Category: Charts I’m Watching

  • Charts I’m Watching: Dec 10, 2012

    The market continues to walk a tightrope between another leg up and a very significant tumble.  We’ve been here many times before in the past year, and it isn’t getting any more fun.  To recap…

    We remain short from 1423 on Dec 3 [see: Without a Net].  This was target A established in our Oct 26 forecast [see: A New Old Analog] and can be seen in the original chart below.

    Note that 1423 was very close to the .618 retracement (1424.41 on the white grid below) of the 1474 – 1343 decline.  Prices reversed there as we expected, shedding 25 points to 1398 in its first wave down (in line with our forecast of 1400.)

    That .618 retracement of the 1474-1343 wave down portends one of three outcomes:

    1. the bearish case:  a corrective wave 2 which sets up a more powerful wave 3 down
    2. the bullish case:  the first of a series of impulsive waves to new highs
    3. the middle case: the “A” subwave in an A-B-C corrective wave that points higher before wave 3 down.

    The first case is pretty clear cut, and has been detailed in prior posts.

    The third is also pretty clear, as the .618 retracement to 1423 could be merely a Point B in a Gartley Pattern to the .786 (1446) or Bat Pattern to the .886 (1459.)

    If SPX blows through 1425, I’m fully prepared to switch sides and take a stab at re-shorting at those higher levels.

    The big imponderable is case #2.  The top question I’ve received over the past week is whether a fiscal cliff deal would result in such a move.  It’s pretty easy to imagine that sort of a market reaction, even though — like last year’s debt ceiling compromise — it would hardly be justified.

    One thing is indisputable:  deal or no deal, we’ll get higher taxes and lower government spending.  Any combination of the two will negatively impact GDP.   By the same token, though, any deal would almost certainly mean a bump in prices.

    UPDATE:  11:50 AM

    Last Friday, SPX came within 48 cents of retracing .886 (1420.82) of its 1423.73-1398.23 decline.  This morning, it sealed the deal, reaching 1421.64 and completing the Bat Pattern.

    In the process, though, it tagged the neckline of the potential Inverted Head & Shoulder pattern we discussed Friday.   The pattern, if it plays out, targets 1507ish.  For the pattern to play out, we’d (at least) want to see a close above the shoulder line at 1420.80.

    But, it’s important to point out that not every IH&S pattern plays out.   Sometimes, it’s just market makers trying to shake things up a little bit.  Here’s one that didn’t play out last year, for example.

    Suppose we went up and tagged the actual .618 at 1424.41 for instance.  It’d be easy to see it as the bullish case playing out, what with a higher high and all.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Update on Financials: Dec 7, 2012

    The last time I devoted an entire post to financials [June 5: So Crazy, it Just Might Work] XLF was down nearly 19% from its March highs.  I held my breath and made some ridiculously bullish predictions.

    But, all good things must come to an end, and I think the tide is turning for financials.  Don’t get me wrong…I still think they’re dead meat in the longer term.  I just think we’re looking at a sizable bounce here and now if — and let me be clear, it’s a very important IF — the rumors are true and Kumbaya Banking and Quantitative Whatever are back.

    If not, this entire exercise isn’t worth the bytes it’s written with.  The financials, along with just about everything else Bloomberg quotes, will roll over and die.  OK, with that huge caveat out of the way — and before you laugh me out of cyberspace — here are my targets:

    JPM:  today’s close = 31.99, price target = 38.69 (+21%)
    C:       today’s close = 25.75; price target = 34.79 (+35%)
    BAC:    today’s close = 7.10; price target = 11.34 (+60%)

    Turns out that was the low for both JPM and C.  JPM reached our target on Sep 6 and tagged on an additional 5 points by October 17.  Citi reached its target on Sep 14 (same day SPX peaked) promptly dropped 10%, then rallied another 3.5 points to form a nifty little double-top on October 18.

    BAC was my one disappointment.  It had achieved a nice 38% return when it peaked at 9.79 on Sep 14, but had fallen short of my price target — a Fibonacci 61.8% retrace of its 68% 2011 plunge.  Apparently I had been too optimistic.  Or, so I thought…

    Don’t look now, but in the past couple of days BAC has shaken off its laggard status and is once again spiking higher — trading within 66 cents of my June forecast.  As has been widely reported, call option buying is going through the roof.

    Sadly for those speculators, though, it’s going to take lots of unicorns farting rainbows for those calls to pay off very big.  Why?

    Reason #1:  Yep.  Two Crab Patterns pointing to the same conclusion — a reversal near current prices.

    Reason #2:  Uh-huh.  Rising wedge, plain as the note on your place.

    Reason #3:    Bad channel karma everywhere.  Maybe those call buyers don’t look at charts much?  Yikes!

    Reason #4:  How about a Fib .382 reversal?  It’s not usually the end of the world, but it is a Fib. And, it’s surrounded by a bunch of little channels that are about as cute as a pack of Dilophosaurus.

    I’m not going go all negative and start talking about the massive fundamental problems BAC faces — as do most other banks.  But if BAC hasn’t done its thing by the time the market does its mama bear crash here over the next few weeks, it’ll be a couple of months before it gets another shot.

    If it’s lucky, the sell-off will only be to 9.12.  But, it the white channel mid-line doesn’t hold, you could through another point or so on the fire.

    What does this mean for the rest of the financials?  Think in terms of a downdraft on Monday.   XLF needs 8 cents to reach its .786 (or .21 for the .886), which ought to get the party started to the downside.

    JPM needs .47-.61 to reach a prime target for reversal — either 43 or 43.14.

    And, C has about 44 cents of life left in it;  38.19 oughta do it.

     

    When it comes to significant moves, financials often lead the broader markets.  Fortunately for our forecast, they are only one good pop away from being ready for a slide.  Having them on board in the next session or two should get us where we want.

  • Last Call: Dec 07, 2012

    Feeling pretty jazzed, as things should finally get underway today.  Today’s theme music from the late jazz great Dave Brubeck, the last of his kind.  This track features Brubeck, Paul Desmond, Eugene Wright and Joe Morello doing what they did best — laying down some hot licks.

     

    ORIGINAL POST:   9:15 AM

    Though the jobs numbers will give a boost to the market this morning, it shouldn’t be enough to break to new highs.  SPX should come within a few points of completing an inverted H&S pattern, but ultimately fail near the .786 or, more likely, a little Bat Pattern at the .886 (1420.82)

    For anyone who missed the opportunity to go short when SPX nailed our upside target [see: At Last] on Monday, this could be your last chance.

    The rally from 1343 has felt strong, but it’s no more than a back test of a broken channel. The next major move should be much lower.

    As always, stops are advised in the event the pattern completes.  Though this analog has worked beautifully since last April, they all fail eventually.

    BTW, the jobs numbers from BLS weren’t quite as fab as they would have us think (I know — I’m shocked, too.)  In the last four years, those over 55 have scored decent job growth.  Younger workers and those in their earnings prime — not so much.  From Zerohedge:

    UPDATE:  11:45 AM

    The dollar has been a veritable billboard for harmonics lately.  It completed a Bat Pattern back on Sep 14 (red pattern), retracing .886 of its rally from February to July.  Since then, it’s retraced 50% of the drop (not shown, but a Bat Pattern from Aug 28 channel mid-line break.)

    It then proceeded to complete a Crab Pattern (in yellow), reversing at just beyond the 1.618 of 81.138 in mid-November.  Since then, DX formed a nice falling wedge that saw it complete a Gartley Pattern on the 5th (in white.)

    Some might see the purple and red patterns as having further downside potential.  The red Bat could go on to form a Crab down at 74.335 (which would line up nicely with the purple .886 at 74.158.  If our analog/forecast busts, I’d say that’s a good possibility.

    But, it’s hard to ignore the recently broken channel for EURUSD.

    UPDATE:  1:20 PM

    Stocks reversed nicely from this morning’s high, which came within  48 cents of our 1420.82 target — good enough for government work.

    Lots of excitement about financials the past couple of days.  It was certainly one of the hot sectors today, offsetting generally poor results from services and, of course, AAPL.  When it comes to significant moves, financials often lead the broader markets.

    So, in a period when we’re looking for a sizable sell-off, it would be helpful to have the financials on board.  Fortunately for our forecast, they are only one good pop away from being ready.

    For more, check out today’s Update on Financials.

  • Charts I’m Watching: Dec 6, 2012

    ORIGINAL POST:

    We can’t call the corrective wave over just yet.  There’s still potential to one of those fibs or channels we discussed yesterday before the 3rd wave down gets going.

    But, RSI is still showing no breakout potential on any time frame.

    A 50 – 88.6% retracement is considered “normal” for 2nd waves.  This one had a little reversal at a little over .618 on the largest white scale, which opens up the possibility of a Gartley (which completes at the .786) or a Bat Pattern (completes at the .886.)

    As the chart shows, the .786 is at 1418.27 and the .886 is at 1420.82.  Each of them looks possible, and one of them is very likely if SPX edges up past 1415.56.  If it does, my leading candidate is the .786 at 1418.27 — especially if we get a little reversal at 1413.50 — the .786 of the smallest red pattern.

    That would set up a Butterfly Pattern on the little red pattern which completes at its 1.272 at 1418.27 — intersecting nicely with the white pattern’s .786 at 1418.27.  Such a price point intersects with the channel lines (as drawn, but not yet firmly settled) at the end of the day or very early in tomorrow’s session.

    If SPX can’t get past 1415.56, then the downside harmonics (represented by the small purple grid) are in play, and the initial target is back to the 1398 level (previous low, and a Bat Pattern .886.)  Once prices move past 1398, the decline should accelerate.

    UPDATE:  12:30 PM

    If the analog were to play out exactly as before, with no deviation from the past pattern, we’d not see any higher prices at all.  In fact, we’d be back below 1343 in the next day or so — starting this afternoon.  But, that’s a bit much to expect, given the big deviations we’ve already seen within each wave.

    UPDATE:  3:15 PM

    Lots of excitement around AAPL the past couple of days.   A couple of weeks ago, after AAPL soared 90 points in 7 sessions and was approaching 600, I was a little skeptical [see: AAPL update.]  I posted the chart below, and nervously took a stand.

    Combining all the above, it’s easy to imagine a scenario where prices drop to 500 into the end of the year, but can’t quite seal the deal on the H&S pattern.  A nice bounce there and rally into February would fit nicely with my general equities forecast (see below.)

    AAPL gained 4 more points over the next couple of sessions, then took a swan dive that has seen it lose nearly 75 points in less than a week.  Here’s the same chart, updated for the actual price action.

    Aside from the fact that AAPL did what we expected, nothing’s really changed.  There’s a H&S pattern that would complete at about 504.  Given the number of hedgies and mutual funds rushing for the exits, who could be surprised if AAPL went ahead and completed it?

    But, I’m not beating the table for that scenario, only because a bounce just shy of completing the pattern better fits with my general equity forecast.  AAPL came within 3 points of a .886 retracement of the bounce from 505 today (and 14 pts shy of the H&S completion) so there’s ample reason for a bounce.

    It could easily stay in the little white channel, forming a falling wedge into the year end as the rest of the market melts down a bit.  Personally, I wouldn’t have anything to do with it in my portfolio unless it was an iron condor or the like.  The volatility is too great and I don’t like the odds in either direction.

    More later…

  • On Our Way

    For anyone experiencing a slow response from the site this morning, it’s not you.  GoDaddy is on the case, and I hope to have some resolution soon.  I sent out the first update via email rather than wait forever for page loads.  Please take this opportunity to subscribe to twitter — another back up available to us:  https://twitter.com/pebblewriter .

    Also, a quick shout-out to a member of this site who, without knowing, has made life more bearable for me of late.  Only 100 feet from where I sit overlooking the beautiful Pacific, someone has been preparing a lot for their new house.  For the past three weeks straight, a 20-ton excavator has been jack-hammering solid granite from 8am to 4pm.

    While slowly going (even more) nuts, I discovered the music of David Parkhurst Crane [website].  It’s both uplifting and serene, and gently guides me back to a saner place.  An added bonus: it’s instrumental.  So, I don’t get distracted (or add to the excavator’s din) by trying to sing along.  Thanks, David, and I hope I haven’t embarrassed you too much.

    ORIGINAL POST:

    This morning, everything is still on track.  We’re getting the bounce at 1400 we anticipated in yesterday’s post [see: Without a Net.]  We haven’t had a significant bounce yet since shorting Monday at 1423 [see: At Last.]

    The key to any additional upside will be if SPX leaves the little white channel established since the top.  The top of the channel is currently around 1408-1409.  A bounce should be limited to 1420.82 or so, the .886 of the move down thus far, and the top of the purple channel that’s guiding the downside in the big picture.

    If it ramps up but reverses at 1409, then obviously the downside will accelerate.

    The 60-min RSI supports the idea of a decent bounce here.  Note we’ve reached the bottom of the yellow channel.

    UPDATE:  12:05 PM

    We broke out of the white channel and are working our way back up.  A typical .618 retrace would stop at 1413.99.  But, there’s a potential channel widening (small red channel) to be had at the .786 at 1418.27 (it would have to hurry) or the .707 at 1416.26 late in the session.

    At some point during every sell-off, the falling channel has to widen or morph into something else.  We won’t know exactly which until this bounce completes and we resume the downside.

    For those looking to capture the larger move, no reason to chase the bounce; it’s likely nothing more than a blip on the way much lower.

    UPDATE:  2:55 PM

    The site seems to humming along again.  The bump got as high as 1415.56 and, since then, has been furiously — well, pretty much nothing.  The two possibilities I ventured this morning are still on the table.  A tag of the purple channel would mean about 1420 as of 3:00PM (the .886 is at 1420.86.)  The red channel I drew is presently up around the .707 at 1416.26.

    SPX has formed a pennant-looking pattern which hints at 1428ish.  While I definitely don’t expect it to play out, this is why we use stops.

    The 30-min RSI is mashed up against a channel line, so it could break either way.

    But, the longer-term picture is still negative — and should remain so as our forecast continues to play out.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Without a Net

    The toughest moments for those of us who chart publicly are those right after calling a significant top or bottom.  There are some instances when pretty much everyone and their mother can see a turn coming.  Other times, it feels like you’re sailing through the air, frantically searching for the catcher and hoping he hasn’t chosen this moment to take an unannounced coffee break.

    The first wave down after any significant top is just plain fun.  It worked!  Sit back, bask in the glory, etc.  Then comes the corrective wave.  Heart-in-throat time.  You know it’s going to retrace some of that first wave down, but how much?  Most chartists develop sweaty palms around 61.8%.  Your stomach starts churning at 78.6%.  At 88.6%, time for your favorite vice.  And, God help us if it’s a double top.

    Following an analog is generally the worst.  Virtually no one else sees it coming, and there is a long list of reasons you’re probably wrong.  Taking a tour around the net last night, that certainly seems to be the case now.  The euro is soaring, the dollar is tanking, and the market has spurted 80 points in two weeks — only 50 points from a five-year high.

    It’s made even worse if the first wave down didn’t break out/down of whatever chart pattern it was in.  Yesterday’s reversal was impressive — going from up almost 8 points to down 8.But, we never quite reached my 1424.41 target — coming up .68 short — not to mention the Inverted H&S target.

    And, we haven’t yet broken down from the rising wedge. A re-test of the high is officially on the table until that happens — hence the importance of using stops.

    Once the wedge is broken, the next support is usually either an important Fib level or a morphing of the wedge into a channel.  In this case, we have strong horizontal and Fib support at 1400.  If we convert the wedge to a channel, it has a mid-line currently around 1402 and a channel bottom around 1390.

    A rising channel would be bullish, of course.  And, I haven’t a bullish bone in my body right now.  We draw it, though, because we have to try to get inside the head of all the bulls out there and figure out where they’re likely to jump in and buy.  Channel mid-lines and bottoms, as well as important Fib levels, definitely qualify.

    UPDATE:  11:35 AM

    Nice reversal off this morning’s highs again, turning a 4-pt gain into a 4.5-pt loss where SPX bounced off the 10-day SMA (in red below, currently 1405.37.)  The SMA 20 (white) is down around 1392 and, like the 50 (blue, 1419), is due to continue falling. Fifty sessions ago was Sep 20, two sessions post the Sep 14 high of 1474.  So, all else being equal, the SMA 50 should start coming down as those higher components to the moving average roll off.

    The 200-day moving average (thicker red) is down at 1385, so it’ll be a while before the 50/200 cross.  And, we are officially back below the 100-day (thicker yellow) at 1410.59.  Look for the 50/100 cross in the next few days.

    The next battles involving moving averages will likely come at 1380, involving the SMA 200 and the SMA 20 at the intersection of the bottom of the rising white channel and the top of the falling red channel.  The 50% retracement of the 1343 to 1423 rally is at 1383.54, which intersects with both channels on Thursday.

    So, we’ll keep an eye out for a significant bounce Thursday at 1383ish.  Remember, the .786 of the 1576 – 666 crash is right there at 1381.50.  And, bulls will want to limit this “correction’s” downside to the next Fib level lower — on the way to new highs, of course.

    The EURUSD, in the meantime, has reached Sunday’s upside target of the .886 at 1.3084 and has completed a fairly decent looking rising wedge of its own.

    UPDATE:  12:10 PM

    The dollar has reached the bottom of the white channel we charted Sunday [see: DX Update], just beyond a .618 retrace of the move up from 78.725.  It appears to be basing for a move higher.

    I’m expecting a 5% move by around the end of the year.   What does that mean for stocks?

    continued for members

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  • At Last

    Nothing has changed since our last post Friday.  We have nearly reached 1424.41 — the lower end of the target range established on Oct 31 [see: A New Old Analog.]

    If the analog remains on track, today should be the start of a large correction — perhaps in conjunction with the ISM report due out at 10 EST.

    I’m shorting here, with stops around 1430.

    UPDATE:  10:05 AM

    One of the uglier ISM reports we’ve seen in a while. From growing to contracting overall, with every category either contracting or slowing except for production — which (oops) is ramping up as demand contracts.

    Looks like the reversal has begun.

    UPDATE:  12:00 PM

    The reversal has begun in earnest now.  I’ll spend the new hour or so reviewing the downside targets.  First, a little treat appropriate to the day.

    I had the great pleasure of seeing the incredible Etta James at the Hollywood Bowl in 2008 and the Monterey Jazz Festival in 2002.  Her voice somehow conveyed both her troubled past and her elation at being on stage, sharing her amazing gifts with an appreciative audience.

    continued for members(more…)

  • EURUSD Update: Dec 2, 2012

    The overall trend since 2008 remains down, with EURUSD likely on its way to the .618 retracement (largest white pattern) of the rally from 2000 to 2008 at 1.12 in either January or (more likely) May 2013.

    This lines up roughly with a 1.272 extension of the Jun 2010 to May 2011 rally (purple) and the 1.618 extension of the rally beginning in July 2012.

    continued for members… (more…)

  • DX Update: Dec 2, 2012

    The US dollar remains in a rising channel within long-term channels that point to very different outcomes.

    The rising white channel intersects just ahead with the larger falling white channel upper bound, the rising red channel mid-line and the 75% bound of the falling purple channel.

    Whether the red or purple channel carries the day will depend largely on whether the ECB or the Fed can deflate its currency the fastest.

    But, the intermediate-term picture is clear:  if DX can hold the white channel, the next move should be much higher.

    continued for members… (more…)

  • Zweig Breadth Thrust

    Came close Friday, but didn’t happen.  A ZBT requires a move from .40 to .60 in 10 sessions or less.  Here’s a successful signal from Sep 2011:

    And, here’s where we ended up Friday — the 10th session from the .40 cross:

    Ditto for NYSE & DJIA too, BTW.