Author: pebblewriter

  • Now We’re Official

    DXY just made it official, tagging the .618 Fib at 88.423 overnight.  It came close on Jan 26, coming within 0.015 before a strong bounce which surprised a lot of people by not supporting stocks.This latest move, along with VIX reaching our downside target, made it possible for ES to tag our first upside target from Feb 5 – albeit two days late.I suspect this had more to do with SPX’s delay in tagging its own SMA200 than anything else.  Bottom line, our analog remains on track.

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  • Where to, Next?

    It’s an odd feeling when multiple forecasts play out all at once.  It’s exciting, probably not unlike drawing several royal flushes in a row.  Except, in the case of the markets, it has less to do with the luck of the draw and everything to do with detecting how the house has rigged encouraged a particular outcome.

    DXY is about to tag the next lower target we set back on May 1, 2017.

    EURUSD is within .0043 of the target we set on Jan 8.

    And, USDJPY just reached a target we set last October.

    On the bond side, the 10-yr note has slightly overshot our 28.56 target from Jan 10...

    …which could potentially accelerate the yellow channel bottom tag posted on Jan 31.

    Perhaps the most satisfying results have been on the equity front.   After many false alarms during the Great Meltup of 2017, we wondered on Jan 30 why we weren’t getting the usual instantaneous recovery and included 2703 to our downside case for SPX.  We added 2732 and 2533 on Feb 2.  SPX nailed our 2533 target a week later (2532.69.)

    As SPX was tumbling on Feb 6, however, an analog became apparent [see: Analog Watch.] If it played out, the bounce from the upcoming lows would be very sharp and VIX would collapse from its then current value of 49.21 to 19.10 (refined on Feb 7) by Feb 14.

    After SPX bottomed at our 2533 target, we set 2765 on Feb 14 as our initial upside target.  This was modified on Feb 12 to 2719.   Earlier this morning, SPX reached 2717.66 — a nice 184-pt bounce from our buy signal at 2533.  While a day late, this qualifies as pretty decent outcome.  And, we’re not done yet.

    My point in presenting the above isn’t to toot my own horn (okay, maybe just a little.) Rather, it’s to point out that by understanding the motives and methods of those pulling the levers, and paying attention to chart patterns, Fibonacci patterns and analogs, reasonably accurate forecasts can be made.

    I heard a financial commentator say, this morning, that higher interest rates must not be that big a deal.  The 10-yr was pushing 3% and stocks were soaring, so all the anxiousness we saw over the past couple of weeks was overdone.

    This is one of the silliest things I’ve heard all week.  To this, I would say don’t confuse the ability of algos (which, as we saw last week can push stocks in both directions) to rescue markets with an economically sound framework.

    The corollary, of course, is don’t confuse the market with the economy.  The US might well be way in over its head, with $100 trillion in obligations (most of which would cost more to meet if rates continue to rise), a growing budget deficit, and consumers who are piling on debt in order to keep up with actual inflation.

    But, that doesn’t mean the party is over — at least, not yet.

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  • CPI: The Charade Continues

    Maybe some day someone will draw attention to the many ways CPI data is falsified.  We’ve written about this extensively, most recently in December [see: Again with the CPI Games?] when gasoline prices, which had risen 20.3% YoY for November, were reported by the EIA as a 17.5% increase.

    Of course, by the time the BLS was finished massaging the data, gas prices had increased by only 16.5% and the “energy index” increased a measly 9.4%.  Combined with the ludicrous methodology in calculating shelter costs, the BLS was able to report headline CPI had increased only 2.2%.

    Equity buyers were thrilled.  SPX gapped higher on Dec 18th (the day CPI was released) and never looked back.  Bond buyers weren’t as sanguine.  The 10-yr, which had traded at 2.35 the day before, was up to 2.49 two days later.

    This morning, we get more of the same.  The EIA reported an 8% YoY increase in gas prices for January. (2.467 vs 2.285.)  It was reported by the BLS as an 8.5% increase.  There’s nothing, in particular, wrong with these figures….except that they’re a lie.

    Here are the closing prices for RBOB (gasoline futures) in Jan 2018 compared with Jan 2017.  The average close in Jan 2017 was 1.5772, compared to 1.8583 in Jan 2018.  That’s a 17.8% increase.

    The extent of the increase is immediately obvious from the RBOB chart below. The Jan 2017 range is shown in 2018 for comparison purposes.  There was zero overlap.EIA reported an average of 2.467 for Jan 2018.  Even a casual glance at the chart below shows that gas might have touched 2.467 only around the first of the month, spending most of its time much higher.My own data, taken from AAA’s daily gas price report, showed that gasoline was as low as 2.467 on exactly one day: Jan 1.

    Why the charade?

    I’ve been listening to the financial news this morning.  Pretty much every single commentator has opined that, while the 0.5% monthly CPI increase is “concerning,” the 2.1% annual increase means inflation is definitely not out of control (how bad might things have been without the manipulation?)

    S&P futures, which just dropped 48 points, beg to differ.  For once, even bulls are openly wondering whether the Fed has, indeed, lost control.  A dismal retail sales figure (the biggest decline in 11 months) hasn’t helped.

    Fortunately for them, VIX manipulation is alive and well.  Pay no attention to the momentary pop in the “fear index.”  It’ll be down to our targets soon enough.And, isn’t it great to see the mainstream financial media start to report on this?  MarketWatch, CNBC, Bloomberg, et al have stories out this morning on the whistleblower lawsuit alleging that someone has been manipulating VIX.  Gosh, really?

    I and many others have only been writing about this for, oh, 5 or 6 years, so it’s nice to see ace reporters jump right in — even if it is to point out how ludicrous the allegations are.  Bloomberg’s article appears to have been penned by the CBOE, which derives 25% of its profits from VIX trading and is quoted extensively throughout:

    The claim sounds dubious: the VIX, that index at the center of the stock market’s wild gyrations over the past week, is somehow being manipulated.  That allegation, made to federal authorities by an anonymous whistle-blower, captivated Wall Street on Tuesday, prompting both quick dismissals and more than a few raised eyebrows.

    I imagine most of the eyebrow-raising is related to who is doing to manipulation rather than how they’re doing it.  Ask yourself: who might have an interest in aggressively shorting VIX smack dab in the middle of a 4.5% futures flash crash?  Who would have the money, the mandate and the cajones?

    It’s the equivalent of writing thousands of homeowners’ insurance policies as the tornado sirens are spooling up.  Yet, this is exactly what happened on election night in Nov 2016 [see: The Fallout and Why the “Trump Rally” is a Fraud.]

    My conclusion all along has been that it was the Fed itself, shorting VIX then and at all the right moments since then to ensure that market volatility was limited to rallies, never declines.

    Yet, an explicit admission by then-Governor and now-Fed Chairman Jerome Powell in the Oct, 2012 FOMC transcripts has gone completely unreported in the media [see: The Fed’s Short Volatility Position.]  You’d think one of the intrepid “journalists” covering the current story might have found it relevant.

    While I’ve been ranting “someone” has been hard at work…shorting VIX.  It has fallen from its initial 25.72 highs to 20.21 (-21%) and has further to go.ES has recovered 34 of its 48-pt loss and is off a manageable 10 points.  If VIX continues dropping as I expect it to, the algos will soon turn the indices sharply positive.

    I’m certainly not complaining.  This is all perfectly in keeping with our analog from Feb 6 [see: Analog Watch] which has already produced nice gains in VIX, SPX, RB, CL and gold.  The currencies are just getting started.

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  • Off to the Races!

    I’ve been a little mystified as to how DXY could take a dive as per our forecast from two weeks ago [see: The End is (Probably) Near] while accommodating our forecast pop in both EURUSD and USDJPY.  We discussed this in our analog details back on Feb 7, wondering whether the comparable drop had already taken place.

    …things are further complicated by the fact that both the white channel bottom and the red TL already broke down before the VIX breakout — that first white dot on Jan 26. In fact, this breakdown was a big factor in the VIX breakout.

    The puzzling aspect of the puzzle was that USDJPY is so integral to propping up stocks that it was hard to imagine a continuing rally without USDJPY’s help.  And, it seemed unlikely that EURUSD’s target could be reached without USDJPY faltering too.

    So, here we are — with DXY declining right on time……and USDJPY dipping toward the 106.50 target we had in place prior to the analog.  Is this the time shift we had contemplated or something more?

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Feb 12, 2018

    So far, so good.  VIX popped just high enough to get SPX to its SMA200, then subsequently dropped through a TL of support that spurred the futures into action overnight.continued for members…
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  • Oil and Gas: Important Role Players

    On January 3, SPX reached a potentially important Fib level: the 2.24 extension of the drop between 2007-2009.

    Now, it doesn’t matter whether or not you believe in harmonics — the application of Fibonacci ratios to price forecasting.  But, you’d have to be blind to not see that plenty of people (or, at least the machines) do.Why begin a post on oil and gas with an SPX chart?  Because, as has happened so frequently the past several years, oil (CL) and gas (RB) were instrumental in a plan to get SPX up over resistance.

    For nearly two years, CL has followed a well defined rising channel, shown below in purple.  It bounced back and forth between its top and bottom with some regularity until it broke out — you guessed it — on January 3.Fibonacci ratios and chart patterns can tell us a lot about future price movements.  But, we must also consider ulterior motives — particularly for oil and gas, which are integral to telling algorithms when to buy and when to sell.  I mattered when we called the bottom in Feb 2016 [see: USDJPY Finally Relents] and it matters today.

    When CL and RB both reached our next downside targets from Jan 17 [see: Targets!] this morning, we had to stop and consider whether stocks had yet done what was desired of them.  With SPX still 50 points away from its SMA200, it seemed they weren’t quite done.  Turns out they weren’t.

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  • The Only Chart That Matters

    It’s pretty simple, really.  VIX got SPX up to 2872.  It got it back down to 2580.  If it’s not stabilized right here and now, SPX is going lower.Fortunately for the bulls, VIX made a lower high yesterday.  SPX didn’t care.  It made new lows anyway.  Because, after years of being tweaked by VIX managing to go just a little lower when needed, the algos need to see VIX stop rising at all before they’ll trigger any buying.

    The inverse VIX ETFs have thrown a 300-pt monkey wrench into the works, forcing buying that would otherwise have dissipated by now.  But, one has to ask: where are the central bankers?  We know they have hammered VIX in the past in order to prop up stocks.  Will they come through this time?

    And, if so, what about the dollar and, by extension, the USDJPY — the other factor which, along with oil prices, engineered the post-US election rally [see: Why the “Trump Rally” is a Fraud.]

    Oil and gas hit our downside targets moments ago, providing one more measure of support for stocks which are desperately in need of it (update coming.)Will it be enough?  Not if VIX can’t be wrestled under control.

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  • Analog Details: Feb 7, 2018

    Our analog is playing out nicely so far.  I’ve spent 18 of the past 24 hours charting, and have some additional info on what to expect from SPX, ES, DXY, USDJPY, EURUSD, TNX, ZN, RB, CL and, of course, VIX over the next two months.

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  • What is Deutsche Bank Trying to Tell Us?

    This morning’s rally is pretty good confirmation that our analog is playing out.  I’ve spent 18 of the past 24 hours charting, and have some additional info on what to expect from SPX, ES, DXY, USDJPY, EURUSD, TNX, ZN, RB, CL and, of course, VIX over the next two months.

    I’ll post it later today, but I’ve yet to come across anything that concerns me from a charting standpoint (i.e., conflicting signals.)  But, of course, there are any number of things that could throw it off track or bust it all together.

    One example is Deutsche Bank.  I don’t usually post about individual stocks, though I do a lot of charting on them for consulting clients.  In this case, I had a client who was trying to decide whether to throw in the towel on the stock.

    I called the bottom 2 days and 4 cents early at 11.23 on Sep 27, 2016 [see: Deutsche Bank – Will it Survive?] and it dutifully bounced up through our various targets until reaching the last target (20.43) I laid out in our Dec 7 post on the stock [see: Deutsche Bank – Another Pause or More?]My view at the time was that DB would correct modestly.

    If DB makes a meaningful reversal here, the rising white channel I’ve sketched in should take form – opening the door to a deeper backtest and fleshing out the rising white channel. It emerges from the falling red channel around Jan 13 at 14.30ish. But, the more conservative target would be the midline at 16.90.

    As it turned out, DB topped out at 20.94 (after gapping higher, gaining 5.6% that day alone) on Jan 25, and reached 16.90 (-19%) less than 3 months later.  It didn’t stop there, however.  It dropped on down to and through its SMA200 and a 50% retracement of its rise where it finally bounced at 15.79.

    Since then, it’s been bouncing back and forth between roughly 15 and 20.  This has been going on for almost a year, since March 2017.  It’s enough to make you wonder where senior management’s incentive stock options are priced.

    The Feb 2 drop was a real blow — the latest drop through the SMA200. As of this morning, DB had dropped 22% since Jan 24.  It’s in line with the string of 20% drops and 20% rallies which had occurred every month or so through last September.

    But, this one looks different from a charting standpoint.

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  • Analog Watch: Feb 6, 2018

    I love analogs.  Sometimes called fractals, they can provide an excellent road map for future price moves based on past ones [for details and a general explanation, CLICK HERE.]

    The first one I ever discovered was the best I’ve ever seen — a repeat of the 2007 top in 2011.  It forecast the summer of 2011 drop to the day and the dollar with very few head fakes along the way.

    My favorite analogs forecast big drops and provide an opportunity to score big gains by shorting or simply avoid big losses by hedging.  But, I’m not picky.  I’m a big fan of any opportunity to figure out where the market is going before it gets there.

    Of course, I always post these with a little trepidation.  Even though almost all of them have worked out, there have been a few notable exceptions over the past 7 years.  Even those have value, though, as the failure for a move to takes place usually confirms the likelihood of the opposite move — also useful.

    The drop since Jan 26 offers an intriguing possibility to repeat a previous pattern which, if it plays out, could produce a nice 15-20 gain over the next couple of months.  More importantly, it could keep us on the right side of the ledger in the midst of heavy volatility.

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