Tag: Channel

  • No Surprise

    “I can’t believe stocks rallied so strongly into options expiration!” said no one.

    Between VIX’s plunge, the euro’s ramp, and the yield curve’s decimation, bears have had no chance – even as fundamentals argued otherwise.

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  • End of the Line?

    The market has frustrated both bulls and bears lately, vacillating between sharp downturns and even sharper recoveries. But, a close examination of the charts shows two very obvious patterns that suggest the tide is about to turn – not in a good way.

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  • Price Setting

    After establishing a well-formed falling channel and positioning for a bearish 10/20 cross, SPX soared last week on  – what else? – another collapse in VIX.

    In the process, the 10/20 cross was (at least) delayed and the channel busted.  It’s normal activity for the lead up to a Fed meeting. Perhaps “price discovery” should be renamed “price setting.”

    Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised to see similar goings on in other “markets” such as silver.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Apr 24, 2023

    Futures are flat this morning after climbing back from a 20-pt overnight deficit.  With scores of companies due to report earnings this week, we should be in for a wild ride.continued for members(more…)

  • Earnings Suddenly Matter

    Futures are off about 30 points on disappointing earnings from stocks such as TSLA, AXP, KEY, etc. and a continuing slump in oil and gas.

    VIX is even popping as we approach the open. If it holds, the rollover in equities will have officially begun.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Apr 19, 2023

    Futures are off moderately on light volume…

    … and, surprise!, a rebound in VX futures, but not VIX itself. Oh yeah, Friday is OPEX.

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  • Jobless Claims Pile On

    Job cuts rose to 228K (vs 200K expected) last week. It will officially register as a drop, however, as the previous week was revised from 198K to 246K.  When viewed through the prism of new highs in bankruptcies and an earnings implosion… …it’s not too surprising that futures are drifting lower. continued for members(more…)

  • Charts I’m Watching: Apr 4, 2023

    After reaching our next upside target, futures have settled into a pause.

    No surprise, as the algo factors are doing the same.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Mar 23, 2023

    Futures have rebounded about 0.5% following yesterday’s roller coaster session that saw SPX backtest its SMA200.

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  • FOMC Day: Mar 22, 2023

    The situation is pretty clear. By raising rates, the FOMC could continue to fight inflation but would also exacerbate the banking crisis. By pausing, the FOMC could give banks a little relief but would loosen financial conditions – thereby making it tougher to reduce inflation to target.

    The seldom discussed situation is what impact the Fed’s decision would have on equity markets. This unspoken third mandate often weighs more heavily on decisions than do full employment and price stability.

    From that standpoint, we look for the Fed to either: (a) pause but stress that the pause is due to rapidly tightening financial conditions which are inherently disinflationary; or, (b) raise 25 bps but stress that this could be the last hike for a while because they believe inflation is headed significantly lower due to tightening financial conditions.

    Our own research indicates that this is true. Gas prices, which are very highly correlated with CPI, are slated to fall 18.6% YoY in March.  The last time the YoY delta hit this level was in Nov 2021 when CPI registered 1.17%.

    Obviously, other stickier factors have usurped the inflation narrative: wages, real estate, cars, etc. But, as we’ve discussed often in these pages, many of these other categories have been fairly flat or have declined over the past year – meaning that their YoY deltas are also falling rapidly.

    Consider food prices, still elevated at 9.5% YoY in Feb.

    Underlying prices, as reflected in the DBA agricultural ETF, have fallen 11.3% over the past year. As long as it remains in the very tight trading range it’s been in since Jun 2022, the YoY decline will reduce inflationary pressures just as oil/gas have.

    Futures have been vacillating around unch all night. The real action should start at 2PM with the announcement, followed by Powell’s press conference at 2:30.

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