Archives August 2021

Pre-Market Outlook – 8/19/2021

Programming issues have been plaguing me since Sunday. I will get everything from yesterday back up on the website later today. Meanwhile, we exited most of our positions last week at the peak, excepting for Energy (XLE). I had set a wider than usual stop to give it plenty of room. One would think XLE would have reacted favorably to Middle East turmoil. We hit our stop about an hour before the close yesterday nonetheless. And perhaps that is one of our “WWSHD” signals (when what should happen doesn’t).

Overnight, the major indices continued lower to tag their 50-day lines. That would have been the end of it in the past few markdowns. However, in June and July, the markdowns did not finish until Monday or Tuesday after monthly options expiration. The monthly expiration is tomorrow (Friday). And we will be gapping lower this morning from the lower third of the overnight range. Overnight inventory is net short.

And the previous corrections started a few days later than this one. Of course, this markdown could be different now that we are in that seasonally weak period of the markets – August through October. Notably, as well, we have now dropped below the August monthly open at 4408, so the monthly candle has turned red, putting a potential bear monthly candle on the board.

Also, we have been in a small pullback bull channel on the weekly chart which normally ends with a large pullback of 10% to 15%. At the very least, the market typically will go sideways for a while. The only question is what the size of the trading range would be. As an example, could we tag the July 19th low around 4200 to form the bottom of the range?

Today, then, is as simple as framing our bias between the overnight low at 4347.45 (the market looked like it was exhausting into that level last night) and the overnight halfback at 4374.50. Above the halfback, I start feeling a tinge of positive bias. Below the overnight low, there are a couple of prominent VPOCS at 4339.75 and 4316.50, but it could also mean a trip all the way down to the 200-day lines, though not likely in one session.

Overnight inventory is certainly net short enough and we are close enough to the ONL to assume that there is potential for a short-covering rally. As always, buy the high of the first one-minute bar or a cross back up through the open should the opening drive be lower.

In either situation, it would be better if the ONL does not get taken out in early trade. Monitor for continuation and target the overnight halfback first. The outcome and tone of any short-covering rally will always give you tons of information that will help you discern the potential outcomes for the rest of the session.

On any fade and then failure, preferably one that cannot even reach the overnight halfback, the cross back down through the opening price is a short trigger.

On an opening drive lower that takes out the ONL, target the first VPOC at 4339.75 and monitor for continuation. Good confirmation that such a move has the legs would be a failure of the NYSE tick to get positive at all during the first half-hour of trade.

Both Gap Rules and Spike Rules apply this morning.

A.F. Thornton

Mid-Day Update – 8/17/2021

As I had suspected, yesterday was somewhat of an anomaly, making me highly suspicious that the Fed intervened in the market to cushion the Afghanistan news.

So it appears that the 40-day cycle markdown has resumed. But with the CBOE Put/Call ratio at the highest level we have seen all year, I do expect a short-covering rally at some point today, perhaps even into the close.

I would target the 21-day EMA on the daily chart as the first reference point and target for the cycle low. From there, you can double the decline if the 21 does not hold and then target the 50-day line.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 8/17/2021

There was no follow-through overnight to yesterday’s morning turnaround and small pullback rally into the close. In fact, though all of the Globex range is inside yesterday’s range, the S&P 500 has retraced 61.8% of yesterday’s prices and sits near that level at this writing. 

Although we are squarely within yesterday’s range and trading around halfback currently, I believe there is some shock and potential for imbalance to this open as futures are opening well away from the bullish settlement and on 100% net short overnight inventory. Treat it like any other orthodox gap with the caveat that gap rules are not officially in play (not a true gap as we are opening within yesterday’s range). Since we know that the initial move should be to correct some of that overnight inventory, what actually happens will leave us with plenty of information.

This still leaves the possibility that we overshot the rising wedge yesterday and still may dip into the cycle low and options expiration on Friday. But it doesn’t matter. As with yesterday, we need to follow the usual plan and let the market take us where it wants to go.

Our first downside reference will be the Globex low at 4447, with our second reference at yesterday’s low of 4432.50, which is right above yesterday morning’s downside target, and last Thursday’s weak low at 4430. Above, our references are yesterday’s halfback and the overnight prominent POC at 4454.50, then the Globex high of 4472.25, and then yesterday’s high of 4476.50. Halfback at 4454.50 is my key bull/bear bias line for today.

As a side note, on instruments such as the S&P 500 index, both the ’33 and ’50 handles are always key lines, so the downside levels this morning are not surprising. Usually, if the market can hold the ’33 handle, it will get the ’50 handle. If it can hold that, it goes after the ’62 handle, then the ’77 and ’88 handles, etc. At some point, I will do a write-up on the 100 handle block and how the market works it on the way up and down.

With all these levels, monitor for continuation.

A.F. Thornton

Epilogue – 8/16/2021

While the day is certainly a head scratcher, here are my notes. I will try to clean them up later so check back. I did not include notes on the Algo Trigger or Moving Average buy and sell signals as the Bull Microchannel was the dominant trading theme after the morning low. We don’t see reversals like this often, but they are awesome when the occur.

Note that I show you how I moved my stop up on each barely discernable dip in the channel. Not once did the price come close to a stop, a sign of strength. I only sold because I don’t like to be trading in the last hour and I did not want to be too greedy. We hit my 100% target of the first leg up (shaded area) so I exited.

Buyers remain in control. I am not entirely certain if the dip was simply news related from the weekend, or if it was a nanosecond of the 40-day cycle dip. I tend to favor the former over the latter explanation, which means the 40-day cycle may still present itself for a few days later this week.

Breadth continues to diverge from price, a negative sign. Also, defense led offensive today, also not ideal. Growth stocks got clobbered and the Dow led, just as I had expected (rotation). But energy disappointed, so I will give it one more day at most.

A.F. Thornton

Interim Update – Morning Outlook for Day Traders – 8/16/2021

Since I just sold my long trade referenced earlier at 4466.50, I thought I would drop you a quick note and update you.

Today is a bit of a head-scratcher. Our macro sell signals will be negated if the market closes this high on the bar. It is unusual to see the market recover a 20 point gap down and then reverse to new highs. Nevertheless, it happens.

Also, wedges fail or barely reverse when the market is in a bull or bear microchannel, as it has been since the morning low on the 5-minute chart, which is what we see today.

Today’s behavior underscores having a good plan for day trading. I will share my notes later, but following my rules kept me in this latest long trade long after I expected to be holding it. Nor did I expect such a profitable day, especially in long trades.

From a macro perspective, the market is being led mostly by defensive sectors. Breadth is negative once again, just as it was Friday. So there is nothing to get excited about.

The best explanation I have for this unusual behavior goes back to the narrative. The primary issue for this market has been a reversal of Fed policy to something less helpful. Global turmoil over the weekend in Afghanistan, the Delta variant, etc., all work to cause uncertainty, putting a cloud over the economy. This takes the pressure off the Fed to raise interest rates or taper, which could have been the course they would take next week in Jackson Hole. We will gain more insight from the last meeting’s minutes on Wednesday.

However, regardless of what the minutes say, the situation has changed, and the Fed is likely to maintain its accommodative stance a bit longer than anticipated. That is the most logical explanation for today’s turnaround.

Even though investors are wading back in on this dip, defensive names are leading. So nobody is throwing caution to the wind quite yet.

A.F. Thornton 

Mid-Day Update – 8/16/2021

Above are the four most common outcomes of an opening gap down, as we experienced this morning. Of the four, the behavior is closest to the lower right-hand corner. We wedged into a reversal about 11:00 am EST. We have experienced a nice rally up to test the gap, where we find ourselves at this writing. The bottom of the gap (where the market opened) is also yesterday’s low and the old trendline we broke this morning. All of this congregates around 4450, a half-roundie that could provide resistance.

Whether this is true buying the dip or short-covering is not entirely clear, but it is certainly not the disaster it could have been this morning. You should be happy with some nice gains if you followed the morning plan. We breached 4441, setting up a short trade to 4430. The market wedged into that level, setting up a long trade that you should still be holding, but getting ready to exit on the current rising wedge now forming into the gap around 4450. After I exit this trade, I am done for the day.

I suspect there might have been some intervention in the markets this morning due to the global picture. We can never know for sure. Also, the global chaos is likely to hold the Fed tapering and interest rate hikes in abeyance. Kind of like bad news is good news. In any event, the sellers were unable to press their case below the morning low, and the buyers are still in control for now. We will see what the afternoon brings.

The put/call ratio is elevated and that may stymie further declines today. But until proven otherwise, we are still in the initial stages of the nominal 40-day cycle correction.

A.F. Thornton

View from the Top Down – Interim Update – 8/16/2021

The rising wedge reversal pattern mentioned in yesterday’s weekly report has broken this morning. The Navigator Algo has issued a sell signal. This appears to be the anticipated reversal into the 40-day cycle low. I have set an initial target for the 40-day low at 4200 on the futures. Currently, the futures are trading at 4437.

I have marked the cycle FLDs (Future Lines of Demarcation) on the chart immediately above. The 40-day FLD is the initial target, also currently at 4200 or so. Notice how close it is to the blue line, which is the 21-day EMA. We will see how all of this develops, and I will keep you posted. Keep in mind that this is the initial target. We could certainly go lower as the decline develops further.

The Founders Group is holding on to the Energy (XLE) position until we approach the close today. While the XLE may not hold, you can also imagine that the situation at hand could destabilize the Middle East. With the current administration increasing our dependency on Middle East Oil, oil prices might soon reflect the chaos. I want to see how the price behaves into the close before I decide whether to hold or fold.

Note that we are approaching the 20th anniversary of 9/11. We have no Southern Border at the current time. More than 5,000 terrorist prisoners have just been released from Afghan prisons by the Taliban. This is a lethal combination, and there is nothing to stop terrorists from entering our country.

This morning, China (the CCP) has already posted headlines aimed at Taiwan and Hong Kong, using Afghanistan as their example. The CCP is warning that Taiwan and Hong Kong need to submit to CCP control as there will be no interference or rescue from the United States. Not only is this tragic, but it could also be a strategic nightmare. Keep in mind that most of our computer chips come from Taiwan.

Recall what I have previously communicated about Fourth Turnings. Every such turning in history has resulted in major wars.

The turn of events in Afghanistan over the weekend has profound, global implications, most of which have not even come to light as yet.

Stay tuned,

A.F. Thornton

Morning Outlook for Day Traders -8/16/2021

We will be opening with a true gap down this morning and Gap Rules will apply. The gap down is occurring in the context of Afghanistan (the new Saigon), the China Virus Delta Variant, Fed taper rhetoric, a rising wedge reversal pattern and the 40-day cycle trough due later this week. 

The Fed Minutes will be published Wednesday, and monthly options expiration is due on Friday. Lately, options expiration has been brutal, resulting in trips to the 50-day line.

My line in the sand today would be the Globex low at 4441, then Thursday’s RTH low at 4430.25. Friday’s low is weak and won’t be much of a barrier to lower prices, so keep that in mind. 

Taking out the Globex high at 4459 would shift my bias to bullish. It coincides with a prominent POC.  Conquering Friday’s RTH high at 4463.25 would open up our remaining upside targets of 4480, 4500, and then 4537. Friday’s high (also the all-time-high) is poor, so it is vulnerable to penetration once tested.

Overnight inventory is net short, so the imbalance could lead to a brief rally on the gap, but don’t let that fool you into buying the first dip. Instead, follow the Gap Rules.

The bottom line is that If the overnight low holds, that will be a sign of strength and vice versa.

A.F. Thornton

View from the Top Down 8/15/2021

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             When the Fed Expands the Balance Sheet, the Market Rises and Vice Versa

Golden Anniversaries and Dead Trading Gurus

Let me start by confessing that I am in one of my moods. So you are forewarned. I could not help it, as today is the 50th anniversary of President Nixon taking the United States off the gold standard. I thought it was worth mentioning since the 50th is a “golden” anniversary, pun intended. The U.S. debt of nearly $30 trillion and growing would not be possible without that monumental step taken on a warm Sunday afternoon in August 1971.

And then there are those pesky “unfunded” liabilities. Would they still be possible?

Unbacked, fiat (paper) currencies have been the undoing of every global reserve currency (and world power) in history. As we see today, the people demand more, the politicians deliver, and the central planners kick the can down the road until they can’t. At least gold forced a modicum of discipline. That is why it had to go. It was the cost of the Vietnam War then.

Coincidentally, there are vestiges of the 1970s all around us now. Gas lines, inflation, riots, protests, Marxists – I have seen this movie before. Now Afghanistan is the new Saigon.

The most any reserve currency has lasted in history is about 100 years. Whether you trace the roots back to the Romans, Dutch, British, etc., it all ends the same, and it doesn’t end well.

Try as they might, central banks cannot cancel the economic cycle. By deferring the pain of the Financial Crisis, and now the China Virus, the ultimate price we pay is certain to be much greater. We could face the worst bear market of our lifetime. A depression of the 1930s variety is unimaginable to the modern world, and that is why we are vulnerable to repeating it right on time for the longer-term cycle trough.

The only thing that backs the U.S. Dollar now is confidence – plain and simple. What do we know about confidence? It takes a long time to build but can be eroded overnight. And there is no lack of enemies willing to help us fall. China, Russia, Iran, and even our European competitors, are waiting in the wings to pick up the pieces.

Perhaps the only thing we have going for us is that none of those countries are any more responsible than we are for fiscal reality. It will be a “global” solution with a new, “global” currency to replace the U.S. Dollar when it all comes tumbling down. No doubt we will all be paying a world income tax, too, as our sovereignty gives way to the New World Order. Brace yourselves.

I hope I don’t live to see this, but it is as inevitable as the sun coming up in the morning. Let me ask you, how is your confidence in the U.S. Government these days? How will the world look at Afghanistan’s overnight collapse and surrender to terrorists? What about our government’s fiscal responsibility? Another $6.5 trillion in spending goodies on the table, really? What about the national debt. What about inflation?

Today’s anniversary also got me thinking again about the Fourth Turning. We are in the midst of the Fourth Turning, which is why there is so much consternation and turmoil. It is part of the generational cycle.

To simplify it, we are four generations (roughly 20 to 25 years each) removed from the Great Depression and World War II. In other words, most of us are the spoiled grandchildren of our grandparents and great-grandparents. So we tend to ignore or minimize the risks and realities of life – like avoiding debt, hard work, individual responsibility, frugality, a responsible government, ethics, and the like. I always like to call it “unearned wealth in undisciplined hands.” And so, history repeats as memories fade.

The Fourth Turning that preceded the Depression and World War II encompassed the Civil War. Before that, the turning encompassed the Revolutionary War. This turning likely won’t end until 2030. The precedent is both sobering and grim, and we are barely at the midpoint of the cycle. If you wonder why everything seems so unhinged, the Fourth Turning is your explanation.

The generational cycle also got me thinking about a fairly well-known and deceased market guru named W.D. Gann. As with most dead gurus, he tends to be more celebrated now than when he was alive. Rumors abound that he died with a several hundred million dollar fortune. His son, once interviewed, stated otherwise. His son indicated that Mr. Gann sold trading programs from the trunk of his car.

Nevertheless, Gann’s math and predictions were contemporaneously tested by a reporter for a prominent financial publication in the early 1900s. To the reporter’s astonishment, Mr. Gann’s predictions came true day after day during this “test.” So there was (is) something to the Gann number calculations and predictions. In 1912 or so, he predicted a stock market crash in 2020. That is certainly an attention-getter.

Important for our discussion, Mr. Gann was keen on a 90-year stock market cycle, which I believe is somewhat related to the Fourth Turning. The last 90-year cycle trough was the 1929-32 stock market crash and bear market. The cycle provides a window between 2019 and 2022 for its next trough or bottom. Maybe the March 2020 China Virus crash was it. But what if we were to revisit the March 2020 lows sometime in the next year?

That would be a shocker. Is it probable? Likely not. But when I look around, I cannot exclude the possibility. There is no lack of catalysts.

Taking the micro view, the vaccines don’t work. The government was slow to reveal this, but the evidence mounts daily. The Delta Variant is highly contagious, as are government bureaucrats who enjoy their newfound authoritarian rule. More lockdowns? Maybe. Socialism and Marxism seem to be taking root in our government and previously trusted institutions. The printing presses are out of control, and interest rates seem to be going up right now – which could burst the financial asset bubble.

Taking the macro view, corporate and sovereign debt is beyond historical comprehension. Interest rates are artificially low. How do I know that? Who in their right mind would accept a yield of 3% on “Junk” Bonds? That is what you pay for your secured first mortgage. Who buys this junk? I want to hire the Junk Bond industry’s marketing person. By the way, junk bond prices are not confirming the new highs in the S&P 500 index. That is a bad omen.

With the supply of debt at historic levels, who will buy all of it? What will they be willing to pay? The less buyers are willing to pay; the higher interest rates will climb. The fundamentals of supply and demand tell us that rates will go higher. I cannot tell you if it is now, next week or next year. All I can say for sure is that the fundamentals support higher rates, and they won’t stay low much longer.

For all of this historical debt to work and not crush all of us, the Fed has to stay in control of interest rates. It is the key to avoiding national collapse and bankruptcy, not to mention financial ruin for the rest of us. But there have been times in history where the Fed loses control, and the market takes the helm. That could be underway even at this writing.

It is scary to contemplate that the cheapest asset class on the planet is commodities, even after the recent rally. Likely, the rise in commodity prices is just getting started. What if all the money chasing stocks suddenly shifted to commodities? What would that do to the price of wheat, corn, cotton, and the like? Inflation anyone? Likely so. What will we do if the commodities indices were to go vertical as the NASDAQ 100 has?

Is the stock market rally real anyway? In the chart at the beginning of this discussion, the Fed’s balance sheet is green, and the broad Wilshire 5000 Index is blue. The green line rises when the Fed expands its balance sheet (going into debt). Notice how the stock market then correlates and zooms.

Yet, when the Fed stops growing the balance sheet, and the green line flattens, the market stalls and corrections are deep. When the Fed reverses and starts shrinking their balance sheet, the market starts throwing what is now called a “taper tantrum.’ Do you recall the 20% decline in the latter part of 2018 into Christmas Eve? How about the expanding triangle from 2017 until 2020? It was not fun.

My goal in sharing these thoughts is not to terrify you. First and foremost, be aware. Don’t be a sheep, be a sheepherder. Stay tuned to these pages. My goal is to help you avoid the coming pain. Then I want you to take advantage of the situation, just like our esteemed elite will do. So don’t fret, prepare.

The Stock Market

After three range days last week, the market broke out of the tight consolidation and completed the Head and Shoulders reversal pattern mentioned last Wednesday (8/11) in the Morning Outlook for Day Traders. The market now sits at the top of three pushes and a wedge, usually a reversal pattern. Coincidentally, the 40-day cycle trough is due later this week. So I am expecting at least a minor dip to get underway.

We still have open targets and measured moves above us, ranging from 4480 to 4537. Of course, we would have to conquer the roundie at 4500 too. I mention this because sometimes, the market can throw over the wedge for a few days. If the wedge reversal fails, always remember that failure is a signal too. We might shoot up to the upper targets before rolling over.

If the wedge reversal materializes, we will look to our lower support levels for a bottom, outlined each morning in the Morning Outlook for Day Traders. Major support on the daily chart starts around 4414.25. Lately, the pivot back higher has been found at the 50-day line, currently about 2.5% below us.

Notably, breadth, strength, and momentum are not confirming the latest all-time highs thus far, bolstering the case for falling into the cycle trough. If rotation back to value and cyclicals truly is underway, the shift could help cushion any decline, especially if the 18-month cycle truly bottomed on July 19th. Only time will tell.

Whether it is the Delta Variant, the Fed Minutes coming out on Wednesday, or the Fed Conference in Jackson Hole later this week, there are plenty of catalysts to trigger an even deeper market correction. We will monitor this carefully.

We are only holding an Energy Sector Position (XLE) at a 10% allocation in the Navigator Swing Strategy. It has not really gripped yet but fits the reflation theme. I am keeping a tight rein on it.

We realized very nice profits on our SPY and XLF calls last week. I will reconsider the positions on the dip. However, the Dow Industrials (DIA) may be the better choice if rotation continues to confirm the reflation trade.

The Bond Market and Interest Rates

Perhaps more important than the stock market these days is the bond market and interest rates. Using the Treasury ETF (TLT) as our proxy for bond prices, the bonds look like they could be forming a topping pattern, especially apparent on the weekly chart. The formation process is still underway, so it is not a definitive pattern yet. Nor can the Fed afford to lose control of interest rates. They will do all in their power to keep rates low. To succeed, the Fed needs bonds to rally, or at least go sideways.

The unstable rate environment is one of those times when we need to stay tuned. The weekly chart did manage to find support on the mean last week, so the bond bulls have hope.

Conclusion

The stock market is overvalued, and it can stay that way for a long time – or not. As you will see from the first chart in this discussion, the Fed delivered this overvalued market on a silver platter by expanding its balance sheet. If they even stop the expansion or begin contracting, the market will correct more significantly than we have experienced this past year. The market also will become more volatile. But that is a liquidity issue.

The other significant risk to the market is higher interest rates, and an economic slowdown is sure to follow. Perhaps the new China Virus wave and scare will do the Fed’s job for them, keeping the economy and inflation tame. Further economic dislocations would abate the need for tapering (beginning to slow their balance sheet growth) or raising interest rates.

Thus far, however, inflation seems to have arisen from the virus waves and accompanying supply disruptions. Since we are experiencing a throwback to the 1970s, how about some stagflation too? Remember that fun period of time?

In an environment such as this, we need to take the stock market day by day. That is why I have preferred day trading to swing trading. I am monitoring relative strength and rotation, as well as the cycles. My focus is intense, and the reins will be tight, even on a swing position acquired on a dip.

The hard truth is, one of these dips will keep going and going and going. That is the cruel nature of the market.

A.F. Thornton

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