VIX was there with an assist, dropping below its own SMA200 (the red moving average.) When things got really dicey and a big push was needed, VIX broke down below the well-established trend lines (below in red.)Now that it’s doing the same thing again, and oil and gas, interest rates and currencies are all following suit, the message is unmistakable: buy, machines, buy!

    Will the few remaining carbon-based investors also comply?

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  • Update on Gold: Feb 20, 2019

    In our December 26 Update, we noted that gold had broken out of a rising channel and was headed for several upside targets including 1292.10, 1346.30 and 1369.40.  Yesterday, it reached the 1346.30 target — a nice 14.7% rally since our Aug 15 bottom call at 1173.60.Interestingly, its latest spike has coincided with continued strength in DXY — an unusual but not illogical occurrence.We’ll take a look at why this is happening, and what’s ahead for gold.  Is it’s strength a warning, as some have suggested?

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