Tag: oil

  • Danger Ahead

    Today is a very important day in the markets. The signals that prompted us to short on several days ago are still intact, and more have joined their ranks – the most notable being the breakdown in the 10Y flag pattern.

    ES snuck down and tagged our SMA200 target overnight. To put things simply: If it doesn’t hold, all hell will break loose.There are any number of fundamental reasons for the market to tank, including the spikes in coronavirus cases in many states. Some governors, such as Texas’ Abbott, are even copping to how disastrous the situation has become.Working to prevent a meltdown, of course, are the algo strategies which have been so effective since Mar 23. It should be an interesting next few days.

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  • Another Day, Another Test

    As we slowly make our way toward the end of Q2, we continue to see tests of important support. They are usually followed by sharp bounces despite the growing evidence that a selloff is right around the corner.Will today be the day the market finally takes the plunge?

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  • Oh Yeah, the China Trade Deal…

    When does “it’s over” mean it’s not over?  When the market plunges 65 points, of course.

    The 2% hiccup came when Fox’s Martha MacCallum asked Trump advisor Peter Navarro whether John Bolton’s claims that Trump delayed imposing sanctions on China over its policy of interning Uighur Muslims would jeopardize the China trade deal. Navarro, fresh off accusing China of deliberately seeding the virus in the US by sending “over hundreds of thousands of Chinese citizens here to spread [it] around…” didn’t equivocate.

    “Do you think that the president — he obviously really wanted to hang on to this trade deal as much as possible and he wanted them [China] to make good on the promises because there had been progress made on that trade deal,” MacCallum told Navarro. “But given everything that’s happened … is that over?”

    “It’s over,” Navarro responded.

    ES quickly plunged below its SMA10 and 2.618 Fib, but was promptly rescued by a plunge in VIX and spikes in CL and USDJPY which, not so coincidentally, popped back above its SMA10.

    In all the turmoil over 9.2 million sickened and 475,000 killed by COVID-19, the ongoing social unrest, and an economy which is arguably teetering, it’s sometimes easy to forget the China trade deal and the months during which the market took its cues from the daily press briefings and chopper talk quips about how magnificently negotiations were going.

    With the White House amping up its rhetoric over China’s culpability for the pandemic, I imagine Navarro’s initial assessment was the honest one.

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  • Another Yield Curve Warning for Stocks

    Two steps forward…in order to accommodate a big step back.

    We’ve seen it countless times in the lead-up to Fed meetings, GDP reports and, lately, jobs data. With May unemployment expected to top 20% (it’s unofficially already there) after another 7.5 million joined the jobless ranks……the market’s caretakers put a 58-pt cushion into the market.  ES’ 10-day moving average, for instance, is about 87 points below last night’s highs. Had ES instead fallen 87 points from yesterday’s lows, it would mean a risky test of its 200-DMA.

    It’s gratifying to see scores of analysts come to the realization that the markets are being heavily influenced (a more accurate word is manipulated) by massive Fed stimulus. But, as members know, this has been going on for years – particularly as stocks reach key levels of overhead resistance.

    With the Dow finally joining SPX in reaching its 200-DMA on Wednesday and several key components (e.g. AAPL) taking great pains not to break out to new highs, it seemed as though we might get at least a pause in the meltup, maybe even a correction.

    Our yield curve model confirmed it yesterday with the 2s10s breaking out above all recent highs except that seen in late March.Now, we’ll have to wait and see whether the algos, being directed this morning by USDJPY, VIX and CL, are intent on notching new highs or will, temporarily at least, reconcile with the real world.

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  • Pop and Drop?

    There’s a lot to unpack this morning, as several targets were tagged overnight.   USDJPY finally popped up to tag its 200-DMA……which enabled ES to come within 1.43 of our 3076.93 target – the 2.618 Fib extension of the drop between 2007-2009. I thought this was going to happen over the weekend, but better late then never.

    It’s been a while since we had a nice pop and drop. Stay tuned.

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  • The Hits Keep Coming

    It’s the last day of a short week packed with more important economic data — which the market has managed to ignore so far. Today might be a little different, as the spike in the savings rate and the collapse in consumption confirm a troubled road ahead for the strong consumer narrative.  Gee, could 25% unemployment actually begin to matter?

    Ignore the spike in personal income, as it reflects the massive government stimulus checks sent out last month.

    The PCE deflator also surprised, plunging almost to 2009 levels. So far, the futures have managed a muted reaction, with a likely falling wedge setting up following yesterday’s reversal at our channel midline target.But, with China trouble, riots in Minneapolis, and Trump taking a swing at social media darlings, maybe the data will matter for a change.

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  • Inflation Craters

    Headline CPI fell 0.8% MoM – the biggest drop since 2008…

    …thanks primarily to plunging energy prices.

    Core CPI fell 0.4% MoM, the biggest drop since it began being tracked in 1961.

    The details show strong upticks in food and medical care but weakness almost everywhere else.Like almost all economic data lately, the algos have chosen to ignore inflation, as VIX dropped another 7.7% from its overnight highs. For the moment, nothing else seems to matter much.

    VIX has fallen from 47.77 to 26.37, a 45% decline, since ES backtested its 2.24 Fib extension on April 21. SPX has climbed a total of 8% during that time – with the great majority of its gains on overnight ramp jobs driven by plunges in VIX.

    Today, the algos are also watching the bond market quite closely, as the Fed is slated to dip its toe into corporate bonds – including junk bonds – for the first time.What could go wrong?

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  • Yield Curve Warning

    In a bit of a delayed reaction to Treasury’s announcement of its $3 trillion borrowing needs in Q2, the 2s10s has pushed above the white TL connecting all-time lows – a clear warning, should it last, for equities.

    Meanwhile, CL backtested its Feb 2016 lows and USDJPY broke down at about the same time that ADP announced another 20 million job losses (roughly in line with Friday’s NFP.)  All of this came on the back of dismal earnings from market darling Disney.

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  • One Million Coronavirus Cases, Market Oblivious

    It’s a day we all knew was coming — over 1 million cases of coronavirus cases officially diagnosed in the US, over 3 million worldwide. Experts such as Scott Gottlieb, former head of the FDA, estimate that actual US cases are 10 to 20 times the reported figure. Deaths currently stand at 56,803 – about 30% of all closed cases.

    Social distancing has slowed the rate at which new cases are being diagnosed. But, with many states reopening, a shortage of tests, no contact tracing, and no viable therapeutic or vaccine yet available, the number of cases and deaths seems likely to accelerate.

    The market continues its oblivious ways with last night’s low-volume meltup good for about 1.5% so far as the Fed begins its two-day meeting.continued for members(more…)

  • The New Normal?

    With May contracts in the rear view, we wondered whether oil markets would revert to some sense of normalcy.  A steep contango continues, however, with June contracts assuming the role of the panic stricken expiration month.

    Futures tested our initial downside target yesterday, the Fib 2.24 extension at 2728.79, and bounced overnight… …as oil and gas prices bounced sharply off our downside targets……and VIX collapsed after tagging our backtest target.The question, as is often the case, is whether the relief rally can continue once equities’ cash market reopens.  And, will SPX ever get to test its own critical support?

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