Archives 2021

Interim Update

As you know, I am on “vacation” this week, otherwise known as a cross-country move. No move is fun, and this one is no exception. I will be back in full gear next Tuesday after the Labor Day Weekend. So this is just an ever so brief note.

August finished with the 7th monthly bull bar in a row. That matches the record since the inception of the E-mini contract 25 years ago. There has never been 8, so that will make September quite the test. When these winning streaks break, we usually get 2-3 months of bear bars.

While the weekly and daily charts have tolerable angles, it is the monthly chart that has that parabolic “blow-off” look, much like 2017 did. We all know that this is courtesy of the Federal Reserve.

But we also know that what goes up, must come down eventually. So we likely have a 50% correction in our future, or some kind of wide, multi-year trading range when this party ends.
In the meantime, steady as she goes. 

The Founders Group is content with our 10% positions in September calls in each of the XLF and XHB. I will look to take profits or roll these early next week. I am also content with our 10% position in October calls in each of the QQQ, IWM, and XLE calls.

We should get our typical early month strength for a few days, and a fairly sizable dip mid-month on the 80-day cycle. We are also in seasonal weakness for stocks in September and October, but there are a number of sectors coming out of recent corrections so while I will take seasonality into account, it does not rule price.

More than anything right now, the market has been climbing the wall of worry. So it may be one of those times to pay closer attention to “worry.” Worry is neutral, at least according to the CNN Fear/Greed index. When this and other sentiment indicators tilt back towards “greed,’ we should pay close attention.

Have a great holiday weekend.

A.F. Thornton

New Navigator Swing Buys – 8/30/2021

The Founders Group will be taking a 10% position today in the XLE (Energy), IWM (Small Cap), and QQQ (Nasdaq 100) October 15th monthly at-the-money calls.

Energy has already been building relative strength but will be boosted by Hurricane Ida. Small caps have a good chance of finally breaking from their 6-month basing pattern after bouncing off the 200-EMA. They have already risen above the mid-point of the range.

The IWM also helps our exposure to Financials and Energy. We will have to watch the Financials for any impact on insurers from the hurricane, but the bank weightings should overcome any insurance company exposure.

We will also be taking a 10% position in the QQQ, exposing us to the FAANGMAN-T mega-caps and the NASDAQ 100. 

We will be easing into the positions all day on 5-minute chart dips.

This brings us up to 50% invested.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 8/30/2021

S&P 500 E-mini Futures - Volume / /Market Profile (Globex Profile in Blue)

First, let me alert you that this will be the only Pre-Market Outlook this week. The wife and I are packing to head to California for a few months before permanently returning to Europe. 

Look, I have used every excuse I can come up with to get out of helping with the packing and moving. I feigned doctors’ appointments, errands, market commentary to write – anything and everything to avoid packing. I am such a good husband; I even offered to fly ahead to sweep and get the house ready! 

But alas, I have run out of excuses. So, packing and driving are all I am doing for the next few days—happy wife – happy life.

These commentaries will resume on Tuesday after Labor Day weekend. Obviously, I will communicate any material issues or changes in strategy.

Also, I am excited to say that the programmers will finally have the new website features, including the live trading room, turned on by then. The programmers need this downtime to get everything ready now that the beta testing is over. 

We are approaching a six-figure investment and nearly six months of work in all this infrastructure, so I am looking forward to making it operational. At times, it has seemed like a bottomless pit of expense and frustration.

Today’s Plan

I am sure nobody is happy to see a hurricane this week except President Biden. It takes Afghanistan off the front pages, at least for a time. But the only news that matters to traders right now is Friday’s commentary from the Fed. Bottom line – the music will play on a while longer.

I have eyes on the IWM, XHB, XLE, SPY, and QQQ for opportunities. Health care (XLV) remains an opportunity on dips. Even better, keep an eye on Biotech (IBB). Also, look at the top 10 holdings in each of these ETFs for stocks. The patterns often mimic the ETF. Usually, half or more of the cap weighting of the ETFs are in the top 10 holdings. You can trade these just as easily as futures if you are careful with weekly or monthly options. More on this when I return.

Back to our core trading vehicle, the E-Mini, we could open a small, true gap higher so Gap Rules may apply. You can see from the profile chart above that the overnight profile is symmetrical and balanced, though we tagged new, all-time highs. Overnight traders are net-long, so there should be a gap fill or small profit-taking dip on the open. If not, that is important M.G.I.

Always remember, on a major Fed day like Friday, the initial gains are short-covering. Nevertheless, we will look to buy dips on the intraday charts. But what we really want to see is acceptance of these new prices and follow-through. Overnight traders were unable to drive prices much into Friday’s range, making it appear that there are not too many sellers present here yet.

Maintaining prices (acceptance) this morning above Friday’s regular session high at 4410 would be extremely bullish. If we need to digest Friday’s gains, I could tolerate a dip down to Friday’s halfback at 4492, where the “emotional” single prints begin. 

A good long trade presents when the market rises back up through the open, preferably after a slight dip. I would be surprised to get as low as 4492, but it could change the tone if traders cannot maintain that level.

Having now conquered the roundie at 4400, the round number should provide support and coincidentally is close to the Globex low at 4401. If the trend is strong today, you could hold a buy around 4400 until lunch.

Monitor internals to help predict the probability of a trend day.

Good luck this week; it tends to be a slow volume week as most of Wall Street is spending their last week of vacation in the Hamptons – except me.

A.F. Thornton

View from the Top Down 8/30/2021

You may be wondering why I don’t rename the family office to Schism Quantitative Strategies. First, I rattle off about “Everything Bubbles,” then I put 10% each in XLF (Financials) and XLB (Homebuilders)?

Well, we can be in a bubble (and likely will be for a bit longer), and we can find opportunities until it pops. So both can be true at the same time. What we know for now is that Fed Chairman Powell threw more fuel on the bubbling fire on Friday, just as I suspected he would. 

We are more than likely starting another leg up in this market, bolstered by all the Fed cocaine in the pipeline. So the patient lives to fight another day – with no liquidity “withdrawal” yet. Vigilance and stops are the keys to any further participation. 

Having owned a bank, I know exactly what the Fed is doing. In a nutshell, the Fed will begin tapering sometime late this year or early 2022. To keep interest rates down in light of the inflation the Fed is feeding, and given that there is no “real” demand for U.S. treasuries, the Fed is reopening the “repurchase” window, as they slow the “reverse repurchase” window. 

So the U.S. Government will pay 25 basis points on a new treasury. The banks will buy them. Then, to get the cash they need, the banks will pledge the treasuries to the Fed every night for overnight loans, and the Fed will charge 5 basis points for the loan. The banks get the cash they need and are guaranteed a 20 basis point profit. That is how they will create artificial demand for treasuries, thereby keeping interest rates artificially low. This will cushion the tapering.

Keep in mind that the Japanese and Chinese are no longer buying our treasuries in any material quantities. The Russians long ago sold all of their US Treasury positions. So the Fed is buying most of the new treasuries (a legal Ponzi scheme). The new repurchase window is how the Fed will incentivize our own banks and a few friendly central banks to keep buying. So the bond market parties on, for now, as long as this new scheme works. But in the circumstances, don’t expect inflation to stop soon. My skeptical mind believes that the government does not want the inflation to stop anyway, as they monetize the debt on the back of American workers.

Small caps (IWM) breaking out of their six-month base would bolster my confidence in this new leg. I have a close eye on them and would like to take a 10% position. Junk bonds are already confirming the new leg after sputtering recently. Breadth should improve as well, and if it doesn’t, that will be a contrary indicator.

Respecting the S&P 500, our core index, I am looking for that trip to what I am calling the “Armageddon” high of 4600 on the cash index. This is tongue-in-cheek because I cannot come up with any other projection higher. I am just not sure how we get there.

We could slowly climb the current channel or break above it and move right to the target. But that is my best calculation of where we are headed for now.

While we should have a bit more of an attention-getter dip in mid-October, the most significant downward pressure comes in the third week of November on the next 20-week cycle low.

That could be a retest of an October low, or the market could dip even lower into a new trough. So the window between now and then is short. The chart above shows the interaction of the cycles.

I am out for this entire week. So unless there is a new buy or sell signal, this will be my last commentary until after the Labor Day weekend.

A.F. Thornton

New Swing Buys

The Founders Group has just taken long positions in the XLF (Financial Sector ETF) and XHB (Homebuilders ETF). We are targeting 10% each. You can buy outright for cash. Or you can use options. We have focused on the September 17th at the money calls. See my previous discussion on these two sectors. They are breaking above Cup and Handle Patterns. The XLF entry price was 38.60 and the XHB entry price was 79.55.

As always, do your own homework.

A.F. Thornton

The Fix is In…

Can I call it or what? No change in Fed policy. No worries – inflation is transitory! Now, does it have anything to do with President Harris getting to appoint a new Fed Chairman in January? Chair Powell will keep his job – no doubt. The fix is in.

Inflation is the most insidious tax of all. Ordinary Americans are suffering now, and they will suffer more in the coming months. But it is the only way out for this government and the Fed. They are trapped.

Armageddon watch? Let’s call this day one.

More later.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 8/27/2021

It is another Fed day. We await Chair Powell’s remarks at 10:00 am EST – the Jackson Hole virtual conference epitaph. Why not Paris? Why not London? Why Jackson Hole? After all, in the virtual world, you can travel anywhere without a vaccine passport. At least for now.

And we are in the midst of the nominal 10-day wave markdown. I don’t talk about that cycle much; it has been largely invisible in the raging bull market. But when the market starts to care about anything, it shows up. But it barely lasts a day or two.

Use yesterday’s RTH candle as your new trading range. Opening above and staying above yesterday’s RTH low at 4465 and the Navigator Trigger line and 5-day line on the daily chart are key to maintaining the bull case.

After that, target the halfway point at 4478.50 as your bias threshold for the day. Closing 30-min candles above it is bullish, and closing them below is bearish – at least for the intraday period.

Pushing above yesterday’s candle high at 4492 opens the door to the all-time high at 4498. Then, in only these blessed and temporary times, we move towards the current Armageddon high at 4600.

Closing candles below yesterday’s low at 4465 opens the door to the top of the gap around 4450, then the bottom of the gap around 4440. I will leave it to your imagination from there.

Yesterday’s epilogue and a few more comments will follow my morning misery sacrifice listening to Fed speak. I will be your translator.

Fridays can be good days, but the S&P 500 is pushing its Weekly Expected Move high at the all-time-high of 4498. So in the best of forecasts today, they will leave us hanging for another weekend.

Good luck today – we will need it.

A.F. Thornton

Mid-Day Outlook 8/26/2021

Morning Headlines Into Liquidation Break

While traders might blame the unfolding tragedy in Afghanistan for the liquidation break this morning, the truth is that Fed Governor Kaplan jawboning ahead of the Jackson Hole meeting might have a lot more to do with this. The key level identified this morning did hold at 4476.25, though we did dip into the single prints a bit before it turned around.

I am watching whether the current reversal and bounce is merely an ABC, two-step correction on the 5-minute chart. I am long from the trigger line buy signal at 4476.50 – also near the measured move low. We are bumping the 15-min, 21 EMA mean, and I would pay attention and sell if we cannot break above that.

The way I see it now, the key to the break is WWSHD – when what should happen doesn’t. We did not even get down into the Gap from a few days ago. All we got was a measured move down from the opening range, also supported by some of our key levels. It should have been much worse, especially in a news-driven break. The buyers have been very aggressive so far.

Until suggested otherwise, the bulls are still in control. But today and tomorrow will continue to be volatile.

This morning supports the necessity and vigilance of using stops. Don’t leave home without them.

Remember, the catalyst to eventually bring the market down will be anything else we haven’t thought about that could go wrong.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 8/26/2021

I touched on something yesterday that bears some attention this morning. I pointed out that the S&P 500 Index Futures overnight action is speculative, as the underlying stocks are not trading. That is why Globex trading has to be kept in perspective.

Related to that concept, the S&P 500 Futures Contract and even the SPY Index ETF are parasites on the index even during the regular session. Through constant arbitrage, these instruments are kept in line with the “cash” index, which is the pure mathematical construction of how the underlying index members, slightly more than 500 of them, are trading at any given moment.

As parasites, the futures and SPY tend to move slightly above and slightly below the index throughout the day, giving a bit rougher appearance to their candles when compared to the cash index. With futures, when you include the overnight action on the daily candles, the action can really look rougher than the cash index. The point is, it bears to pay attention to the cash index, so I plot both in all of my analyses.

To that end, I spent some time last night on the cash index, trying hard as I can to justify higher prices. It was a useful exercise. As you will see from the chart above, we are in striking distance now of the top bull channel line, which comes in around 4600 on the monthly chart.

Moreover, using standard price movement and measured move techniques, if you project the breakup of the China Virus decline from its peak, the number also comes in right around 4600. And that is not all, as 4600 projects the A wave as the C wave from the B retracement of the rally that has ensued from the China Virus bottom. This is so much clearer on the cash than the futures index, and the coincidence of this intersection is stunning. Of course, there are no coincidences. The big boys and girls will tune a lot of computers to these levels.

Given that we are approaching 4500 on the index this morning, 4600 is only 100 index points above us, which is not much in the scheme of things. And there is no guarantee we achieve the target, but it is more probable than not. I am communicating this when market internals continue to deteriorate even though the index is hitting new highs.

Just because we hit the target does not mean we crash. Look at the 2014 period where the monthly range was tight and hugged the top channel line for some time. Given the strength of this market and the new spending spree coming out of Congress, I am not predicting Armageddon. I would be happy with a 10% correction to get some cash invested and sit for a while. So awareness is the key.

For now, the market held up overnight and is marking time until Friday’s Fed talk. I am still focused on the overnight swing low from the 24th as the main downside level to watch today. As with yesterday, there can be no change in tone unless this level is broken. If it is, monitor for continuation and see if the single prints and gap sections below us come into play or not.

Otherwise, let’s see if we have a range day or not and continue to buy the dips.

A.F. Thornton

Epilogue 8/25/2021

Sometimes the charts get busy. I don’t recommend cluttered charts. Simple is always better. Sometimes I have a chart that solely has the mean and Algo trigger. Then I switch the trendlines on and off. That is a nice software feature to have. Otherwise, have a separate chart that marks lines and wedges. Maybe you put your key horizontal levels on another chart. For sure, have a chart that focuses primarily on the mean. The mean is the center of our day trading universe. It helps you isolate the issues.

Notice a lot of my charts are black and gray. The yellow bars tell me it is an outside bar, and the green tells me it is an inside bar. But again, I keep it simple. Too many colors, too many lines, and your brain gets scrambled.

On the chart above, I isolate the opening range, mean, and measured move. If anything was a heads up this morning, it was the bull surprise bar that closed above the mean. The safest move is to buy the retest of the mean break. It came not long after. The small pullback trend got so strong that it stayed above the Navigator trigger line all morning. The trend ended on a parabolic wedge. The faint lines are the K-Bands set at two and three ATRs. When you tag the outside band, it is a safe bet that you are overbought.

But you had additional help as well. You had a measured move target from the opening range, which is precisely where the trend ran out of steam. It would be best to have a target when you are at new, all-time highs, as there may be nothing but blue sky above. Here, we had that upper channel line on the daily chart but were still just short of it. And in the scheme of things, today was nothing to write home about anyway. Note that the scale looks big above, but it is only a 15 point range on the day.

How to project a measured move can be as much an art as it is science. Some measure the first 30-minutes or hour. I guess I know it when I see it. I prefer to mark the morning turns, usually occurring in the first 30-minutes, but the break of the top or bottom of any wedge reversal marks a range to project. Try to isolate the consolidation. I like to be conservative, so I often exclude most of the tails. To me, there was no clear breakout until we cleared the top of the morning wedge reversal today. I projected that range, and that is where I sold. I marked where I bought below.

Let me briefly mention another point. More money has been lost in trading trying to catch the first or last 1/8th of a move than most traders make in a lifetime. We are here to make money. There is no perfection. Don’t be too greedy. Don’t be afraid to sell or buy a little bit short of the measured move. At the very least, tighten up your stop.

I published the Mid-Day Update today just as the micro bull channel was peaking. I sold at the wedge tip into the measured move. But you had a double top soon after. And don’t forget that wedge reversals often morph into head and shoulders reversal patterns. With a little imagination, you can see one on the chart above, and that measured move projected the afternoon low.

This is also a good place to mention that many patterns are imperfect. Don’t expect perfection. Wedges, heads, and shoulders don’t have to be perfect to be valid. These are just another form of triangles and trading ranges, which are consolidations before the next move.

On any trend day, you expect some profit-taking into the close. And when a minor pullback, bull micro-channel finally breaks down, you expect the first reversal to be minor. Here, we had gone more than 20 bars before a trip to the mean. The rule is that the first trip to the mean after 20 bars above it is good for a long trade, even if it is a scalp. The reverse is also true on the short side. The 20-bar rule trade was my last trade of the day.

I tried to mark what might have been an afternoon trade. I am not so sure it would have been clear at the time. Bull and bear traps often show up around the close, and that is why I rarely trade them. There may be some poorly positioned longs at that end-of-day trap. We will likely have to deal with them in the morning.

When you see those large candles with a mix of bull and bear and lots of tails in both directions, those are limit order traders. They short the close of bull bars or a couple of bull bars, and they buy the close of bear bars. That is the opposite of what typically works. Those are hard areas to trade, so I generally don’t participate. I sat out the morning wedge and the afternoon wide range with a bear tilt. By the way, the afternoon drive into the measured move low still qualified as a three-push wedge – even though it did not have the perfect wedge “look.”

Remember that something that does not look perfect or even looks micro in the 5-minute time frame can look a lot more perfect in a higher or lower time frame. You have to have imagination, which comes with experience.

Speaking of experience, here is the Navigator Algo on the 5-minute time frame. The labels reflect the system status at the close and change throughout the day.

Note the “SOB” red label at the peak where I sold. “SOB” means super overbought. Note the trigger line buy and sell signals. Note the volatility squeeze (grey, yellow and red dots on Navigator ATL). The red and yellow arrows are heads up, but the trigger break sets the buy or sell signals. Also, the relationship to the mean can dictate whether the signal makes sense from a risk/reward perspective. I like my potential reward to be two times my risk to stop. Note the momentum divergence on the lower oscillator at the peak. I always have this open on a separate screen. It works nearly as well in a 5-minute time frame as it does on the daily chart.

But having authored and programmed the algorithm, I almost don’t need it. I can see the issues unfolding on an uncluttered chart by focusing on the mean and trigger line.

On a completely separate note, you will begin to see changes to the website this week as we move into a membership-only site. What will be exciting is the new trading room and trading notes. I will trade live once a week. For day traders, I will have a running page of my live notes. Videos will be coming soon as well. These writings involve too much typing for a two-finger expert like me. Don’t register or do anything until you are directed.

By the way, I like the potential cup and handle formation on the XHB (Homebuilders ETF). The ETF has been consolidating since May. Rotation anyone?

Financials have a similar pattern and status:

Now, a cup and handle pattern is not a pattern until it breaks out. When you realize that nearly 80% of breakouts fail, you don’t always want to be first in line. But the way price tends to fly these days; you could miss the move if you wait too long. Ideally, you buy a retest of the breakout if you get one. You can also shoot for a small, lower-time frame pullback after the break.

Here is why considering these potential “swing” trades makes sense. The measured move is double the size of the cup. On the XLB, the projection is 8 points. On the right call option, that would be roughly $600 per call. On the XLF, the measured move would be about $300 per call. Note that you rarely get a one-for-one return on calls for each point gained. I usually get roughly 70%. Volatility and time decay affect option pricing as well.

At the money XLF September 17th monthly calls are only $54 each at the close today. The complete move won’t happen overnight, but that is a six-fold return even if it takes a month. Similar expiry XLB calls are a bit pricier at $175 per call, but the return is still 3.5 times the investment.

I will send an alert tomorrow if we give these a go, but consider this a heads up.

A.F. Thornton

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