Commentary and chart analysis featuring Elliott Wave Theory, classic TA, and frequent doses of sarcasm from the author who first coined the term "QE Infinity." Published on Yahoo Finance, NASDAQ.com, Investing.com, etc.
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Monday, November 12, 2012
How Will Equities React When QE-Infinity Liquidity Hits This Week?
Liquidity is the main driver of equities prices, since excess liquidity usually finds its way into assets, while a paucity of liquidity usually necessitates their sale. The QE-Infinity liquidity will start hitting the market this week. The first MBS purchases are scheduled to settle on November 14, so now we'll finally see how this will impact the market. As noted on Friday, several markets are hovering near long-term support levels, but this zone is a key inflection point, and breakdowns of support here could lead the market into a rapid drop.
The chart below outlines several markets, and the bottom line is bulls need to make a "last stand" here or risk a panic sell-off.
The S&P 500 (SPX) chart below notes the potential air pocket beneath this price zone. This results from the overlapping summer price range -- markets can race rapidly through such ranges, so a failure of support here could drop SPX quickly into the 1320's.
So... is there any reason for bulls to have any hope here? This is a dangerous position for the market, so while I'm not encouraging front-running, there are a few signals that bulls could capitalize on, which I'll outline below. It's a case of potential energy, but it's up to bulls to grab the ball and run with it.
In addition to this price support zone, there are a several reasons for bulls to feel all is not yet lost. The first is the fact that, as noted, the QE-Infinity liquidity begins reaching the Primary Dealer accounts this week, and that usually translates into an inflationary reaction (equities up; dollar down). Notably, the potential does exist for a complete (or nearly complete) corrective fractal from the 1474 print high (noted below as the double-zigzag).
Also interesting to note the US dollar seems to be forming a rising wedge, which is usually a bearish pattern: (continued, next page)
Friday, November 9, 2012
Bears Close-in on Claiming the Market for the Long-Term
Thursday's decline captured the target of 20 SPX points from the bearish sell trigger outlined on Wednesday (1403 to 1383). In fact, all the bearish sell triggers I've outlined since the 1474 print high have now been captured. The failure of support at 1403 caused significant technical damage to the market, but in this update we're going to examine both the remaining bullish potential and bearish potentials in detail.
The market has reached another inflection point, and further downside from here could spell long-term disaster for bulls. The odds that the market has seen a major trend change at the 1474 high are increasing daily, and the chart below shows why this zone is important.
Most major markets have broken the long-term uptrends from the October 2011 lows, but are now reaching possible support levels concurrently.
As promised yesterday, here is the intermediate bullish interpretation that remains standing, shown on the S&P 500 (SPX) chart below. This would make for one heckuva surprise from bulls here. While this count is still completely viable, I continue to have no intention of front-running this decline except at low-risk, tight stop entries, since the trend is clearly down at the moment (I trade primarily futures, so am rarely subject to huge gaps down as cash traders can be). Front-running is only for the very nimble now, because of the danger of the bear count (shown later) which suggests a nested third wave decline -- which means it can go days without coming up for air.
If SPX can generate an impulsive (five wave) bounce, we can run with this count as a more significant and "safer" potential play. Above 1434, and we can start favoring this count.
Honestly, the charts look horrible for bulls right now, and this count is becoming the underdog -- but there are three things which are causing me to continue considering the bullish wave count:
1. The QE-Infinity liquidity injections, which start on November 14.
2. The three-wave rally into the 2012 print high on the Dow Jones Industrials (shown later).
3. Big money sentiment is quite bearish. This is often bullish.
The bearish interpretation has been steadily gaining traction, and the rough expectations of the bearish count are charted in detail below. This should probably be considered as the narrow odds-on favorite at this point in time. There is a nice symmetry to this interpretation. (continued, next page)
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Bears Caused Technical Damage on Wednesday
Wednesday's strong sell-off created some potential technical problems for the bulls, particularly in the Dow Jones Industrials (INDU), where the decline overlapped the wave (1)/A high. I literally ran out of time while charting last night, and I'll simply have to publish what I have now and fill in the blanks in the next update. It's not helping that I came down with the Martian Death Flu yesterday, and feel severely under the weather.
The first chart we'll look at is INDU, since this is where a potential key price overlap has occurred. Note the decline has now overlapped the blue wave A high. I suspect a snap-back rally is close at hand (toward black (2)) -- though this is purely anticipatory, based on the five-wave decline... the bulls need to break above the head and shoulders neckline and the red falling trendline first; until they do, the charts maintain a strong short-term bearish bias.
This chart has a lot of annotations on it, and only outlines the bear count -- I'll outline the remaining intermediate bull potentials for INDU in more detail tomorrow; for now, I've discussed them only on the final chart of the Nasdaq 100.
The next chart is the S&P 500 (SPX) bear count, which can't be locked-in yet, but which seems to be gaining traction. SPX did not overlap its key wave (1)/(w) high yet, so it is still conceivable that this is a fourth wave correction. Again, this chart only outlines the bear potentials.
The hourly SPX chart has a bit more detail, and notes my preferred short-term path. This market meets the definition of "trying to catch a falling knife" and it should be strongly noted that trying to anticipate a bottom after a decline like yesterday's is quite difficult and often ill-advised. Nevertheless, I wanted to share my thoughts and observations on what appears to me to be a reasonable short-term path. Don't bank on this, though, as the decline could simply continue unabated.
Finally, the Nasdaq 100 (NDX) chart does have a bit more detail on the bullish intermediate potential still in this chart. The rally from the June lows appears to be a five-wave impulsive form (meaning it is in the direction of the larger trend, though it could be the final wave of that trend). So far, the decline is still a three-wave form. This leaves open the option that this is a second wave decline (and INDU/SPX still share this option), which would be allowed to create the price overlap witnessed in INDU.
NDX could provide some key tells going forward if the decline turns into a five-wave structure (noted by the gray (4) and (5)) -- and if that happens, it will suggest the trend has indeed changed for the long-term.
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
With the Election Over, Will the Market Break from this Pivot Zone?
The election's finally over, so it appears the country will have at least four more years under the reign of the Most Powerful Man in the World -- I refer, or course, to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. I think there was also a Presidential election.
So what does this mean for the market? Well, Obama staying in office suggests no radical changes in the guard, which means the market can likely count on QE-Infinity, and the generally inflationary policies of the past few years, to continue. Barring a massive external deflationary event, this would seem to be bullish for equities over the longer-term.
The market, however, remains caught in a pivot zone and difficult to read. As I noted last week, there is an excellent chance an intermediate low is forming here, but no key levels have yet been claimed to the upside to build confidence. Across markets, there is still conflicting information in the charts.
On the S&P 500 (SPX), the decline from the 1474 has a great deal of price overlap, which so far leads me to believe it is corrective -- however, a material breakdown of the green support zone (noted on the daily chart below) could be quite damaging to the market's technical picture. Unless that happens, though, the most probable view is that the decline is complete or nearly so, and that new swing highs will follow.
The short-term SPX chart is open to a lot of interpretation. I've noted one potential wave count (which sees a complex 2nd wave correction unfolding) along with some buy and sell triggers.
I'm still watching the Philadelphia Bank Index (BKX) for clues. So far, the bottom I noted last week as a complete fractal pattern has held, but I would become quite uncomfortable for the bull case if that bottom fails -- especially if the blue wave (1) high is broken. (continued, next page)
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
No Material Change... and Don't Forget to Vote (or not)!
No real change from yesterday's outlook, with the added info that bulls have thus far held the 1403 level and maintained the hope of a wave (4) bottom.
Accordingly, I'm only going to do a brief update. The 15-minute SPX chart notes short-term support/resistance, and a bearish sell trigger. Note the potential head and shoulders which everyone and their uncle's elder roommate is watching. The fact that so many have noticed it leads me to think that means a lot of bearish front-running, which leads me to think the market heads UP near term.
And the SPX daily chart below, which hasn't really changed in the last couple months:
Trade safe, and don't forget to vote. Unless you're one of those people that knows absolutely nothing about the real issues facing this country, or what this country stands for in the first place, in which case you should probably just stay home.
(Warning: Rant Alert!) I think this idea that "everyone should vote" is incredibly stupid -- some people clearly should NOT vote. My personal preference would be that a passing grade be earned on some basic test in order for an individual to be allowed to register to vote in the first place. It would consist of simple questions about our government, and if you couldn't answer these questions, you'd have to go the hell home and learn something before being allowed to decide the fate of the free world (or if you're a Chicago voter, instead of going home, you would be sent back to the cemetery from which you were exhumed).
"Well, Pretzel," I can hear you muse, "What types of questions are you talking about?" Funny you should ask, because I just happen to have a short list of examples floating around in my head.
Example Questions in Order to Vote:
What is the Constitution?
a. The supreme law of the United States of America.
b. A "living document" subject to the current whims-du-jour of the very leaders from whom it is intended to protect us in the first place.
c. A new car from Hyundai.
d. A sandwich.
Who said, "You can please some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can't please all of the people all of the time."?
a. Abraham Lincoln
b. Abraham Lincoln, but he actually said "fool" instead of "please."
c. What do you mean "you can't please all of the people all of the time"? Why not?!?
d. And who's Abraham Lincoln?
What form of government is outlined in the Constitution of the United States?
a. A Republic.
b. A Democracy.
c. Wait, if I were smart, I'd realize that this actually helps me answer question #1...
d. Can I go home now?
Monday, November 5, 2012
SPX, INDU, NDX, NYA: Charts Show Fractured Markets
Last week the market gave several buy signals, but Friday's action aborted some of those signals. Hourly MACD on the S&P 500 (SPX) flipped to a sell signal, and several markets formed very bearish reversal candles.
The good news is my short-term target from Wednesday (of 1430-1432) was reached before the market reversed, capturing 20 SPX points of profit. The bad news is the intermediate-term outlook has been clouded by the strength of Friday's reversal, and bulls will need to reverse the market directly to maintain their hopes. Trade below 1403 SPX would suspend the potential intermediate turn I talked about in Friday's article.
The chart below outlines the three viable wave potentials from here. The reality is: at this point, if the market crosses back below 1403, that will tell us more about what this wave structure isn't than about what it is. As noted, trade below 1403 would invalidate the wave (4) bottom and open up the possibility that this decline could have much further left to run -- though it's difficult at this point to say exactly how much farther. The old expression "the trend is your friend" would be wise to keep in mind if this happens, as trade beneath 1403 would indicate the intermediate trend is still down.
The wave count discussed on Friday of a fourth wave bottom at 1403 is still the best fit to the entire structure, so if bulls can hold 1403, they give themselves a fighting chance at making new swing highs directly. Trade above 1423.62 is the first short-term step for bulls to start feeling good again, and trade back above 1434 would be a confidence booster.
On the bearish side of the coin, the SPX trendline chart notes a potentially dangerous pattern for bulls if the market sustains trade beneath the 1395 zone. Trade into that price zone would also break the long-term uptrend line of the past year.
The Nasdaq 100 (NDX) currently presents one of the more bearish-looking long-term charts out there (below), and muddies the overall outlook. (continued, next page)
Friday, November 2, 2012
SPX Update: Intermediate Low in Place?
In Wednesday's update, I noted that the market had likely put in a bottom at 1403 SPX, and I suggested a rally would begin to unfold. I also published a short-term rally target of 1430-1432 for the S&P 500 (SPX), and on Thursday, the market came within 1.65 of my target. The bulls have taken the first steps toward validating an intermediate bottom, but there is still some work to do before we can declare the bears out-of-the-running.
My work suggests that an intermediate low is in place, and the market is now headed toward the (first) intermediate target of 1480-1490, but any trade beneath 1403 would invalidate that outlook. The first step for bulls to gain confidence is to overlap the key 1430.64 price point. Conversely, over the short-term, sustained trade beneath 1416 could suggest problems for the bull case.
The hourly chart notes the alternate potential of a 2nd wave rally, though I'm only giving that potential 30% odds at the moment. I'll note the key downside levels going forward.
The 5-minute chart anticipated the rally perfectly, and Friday's market looks destined to hit the 1st-tier 1430-1432 target which was published on Wednesday -- when my blue target box looked a lot more lonely than it does now. Considerably more upside is possible, and if the high-degree preferred wave count is correct, the market is on its way to 1480-1490 at the minimum. (continued, next page)
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