Author: pebblewriter

  • Q1 2017 Results

    Our first quarter total came in at 26.17% versus 5.53% for the S&P 500.  This brings our average monthly return to 8.39% for 2017 YTD and to 14.58% for the period since Jan 2015.

    While Q1 returns were lower than those earned in 2015 and 2016, there has been significantly less volatility these past few months, and much fewer opportunities to short.

    Discussion

    This quarter was arguably the most challenging in recent memory.  Coming on the heels of the algo-driven post-election ramp job, stocks rallied strongly into the year end.  This was in keeping with our analog first posted on Aug 3 [see: A New Analog] which called for SPX to reach 2297 by Jan 5.

    From the Dec 9 Analog Update:

    SPX was a little late, reaching 2297 on Jan 25 and then reversing.  But, two weeks later, it shot up through 2300, breaking out of a sharply rising channel and tacking on an additional 100 points before finally running out of steam.

    This was unexpected, and we spent much of January and February getting head faked by frequent weak closes which were then followed by strong gaps higher the following morning (11 of 39 sessions.)

    March was more fruitful, as the sharp decline in oil prices we had forecast finally played out, driving stocks lower in the process.  This was a nervous few weeks, as speculative long positions had reach all-time record highs.  But, it worked out nicely, and we were able to maintain higher conviction on our positions throughout the month.

    As we’ve discussed often, VIX took up the mantle of chief market manipulation tool following the US election [see: Why the Trump Rally is a Fraud.]  Between Dec 21 and Apr 5, it dropped below the bottom of a long-term channel that used to warn of impending corrections an astonishing one out of every four sessions (the yellow arrows.)

    While VIX has moved off the yellow channel bottom these past few weeks, USDJPY and CL are still quite active in propping up stocks.  Just today, USDJPY completed an IH&S Pattern that drove SPX nearly 1% higher.

    There will no doubt be many head fakes and trap doors ahead. In the next week alone, we face the prospect of war, the next step in the dissolution of the EU, a budget showdown and government shutdown, and the continuing oil price collapse.  Our latest forecast indicates plenty of fireworks!

     *  *  *

    Membership Promotion

    To celebrate successfully getting through a difficult quarter, we’re throwing a little membership promotion through the end of April.  Earn a 25% rebate on a monthly or quarterly membership [CLICK HERE] or take advantage of special prices on annual memberships.

    But, don’t wait too long.  Annual memberships start at $500 today, April 20, and rise by $50 each day through the remainder of the month.  Just CONTACT ME with the subject line “set me up!”

    The sale ends Apr 30, so don’t delay!

     

  • Sometimes You’re the Bug

    Note: First quarter 2017 results have been posted.  For the latest, including news about a membership promotion starting today, CLICK HERE.


    Sometimes you’re the windshield,
    Sometimes you’re the bug.
    Sometimes it all comes together baby,
    Sometimes you’re a fool in love.
    Sometimes you’re the Louisville Slugger,
    Sometimes you’re the ball.
    Sometimes it all comes together baby,
    Sometimes you’re going lose it all.

    Mark Knopfler, Dire Straits

    It seems another hedge fund bites the dust almost every day.  It’s hardly surprising, given the state of the “markets” lately.

    It used to be that having a strong grasp of macro- and microeconomics and financial statements was enough to generate respectable investment returns.

    Now, it seems that funds have essentially three choices:

    1)  become a closet indexer — hopefully, with alpha thrown in from brilliant stock picking
    2)  be extremely nimble — avoid or take advantage of seemingly random rips/plunges
    3)  be one of the manipulators (or shadow them)

    Being a closet indexer doesn’t work very well in a 2/20 structure.  While there are certainly some great stock pickers out there, even great picks suffer along with everything else when the market is plunging.

    And, it’s challenging to be nimble if you’ve got anywhere north of $1 billion — or, even $100 million. Given how low volume has become, stocks are sensitive to big moves into and out of markets.

    This leaves our manipulators — central banks, their lackeys and big, data-driven firms which are able to shadow or emulate them: Renaissance, Citadel, etc. (some have even accused these firms of being able to help write the daily script via their ability to drive the algo drivers.)  If you’ve got $20+ billion and like to throw your weight around, you can make your own luck.

    Bottom line, stocks are driven all day, every day, by algos which feed off three primary drivers: the price of oil, USDJPY and VIX.  Each of these is manipulated on a daily basis, primarily by central banks but almost certainly by other large players.  If you haven’t noticed this, you haven’t been looking very hard.  Together, they were entirely responsible for the election night recovery and subsequent Trump Rally [see: Why the Trump Rally Is a Fraud.]

    Yesterday, I forecast a pop and drop, calling for a short at 2351.52 (within a point of the top) which we then rode down to 2336.75 (within 2 points of the bottom.)

    VIX, which was hammered over 12% off yesterday’s highs, is curiously on the rise.  Could it be that this ramp job isn’t meant to stick?  It’s been a while since we had a nice pop and drop… Note that the IH&S has completed, so this is a make or break moment for SPX.  I’d short here at 2351.52 with tight stops.

    We picked up 0.6% for the day only by watching and anticipating the price action and interplay between CL, VIX and USDJPY.  It wasn’t an amazing day.  But, string enough 0.6% days together and you get a nice month.  Those who ignore chart patterns and technical analysis were left scratching their heads.

    It works around 90% of the time.  When it doesn’t, it’s because: (1) something big is happening that can’t be contained by a timely hammering of VIX or a USDJPY ramp; (2) those doing the manipulating have their signals crossed; and, (3) the move is imminent, but is delayed multiple times while the big boys position themselves ahead of time.

    Last month, this approach generated 13.15% — a little below our average of 14.58% since Jan 2015, but better than the two previous months (meltups are challenging.)  [see results.]  While I generate medium-term and swing targets, about half of our returns are the result of intra-day swings — many of which are head fakes.

    The worst are those at the end of the day.  Yesterday’s close, for instance, saw a three-day old channel break down.  In the old days (pre-2010) this would have been a bearish development, particularly since stocks are likely headed lower over the next week.

    From yesterday, just before the close:But, a timely push above resistance by USDJPY and a timely after-hours dip by VIX ensured that SPX opened back inside the rising white channel.  They can just as easily push SPX up and out of its falling purple channel.  So, as is often the case, forecasting this beast involves discerning the intent of those who are doing the manipulating and contrasting it with inherent limitations they face.

    A simple example is the USDJPY.  By hammering the yen (an increase in the USDJPY) it’s easy to drive stocks higher.  But, at some point, a cheaper yen hurts Japanese consumers and businesses who must pay higher prices for imported oil and food.

    If you’re thinking “hey, wait a minute; this is the tail wagging the dog!” you’re absolutely correct.  In fact, I’ve had even better results in forecasting currencies and commodities, as they usually wear their motivations on their sleeves.

    If you’re thinking “hey, wait a minute; this is easy!” you’re dead wrong.  I watch 10-12 charts on six monitors all day, and the interplay between them often defies logic. For example, we’ve had several instances, lately, of VIX and stock prices both rising or falling at the same time.

    It’s also quite common for large moves to be delayed all day long, only to take place after hours.  And, don’t get me started on intraday ramps in USDJPY that are unwound after the close each evening, when futures are more easily propped up (watch it tonight.)  Even worse: ramping VIX overnight so it can be hammered during market hours when stocks need a boost.

    All this to say…if trading has been tough lately, you’re in good company.  If a $3 billion hedge fund with dozens of insanely smart analysts and traders backed up by world class research and computers can’t hack it, maybe it’s not them.  Maybe it’s the market that’s broken.

    Now, on to today’s forecast.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Apr 19, 2017

    Another ramp job last night, this one courtesy of USDJPY – which is conveniently back above its SMA200.

    VIX, which was hammered over 12% off yesterday’s highs, is curiously on the rise.  Could it be that this ramp job isn’t meant to stick?  It’s been a while since we had a nice pop and drop.

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  • The Trouble With Meltups

    The trouble with low-volume meltups driven entirely by algos is that they lack a strong foundation.  So, troubling economic, political or military news often unwind them — after hours, of course.  Such was the case with yesterday’s melt-up.

    There’s no shortage of bad news this morning: a new UK election, horrid factory output, oil’s production cut in danger, disappointing housing starts…oh, and the backdrop of potential thermonuclear war.

    USDJPY dutifully ramped back above the SMA200.  And, WTI studiously avoided completing a bearish H&S Pattern.  VIX, of course, shed over 8% intraday — just because.  It was enough to run some stops and put bears on edge.  But, it wasn’t enough to break the negative trend that’s pervaded since the 2400 top.

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  • More of the Same?

    Despite an initial 10-pt surge, SPX came within 0.48 of our next downside target on Thursday — despite attempts by USDJPY, VIX and CL to prop it up.

    Now, even with the futures up several points, it appears the downside might not be done.  After tagging the SMA200, USDJPY has dropped below it to our next lower target. And, CL has ignored an easy opportunity to break out.

    Could we be in for a replay of last Thursday, with our next downside target in play?

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  • Trump Falls in Line

    Trump, who rode to the White House on promises to fix healthcare, avoid foreign wars, embrace Russia, dis NATO, label China a currency manipulator, rebuild infrastructure, slash taxes and upend the Federal Reserve is well on his way to reverting to the same stance as nearly every other mainstream politician in recent memory.

    Yesterday, he declared that the US dollar was too high.  And, after criticizing Yellen for artificially depressing interest rates to aid the (then) incumbent, it turns out he’s a fan of them (and, her.)  Could it be that with all those ex-Goldman bankers running around the White House, someone sat him down and explained that he, too, could benefit from low rates?

    USDJPY dropped right to our next downside target a full week ahead of schedule, but not without a bit of theatrics.  Tuesday’s drop through the yellow line of support at 110.15 yielded, as expected, a drop to the falling white channel bottom. What happened next speaks to the continuing manipulation of USDJPY which, in turn, manipulates equity prices.  The initial breakout above the yellow TL busted a rapidly falling channel in eminis.  From there, USDJPY bounced back and forth in a series of headfakes above the purple trend line and below the red in order to fine tune equities.The primary purpose, of course, was to delay hitting the SMA200 until after the close — so as to avoid the rapid selloff that would otherwise have occurred.  Mission accomplished.  The yellow arrows below indicate where downtrends were interrupted.

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  • Website Maintenance

    I’ve had occasional capacity issues that my web hosting service assures me can be fixed with a little maintenance on their end.

    Hopefully, everything will go smoothly.  But, I’d like to know asap if it doesn’t.  If you encounter any issues logging in or navigating the site over the next few hours, please take a moment to contact me with specifics.

    Thanks,

    Michael

  • Charts I’m Watching: Apr 12, 2017

    As we noted yesterday, SPX is hanging on by the skin of its teeth to a breakout.  Despite an 18-pt intraday plunge, it recovered by the end of the session thanks to a timely decline in VIX and rally in WTI.  Will it be enough to keep the trend intact?

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    The daily candle is close enough to the yellow channel bottom to call it a save.  But, futures are off several points again this morning. 

    And, VIX is on the rise — likely headed for our target at 16.25 – 16.48.

    But, USDJPY has reached the white channel bottom ahead of the SMA200 and could get a bounce for a few days.

    It will need to clear the 109.75 price level to be of any help.

    I suspect this is all designed to allow ES to tag support on this little red channel as well as the larger red channel.  If it doesn’t hold, the falling white channel suggests another 20+ points of immediate downside.If it holds, SPX should bounce from right here and recover to test the IH&S neckline over the holiday weekend.  Aside from the purple TL, the other key level is the SMA5 200 at 2354.95 — which is very close to the yellow neckline (which has yet to be properly backtested.)  I would want to be long here with very tight stops.

    Here’s SPX with the same falling white channel as ES sketched in.  Clearly, yesterday’s reversal at 2337, which occurred a few points shy of our 2334-2335 target (yellow) was a little premature.  It leaves open the question as to whether the bounce was off firm enough support.

    UPDATE:  10:01 AM

    SPX is struggling to remain above its SMA50.  USDJPY and CL aren’t helping much, though VIX is falling just enough to keep it above the purple TL — now around 2348.80.

    Remember, we have an EIA crude inventory report coming out at 10:30AM.  CL has been steadily approaching the .886 at 54.11 for the past two weeks, and yesterday’s API report was bullish.

    Stay tuned…

    UPDATE:  10:32 AM

    The EIA says crude inventories decreased by 2.2 million barrels.  The bad news, however, is that Cushing is at all-time highs — 69.4MM versus capacity of 77MM barrels.

     

    CL spiked higher for a moment, but is back to its .786 Fib.  SPX is following its lead, and dropping through the purple TL.  I’d revert to short on any drop through the SMA5 100 at 2348.76.

    CL is slipping, and looks like it wants to tag its SMA5 200 at 53.19.  It would be enough to knock SPX off trend, so it’s a little tricky.  If CL drops through the SMA5 200, it’d be quite negative for both CL and SPX.

    VIX is keeping SPX afloat……and USDJPY is still playing its cards close to its vest.

    UPDATE:  10:38 AM

    SPX is slipping below the purple TL, but has so far just head-faked 5 separate declines below the SMA5 100.  If CL gets a strong bounce off its SMA5 200, it’ll set up another head fake.  Even so, it makes me nervous to hold long as it keeps testing the SMA5 100.  Keep your stops where you’re comfortable.

    UPDATE:  10:44 AM

    I’ll probably be right back to long, but I’ll revert to short here.  CL is struggling with its SMA5 200 and USDJPY might not hold its red TL.A drop through 53.29 would be bearish and open it up to 51.6 or lower.

    Note that ES’ red channel has completely broken down.UPDATE:  11:07 AM

    A bounce off the white midline makes sense.  We’ll have to see what happens, thought, when it reaches the SMA5 10 at 2347.80.  If it pushes through, everything’s a go for the SMA5 200 tag and yellow neckline breakout.  If it can’t, then 2334.26 is in view.

    At the current rate, it could reach the .786 without tagging the bottom of the falling white channel — if it’s willing to wait a while.  Note that the channel’s .236 line reaches 2335 a little after 3pm this afternoon.

    UPDATE:  11:42 AM

    ES just reached the midline of its falling white channel, which could provide support even though SPX doesn’t show much.

    UPDATE:  11:58 AM

    Now, SPX has tagged its midline, too.  I’d expect a bounce here, though it could be confined to the SMA5 10 around 2344.  Note, though, the SMA5 200 is approaching the purple TL.  A huge bounce would make that a target — though it seems unlikely.

    CL has broken down below the .786 and SMA5 200.  So, this entire decline feels very much managed/engineered — meaning there’s a purpose and a target which is below current levels.

    UPDATE:  12:09 PM

    12:09 — often a turning point in bounces — and SPX just backtested its SMA5 10.  I’d look for a reversal here, but keep an eye on USDJPY and CL.

    UPDATE:  12:21 PM

    SPX is nudging up through the SMA5 20 on VIX weakness and USDJPY strength.  But, CL continues to falter.  And, VIX has bounced at the SMA5 50 three times in a row.  I’d hold short here.

    UPDATE:  12:51 PM

    VIX is getting a nice boost, but our 16.25-16.48 target isn’t that far off.  SPX should continue dropping, but I’d keep a close eye on VIX and USDJPY, which is testing its SMA5 200 again.

    I have to run a quick errand, will be back in 10 minutes or so.  Watch for TL support at 2341.78, the 1.618 and .786 at 2334.26-2335.34, and the .886 at 2328.65.

    UPDATE:  1:03 PM

    SPX just tagged TL support at 2341.78 and got a nice bounce.  Bears need the bounce to stop right here.  Will CL be satisfied with a backtest?

    UPDATE:  1:14 PM

    Giving it just a little leeway in case the .886 is the target.  My only hesitation is USDJPY, which has pushed above its SMA5 100 again.  On the other hand, VIX has tagged the SMA5 50 for the 4th time.  The fact that it hasn’t plunged down to the SMA5 200 or below tells me this is probably an officially approved and scripted decline.

    UPDATE:  1:40 PM

    SPX is breaking out on VIX’s dip below red TL and USDJPY’s push above the purple TL.  Back to cash until this resolves itself.  Remember, VIX has support at the purple TL and the SMA5 200 around 15.35.  If it drops through the SMA5 200, SPX has a good chance of reaching its own SMA5 200 — perhaps as it reaches the SMA50.

    UPDATE:  2:01 PM

    Feeling pretty iffy about it, but we could get a reversal here at the SMA50 rather than the SMA5 200 as it’s also the white channel .786 line.  Back to short with relatively tight stops.

    Note that ES has fully backtested the red channel.

    UPDATE:  2:10 PM

    Note that USDJPY is back below the purple TL.  I need to run out for a meeting and probably won’t be back until after the close.  I think there’s probably a 50% chance that SPX holds these levels until the SMA5 200 arrives at the SMA50 at 2349.60.  It’s equally likely it reverses between here and there and heads down to 2334 or 2328.  As long as it stays below 2350, I’d want to be short.

    UPDATE:  2:51 PM

    TL support, again.

    UPDATE:  3:20 PM

    USDJPY just snapped, sending VIX surging and CL popping to compensate.  SPX is down to the white midline again, where it could bounce.  VIX might have one more good run in it up to 16.25+; but, they might be looking to close the session at that SMA50/SMA5 200 intersection. I’d want to revert to cash above the SMA5 100.  As usual, shorting overnight should only be attempted by those who can hedge or handle the gap risk.  Watch your stops.

    .

  • Price Alert: Gold

    Gold is approaching our next upside target from two weeks ago [see: Gold – Following the Yellow Brick Road.]

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  • This is a Test

    Yesterday, we got a taste of what happens to United Airlines passengers who are “disruptive and belligerent.”   In what is being described as one of the biggest PR fails in recent memory, United CEO Oscar Munoz defended the action taken to forcefully drag an Asian-American doctor from a flight that United had overbooked.

    No doubt United would have found the volunteers it needed had it upped the compensation it was offering to $1,000, $1,500 or even $2,000.  Instead, it will pay millions to the passenger, and many more millions in lost revenues from prospective passengers who are too horrified to “fly the friendly skies.”

    The stock is likely headed for at least 61.72, a 14% drop from yesterday’s highs — about $3 billion off its market cap.  And, that would be a positive outcome — if it’s able to hold both horizontal support and its SMA200.

    While the event itself was shocking, it’s equally surprising that the CEO of a major airline could be so tone deaf as to email his employees that “I want to commend you for continuing to go above and beyond to ensure we fly right.”

    The most interesting CEO on the world stage, right now, is our own Donald Trump.  He faces much greater challenges than Munoz did: escalating military conflicts with both Syria and North Korea and, by proxy, Russia and China.

    We’ve had a taste of Trump’s leadership skills with respect to the battles over health care, tax reform, and scores of executive orders relating to the environment, energy, etc.  He won some, and he lost some. None of those, however, involved the risk of nuclear war.

    Is it any wonder that investors are a little nervous and stocks have, so far, not shaken off this particular geopolitical risk?

    On Feb 10, SPX broke out of a large, year-old channel that was averaging 17% YoY returns.  It has backtested that channel top seven times in the past several weeks — including a serious plunge below it on Mar 27.

    Today, it’s happening again.  Will it survive this test?  It might just depend on whether or not Trump survives his.

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