Tag: stocks

  • DXY: Finally Breaking Out?

    Stocks tumbled yesterday on inflation numbers that call into question the pace of the Fed’s taper and rate increases. Then they rallied overnight on an 11.4% collapse in VIX. The most significant chart on my screens at the moment, though, is the US dollar. DXY has had great difficulty breaking out of a tightly controlled consolidation pattern that dates back to July 2020. It tried this past September, but was smacked down to support stocks’ recovery from that terrifying (sarc) 5.8% slump.Now, it’s making another bid for a breakout — one we’ve been expecting for months (a very lonely stance BTW) — which wouldn’t bode well for stocks. Is this one for real?

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  • CPI: Out of Control

    CPI soared to 6.24% YoY in October, well above the 5.9% expected and the highest since Nov 1990. The MoM print of 0.9% and the Core CPI print of 4.2% also came in hotter than expected and set multiyear records. Put simply, the Fed has lost control.As we’ve discussed, inflation continues to become more broad-based than the oil/gas-driven effect initially seen earlier this year.

    The chart below shows the divergence from May-September and illustrates the importance of oil/gas prices to future inflation prints. If gas prices were to level off at today’s levels, the direct effect on CPI would cease in November. However, even if the base effect were to roll off, the other categories are now equally problematic. Futures are off 20 points on the news, with several key factors indicating more to come.

    Today marks the point at which the Fed officially stops cheering on the reflation trade.

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  • Out of Sync

    SPX tagged a significant Fibonacci extension Friday, but ES came up short of its equivalent target at 4728. Meanwhile, CL is faltering and USDJPY is rolling over as VIX faces a bullish 10/20 cross. What does it all mean?

    Surprisingly, the answer might lie with the bond market.

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Nov 5, 2021

    The 531K payrolls beat and Pfizer COVID-19 pill could influence the taper schedule. The 4.9% increase in wages should.

    Energy and food prices might well fall over the coming months. But, wages are sticky. Whether due to contracts, minimum wage rules, or just market forces, they are very difficult to reduce. While it’s true that workers need higher wages in order to keep up with spiraling cost inflation, this is undoubtedly more fuel for the non-transitory inflationary fires.

    Futures are up sharply on the news, which has the factors wondering what to do at ES 4700. Having delivered stocks (with a few trillion in help from the Fed) to all-time highs despite lackluster and occasionally bad news, what should they do with really good news that might speed up the taper?

    Stay tuned.

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  • Buying the Dip?

    Futures are up moderately this morning, bouncing 60 points from their midnight lows on a retreat in VIX. Note that it wasn’t a collapse – the usual response when a rally is resuming.

    This lack of algo baiting occurred yesterday, too, when ES completed a Head & Shoulders Pattern and backtested it in a fashion that was reminiscent of the old days, when central bankers didn’t “fix” every little dip.

    This highly unusual restraint suggests this dip shouldn’t be bought, but is the next stage of a scripted correction we warned about several weeks ago [see: Correction Watch.]

    Our downside case remains intact, with an even more bearish Head & Shoulders Pattern up next.

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  • Gold: Anatomy of a Rat’s Nest Chart

    Once in a while, charts are so crystal clear that we can see the future as easily as we can reflect on the past. Gold is not one of those charts. The zigs and zags come fast and furious and rarely correlate with anything happening in the real world. Witness the indifference this so-called inflation hedge has shown toward the highest inflation in 13 years.

    But, the charts have pointed out some excellent trading opportunities along the way – usually by highlighting trend changes (or continuation patterns) that offer strong directional hints.

    I thought it might be interesting to reflect on the use of channels. What do they tell us, and how can we use them to guide our trading?

    By the time we layer in all the trend lines, Fibonacci levels, moving averages, etc. charts can start to take on a rat’s nest look.

    But, if we strip away some of those things, the channels tell a very compelling story. GC’s long-term chart, for instance, starts with a long, pretty well-formed channel. It did a reasonably good job of guiding prices from the late 1990s until 2014.

    When it broke down in late 2014, it was a clear signal that the long-term trend had given up the ghost.

    We can see that the breakdown followed a pretty clear trend lower, marked by the red channel below. When GC rallied out of that falling red channel – a clear buy signal – we were able to construct a less bearish falling purple channel that guided prices for several more years. When GC reached the bottom of that channel, it accurately signaled a good buying opportunity. That signaled was reinforced when, in 2019, GC broke out of it. Once a few parallel highs and lows were established, we had a rising channel once again. But, GC broke out of that rising channel, requiring a more aggressive one. We added the rising purple channel to accommodate it……and expanded the red channel to make room for the new highs.Although it’s a little early to say with any certainty, the rising purple channel is threatening to break down. It obviously sets up a backtest of the rising red channel’s midline (the dashed red line.) If the two of them are breached, it would be a very bearish signal – particularly in light of the drop through the 200-DMA.

    Put it all together, throw in some trend lines and other chart patterns, and we get a pretty clear picture that GC is on the verge of a breakdown. The chart doesn’t necessarily tell us which way it will ultimately go, just that we’re at an important juncture – very useful information indeed.The factors have been busy overnight, seemingly in quarter-end mode to prompt a bullish run for the barn. Will it be enough?continued for members(more…)

  • Equities Plunge on Loss of Algo Support

    Futures reached our next downside target earlier this morning, the Fibonacci retracement at 4348 we added on Sep 9 [see: Just Don’t Call it a Taper.] ES is now off 4.6% since recent highs and 4% since our Correction Watch on Sep 8.

    The algo factors, which have propped up stocks for months, are positioned for further losses following their realization that a bounce at the 50-DMA is not guaranteed.

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  • Because They Can Can Can

    Watching the “market” melt up and bonds barely budge in the face of all-time highs in the monthly and annual PPI print…  More grist for the Fed’s “transitory” inflation scenario.

    Inflation is no longer dominated solely by soaring oil/gas prices.  In other words, not transitory.Will the party end? Not as long as the Fed can control volatility and interest rates – which are, for now at least, ignoring reality. Tomorrow’s another day…

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  • Correction Watch

    S&P 500 futures are soft this morning, flirting with their first drop through the 10-DMA in three weeks and breaking the dashed red trend line from Aug 16.

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  • OPEC: Will They or Won’t They?

    OPEC+ is expected to increase production by another 400,000 bpd in today’s meeting, another dagger in the heart of the stubborn oil/gas rally. Of course, at this juncture, CL can backtest its SMA200 without even making a lower low. So, perhaps a pullback will finally be allowed.

    Given how important rising oil/gas prices have been to equity performance, stocks might just have a hard time digesting a significant pullback.

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