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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Wednesday, December 13, 2023
TLT and SPX: Time to Update the Bull Count from 6 Months Ago
Monday, December 11, 2023
SPX and BKX: Caveat Subscriptor
Yesterday, SPX came within 7 points of its preferred target zone, which also puts it into the C-wave inflection zone (not that I'm expecting this to be a C-wave, but I'm not always right, so I never ignore things that run counter to my biases):
That was followed by this chart:
Friday, December 8, 2023
BKX, NYA, COMPQ, etc. Updates: Vive la Résistance
Wednesday, December 6, 2023
SPX and NYA Updates
Monday, December 4, 2023
INDU Update: Blast from the Past
Remember when (28 minutes ago) everyone was talking about the yield curve inversion? I'm sure you do, but just in case you're new to the markets: An inverted yield curve has accurately foreshadowed all 10 recessions since 1955, per the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, with only one false positive in the mid-1960s.
So, is "this time" really different? Will this be the first outlier in ~60 years, proving all those who heeded history wrong?
Or is the market/economy (yes, I very much realize those are two separate entities, despite the slash mark, and have written about that extensively) just biding its time?
INDU is approaching an interesting very-long-term trend line:
Here it is zoomed in:
And here's an even closer look, along with a trend line that's only months-old (in blue) instead of decades-old:
I suppose if we get into a bigger bull move, then it's entirely possible we're experiencing a "bull market in short covering." Since most everyone who hasn't been hiding under a rock during the past year and a half knew about the yield curve inversion (along with many of the other fundamental challenges facing the market), maybe there were just too many shorts for bears to get traction. Maybe those needed to be cleared out. Maybe even more clearing out is necessary.
We'll see if the market responds to this resistance, or if it blows through it. Trade safe.
Friday, December 1, 2023
SPX Update: Let's Take a Serious and Critical Look at the Bull Count
- Inflation needs to stop, obviously.
- Rates need to come back down to somewhere near the lowest levels in history [which is where they were during the prior bull market], in order to again fuel some degree of debt expansion.
- Commercial real estate needs to come back from the edge, and rates coming down would only be part of that equation: People also need to return to working in an office and quit this remote stuff. People also need to stop shopping online so that brick and mortal stores can make a significant comeback.
- Treasury buyers must be found, in order to fund the rapidly-growing national debt and to help bring Treasury rates down, because it's hard to bring rates down when there are barely enough buyers to absorb supply.
- China needs to find a way out of its pending demographic crisis, in order to keep buying Treasuries and in order to keep manufacturing cheap Widgets for us. And also to prevent their highly speculative real estate market (which already features numerous literal "ghost cities") from melting down and causing any degree of global contagion.
- American consumers need to get out of debt and start spending and taking on new debt again. The problem with a lot of this stuff is "it only works once." You can't max out your credit cards AGAIN until you pay them off.
- GDP needs to increase substantially and in a real manner, since all recent "rises" in GDP have been fueled solely by the government borrowing and spending (see: Treasury oversupply, etc.). Again, seems hard to do when everyone else is already tapped out, but no matter, it needs to happen to fuel that bull market.
- Banks need to strengthen their balance sheets. Of course, if commercial real estate recovers somehow and Treasuries come down substantially and mortgage rates come back down (so that banks aren't stuck holding all those 3% mortgages, which are a liability in the current environment), then banks will probably be just fine. The problem is: How do we get those other three things to happen?
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
SPX, NYA, OIL: The Grass is Always Greener -- When You Aren't Standing on It
Not a lot to add to the past several updates, but I have some interesting charts today nonetheless. Let's start with INDU's very-long-term chart:
Next, a bit of a different perspective on SPX:
NYA highlights this even further:
Finally, oil has remained stalled at its inflection point for a few weeks now, and presents some interesting options from here:
Worth mentioning that we are closing in on the July high in SPX, and prior highs can sometimes offer resistance. Btw, the "grass is always greener on the other side" because our very presence on the grass changes both its environment and ours, so unless we take proper care to nurture and sustain it, trapsing about casually ultimately kills it. Not much else for now. Trade safe.















