Tag: EURUSD

  • Charts I’m Watching: Mar 21, 2013

    ORIGINAL POST:  9:25 AM

    The EURUSD is still trying to change trajectories (purple channel to red), but hasn’t been able to break out yet.

    The dollar is similarly facing a change in direction if the red channel can hold.

    Judging from the futures, SPX is set to react off the neckline and TL we’ve been talking about for several days. Though, daily RSI still shows a little more upside potential.

    I’ll play along on the downside, but will be looking to see if it gains support at the purple channel midline.

    UPDATE:  09:23 AM

    That should do it for the short side, going full long again here at 1550.7 with stops at 1548ish.  Always fun, trying to catch a falling knife…

    The 15 min RSI shows support with SPX here at the .500 Fib.

    Fresh charts in a few…

    UPDATE:  9:50 AM

    If SPX reverses here, it leaves a much nicer right shoulder for the IH&S we discussed yesterday.  And, the revised purple channel looks more sustainable.

    Existing home sales, Philly Fed and Leading Economic Indicators are due out at 10 EDT.

    UPDATE:  10:01 AM

    Data better than expected on Philly Fed and Conference Board Leading Indicators, a miss on NAR existing home sales.

    The leading indicators look a lot more positive than the current, which barely moved.

    No charts for the NAR, but sales came in at 4.98 million vs expectations of 5.0 million.  Inventory increased from 4.3 to 4.7 months, which flies in the face of the most commonly heard argument that a shortage of product was driving prices higher.

    There are no doubt pockets of actual product shortages, just as there are many with a huge excess.  But, the price increases have more to do with math than with supply and demand at the moment.

    The NAR, like everyone else, reports average (median) prices.  The entire market could remain at a standstill, but if the bottom 5-10% (in price) of houses are bid up, the average price increases.  It wouldn’t affect the average house, just the average price of all houses.

    That’s why many average homeowners remain underwater and unable to sell their houses for the asking price despite the “good news” from the NAR/MSM.  So, what’s happening to bid up prices on the low end?  Enter our friends at the Fed.

    As Bloomberg reported a few days ago, big institutional money is chasing single-family homes.  With the stock market at all-time highs, bonds at 2% and much of the rest of the world in questionable economic condition, the new bubblicious investment is housing.

    Blackstone, which put $3.5 billion to work buying 20,000 houses, just increased its credit line by another $1.5 billion.  Colony Capital owns 7,000 units and is raising another $2.2 billion.  American Homes-4-Rent owns 10,000, and is buying up more.

    Institutions represent a large percentage of the buyers in many markets which have rebounded the most:  Miami (30%), Phoenix (23%), Charlotte (21%), Las Vegas (19%.)   But, will the dead cat bounce translate into profits for investors?

    As fools rush in, rents are falling in many of the markets in play — making it tough to derive much cash flow.  Colony Capital will be buying another $2.2 billion worth of houses, even though their current portfolio occupancy is only 53%.  In an environment of 2% 10-year treasuries, the 4-5% cash-on-cash yield might look pretty good — especially coupled with some degree of inflation protection.

    I can’t help but think this is another big bubble in the making — courtesy of the Fed’s ZIRP.  Even after 5,000,000 foreclosures since the 2006 peak, new delinquencies continue to surface — including a steady contingent of older, more seasoned loans as this LPS chart shows:

    Global Economic Intersection ran a nice piece Tuesday posing a thought-provoking idea:

    “The housing market is therefore the hostage of economic growth and not the signal of economic growth.”

    The evidence of yet another liquidity-fueled, lack-of-any-better-alternatives bubble is here.  Investors must decide whether to button their chin straps and get in the game, or watch from the sidelines as the greater fools slug it out the red zone.  Stay tuned.

    UPDATE:  2:05 PM

    With the move down through 1548, I gave SPX a little more wiggle room to the .618 of the last move up at 1547.35.  It bounced, but couldn’t hold, prompting me to take a short-term short to cover my core long position.

    I’m closing the short here at the .786 of 1543.75 for a small gain.  More charts, revised channels coming up.

    The bullish case needs 1546.27 to hold firm.

    UPDATE:  2:30 PM

    Hard to keep up with charting this morning, with things moving rather quickly and dropping a little further than I expected.  Looks like the .786 will hold, but let’s make that the new stop.

    The 60 min RSI has found midline support at a potential falling channel (purple) and a rising channel which isn’t as convincing as I’d like (yellow.)

    UPDATE:  5:30 PM

    Weakness everywhere around the close.  I’m going to lay out the bullish and bearish scenarios, but from a chart pattern standpoint, this is a toss-up.

    Taking a look around the indices, I see a lot of indices at make or break points.  I just revisited RUT, a great case in point.  Drawn from the 98 and 02 lows, one channel makes a great case for the upside being done.

    The daily chart CU shows just how precisely we’ve tagged the top of that channel and the TL’s the make up the rising wedges.

    Drawing the channels off the 98 and 09 lows, however, shows RUT has already pushed above and backtested the channel top (in purple.)

    Throw in some Harmonic Patterns and things get really interesting…

    There was a big reversal at the .786 of the 2007-2009 crash, so we should expect a Butterfly Pattern to play out at the 1.272 of 996.26, right?

    But, look at all the TL’s of resistance we’d have to push through first…

    Besides the trend lines, the purple 1.618 hasn’t really caused a reaction yet.  The white 1.618 has, but not much of one.  And, note that the yellow pattern calls for a run to the 1.618 at 1033.  Mixed signals, to say the least.

    More in the morning…

     

     

  • Charts I’m Watching: Mar 20, 2012

    The ECB will do “whatever it takes”, which I guess now translates into strong-arming the Russians into bailing out Cyprus.  Still no break out on the EURUSD, though.

    It makes sense to play along with the upside, but keep stops close.  It’s questionable whether this rally will have any legs. The dollar looks like it’s finding support here.

    UPDATE:  09:33 AM

    Looks like a pop and drop by SPX standards.  That was the .786 of the move down from 1563.62 (purple) and the .886 of our proposed path to 1576 (white.)  Full short again, stops at 1561ish.  Revised charts in a few minutes…

    UPDATE:  09:55 AM

    The daily chart tells the picture well.  I need to redraw some channels, but the prominent features are:

    • large 1474-1343 Crab Pattern completion at 1555.57 (yellow)
    • large 1370-1074 Crab Pattern completion at 1553.39 (red)
    • small 1530-1485 Crab Pattern completion at 1559.32 (white)
    • small rising wedge broken at 1563 top
    • long-term TL and channel top at 1560

    UPDATE:  11:10 AM

    SPX continues to position itself for a run at 1576.  The 5-min chart shows a small potential Crab Pattern with a 1.618 at 1577 and a Flag Pattern targeting 1576.

    It has broken back above and backtested the purple channel midline and retraced nearly .886 of its drop from 1562 and a little more than .786 of the drop from 1563.62.

    While it’s positioned for 1576, there is no more certainty than when we first broke 1555 on the Mar 14 overnight ramp job.  The large, bearish patterns listed above have still not produced the kind of sell-off they normally do.

    And, it’s all because of the cheerleaders’ determination to be able to tout a new all-time high for the S&P 500.

    In addition to the little Crab Pattern (purple) that targets 1577 and the flag pattern targeting 1576, there’s an obvious effort to construct an IH&S pattern targeting 1580.  It could benefit from a lower right shoulder, but bulls must beware of crossing back beneath the purple channel midline.

    The S2 shoulder isn’t quite legit, BTW, as the neckline doesn’t quite connect on the left side.  But, the S1 shoulder is quite a ways down there.  So, if the pattern plays out, be prepared for some serious chop.

    UPDATE:  1:00 PM

    With the FOMC announcement a little over an hour away, let’s resume our chat about the big picture.  If it seems like we’re “lost in the reeds” as one reader so aptly put it, it’s because we are.

    The large Crab Pattern completions promised a good-sized dump last week at 1553/1555.  Instead we’ve inched higher.  Why?  These patterns completed in the middle of harmonic no-man’s land: the gap between an .886 retracement and a double-top.

    The .886 retracement (of the 1576-666 crash) produced a 9% reversal back on Sep 14.  Since then, SPX came screaming back to retake the 1576 all-time high — but slammed into the Crab Patterns and a very important channel line along the way.

    Now, it doesn’t know what to do.

    Double tops usually produce reversals, too — sometimes meaningful ones as we found out on October 11, 2007, when SPX scooted up past the 1552 top from 2000 by a whopping 24 points before dropping 58%.

    The 2000 top itself shows just how “messy” tops can be.  Here’s the finished picture in perfect hind-sight.  It’s a very crowded chart, but every pattern on there had a say in how the top unfolded.

    Once SPX broke out of the falling purple channel, it had “permission” to pursue several harmonic patterns in the works.  SPX shot up 66 points in that one day — blowing through every Fib level between .618 and 1.000.

    It finally came to rest at 1458, completing a Bat Pattern at the purple .886.  But, the small white 1.272 was just above at 1477, as was the rising purple channel midline and the 1.272 from a much larger pattern seen below.  An IH&S target waited at 1497 – tantalizingly close to a nice round number of 1500.  The all-time high of 1478 from two months earlier beckoned.

    SPX got up to 1477.33 before reacting, falling to 1466 over the next two days.  Close, but not quite.  Someone watching closely might have noticed the Flag Pattern it constructed, targeting 1562.  Someone else probably pointed out the biggest Crab Pattern target of all — the 1.618 extension of the 13% correction from 1420 to 1233 from Jul-Oct 1999.

    I don’t know what the catalyst was, but on Mar 21, 2000 (that date sounds awfully familiar) SPX shot up through the channel midline, the cluster of Fibs around 1477 and, importantly, the 1478 high and raced up toward those higher targets.

    On Mar 24, it reached 1552.87, which cleared the IH&S target at 1497, the purple 1.272 at 1519 and the last remaining Crab Pattern at 1535.  What ultimately stopped it?  The .75 line from the big purple channel dating back to Jul 1999 — almost to the penny.

    Total move: 17% and 227 points in 20 sessions.  Could it happen again?

    continued for members(more…)

  • Do or Die Time

    As we discussed yesterday, it’s do or die time for the equities markets.

    Keep an eye on the small rising wedge today.  A break down below 1560 is important to the bears’ case — while the bulls obviously have their sights set on the all-time high of 1576.

    As always, watch for a backtest after the wedge is broken.  Any such bounce should fail by 1562.80 or so.

    The US dollar reached our Mar 4 target [see: After the Funding’s Gone] and reversed sharply.  Note this was the confluence at the completion of a Crab Pattern (in purple below), a Bat Pattern (red) and two channel midlines.

    The channels can be better seen on a longer term chart.

    DX and SPX have become mildly positively correlated of late with the 25-day moving average at 0.59.  This is a huge shift from the high negative correlation we had all become used to: as the dollar as a safe haven during equity market sell-offs:

    This chart from Deutsche Bank showing the 1-year rolling correlation has been widely circulated.  It’s a week old, but shows that despite some huge swings over the past few years, correlation continues to become more and more negative.

    The last little blip up in the dark blue line represents a relative decrease in negative correlation, but it appears to have formed a channel since 2009.  In the absence of a breakout, one would expect the trend to continue…

     

    From a technical standpoint, whether the trend continues or not — and, where the dollar goes from here — couldn’t possibly be more important.

    The ebbs and flows of the relationship can best be seen in a long-term comparison.  Here, we can see long periods such as 1995-2000 when they moved in lock step.  Notably, when stocks faltered in Aug 2000, the dollar vacillated for a while before finally joining in in Jan 2002.

    But, when stocks finally bottomed in 2003, the dollar continued to sell off.  It got a big bounce in Dec 04 (the previous low) but didn’t bottom out until Apr 08 as SPX was about to fall off a cliff.

    When stocks bottomed in Mar 2009, the dollar peaked.  The next time the dollar bottomed was in May 2011, as the 2011 correction got underway.  It rallied again with the equity sell-offs in Apr 2012 and Sep 2012, but has so far failed to break the high established in July 2012.

    Why should equity investors care so much about the recent shift in the relationship between these two?  When we chart DX, we can see that equities often moved dramatically at fairly predictable key turning points.

    The most prominent chart pattern for DX is the falling channel shown above.  When DX dropped through the midline in 2003, it marked a bottom for equities.  They rallied strongly until the dollar finally approached the channel bottom and, as mentioned above, fell sharply after it bottomed.

    As DX raced up toward its midline, stocks plunged toward their 2009 low.  The dollar’s peak and stocks’ trough were almost simultaneous.  As DX fell away from the midline, stocks took off — not pausing again until DX’s next run at the midline in Apr 2010.  As soon as DX tagged the midline, stocks were off to the races again.

    In May 2011, the dollar bottomed again, enabling us to draw a little rising channel reflecting the strengthening trend since.

    Like its big brother, this smaller channel has proven pretty successful at indicating potential turning points — a breakout or breakdown — at its midline.  In general, each downturn from the midline meant the accompanying equity rally was nearing at end.

    Stocks didn’t actually reverse until DX bottomed at either the channel bottom or the .25 line as occurred with the May 2011, Apr 2012 and Sep 2012 corrections.

    Significantly, this last bounce off the .25 line in late January resulted in stocks going up.  The SPX has rallied 160 points or so, leaving us to wonder whether DX will head back down — which has always produced equity rallies — or break above the channel midline.

    The past several instances have produced large declines of 630 points (May 2008), 200 points (Apr 2010) and 160 points (Apr 2012.)

    In other words, a sudden strong rally in DX is highly likely to accompany a sudden and significant decline in stocks.  And, as we’ve seen in the past, prices that approach a midline are, by definition, poised to break out or break down.

    So, which will it be here for the dollar: a break out or a reversal?  Let’s set aside SPX’s recently completed bearish chart patterns for the moment, and focus on DX.

    Based on the larger of the white channels, we would have to conclude DX has much more upside.  Its midline is up around 86-87, which would clearly take DX beyond the smaller channel midline — tagged yesterday at 83.42.

    In addition to the small white midline, however, DX will need to break above the .75 line on another falling channel (purple below) in order to reach the larger midline.

    But, it might not be all that difficult.  DX recently broke back above a trend line drawn from the Jan 2002 and Jun 2010 highs.  This TL looks fairly decent as a channel (yellow below), and reflects another breakout such as the one which occurred in Apr 2012.

    That DX channel breakout, of course, accompanied the SPX slide from 1422 to 1266.  It backtested nicely, then suddenly failed when the Fed announced QE3.  Prices fell back into the channel until the latest breakout in February.

    In keeping with the theme of sudden strong DX rallies being unhealthy for stocks, take a look at the Fibonacci Fan chart below.

    Each time DX crossed one of those lines — even by just a little — SPX reacted.  DX has reached the latest line — the .707 — and is thus signalling either an equity breakout or breakdown depending on which way it goes.

    Weekly RSI mirrors the rising channel DX has been in since October 2007.  DX RSI recently broke out of the latest falling red channel and through the white channel midline.  After reacting against the purple .75 line, RSI is backtesting the white channel midline.

    If it’s more than a back test and RSI breaks back below the midline, this would confirm DX’s price reversal.  If, on the other hand, DX RSI survives the midline, it’s not hard to imagine a rally to the top of the purple channel or even the white channel .75.

    The daily RSI chart shows a similar situation.  RSI is finding support on the small white midline, the large white midline, and backtest of the red channel it just broke out of.

    A reversal here and a strong rally qualify would qualify as one of those sudden turns that isn’t terribly healthy for equities.

    I know, I know.  With eleventy zillion dollars being pumped into the markets every hour by Bernanke and friends, how in the Wide World of Sports could the dollar suddenly soar and the stock market flop?  The answer to that, of course, requires one more chart.

    I’ve marked some of the more obvious “sudden, strong rallies” in DX which, as discussed above, frequently coincide with sudden, strong declines in stocks.

    But, note how many of them occur as SPX is nearing one of its own channel lines drawn off the 2000 and 2007 tops.

    We’ll get into that and other channels in the forecast coming up next. But, it’s fascinating that SPX is only a few points from a channel top dating back 13 years just as DX has arrived at the confluence of such important support and resistance lines.  For both, it truly is do or die time.

    I’ll continue with the forecast for members after a quick break.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Picking up Pennies

    Just about every other index has reached an important harmonic and/or chart pattern target. Given the NFP print, this could be the day SPX finally reaches 1553-1555.  Best to be long on the opening, and ready to re-short fairly quickly.

    The dollar isn’t waiting, surging nearly 1% on the day and resolving the question as to which channel to watch.

    DX is very near a tag of the red .786 (83.064) and the purple 1.618 (83.179).  But, more importantly, it is coming up to the intersection of the midlines of two important channels.

    Look for heavy resistance at these levels — until the equity sell-off begins in earnest.

    Likewise, the EURUSD is off over 1% and approaching the white .786/yellow .500 — also the scene of an important channel line.

    Will the currencies react first to the equity strength, or are they positioning ahead of what they know will be an equity pop and drop?  As the grown-ups in the room, I believe currencies are doing the latter.

    Our premise called for a back test of the channel line or TL off the July 2011 & Sep 2012 highs, but the market is eager to go ahead and get there.  Who am I to stand in the way?

    UPDATE:  9:35 AM

    Got to 1551.65, only 1.74 away from the white 1.618 – which is close enough for me.   I have nothing against staying in until the actual tag; just watch your stops in the event it turns quickly.

    I’ll pick it back up if we get a second push through 1551, as it would not be unusual to see a bit of an overshoot — somewhere between 1553 and 1560.  Likewise, a drop through the yellow TL down around 1535.50 probably signals “game over.”

    Remember, this completes a Crab Pattern from the 2011 crash from 1370 to 1074.  Are we guaranteed a big sell-off here?  Of course not.  But, odds are it will be substantial.

    UPDATE:  10:08 AM

    If SPX is going to bounce higher, it should do so by 1543 — the 1.272 Fib on the small white harmonic grid and the bottom of the tiny channel SPX hung out in for the past several days.  For anyone who missed the last six points because of the gap open, this is your second chance.

    UPDATE:  10:27 AM

    SPX getting the bounce here at 1543… will take another crack at 1553-1560.

    In the meantime, let’s take a look at how we got here.  If you had asked me at the end of 2011 which upside scenario looked most likely, I would have suggested the Crab Pattern that started at 1370 in May 2011 and put in a bottom at 1074 in October (in white, below.)

    There were three potential Point X’s in a row: 1370.58 on May 2 (in white above), 1347 on July 21 (in red) and 1356.48 on Jul 7 (not shown.)  And, 1370.58, the high following the 1576 to 666 sell off from 2007 to 2009, was the most prominent.

    My reservation was that it reversed at the .707 Fib level rather than the more common .618, .786 or .886.  The .707 is the red-headed stepchild of the Fibonacci ratios.  It’s the square root of .500, which itself doesn’t get much respect as a Fib ratio.  Geeks and wannabe’s CLICK HERE for details…

    When SPX finally pushed above 1370 in March 2012 and started approaching the 1.272 Fib levels between 1422 and 1451, we had to choose from among the three possibilities for a Butterfly Pattern completion [see: All the Pretty Butterflies.]

    I went with the red pattern because of its more precise tag on the .786 and was rewarded with 20%+ gains from a perfectly-timed short.  And, I assumed the red pattern would continue to drive future harmonic swings.

    As we approached the red 1.618 at 1515.24, I noted that it intersected with the purple 1.618 (1518.57) and the yellow 1.272 (1510.19) — not to mention the yellow trend line running very precisely through the July 2011, April 2012 and Sept 2012 highs.  To me, this was a very solid conclusion based on very reliable patterns.

    We got the sell-off.  In fact, we got three sell-offs, one from each of those Fib levels.  On the final tag at 1518.57, we got a little overshoot to 1530 (a smaller harmonic pattern completion) before beginning a correction all the way to…1485.  Yep, not even a lousy 3%.

    In harmonics, it’s not usually the tops that bother me, it’s the 2nd waves.  The rebound from 1485 went to 1525 (a healthy .886 retracement) and even sold off nicely — before zipping back up to complete an IH&S, take out the 1530 high and…well, here we are.

    Harmonics are great.  They offer concrete turning points at which the market usually reverses.  If it doesn’t, you’ve either picked the wrong Point X (1347 instead of 1370) or the wrong pattern.  In other words, there’s a solid decision matrix; you know when it’s time to go to Plan B.

    Fundamental analysis isn’t anywhere near as precise — especially in the short to medium term.  And, as we’ve seen this past year, there’s plenty of money to be made by going long at bottoms and short at tops.  You just have to be prepared to switch gears when your assumption — no matter how well thought out — turns out to be wrong.

    If SPX exceeds the Fibs at 1553/1555 and/or the IH&S target at 1465, there’s not much more in the way of targets other than the previous high of 1576 (October 2007.)  Many other indices have made new highs, so maybe TPTB will feel it necessary for SPX to do so as well.

    more later…

    UPDATE:  1:55 PM

    The bounce off 1543 still going strong.  15-min RSI just broke out of a falling channel from this morning’s rally.  A move back to the white RSI channel midline might permit 1553/1555 or slightly higher.

    continued for members(more…)

  • A New Analog: EURUSD

    As noted back on Feb 21, the EURUSD has broken down from its rising channel (white) and accelerated to the downside, breaking the Jan 4 1.2996 low and the psychologically important 1.30 level.

    The intersection of the purple .618 and two white channels at 1.38 will have to wait (till my next visit across the Pond, no doubt.)

    Losing the rising white channel hurts momentum quite a bit, but it’s the drop back through the 75% line on the falling white channel that represents the bigger problem for the pair.

    This channel dates all the way back to Dec 06. Reaching the top for the third time is still possible, of course, but it’s that much harder now that the pair needs to retake the higher channel line and mount a fresh attack.  Suppose it doesn’t?

    I’ve redrawn the falling white channel as red and will lower its top (for now) to reflect that possibility.  I’ve also sketched in a more relaxed rising channel (light blue) that reflects potential channel support at current prices (the intersection of the falling red .75 and the rising light blue .25.)

    I don’t know whether the pair needs to retest the falling white midline or not.  The bottom of the new light blue channel intersects with the red .75 in mid-March.  Also there is the .25 of the very large rising purple channel, which provided a huge bounce in Jun 2010.  It’s easier to see in the LT chart below.

    Here’s the really big picture.

    Several months ago, I noticed that the entire chart looks a bit like an expanded replay of the little dip way over to the left.  Playing with channels, I got some interesting results.

    The huge rising white channel seems to matter quite a bit. Note the support it offered from Aug 93 – Jan 97.  When it broke, the pair fell precipitously to the midline, shedding .15 in about six months.

    The midline offered support again through Feb 99, then completely fell out of bed (equities maxed out in Mar and Aug 2000.)

    EURUSD spent 18 months in the penalty box confirming the channel bottom until finally breaking out early in 2002.  It nearly reached the midline again two years later, and spent almost 4 additional years grinding higher – reaching 1.60 at a little over the 1.618  before zigzagging lower to its present level.

    We’ll circle back to these charts Tuesday and take a look at the analog’s implications for the US dollar and equities.

    To be continued…

     

  • Charts I’m Watching: Mar 1, 2013

    Getting a nice sell-off following the completion of the Bat Pattern we were tracking yesterday.  Shown below on the eminis…

    The downside path is clear.  But, bulls will probably go for the obvious IH&S with what should be a decent bounce somewhere around 1495-1500.

    The dollar reached our 82.136-82.281 target from several days ago, and the EURUSD has lost another important level of support: 1.30.

    More in a few…

    UPDATE:  09:40 AM

    SPX opening down sharply…Note that it turned yesterday at 1525.34, only 36 cents from one of the two targets we identified just before it opened at 1515.99.

    The market didn’t fall out of bed overnight, so I’ll take a long position on the open this morning in anticipation of tagging the .786/.886 combo at 1521.11/1521.19 or the .886 at 1525.70.

    I remain full short from 1525.34 (the 2:20 update for members) but will play any bounces as mentioned above.

    The key level today is 1496 – the bottom of the purple channel.  If this is broken, lots more downside where that came from — especially if the previous low at 1485 is taken out.

    UPDATE:  10:00 AM

    Nice post on Zerohedge earlier: You Rarely Know You’re in a Recession Until it’s Too Late.

    Referring to an ECRI report, ZH makes the following points:

    1) Think back to 2008, a couple of days before the Lehman failure. Looking at the data in hand, you would see GDP growth at about 1% in Q1 and 3% in Q2. More specifically, Q2 GDP growth had just been revised up on August 28 from 1.9% to 3.3%, sparking a 212-point Dow rally that day. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/29/business/29econ.html?_r=0

    2) In March 2001, 95% of economists thought there would not be a recession, but one had already begun.

    3) No economist predicted the 1990-91 recession beforehand.

    4) Hardly any economists recognized the severe 1973-75 recession until almost a year after it started. Indeed, that recession began with the ISM at 68.1, and payroll jobs growth did not turn negative for eight months.

    5) In 1970, unaware that the economy was nine months into recession, none other than Paul Samuelson said that the NBER had worked itself out of a job, meaning that improved policy expertise had made recessions very unlikely.

    6) In three of the last 15 recessions – specifically, in 1980, 1945, and 1926-27 during the Roaring Twenties – stock prices remained in a cyclical upturn.

    ECRI has caught a lot of crap for their recession call last Fall.  I know the feeling, as most economists I know (yes, I travel in exciting circles) think the worst is over.  I wish I shared their optimism.

    I mention this because of the positive ISM Mfg Report released this morning.  It’s being cited as proof of expanding activity.  Remember, the PMI is a survey of purchasing managers’ opinions about their business.

    They read the same newspapers and websites, watch the same TV, and are subject to the same MSM brainwashing as the rest of us.  A better than expected snapshot in time of their opinions does not mean the economy is just fine.

    UPDATE:  10:35 AM

    We got a bounce off 1501 — pretty close to the 1495-1500 range where we expected it.

    Any push back into green territory would be cause for an intraday long with tight stops, but not for giving up shorts.

    We just hit the .500 Fib of this morning’s decline, and the .618 is at 1516.63.  The top of the white channel is up ahead at 1518.50.  Any of these would take the index positive on the day.

    Would that mean the correction is over?

    continued for members... (more…)

  • The Big Picture: Feb 27, 2013

    ORIGINAL POST:  6:00 AM

    SPX ended yesterday just below our 1497 trigger point at the neckline.  I know the bulls would love to blow through this level and negate the H&S, but I think they’ve really got their work cut out for them, especially given the political mess in Italy and the looming US sequester.

    Bernanke isn’t likely to say anything new today.  And, judging from AAPL’s price action, the market isn’t looking to Cupertino for salvation.  The durable goods data?  Ho hum…  Saying it was a good number if you ignore defense and aircraft is like saying a shark attack was fine except for those pointy things in their mouths.

    Defense is due to get a lot worse starting next Monday.

    I’d put slightly greater odds on a breakdown of the purple channel.  As for targets, I’ve mentioned the 1474.51 level a lot – the Sep 2012 high and roughly where the SMA 50 was at the EOD (hat tip to Mike for the question.)

    I still think this area has potential, as a retracement to the .886 of the 1576-666 decline would set up a move to 1576 itself.  Why?  Think of stair-steps, where each major Fib tag or break is followed by a back test to a significant lower Fibonacci level.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Bernanke Speaks

    PLEASE NOTE THAT MEMBERSHIP RATES ARE SET TO INCREASE ON MARCH 4.

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    A new day, a new bounce.  As we discussed late yesterday, SPX has reached the bottom of the purple channel that’s guided it since 1343.  So, naturally, we’ll get some reaction — probably at least to the white midline at 1495.

    Whether it sticks or not is pretty much up to Ben.  Press conference at 10AM EST.

    The yellow channel on the 30-min RSI shows decent support here.  Looks like resistance at the purple midline, though, likely in conjunction with the white midline mentioned above.

    I’ll be surprised, though, if we don’t make it all the way back to 1497 for a proper back test of the H&S neckline – yellow dashed line.

    UPDATE:  09:40 AM

    That’s close enough for me.  I’m closing my ST long position taken yesterday (3:50PM update) at 1490 for a 6-pt gain and will let my core short position ride — for now.

    Many Bernanke pep rallies have left me feeling like a crash test dummy.  I’ve learned to keep my stops tight or stay on the sidelines all together.  For intrepid day traders, I suggest staying nimble.  A breakout or breakdown is to be expected.

    But, we did just complete a H&S Pattern, and that counts for something — as do the incomplete harmonic patterns.  We’ll take a look as soon as the Bearded One is done scolding Congress for messin’ up a good thing.

    UPDATE:  12:30 PM

    Equities are clinging to gains following Bernanke’s testimony — which was mostly a non-event.  IMO, he said nothing to help the bulls’ or bears’ case, which means Italy and the sequester will likely drive prices over the next several days.

    We should continue to see periodic bounces over the balance of the day, but the onus is on the bulls now to turn the trend.  We’ll keep an eye on the 5 and 15-min RSI charts to determine breakouts that merit an intra-day long, and revisit the daily charts to get a sense of intermediate-term possibilities.

    continued for members(more…)

  • Charts I’m Watching: Feb 25, 2013

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    ORIGINAL POST: 09:30 AM

    High potential for a pop and drop this morning, with key levels being 1523.74 and 1527.10.  I’m operating on the assumption that this is a bounce in the midst of a larger move lower.

    Recall that we shorted at 1530.50 on Feb 19 (the 2:45 update) and went long for a bounce at 1499 on Feb 21 (10:20 update.)

    I’m taking profits on the long position here at 1523.60 and going full short again.  Any move up through 1524 is cause to consider an intra-day long.

    Why am I suspicious of this rally? The dollar has back-tested the 25% line in the big rising channel, as well as the 1.272 Fib in what looks like a Crab to the 1.618 at 82.281 (and red .618 at 82.136.)

    The DX daily RSI also looks strong, having broken out of and back-tested the red channel and making a beeline for the intersection of the white and yellow channels.

    UPDATE: 10:00 AM

    SPX is taking a crack at the .886 at 1527.10.

    I’ll take an intra-day long position at 1524 with tight stops.  Keeping the short position unless we move up through 1530.

    UPDATE:  10:10 AM

    That move didn’t take long to fail. A reversal here leaves a nice tag of the top of the white channel, a tag of the 75% line of the light blue channel, a near tag of the .886 (1525.84 v 1527.10) and a nice reversal candle on the 60-min chart.

    Closing the intra-day long at 1524, and full short again from 1523.60 (above.)

    UPDATE:  11:25 AM

    SPX broke back down through the big purple channel midline, which augers well for further downside.  Watch for a backtest to the midline (around 1519.)

    UPDATE:  2:00 PM

    We’ve racked up a nice 24 points since shorting this morning, which is especially cool on the heels of the 26-point gain from our long position (the bounce from 1497) and the 32-point gain since originally shorting at 1530.50 on the 19th.  That’s a 5%+ week — much appreciated after the market’s directionless churning in the days leading up to 1530.

    As we approach the .886 retracement (1500.54) of the rally from 1497 to 1525, we should be on the lookout for a bounce at the still-important 1500.  A good place to start is the  RSI channels on short-term charts like the 5-min. A break of the upper bound of a well-defined channel is always a warning signal of building momentum.

    The US dollar is approaching our 82.22 – 82.28 price target and the top of the daily RSI channels we charted this morning.  It will likely need a breather before attempting higher.

    Much of its strength is being attributed to euro weakness which, of course, is being blamed on Berlusconi’s unexpected success in the Italian elections.  It goes without saying that his reelection would be a disaster for the euro zone.

    The EURUSD, which had carved out a solid channel to the moon (well, 1.39 anyway) broke down and backtested the channel that’s guided its upside since last July.

    We should expect some support here at the .886 of the 1.2996 to 1.3710 rally at 1.3078 (also a potential price channel bottom in yellow.)  It’s also the bottom of an RSI channel (below in white) on the daily chart.

    But, I’m not so sure that this support will hold.  We could be looking at a drop to the bottom of the red/yellow/white RSI channels, meaning the pair takes out 1.30 support.

    As unpopular as Monti is with Italians, Germany thinks he’s just swell.  He’s been a team player, falling in line with Merkel’s efforts to salvage Germany’s investments throughout the continent.

    Berlusconi, who was heavily criticized by his former contemporaries around the time of his resignation, is a wild card whose election, at best, would leave Italy with a divided leadership at a time when a unified front seems essential to the euro’s continued survival.

    This is not what the bulls needed, especially as they try to get through the sequester week unscathed.

    UPDATE:  3:00 PM

    Adding the complications of the euro mess to the sequester mess makes for a very tricky path ahead for equities.  Last week, I theorized that a decline to 1490 would make for a deliciously ambiguous setup (for market makers, at least) to fleece the greatest possible number of investors.

    Does that scenario still make sense?

    continued for members… (more…)

  • Charts I’m Watching: Feb 22, 2013

    ORIGINAL POST:  09:25 AM

    UPDATE:  09:30 AM

    SPX overshot our initial target by just a couple of points yesterday, reaching the channel 25% line at 1497.29 before getting the bounce I expected at 1499/1500.  Note that SPX completed a Bat Pattern down to the .886 in the process (larger white pattern.)

    The .618 Fib of the decline from 1530 is up ahead at 1518.09 — also the 1.618 of the 1422-1266 decline last summer (1518.57.) It intersects with the channel midline either later today or early Monday.

    Daily RSI reached the white midline as we expected, and is currently backtesting the purple midline. It’s still too early to say whether the new falling channel I sketched in yesterday is legit or not.

    The dollar is backtesting the channel line it broke through Wednesday after completing a Butterfly Pattern (the small white grid) to the 1.272, but the 1.618 awaits at the confluence of the purple 1.272 and red .618 up around 82.1-82.2 after the backtest is complete (not yet, I think.)

    The big question: what happens after the backtests are complete?

    continued for members(more…)