Archives March 2021

Up, Up, and Away…

Navigator Algorithms – 10% Nasdaq 100 Futures, 10% S&P 500 Futures, 5% April 16, 2021 XLF 33 Calls, and 5% April 16, 2021 XLE 49 Calls

Revised to Include Stop References

Yesterday. I hammered the talking heads who got too negative on the market by last Friday. Yet, I only had the guts to go to a 30% invested position myself. Granted, the position is highly leveraged, but I still confess to being a chicken and somewhat affected by all the talk of a meltdown. So who am I to criticize?

Yesterday was one of the most powerful rallies I have seen in a long time. At one point, 495 out of 500 stocks in the S&P 500 index were positive – and the breadth lasted most of the day. We saw ticks on the NYSE exceed +2000 at one point. It does not get much better. The gains are to be expected when larger degree cycles, such as the 20-week cycle I have been discussing of late, launch. In fact, we can use the launch as additional confirmation that the cycle has bottomed. However, until the market achieves new highs, confirmation is not absolute.

Of course, the buying likely included considerable short-covering – forced buying as opposed to real, bullish investors. Never confuse the two – as it can be to your detriment.

But I would not be doing my job if I did not identify at least one negative. Using harmonics and corrective pattern analysis, the market could be forming a bearish “Shark Pattern.” If so, the peak would come at about 3870 on the S&P 500 futures. And that would coincide with a small downtrend line you can draw from the recent peak at 3959.25. I view that line as our line in the sand right now between bullish or more bearish activity.

Aside from that, the trading channel’s top takes us up over 4000 on the S&P 500 index:

Anyway, I would move your stops up to two ticks below the 5-day EMA on all of the aforementioned positions. The Globex lows on the NASDAQ 100 (13153.50) and S&P 500 (3866.25) are good proxies. Since the XLE and XLF don’t have Globex trading, use a couple of ticks below the top of yesterday’s gaps (the gap tops are 49.25 on the XLE and 32.86 on the XLF). Use a close below the levels for now as your stop, rather than an intraday violation.

I want to add to positions if the right opportunity presents. Otherwise, I am satisfied with our current mix. Last night, the S&P 500 futures pulled back to the 21 EMA, but I slept through it.  If I had been up, I would have moved us to 50% invested proportionately.

Today’s Plan

Overnight inventory is balanced, giving little indication of the market’s direction this morning. I would let the market settle a bit before forming an opinion. On the S&P 500, key levels will be 3870, where the shark pattern projects a potential reversal, and the downtrend line comes in from the all-time high. Again, use 3870 as your line in the sand for bullish versus bearish bias. If we manage to conquer that level, we would need to conquer yesterday’s high at 3912.50 – then the Weekly Expected Move high for this week at 3936 which is right above yesterday’s high, and likely to be an obstacle for the remainder of the week.

We can exceed the WEM high, at least early in the week, but the price is likely to anchor us for the rest of the week. Nevertheless, when and if we conquer 3912 or 3936 meaningfully, then we go up to challenge the all-time high at 3959.25.

Settlement yesterday was 3899.50 on the S&P 500. On the downside, we should encounter support at the halfback of 3885, then 3881.50 for the top of the single prints, then the 3866 overnight low, and then yesterday’s gap high at 3859 or so. The daily 5-day and 8-day exponential moving averages should provide support along the way.

We remain in lofty territory, risks are high, and the shark pattern projection at 3870 could be a bearish turning point for the market. That would be the market’s ultimate revenge. We think all is well after such a great day, only to see the market reverse and crater. I specialize in unintended consequences – so I think about these things.

Balanced trading frequently follows a large up day as yesterday, so the overnight range may be repeated in today’s trading.

A.F. Thornton

The Crash?

Navigator Algorithms - 10% Nasdaq 100 Futures, 10% S&P 500 Futures, 5% April 16, 2021 XLF 33 Calls, and 5% April 16, 2021 XLE 49 Calls

If there is anything I have learned over the past 34 years, when everyone calls for a meltdown crash and depression, it tends not to happen. Don’t get me wrong; there are always some extreme bears and extreme bulls. It sells. Call it simply greed and fear – the engines of the markets.

But here is how it really works; by Friday, the talking heads were talking gloom and doom. If everyone is doom and gloom, they have already raised cash. Typically that means that the selling is over, or nearly over, at least for the short-term. A good way to measure this is to follow the VIX or volatility index. It gives you an instant snapshot of fear.

Friday, the volatility index was not nearly as low as it was on the dip we experienced on Tuesday. Simultaneously, the S&P 500 index’s price went lower as traders ran the stops under Tuesday’s lows. This was one among several divergences indicating that a short-term low likely was in. Another indication that Friday could mark a short-term low momentum. Few stocks fell below their 50-day moving averages.

Having gone into Friday’s low with 100% cash, we stuck our toe back in the water. If the futures are any indication, we made a good decision. As we get more confirmation, we may deploy more cash.

Is there a major peak coming? Absolutely. How soon? That depends on where we are on the roadmap. The most important roadmap for our purposes is the 18-month cycle. That cycle splits into two nine-month cycles. In turn, that cycle splits into two 40-week cycles. In turn, that cycle splits into two 20-week cycles. Got that? More math than you need early in the morning.

The related concept to understand is that I have listed the “nominal” cycle lengths. Over time, the lengths vary, not unlike your EKG – to visualize the concept. Nevertheless, using the nominal lengths and a baseball analogy, we are in the ninth inning of the 18-month cycle. The cycle’s real-time length has been averaging about 16-months from trough to trough over the past 10 years. Since the last cycle low was last March, adding 16-months guestimates the next low to occur in July.

Distilling the math of the nominal lengths, there are four 20-week cycles in the 18-month cycle. We are bottoming the third 20-week cycle now and heading into the last 20-week cycle of the larger 18-month loop. Given that it is the last 20-week cycle in the series, it tends to peak a bit earlier than its preceding cousins. In my best estimates, that peak is still a few weeks to a month ahead of us. As well, what we are currently experiencing may be the beginning stages of that process.

Could this last phase have already peaked? Sure, it is possible, but I deal in probabilities, not possibilities. Interest rates moved into a surprisingly quick acceleration last week. If rates continue sustainably past that 1.5% inflection point on the 10-year Treasury Note, the nominal 20-week could peak earlier than normal. That is why we use stops. For now, our stop is two ticks under all the lows from Friday on all four of our positions. If I raise the stops later today, I will publish the change. 

We need to give the XLE and XLF a bit more room as they just started a pullback. I would put those stops two dollars below last Friday’s lows on the ETFs. We are trying to scale into these positions as they pull back to the 21-day EMA. We started scaling early because they may not pull back as much as we like.

We have the February jobs report and factory reports out on Friday. Perhaps that will give us more insight. However, the data this week promises more volatility. Based on weekly options expiration on Friday, the S&P 500 projects a 104 point range on either side of last week’s close at 3811.15. So the index could go as low as 3707 or as high as 3915, based on the market maker option pricing.

So interest rates are the wild card here. They went almost vertical last week, typically a sign of short-term exhaustion. Rates will be a big focus on my radar.

I have an end-of-month video coming out later today. It details the important issues in our windshield. It is published for the Founders Group, but I will share it with everyone as we are late in the 18-month cycle and expect a significant correction associated with the mark-down phase.

Today’s Plan

As most of you know, I don’t typically day trade on Mondays for various reasons. Nevertheless, if you decide to do so, here are the key issues.

Value (where 70% of the volume occurs for the day) was unchanged on Friday from Thursday, and while there was some price action lower, it did not fill the large gap. This, coupled with the break higher out of the diamond pattern overnight, may give buyers the edge in today’s session. I would focus on where value develops this morning and how far down into the value area we trade. The top of the value area is about 3847, and the bottom is about 3814.

The Globex high and Friday’s high are close to each other, around 3858. Given the context, assume short-covering (force buying) will accelerate if the levels are cleared. Then you would need to monitor for continuation.

While early indications point to lower odds of downside activity today, anything can happen. I am noting that the Globex low is at 3812.50 is close to the Value Area Low at 3814.50. Acceptance below the two levels puts the gap from last week back into play.

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