Author: pebblewriter

  • 3rd Time a Charm?

    UPDATE:

    Down to 1350.76 so far, getting close to the .886 of the larger purple Butterfly pattern.  We didn’t bounce much at all when RSI first hit its fan line, a show of strength for the bearish case.

    The next test is the 60-min RSI, which has reached 18 — the low since August of 2011 and a sign of short-term oversold condition.  A push into the 17 range would be extremely bearish, though I suspect we’ll get a bounce before too long.

    A reminder of our downside targets posted on the 6th [see: So Far, So Good]:

    • 1349.42 — .886 of the purple Butterfly
    • 1343.41 — 1.272 of the yellow Crab pattern
    • 1340.03 — horizontal support, prev. Point X
    • 1323.85 — 1.618 of yellow Crab
    • 1317.63 — 1.272 of purple Butterfly
    • 1289.14 — 1.618 of purple Butterfly (and 2.24 of Crab)

    I talk a lot about bounces, but watch the market’s momentum.  If we slice through one level, consider adjusting stops rather than closing out positions.  We’ve seen it happen often enough on the upside — where logical reversal points were routinely ignored by a runaway bull.  The same thing can happen on the downside.  It’s just been so long that it’s easy to forget, LOL.

    ORIGINAL POST:

    This push below the neckline looks rather convincing, but — as before — the key is a close below it, currently around 1364.  The fly in the ointment is the RSI, which just tagged the fan line from Aug 2011.  It should provide at least a bounce.

    More shortly.

  • Update on AUDUSD

    AUDUSD can be viewed as having dropped into a long term channel back in 1997.  As its 2011 efforts to break out indicate, any significant upside will be limited by that channel.

    It now sits at a critical juncture —  the last fan line coming off the 2008 lows is the only thing standing in the way of a plunge to the midline currently around .85.  A hard bounce on this fan line, on the other hand, would buy it some time.

    From a fundamental standpoint, AUDUSD is probably as good a canary in the inflationary/deflationary coalmine as there is.

  • Crude, but Effective

    UPDATE:  1:40 PM

    VIX came within a point of completing its Inverse H&S pattern this morning but was beat back by the equities stick save. The purple channel we drew a couple of weeks ago was broken, but there is one last viable channel (yellow) that can be drawn — based on this morning’s high.  Anything beyond will have to be viewed as a break out.

    Based on the RSI channels we’ve been watching for the past few months, (more…)

  • So Far, So Good

    Over the past 5 weeks, our forecasts have been remarkably accurate.

    The Butterfly pattern identified back on Mar 29 [All the Pretty Butterflies] correctly called the 1422 interim top.  As anticipated on Apr 10, we got a bounce at 1357 (the .786 of the 1340-1422 rise) and began tracing out a head & shoulders pattern that fit with an analog of the Feb-May 2011 topping pattern [Analog Details].

    The analog been very accurate thus far, although the initial right shoulder bounce had us wondering whether the alternate path to 1462 was playing out.  Our RSI indicators kept us on the right path.  Instead, we got a complex H&S pattern, with a second test of the neckline and subsequent round trip to the shoulder line, accurately forecast in both time and price.

    Friday’s bounce at 1367 was within 2 points of our 1365 target [2d Time a Charm], with a nice little back test — as forecast — to the neckline, where we closed out the week.  The only reason I mention all the above is that, while this degree of accuracy is always desirable, it’s not typical and should not be expected.

    Regardless of how well your investments have performed the past five weeks, don’t forget that they are out to get you.  Even now, as it appears that the analog is playing out nicely, the financial establishment is working overtime to separate you from your money.  There will be more times, such as in January, when perfectly good harmonic and chart patterns don’t play out as they should.

    Always use stops!

    Now, with that out of my system, it looks like the results of the Greek and French election, on top of Friday’s dismal non-farm payroll numbers, is going to provide the push we need to get on with the downside.

    Remember, our target is 1288-1323, although 1288 has been fudged to 1295 simply because a dip below 1292 would be problematic for the bulls from a wave count perspective;  i.e., I think they’ll pull out all the stops to avoid it.

    Potential bounces along the way include:

    • 1349.42 — .886 of the purple Butterfly
    • 1343.41 — 1.272 of the yellow Crab pattern
    • 1340.03 — horizontal support, prev. Point X
    • 1323.85 — 1.618 of yellow Crab
    • 1317.63 — 1.272 of purple Butterfly
    • 1289.14 — 1.618 of purple Butterfly (and 2.24 of Crab)

    But, I divide the downside into three basic scenarios:

    (1)  stick save: Fed freaks over Europe, QEish leak limits downside to 1349.
    (2)  top case: normal Butterfly completion to 1.272 (1317) or 1.618 (1289.)
    (3)  panic sets in: crash and test bottom or large red rising wedge around 1200.

    I expected to be able to update all of the charts today, but my youngest daughter has been home with stomach flu while my wife and daughter #2 were at an all-day volleyball tournament.  Needless to say, it wasn’t as productive a day as I expected.  Look for updated charts Monday.

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    Over the next couple of days, I’ll finish converting the new website to a premium site.  Many thanks to those of you who have joined up.  I hope you’ve been able to act on my forecasts; if so, you’ve more than earned back your subscription costs in the first week.

    To anyone still thinking about it, the end is near.  The old site will still display articles of general interest and delayed market updates.  But, members of the new site will enjoy the first and best of what I can put out.  To join now, click here.

    Good luck to all.

  • Random Walk, My A$$

    As we close precisely on the trend line between the Oct 27 high (which kicked off a 112-pt Inverse Head & Shoulders pattern) and the just completed (for the 2nd time) Head & Shoulders pattern, I’m reminded of how little fundamentals have come to matter.

     

    Oh, and for any Fibonacci haters out there, check out the time and price relationships between the two patterns.

     

  • 2nd Time a Charm?

    UPDATE:  11:30 AM

    I feel pretty good about my downside (primary) case now that things are moving along.  I mentioned back on April 25 [see: The Bulls Fight Back] that we needed to start down by Wednesday in order for the larger H&S to maintain some time proportionality between shoulders.  We got our reversal Tuesday, and have been moving down since.

    Also, check out the RSI and MACD on the chart below.  RSI broke the little fan line I threw up a few days ago, and has no support until it hits line k-5 — presumably below 1370.  MACD just saw a bearish cross and is approaching the center line.  Note, also, that SPX has fallen below its 10, 20 and 50-day SMAs.  The only remaining moving average to offer support are the SMA100 (at 1342) and the 200, way down at 1276.

    I’ve already seen a few Fed comments, talking up the economy, employment, etc.  And, SPX is pausing here at the neckline.  I assume that even the most fundamentally oriented and/or manipulative powers that be have a smart technical analyst on staff who explains to their bosses what happens when various patterns play out.

    So, there’s always a struggle at key moments like this. It’s interesting, all the same, that if we look very hard at all, we can find chart patterns that provide rationale for the price movements.  Here, at the neckline, we can see that RSI has also reached a midline of sorts in the channel we’ve been following.

    If we break the neckline, look for that back test somewhere around 1365 mentioned below.  After that, not much support till 1340, and then 1323.

    UPDATE:  11:15 AM

    Here’s the big picture, again.  The larger H&S, which completed but didn’t play out on Apr 23, is back in play.  If we can close beneath 1370, we’ll have a crack at a complex H&S pattern (two shoulders on each side) that targets the low 1300s.

    The harmonic picture supports this, by the way.  If the H&S plays out, the little Bat pattern (yellow) under construction becomes a Crab pattern.  These typically extend to the 1.618, but can go further (2.000, 2.24, 2.618, etc.)

    The larger purple pattern – a Butterfly – completes at 1317 (the 1.272) or 1289 (the 1.618.)  Hence, my call for a downside of 1295-1323.

     

    ORIGINAL POST:  10:30AM

    The Bat, Crab and H&S patterns are doing their thing, and we’re fast approaching the target we set yesterday of 1372. That was an interim target of course, because if we complete the larger Head & Shoulders target (again), the potential downdraft is to 1295-1323.

    I’m refining the larger H&S completion target to 1370.73 and the nominal target to 1300.

    The .886 Bat pattern retracement of the 1358-1415 rise from Apr 20 to May 1 indicates a turn at 1365.23.  So, if the pattern is to play out, that would be an excellent place for a back test to commence.

    Of course, TPTB will attempt to turn it again.  Cue the talking heads, or QEeak from deep inside the Fed that will attempt to turn the tide before it’s too late.

     

     

  • New H&S Pattern

    Nothing to do with markets per se, but this kind of story really makes you stop and think…  Anyone who thinks the same couldn’t be done just as easily with a FAB-250 from a Skyhawk is deluding themselves.

     

    UPDATE:  3:40 PM

    The H&S neckline back test we discussed in the 2:20 post below is likely complete.

    Note that the head of this little H&S pattern came at the 1.618 extension of last week’s 1392-1358 decline — in other words, a Crab pattern (drawn in yellow.)  And, it’s nestled in the C and D legs of the Bat pattern that completed at 1415 (the purple pattern.)

    After weeks/months of normally reliable patterns busting left and right, it’s so nice (not to mention profitable) to see patterns play out the way they should.

    UPDATE:  2:20 PM

    SPX traded through the small neckline and seems quite content to pause at the small fan line I posted about this morning.  It’s line k-4 on the chart below, and just so happens to correspond to the SMA 10 on the daily chart (1390.81.)

    In H&S patterns, neckline breaks are often followed by a back tests.  If the NFP print in the morning is lousy, we should head down to 1372 pretty quickly.  If the numbers are great (or the market perceives them as guaranteeing another round of QE), the pattern will bust.

    UPDATE:  1:15 PM

    Be cautious with this smaller pattern, though.  The 60-min chart shows a distinct possibility of a bounce at the neckline (as happened with the larger pattern.) Focus on the bold, yellow TL on the RSI below.  I would suggest anyone considering piling on shorts protect themselves, as always, with tight stops.

    UPDATE:  12:30 PM

    Over on the right shoulder of the Head & Shoulders pattern we’ve been watching is a… H&S pattern.  It would complete somewhere just below 1394 and targets 1372 — the (wait for it…) neckline of the larger pattern.

    Ever get the feeling the market is just toying with you?  Seriously, though, this fits rather well with the RSI indicators, which as I posted earlier, support the idea of another test of the neckline.

    If we get crazy positive non-farm payroll numbers in the morning, all bets are off.  Barrons is reporting consensus estimates of 165,000 (below), while Briefing.com estimates 140K.

     

  • Charts I’m Watching: May 3, 2012

    NOTE:  New on the MEMBERSHIP>MY PROFILE page, a sign up area that will allow subscribers to be texted whenever a new post is added or added to [note:  additions don’t seem to be generating additional texts — working on this].   I tested it last night, and it took only 3-4 minutes for a SMS text advising me of a new post to appear on my mobile.  It doesn’t appear to handle non-US cell providers, so I’m looking for additional vendors that can accommodate those outside the states.

     

    UPDATE:  1:15 PM

    Be cautious with this smaller pattern, though.  The 60-min chart shows a distinct possibility of a bounce at the neckline (as happened with the larger pattern.) Focus on the bold, yellow TL on the RSI below.  I would suggest anyone considering piling on shorts protect themselves, as always, with tight stops.

    UPDATE:  12:30 PM

    Over on the right shoulder of the Head & Shoulders pattern we’ve been watching is a… H&S pattern.  It would complete somewhere just below 1394 and targets 1372 — the (wait for it…) neckline of the larger pattern.

    Ever get the feeling the market is just toying with you?  Seriously, though, this fits rather well with the RSI indicators, which as I posted earlier, support the idea of another test of the neckline.

    If we get crazy positive non-farm payroll numbers in the morning, all bets are off.  Barrons is reporting consensus estimates of 165,000 (below), while Briefing.com estimates 140K.

     

    UPDATE:  12:30 PM

    Non-manufacturing ISM numbers confirm the economy’s slowdown.  Recall that the recent national numbers for manufacturers inexplicably showed an improvement — in stark contrast to the regional numbers and most other economic indicators I watch.

    The services sector (the larger share of the US economy) confirms what I suspect was a bad print a couple days ago.  We see worsening in the overall index (from 56 to 53.5 and vs expectations of 56.5) and in the categories of business activity, new orders, employment and prices (the largest drop of all.)

     

    ORIGINAL POST:  11:00 AM EST

    The RSI channel we analyzed (in excruciating detail) yesterday is holding so far.

    If we can break that last little fan line (k-4) things should accelerate a little to the downside, probably to test the k-5 line, which I believe will correlate with the H&S pattern neckline.

    It seems like the market is waiting for a sign of some sort for any serious downside to develop — which will likely come from Europe, China or MENA.  Why?  If good economic news drives the market up, and bad economic news increases (even falsely) the odds of QE, then it stands to reason that only an exogenous shock — one over which the Fed has less control — will drive prices lower.

    Having said that, the entire economic picture has the feel of a triangle pattern.  We careen from good news to bad, euphoria to despair — all the while drawing closer to the (IMO) inevitable day of reckoning where the mountain of debt shakes just enough to unleash a major landslide.

    We see a preview of the effects in places like Greece, Ireland, Portugal and increasingly Spain.  Total debt to GDP is much too high in these countries, but the US tops them all.  Official reports put acknowledged debt/GDP in the US at 101.5%.  But, as this Zerohedge article points out, the contingent liabilities such as the NPV of unfunded pension and health care drive our true debt/GDP to well over 300%.

  • To Scalp or to Swing?

    Yesterday’s Bat pattern reversal we expected has confirmed this morning.  SPX, currently down 7.42, was off as much as 11.90 just after the opening.

    Bat patterns complete following a .886 Fibonacci retracement of a significant move — in this case, the 1422 to 1357 drop from April 2 to April 10.  88.6% of that drop was 1414.97, and we exceeded it just slightly before the market reversed course (at 1415.32.)

    Cash short positions established at 1415 were up almost 1% this morning.  At-the-money puts bought when SPX hit 1415 were up at least 100%.    If you bought a few, congratulations!  Your pebblewriter membership just paid for itself.

    The tricky thing with harmonic patterns is how much of a reversal to expect.  Some harmonics traders, therefore, practice scalping — establishing a position just before the expected reversal (with appropriate stops) and taking a profit shortly after.  This can be very profitable and, if done properly, entails little risk.

    The other method is to use these reversals to establish longer-term swing or momentum trade positions.  This method works well if there is a reason to believe the position has more room to run; i.e., other chart patterns or technical analysis hint at a continuation of the new trend.

    If you’ll indulge me, I’ll walk us through my thought process.  It doesn’t always work, but it provides a useful framework for the scalp/swing decision.

    In this case, the dominant chart pattern is the H&S pattern that completed but didn’t play out back on April 23.  We would expect a busted H&S pattern to go up and take out the head — 1422.  But, this pattern has continued to loiter, and now reverse, at the shoulder line already established.

    For that reason, it’s quite possible we’re establishing a complex H&S pattern, which simply means there are more than one shoulder on each side.  There are two shoulders on the left, although they’re not perfectly formed.  But, good enough?  Probably.

    We can’t put a number on it, but I did observe the other day that the pattern would be balanced time-wise by today.  While not an absolute requirement, balanced right and left shoulders contribute to a more reliable pattern IMO.  In other words, if the pattern is going to play out, it had better get on with it.  A substantial delay increases the odds that the alternate path to 1462 plays out — without a trip to the low 1300s.

    The other chart pattern I’ve written about a lot these past few days is the RSI channel.  Along with the Bat pattern, it correctly forecast yesterday’s turn as a back test of the major trend line (yellow, dashed) running through the middle of the chart.  Note that it can be viewed as a system of fan lines originating from August 8 when SPX had nearly completed its initial 246-point plunge [see: Analog.]  We’ll label this point “a.”

    Point “a” was just a point until the Oct 4 1074 bounce.  With the addition of a “b”, we had a trend line/fan line.  The bounce at “c” more or less confirmed it.  Shortly after, we broke the fan line and fell to “d.”

    Line a-d now becomes a new fan line, though SPX would go back up and back test line a-b starting at point “e” and continuing for months — until point “g” in February.  Along, the way, a new line was established at “f” — which correlated with the 20-point Dec 19 plunge.

    Point “f” established both a new channel (line d-j) and would also serve as the origination point for new fan line f-g that, together with a-g, would form a rising wedge within RSI.  The break and back test (at the apex) of that rising wedge would mark the topping out of RSI, and thus the beginning of the serious divergence that would begin to drag on the bull run.

    Note that the 1422 high didn’t occur when RSI peaked at “g” or even later at “j.”  It came at “1” — 4 little peaks later.  Of course, “j” wasn’t just another little peak.  It was a back test of the channel created by d-j and followed a major dip to “i” that correlated with a 23-point drop on Mar 6 — further defining the SPX rising wedge.

    Point “i” also helped establish the downward-sloping channel (red, dashed) on which I’ve been so focused lately.  The dashed fan line from “i” to “1” (the SPX high) provided a clue as to the drop to come — since “1” was established during a back test of that line.  When fan line i-2 was broken, it was followed by a 65-point drop in SPX.  And, the corresponding “k” in RSI helped validate the current channel.

    Note that i-3 is a third fan line and is simply a segment of the major a-i fan line.  Its back test is what we’re trying to complete right now.  Will it be a short, sweet back test like point “j”, or a long, drawn-out affair like the period from “e” to “g”?

    All channels work forever…until they don’t.  So, there’s no guarantee that this one will contain SPX’s moves going forward.  The key points I’ll be watching are the fan line k-4, which was established by the Apr 23 neckline tag (and H&S completion.)  A break of this fan line would really help the bearish case — while a RSI move up through “3” would be bullish, establishing k-4 as the lower bound of a new upward sloping channel.  In fact, a break up and out of the channel at any point would be bullish.

    If we do break beneath k-4, the next major fan line is a-k.  Both prior major fan lines got two bounces before they gave way — a common occurrence, so it’s entirely possible this one will, too — especially if it’s still within the channel.

    So, which is it?  Will the new channel hold, or will the alternate case play out?   The bulls have their work cut out for them, as an upward move to the apex means not only breaking out of the channel, but through the solid, purple trend line that dates back to November of 2010.  This same TL (or its lower parallel) figured into the reversals on Feb 18, May 2, July 7 and Oct 27 in 2011 — some pretty good company.

    The break above it from Jan 9 to April 4 2012 ushered in the 1280 to 1422 melt up.  We broke below it on April 4 — the SPX high — and have back tested it twice in the past week (the highlighted area.)  All things being equal, I suspect it would be much easier to break out of the red, dashed channel than above this TL.

    If I haven’t put you to sleep yet…

    Therein lies the reason I’m still clinging to the analog as my top scenario and the alternate case as just an alternate.  I think the bullish case is stretched very thin, meaning SPX needs to pull back and gather momentum if it’s going to take a run at 1462-1472.

    At these levels, it would have to bull its way through that purple TL in an already extended state.   The much easier way of achieving a higher high would be to go down and bounce off line a-k — corresponding to the low 1300s in SPX — and zip back up to the purple trend line.

    A new high on SPX at the century mid-line around 1462-1472, combined with a lower high on RSI would establish another significant divergence that just might unravel the bull run in a much bigger way.  More on that later.

    Conclusion:

    We started off with the question of whether to scalp or swing.  It’s largely a matter of wits and nerves.   The market is consolidating now, trapped in the channel created by the shoulder line and neck line of a H&S pattern — which is the perfect environment for day trading and/or scalping.

    But, one of these days, it’ll break out.  If it’s to the upside, that’s 60-70 points of swing trading that could be very profitable.  If the downside, I expect a swift 80-100 points.  When it does, swing traders will be very happy campers.  Scalpers will be kicking themselves for settling for a lousy 100% return.

    Either way, these are the charts we’ll be watching.  It should be exciting!

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    BTW, there are still about 12 hours left until the introductory pricing on pebblewriter.com runs its course.  Current Followers get $100 off the price of an annual membership.  And the first 100 annual members, regardless of whether they’re a Follower or not, will have their current annual subscription price grandfathered for the life of the site.

    For full details, click here.

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    P.S.  I promise not every post will be this dense.  Some of you want to know what time it is, not how a watch works.  But, there are plenty of guys out there who, for a small fee, will tell you whether the market’s going up or down.   My goal is to teach you why and, together, to discover new ways to make sense of it all.

    Good luck to all.

     

     

  • A Swing and a Hit!

    We didn’t have to wait long for the Bat pattern I posted at 11am to play out.

    The .886 target was 1414.97, and we reversed at 1415.32 at 11:50am — closing just a fraction above the subsequent low for the day of 1405.25.

    I was disappointed to be stopped out of my short position early this morning, but more than made up for it by establishing new shorts at 1415.  I enjoy 60% intra-day profits as much as the next guy, but what’s really cool about the way the day closed is the effect on the RSI channel.

    I posted yesterday about the RSI channel that was setting up on SPX.  I added another post late last night (early this morning?) showing essentially the same pattern on all the other indices I watch.  It strongly suggests that the rise since 1357 is nothing more than a back test.  Here’s the view at yesterday’s close.

    This morning’s elevator ride sent RSI right through that dashed, red line — making the channel look about as valid as a $3 bill.  In fact, RSI spent most of the session ignoring my channel line. But thanks to the Bat pattern reversal, at the end of the day (literally) the channel held.

    And — wouldn’t you know it — SPX closed right at the shoulder line (white, dashed line) where it can torment us with uncertainty for another day.

    For a peek at the other indices and their channels, check out New Charts! posted last night.  Also, each index has its own page under the MARKETS menu, and will be updated at least weekly.  SPX, DX and VIX are typically updated intra-day on the main page, depending on market conditions.

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    While you’re poking around, consider signing up.   Current pebblewriter followers who join by midnight tomorrow are entitled to $100 off an annual membership.  Also, the first 100 annual members who sign up by tomorrow will have their membership rate grandfathered for the life of the site.  No increases, ever — which will be pretty cool when it costs $500 just to fill up your Suburban.

    Over the next day or two, this website will be password protected, so those of you who have already subscribed (thanks!) will enjoy first dibs on the latest and greatest.  If you haven’t subscribed yet, might as well do it now and save yourself $100.  If you bought a dozen at-the-money puts at 1415 today, you’re already up more than the cost of an annual membership.

    Good luck to all.