Tag: trend lines

  • Are We There Yet?

    SPX came within 7 points of our downside target yesterday, getting a midday bounce that couldn’t quite reach the 200-DMA.  Futures popped as high as 73 points off the intraday lows, but have since given back about 12 of those points and are perched barely above ES SMA200 at a 28-pt gain in the after-hours.If those gains hold, it still won’t be enough to ramp SPX back above its 200-DMA.  What’s more, USDJPY, RB and CL have further to fall, VIX has additional upside potential and DJIA and COMP remain below their 200-DMAs.  Despite the after-hours euphoria, stocks aren’t out of the woods just yet.

    One economic item which doesn’t usually attract that much attention, but might today: Treasury Budget.  The trend hasn’t been very positive lately as witnessed by the widening gap between outlays and receipts.

    For excellent commentary on the problems this poses, see Jeffrey Gundlach’s interview on CNBC yesterday.  The latest is due out at 2pm.  From Briefing.com:

    Export and import prices are also due out (8:30am.)  These will get extra scrutiny to see what impact tariffs have had on prices so far.  And, Michigan Consumer Sentiment (10am) frequently impacts markets.

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  • That Escalated Quickly!

    It was just last Tuesday we asked “where’s the bounce?”  SPX had gapped lower and failed to rebound the way it always seems to has for the past year.

    We had watched a trend line dating back to Dec 29 (below, in red) break down, and were wondering about the small, white channel.  From Where’s the Bounce?

    After that, it gets a little messy. ES has an important backtest at 2773, which would be 2730 on SPX — nothing all that important in the vicinity. Below that, however, the white 2.24 at 2703.62 remains very interesting. It would be a hell of a drop from here: 117 points or 4.1%.

    The closer we got to 2703, the more plausible it seemed.  When we reached it today, though, SPX leveled off for only about 10 minutes before plunging lower.  Why?

    There are two primary reasons.  The first, of course, is VIX.  Was there a single session this past year when I didn’t bitch about the degree to which timely beatdowns in VIX were triggering algos to bid up stocks?  Doubtful.

    After VIX broke out of the falling channel on Friday, Our charts suggested it would reach 16.29 and, if/when that broke, 25.65. 

    When 25.65 broke, at approximately 11:48 this morning, it triggered an additional wave of selling from those very same algos which have learned so well to take their clues from VIX’s every twitch.  Live by the sword…

    The second reason was USDJPY and the ubiquitous yen carry trade.  As we noted in our last update [see: Jan 24 Update on USDJPY], the pair reached a channel bottom which represented important support.

    We’ve reached the bottom of the rising white channel which has held on four previous occasions since its origin in late 2012…Bottom line, USDJPY isn’t necessarily done until DXY is done. We had bounces at the .500 and .618, so an overshoot to the .786 at 108.90 or even the .886 at 108.16 is a distinct possibility.

    As it so happens, the white channel bottom didn’t hold.  Despite Kuroda’s desperate jawboning, USDJPY has continued to falter.  It backtested trend line resistance yesterday — all well and good.

    But, instead of catching support as it almost always does, it broke down.  At 11:56, it dropped through a tiny trend line of support.  Seconds later, when that TL broke down……it broke down through a larger TL of support.

    Bottom line, VIX and USDJPY are the two most powerful drivers of algos there are (oil occasionally takes the lead.)  When they were going strong…melt up.  The slightest hint that they’re not…melt down.

    SPX bottomed out yesterday at 2638.17 and closed a good 55 points below the 2.24 Fib.  While it’s always scary to see major Fibonacci support fail, there was an obvious effort to keep the uptrend alive.  Note the SMA100 crosses the bottom of the rising channel which was established with the Feb 11, 2016 lows.  In other words, it’s important.

    Significantly, the channel bottom was defined by the Nov 9, 2016 lows.  If that date sounds familiar, it was the election night in the US.  And, it was the last time a major effort was made to salvage important Fibonacci support. [see: Why the Trump Rally Is a Fraud.]

    It worked spectacularly, resulting in a 38% rally.  All it took was a 17% spike in USDJPY, a 55% rally in oil, and a 63% collapse in VIX.

    How about now?  The algos are primed and conditioned to respond.  I’m sure Jim Bullard still knows his way to Bloomberg’s studios.  Can TPTB manufacture another recovery?  For the answer, we need only to examine two similar, previous meltdowns: the night of the US election in Nov 2016, and August 16, 2007.

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  • The Same, but Different

    Yesterday started out with a VIX-driven pop that quickly fizzled and nailed our downside target before rebounding and hitting our upside target.  Since SPX closed right at resistance, it needed a boost overnight.  So, why not go back to the same clever trick that worked the day before?

    Yes, VIX’s red channel has broken down again.  And, the algos are eating it up… to the tune of +5 on ES.

    Will it pop and drop, again, or will this one take?

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  • Striking Distance

    This is day 8 of our membership promotion, running now through the end of the month for members and non-members alike. We’re offering a 25% rebate off the first month of Monthly and Quarterly auto-renew subscriptions. Annual memberships are available at a very substantial discount (rewarding those who act quickly!)

    Remember, the annual pricing is available to current members. If your current membership hasn’t expired yet, we’ll tack your new subscription on to your current expiration date. This can be especially valuable for those who took advantage of a special last year which offered a discount on the first year of a auto-renewing annual subscription.

    To sign up for a new monthly or quarterly subscription, CLICK HERE. For details on an annual subscription, drop us a line with the subject line “sign me up!”

    * * *

    After SPX’s break out on the back of a 37% plunge in VIX, it’s no surprise that the VIX has kept it within striking distance of new all-time highs.

    In dropping that 37%, VIX completed a deep retracement of its rise from 9.97 — the lowest it’s been since 2007 — to 16.28.  The .886 retracement is considered the last stop before prices drop through the previous lows.  Imagine: risk being considered lower than at any time since 2007!

    Yesterday, VIX spent the entire day dancing around that .886, with a dip below it every single time SPX started slipping.  The message to algos was that VIX was about to drop to new lows and, therefore, stocks should be bought.It was enough to keep SPX from completing a simple retracement from its .886 to its .786, or any meaningful dip until the final minutes of an otherwise nonsensical session.Today’s a new day, as CL is closing in on our 48.35-48.45 target and investors are no doubt anxious to express their disappointment with the lack of details provided for the fantastic, big-league tax cuts “revealed” yesterday.

    Despite the slight bump in futures overnight, our downside targets remain intact – starting with 2384.

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  • Betwixt and Between

    SPX and ES managed to hold key trend lines and channels yesterday, bouncing from just short of our downside targets to exactly where we expected.  All it took was an 18.3% hammering of VIX — no problem for the Masters of the Universe (real subtle, guys!)

    But, there was no breakout.  There wasn’t even an overnight ramp job.

    This somewhat validates our theory about the oil and USDJPY two-step, meaning we should be looking for a big, sudden move in the currency markets as soon as today.

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  • Reproach and Retreat

    The first big Republican victory — the repeal and replace of the ACA — has morphed into reproach and retreat.  The net impact: what does this failure portend for the rest of the Trump agenda and, thus, the Trump Rally?

    Regular readers know that I’ve looked askance at this rally from the start [see: Why the “Trump Rally” is a Fraud.]  It was born of a sharp reversal in CL, USDJPY and VIX — the key algo drivers.  Momentum traders jumped on board as it rose.  And, somewhere along the way, mainstream investors convinced themselves that the new and improved outlook justified an 18% rally.

    But, live by the algo, die by the algo.  The yen had to appreciate to compensate for higher oil prices.  Higher US and euroland inflation necessitated a drop in oil and gas.  And, front-running the Fed’s tepid response to spiking inflation was widespread.  With the Trump Rally narrative in doubt, there were simply too many plates to keep spinning.

    Futures are off 22.50 at the moment, leaving us some clues as to what to expect for SPX.  But, the more important side of the equation is where do WTI and the USDJPY dip to?

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  • Horseshoes and Hand Grenades

    There’s an old expression that says “close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.”  So, we spent most of the day yesterday wondering whether the day’s 2336.45 lows were close enough to our long-held downside target of 2335.34.The tag was marred by premature reversals in oil and VIX.  Did the guys working the algos not get the message?  Or, were they just a little over-eager?  Admittedly, it’s tough to nail a precise value in an index as unwieldy as the S&P 500.  But, they went to all the trouble of engineering a backtest of a key Fib level.  You’d think they’d care…

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  • Charts I’m Watching: Aug 12, 2013

    The eminis are flirting with danger this morning, having ducked below a key channel midline (dashed, purple) but bouncing off a smaller channel bottom and another channel midline (dashed, white) near a .786 (1674.15) for a Gartley Pattern completion.

    The dollar is threatening to break out of the falling wedge….

    And, the SPX is set to tag the neckline of the yellow H&S Pattern again.  Holding above 1686 will be key.

    I’ll play the downside on the opening with an eye towards the red .886 at 1679.86 — our target from last week.

    UPDATE:  9:35 AM

    We got a bounce at the pale blue channel midline, but I suspect it’s just to back test the neckline and that 1680 is still on the table.

    The danger for bears is a dip to tag the .886 and complete the H&S Patterns, then a rebound back above the neckline to invalidate the patterns.

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  • The Best Laid Plans

    The best laid plans of mice and men
    Go often awry,
    And leave us nothing but grief and pain,
    For promised joy!

    Robert Burns, 1785

    ORIGINAL POST:  6:45 AM EDT

    The wedges we’ve been watching on DX and EURUSD are playing out.  EURUSD has broken out…

    …and DX has broken down.

    But, it’s the USDJPY that I’m watching especially closely this morning.  It still hasn’t broken 100 since our Apr 8 observation [USDJPY update] that it was running out of steam:

    “…there is growing risk of a downturn as it approaches 100… it appears the pair might have hit at least interim resistance at today’s high.”

    It topped out 3 sessions later at 99.94, and two weeks later is in danger of a larger pullback.

    Remember, weakening the yen was a critical element of the BOJ’s stimulus program that was supposed to generate inflation, boost Toyota sales and send Japanese investment funds flooding into foreign markets.

    Instead, Japanese investors are repatriating their funds from abroad — a net Y9.5 trillion ($95 billion) since the first of the year.  Why?  As any US investor could tell you, QE might not inflate economies, but it sure as hell inflates markets.

    The Nikkei 225 is up 65% since last October’s lows….

    …and, still hasn’t even recovered 2/3 of its losses from the 2007 crash.  The Dow and the S&P 500, by contrast, have recovered all of them — and, then some.  So, to many, the Nikkei still seems the better value.  It’s hard to argue with success.

    But, I’ll do it anyway.  In reaching 14,020 a few hours ago, NKD tagged the .618 Fibonacci retracement of its 2007-2009 crash from 18,365 to 6990.

    To those not familiar with harmonics, this tends to be a big deal.  When SPX reached the equivalent point in April 2010, it plunged 17%.  The DJIA fell almost 15%.  The USD, represented by DX, soared 9.3%.

    But, the yen positively soared.  USDJPY started a 17-month slide that took the pair down 20% from 94.98 to 75.78.  NKD, which had just reached its .382 Fib, shed 23% over the next 4 months, eventually reaching almost 30% in Nov 2011.

    Could the USDJPY’s failure to break 100 be telling us something?  You better believe it.  I called a top a few weeks ago because the pair had reached several important Fib levels as well as the midline of an important channel (in yellow, below)…

    …that dates back to 1995.

    There’s no guarantee it won’t push through instead of retreating, but the RSI picture supports the danger of a significant retreat.

    Daily RSI has backtested the broken yellow channel twice, but the trend is clearly down — with the latest push being rebuffed by the purple midline.

    And, a close-up reveals that a breakdown has already started.

    Stay tuned.

    UPDATE:  9:25 AM EDT

    With SPX set to open 5-6 points higher, it stands a very good chance of reaching our 1584.23 target. In other words, a pop and drop is very much in the cards.

    If it goes any higher, look for 1590.36 instead.

    UPDATE:  9:40 AM

    That’s good enough for me.  I’m closing my long position and reverting to full short here at 1584.80.  Stops around 1586ish.

    The .25 of the purple channel is right around 1587, so I’d use some discretion around that stop level and look to see if there’s any real strength behind a move higher.

    UPDATE:  10:25

    Getting a push through 1587, so I’ll open an interim long position for what should be only a few points higher to the .886.  Core short remains in place.  Tight trailing stops.

    I wouldn’t start getting nervous about the short position until around 1594 — the trend line (red, dashed) that extends from the 2000 and 2007 peaks.

    UPDATE:  10:50 AM

    I’ll go ahead and close that interim long here at 1590.  While I still think there’s potential to the 2000-2007 trend line, it could easily happen after the correction that should begin in the next hour.

    That way, the Inverted H&S Pattern would feature a neckline that’s roughly the same as the purple channel .25 line, and would target the same price level as the 1.618 extension of the 1597-1536 slide: 1635.

    This is a very artfully crafted scenario to justify (from a technical standpoint) a rally above that red TL — which is one of the last remaining technical impediments to a continuation of the rally from 1343 in November.

    Can they pull it off?

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  • The Storm Before the Calm

    I’ve been quite bearish since going short on April 11 at 1597 [Big Picture: 11:30 update.]  Yesterday, though, SPX reached our initial downside target of 1540 and, as expected, paused.

    As we’ve discussed, this was an important points for bulls to take a stand.  It was also the ideal spot from which to launch the right shoulder of a Head & Shoulders Pattern as I posted on the 16th.


    So, we closed our short position late yesterday [Dollar Daze: 3:45 update in members section] and played “catch the falling knife” with a long position at 1541. This morning, we’re being rewarded with a nice bounce that should have legs.

    Whether it will form the right shoulder we’ve been expecting, or resume its QE-fueled race to the moon is open to debate.  But, for now, the trend is higher.

    Note that SPX formed a nice little falling wedge (in yellow above) that, if it plays out, supports the idea of a return to the idealized right shoulder height represented by the dashed yellow TL.

    The falling white channel I’ve slapped on the chart, as regular readers know, probably won’t last.  It’s rare for the initial slope of a decline to be maintained through the series of rallies and sell-offs that comprise a major move.  But, it’s a good initial fit, so it will do for now.

    UPDATE:  10:30 AM

    The ideal right shoulder in a H&S Pattern is the same height as the left.  But, it needn’t be in order for the pattern to play out.  The high so far for the day is 1549.63, which represents a 14 point bounce off the neckline — compared to the left shoulder’s 33 points.

    UPDATE:  12:15 PM

    SPX has reached the important Fib levels of 1553 and 1555 (the Crab Patterns from 1370-1074 and 1474-1343.)  This would be a natural place for prices to reverse, so I’ll close my long position here at 1554 and go short.

    This constitutes a 20-pt rise off the neckline, so it’s technically enough of a right shoulder for the pattern to play out.  And, the bears could really use a H&S Pattern completion to keep the downward momentum going.

    A good reversal here – or, at least by 1574 – and we can write off the 1576-1597 rally as a prank, a juvenile burst of irrational exuberance.

    Bulls, on the other hand, would greatly benefit from a push through the Fib lines that they completely dissed the first time around.  And, they should have mattered.  Take a look at yesterday’s Dollar Daze for a discussion of how the dollar confirmed the sell signal that a few good overnight ramp jobs were able to beat.

    There are other logical turning points as well.  This could quite likely be a short term trade to score a quick 10 points or so — unless 1535 is taken out and the H&S completes.

    Choices, choices.  We’ll take a look at different scenarios below.

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