Archives 2021

Mid-Day Update – 6/8/2021

They are not making it easy today, and it reminds me a bit of yesterday. Yesterday, the market was weak all morning but left us with a happy finish. Selling in the morning and buying into the close is bullish. Interestingly, the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 are swapping leadership back and forth this morning. It is a bit like the wife directing me to place the furniture.

We had a two-step liquidation break off the open. The pop-down helped clear out the weak hands (it almost got mine). The market went right back into that dastardly balance range. Not again???

While the price flirted below 4022 (on the S&P 500), “value” (70% of the volume location) is unchanged from yesterday. The situation, then, remains positive and still calls for a hat tip favoring the bulls, though ever so slightly. 

Don’t get me wrong; the failed breakout thus far is a disappointment. But today is far from over. I will use the 11:30 am EST lows as my line in the sand for the rest of the day.

I do not see anything newsworthy to mention. The IWM (Russell 2000) has hit its WEM high, so I am done there for the week. Both the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 have room to run, but it is a hard-fought battle. That is not a surprise at these levels.

Could we possibly be forming a double top on the S&P 500 with the NASDAQ 100 coming in a bit lower? Sure, but I would not call it yet. I am bothered by the shallow levels we see on the put/call ratio. The surging put/call ratio and negative sentiment gave me the confidence to go in and stay put a few weeks ago. I wouldn’t say I like it when the crowd is complacent. It always makes me want to go the other way.

Perhaps offsetting the complacency, 10-year rates continue to behave, down slightly to the 1.5% level today. As well, sometimes they launch the trading algorithms mid-day, and the gamma squeeze will help the market wind steadily higher. Let’s see.

If we maintain the lows, my bias remains long, and I will make final decisions in the last 30-minutes of trading. As usual, I will post any changes.

I think traders are selling all morning in Chicago and New York, and then the hedge funds are jumping in over lunch. Isn’t this fun? I think I might have suggested you to take the summer off. You know what they say, “sell in May and go away.”

It is 7:30 pm here in Kefalonia, Greece as I write this, with a beautiful sunset over the Ionian Sea. While I am not here on the best of occasions, it would be nice to open a bottle of wine on the beach. But the U.S. stock market is open until 11:00 pm!

As always, stay tuned.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 6/8/2021

Breakout, Double-Top, or More Chop?

The market gods were smiling with forgiveness yesterday. When I confessed my sins on these pages, providence lifted my burdens. So even though I missed the initial moves off the 21-day lines in the indexes last week, the powers above brought the market halfway down Friday’s bar to give me another chance. It was as if a kind hand dropped from the clouds, opening up with the next opportunity.

For the Founder’s Group and the Navigator Swing Strategy, I put us into the NASDAQ 100 at 13,733. I saw a bit more conviction and relative strength there than the S&P 500. The index followed through with a double bottom and positive momentum divergence on the intraday chart. The NASDAQ 100 is moving higher in Globex at this writing. In fact, we are more than 100 points or about $2,000 per contract ahead of our entry, and breaking the neckline of a bottoming head and shoulders pattern that is now reversing higher and should take us up to test the all-time highs, if not higher. We will now use the 5-day stop line as we recently did on our S&P 500 position.

Yet, there is another lesson in these past few sessions that I would like to share. It happens often enough that you might want to place this one in your notebook. It can happen in any time frame. And while I mentioned I am not a pattern trader, I still don’t ignore them. Patterns can help us see the markets in different ways, and even set price projections when the patterns take. A great website for learning patterns and their possibilities is Bulkowski’s PatternTrader.com.

The lesson starts with last Thursday’s labeling of the NASDAQ 100. I had identified a potential head and shoulders topping pattern and labeled it as you will see in the first chart below. Of course, it was a qualified opinion. I often opine in such a way. But let’s face it, I am of no use if I am constantly saying “it might be this” or “it might be that.” And in further confession to the heavenly powers that govern these markets, the pattern did have a negative influence on my decisions last week no matter what I said or how much I was fooling myself.

When we are stopped out on the 5-day line, an Algo sell signal is painting, Tesla and Apple are breaking down, and we are in a large down bar, a topping pattern would merely seem like icing on the cake. I take my stop, head to the beach, and take Friday off, booking the profits and ever confident in my forecast. Thank heavens I didn’t stick around and short the market!

NASDAQ 100 Futures - From the Perspective it is Topping

But it is never quite so easy, is it? I have achieved my trading success by combing unrelenting curiosity with constantly questioning the current consensus. Frequently, a topping head and shoulders pattern (or a bottoming head and shoulders pattern) can morph into the same design but smaller and in the opposite direction. This morphing has often happened to me – and it should be in your notebook. I now always consider the possibility.

NASDAQ 100 Futures - From the Perspective it is Bottoming

So there you have it, the reversal’s reversal. Perhaps we will coin that phrase. And with the overnight action breaking out decisively, the NASDAQ 100 seems well on its way to challenging its old high. The pattern projects a move to 14,600, but even if we make it up to the old high at 14,064, the Weekly Expected Move high is at 14,038. That is a rough combo to take out before Friday. Perhaps we could do so next week. Also, remember that even as we break the neckline of the bottoming head and shoulders reversal pattern today, the index could fall back and retest the neckline before it decisively moves higher.

I suppose another item bears mentioning. Last week, the cyclically sensitive sectors such as energy, metals, financials, and industrials seemed to be rocking the universe. Yet this latest move has been all about the interest-sensitive growth stocks, responding to a somewhat unexpected rally in the bond market accompanied by falling 10-year rates. Who would have thought – only a few weeks ago?

Please make no mistake; interest rates will rule sector allocation as we advance and rates will most likely be moving higher. We should let growth do its thing here, but after the cyclical stocks and sectors rest a bit, they are still very much on my radar. Recall my comments from last week, set alerts for these cyclical sectors and stocks around their 21 and 50-day lines, depending on each instruments’ unique behavior. Perhaps the back and forth between cyclical and growth stocks will be with us for some time as the markets move forward.

I might highlight one more element of successful trading if you will kindly indulge me. No matter what happens in trading, you must be willing to jump right back on the horse to succeed. And no question committed students can and will succeed if they are engaged. I am not saying it is easy to do so, but I will constantly harp on this point.

I missed Friday’s move, but I waited patiently for the next opportunity. It came sooner rather than later, but that should not matter. Successful traders (and investors) are market sociopaths. They have no conscience but nearly an automated response to conditions as they present, right or wrong positive or negative.

Today's Day-Trading Plan

Hard to believe, but the S&P 500 futures tested 4215 last night once again and survived. I also noticed that some European indexes, including the German Dax Index, are already trading at new post-pandemic highs, aided by a strong Euro. Actually, at an exchange rate of 1.22 Euros to the Dollar, I am keeping my money in Euros while I am over here. It stings!

At this writing, both the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 will open above yesterday’s range and near the candle top.  A true gap higher is possible, and gap rules would apply if the true gap presents. Inventory is balanced, so there is no typical incentive to fade a gap – making a gap-and-go scenario more likely. If we make it to the old highs (only a hair above us on the S&P 500), the market will present us with a go/no go situation. Monitor carefully for continuation and be on alert for the bull trap. I don’t know how to tell you to avoid it – but if I had two contracts, I would sell one at the old high and get my stop to break even on the other to keep it as a runner for a continuation of the breakout.

On both the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ 100, don’t lose sight of the WEM highs at 4280 and 14,038, respectively. Even with a true gap higher on the open, the gap won’t be large enough to engender shock and awe, providing less potential for early trade given that there is no overnight inventory imbalance. The better trades might develop later rather than earlier in today’s session.

Upside references and targets are visual and mechanical for all. The all-time highs are the apparent targets on strength, monitoring for continuation after that. On weakness, watch the back-to-back settlements around 4226 on the S&P 500 to see if sellers get more active below them. I would not even consider the short side of anything unless we were below those levels. Continue to carry forward the gap below us we discussed yesterday.

A.F. Thornton, 

With Sincere Gratitude to Providence

Pre-Market Outlook Update

S&P 500 Futures - 5-Minute Candles

As expected, the market is balancing back into Friday’s range so far this morning. Maybe I have not lost my touch after all. The S&P 500 has twice tested the top of the old range at 4215. It needs to bounce on this second touch for me to stay positive. Tick distribution is favorable so far, and the cumulative tick has been building positive as well. So it is not as if the market is going down; it just isn’t going up.

There is nothing particularly negative at the moment. The (now apparent) news-driven gains from Friday have stalled. Perhaps we are still missing a catalyst after all. I do like the positive momentum divergence on the morning low on the 5-minute RTH chart.

The Founder’s Group has taken a position in the NASDAQ 100 at 13,733. The reversal down pattern now has a turnaround up pattern on the right side, if it takes. We are running a 15 point stop – using a little discretion to give the trade some room.

Growth stocks are strong this morning, as is the IWM (Russell 2000). The S&P 500 Advance/Decline line is about even. It is hard to get the breakout the bulls want without solid internals. Mixed internals rule the day thus far.

I would put odds at 60% that we still break to new highs in the next few days and about 40% that we don’t. Of course, that is more of an educated guess than anything else.

We shall see if the market will take a run at the highs mid-day or perhaps on this afternoon’s post-lunch drive. The put/call ratio is low, indicating complacency here, which is unhelpful.

It was important to determine early on that we would be balancing this morning. That way, you don’t become overly negative about your existing long positions.

As outlined in the morning’s commentary, I think the tone changes if we drop below 4209 and into Friday’s gap area. So carry that forward in your narrative.

Watch for the bull trap as well. The leprechauns may run us up and above the old highs this afternoon, only to take our gold while they run the stops and bring it back into range. Today is a quiet day so far, and that is when the leprechauns come out to play.

Stay tuned.

A.F. Thornton

Buy Signal

The Founder’s Group is taking a long position in the NASDAQ 100 futures at 13733 with a 15 point stop. This is a somewhat risky trade at the top of the range, but also note the upside reversal Head and Shoulders pattern formed from Friday. As always, do your own homework carefully. QQQ at the money July 16 calls or a debit spread will work as well.

Pre-Market Outlook 6/7/2021

Be sure to review the Top-Down analysis published earlier this morning. Not a lot has changed in the bigger picture from last week, except that we are now back at the top of the trading range, with bulls hoping for a breakout.

Except for a few ticks, the overnight range is within Friday’s range. The inability to break out of Friday’s range tells us that the market is in balance for now.

The overnight balance often carries over into the regular session. We always want to think in terms of probabilities – and that is the most probable course.

The all-time high right above us does complicate the probabilities. Market makers could try to run the buy-stops above the range to capture the order flow.

Pay attention to internals and FANGMAN+T. Strength with either or both could support a breakout.

Friday’s market profile resulted in a double distribution. The overnight halfback is the exact point where the upper one ends, and the lower one begins. Treat each profile as a different day. Acceptance in the upper one is more bullish than acceptance in the lower one. To put it another way, watch where value develops today.

The all-time high could easily be in play today, and traders should also note that the overnight high and Friday’s high are almost identical. That sets up a potential go/no-go level on the upside.

Given the overnight tone, assume further balance if the market cannot move out of the overnight and Friday range. Potential is there for higher over the overnight high, targeting the all-time high.

There is an unfilled gap below us from Thurs/Fri of last week. This gap should remain unfilled for the time being if the bullish sentiment from late last week is to hold. Filling it has the potential to change the tone. Continue to carry it forward as long as it is unfilled.

View from the Top Down

View from the Top in Assos, Cephalonia (also known as Kefolonia), Greece

The market was just plain wrong on Friday...

Can you believe I would even say that? If I thought it, you should run for the hills. Since I am being facetious, it is acceptable to read on. My personal opinion means nothing because the market is never wrong. Perhaps the jury is still a bit out on my trading range scenario until we see if the market decides to break to new highs today – but I missed Thursday and Friday’s turnaround from the 21-day line. Friday’s action was not what I had expected – I expected a breakdown, not up. To be good at trading and investing, our misses can be the best teacher.

So let’s get the hard part done first – the admission of being wwwrrrrong. There, I said it. I was wrong. The words still sting my lips – whenever wrong-headed decisions force me to utter them.  My job is to make sure we are appropriately allocated – in line with the net aggregate opinion of all market participants regarding all subjects on all time frames. Of course, the charts help me as gigantic psychological profiles of the current state of the market or any part of it. But I have to read them correctly. The market is always right because it reflects the net aggregate opinion I am required to discern accurately.

I did three things wrong on Thursday. First, I was lazy in the sense that when our 5-day EMA stop was hit overnight (which was perfectly fine), I figured there would be some time before we needed to get back in the market again – perhaps a few days or a week. Also, I wouldn’t say I like to day-trade Fridays, so I am less attentive.

Second, Thursday’s candle fell exceptionally far for the current context and painted an Algo sell signal intraday. I did mention the potential, fleeting nature of the signal in my writings here, but I must admit that the temporary sign made me overly negative. I should have waited for the Algo sell signal to paint definitively at the close of Thursday’s candle – instead of anticipating it. The signal negated by the time the candle closed – and I should have taken that as a potential WWSHD alert that a buy might be in order. After all, we were on the 21-day line.

Finally, I should have given more confidence to the 21-day line, exactly where the market bounced. Eight out of ten times, the market will find support on the 21-day line. Sure, I mentioned and expected the bounce. But I did not account for a complete reversal of the magnitude we experienced on Friday. I should have been more respectful of that possibility.

The way to execute this would have been to take a position at Thursday’s close, with something like a stop 5 points below the 21-day line. Our job is to find low-risk entry points, and this certainly fits the bill. Whether the market ultimately breaks to new highs or not this week, that would have been a 50-point trade or $2,500 per futures contract. As I always say, that buys dinner with the wife. Here in Greece, where your money goes a long way, that buys dinner with the wife for an entire year.

The NASDAQ 100 bounced off its WEM low Thursday. I should have recognized that this limited the negative influence of tech on the S&P 500. There were a few other clues the market would survive here as well. Breadth had been acceptable, and junk bonds were breaking to new highs. Investor sentiment was at least neutral, and even the bond market was rallying. While the NASDAQ 100 had taken a steep fall in the latest dip, it appears to be capable of recovering to new highs. I did not think the bond market or the NASDAQ 100 could perform as well as it did.

I also mentioned bias. I need to check myself on that issue as it had the most significant influence on my attitude last week. I do have a risk-averse preference at the moment. Inevitably, we need to check our prejudice at the door most of the time to be successful. As an example, junk bonds breaking higher Thursday and Friday is hardly risk-averse behavior.

Markets reverse when people like me think they are right but end up being wrong. I am always looking for things that prove I am wrong. But there is no perfection in the search. When I am wrong, it likely has to do with misreading something, missing something, or bias. I don’t think I missed much here as I look back on my writings. Instead, I got a bit lazy and too negative. However, if I am going to be wrong, I would rather the result be an opportunity loss such as the current case rather than actual, hard-nosed investment losses. 

As we have been discussing on these pages, we have been in a trading range now since early April, sometimes wider and sometimes narrower. We have looked above and failed, as well as looked below and failed several times. Every time we have a consolidation such as this, I have to decide whether it represents net distribution or net accumulation. The difference between the two can be very subtle if it is discernable at all. As of Thursday, I was leaning toward distribution. Now, the opposite appears to be the case, but we will only know for sure with a solid breakout and follow-through on either side.

I did mention I had been expecting a catalyst. The employment report missed on Friday. I suppose the market liked that in a Goldilocks sort of way. The economy is not so hot that the Fed has to put on the brakes, but not so cold that we need to be concerned. 

But the most significant jump on Friday came out when the Biden administration backed off their drive for higher corporate income taxes in favor of a 15% global, minimum, corporate income tax. Janet Yellen made clear to the G20 this weekend that the tax is a worldwide effort to discourage tax haven shopping. We will see if the potential agreement has a negative or positive effect on the markets today. Incidentally, Yellen also said that the U.S. needs higher interest rates and can tolerate higher inflation. That could also be a drag on a breakout today.

This week, the bulls have the ball, and odds favor a breakout of the range rather than a double top. Nothing else has changed much. The run since early March this year is the third push higher from the March 2020 pandemic lows. That is the typical sequence before an intermediate correction of the type we expect on the nominal 18-month cycle. 

The entire rally has been parabolic, and such climaxes can last a lot longer than we typically expect. Based on historical analysis of parabolic runs, it is even possible that a typical, intermediate correction of 10% to 15% may not present at all. The result would be unusual, but we cannot eliminate the possibility.

This latest run since the March 2021 low this year has a bit of a rising wedge shape to it – which is likely to be aggressively sold as it peaks. A rising wedge is a unique characteristic of an Elliott 5th wave (a third push higher in the sequence interrupted by two countertrend corrections). So far, June is an inside bar as to May – which might indicate that June will close below its monthly open. June is one of the weaker months anyway, historically. The first few days of the month should have performed better than we experienced. So there is a bit of WWSHD at play.

While the 1st intermediate pullback from the Pandemic lows will probably last only a few months, it is essential to note that it could lead to a trading range that could last a year or more. The January 2018 buy climax led to a trading range that lasted two years. The trading range that began in 2014 stayed more than a year, despite a strong bull trend.

So I am coming into this week neutral to slightly bullish. I think a break to new highs is more likely than not. The stars have favorably aligned for it. However, given the rising wedge pattern and the number of traders that could get sucked into the new highs, we need to be on high alert for a relatively sudden reversal that could begin the intermediate correction. I will continue to use the 5-day EMA as a stop line, along with the Algo trigger. The Founders Group is 100% in cash right now after a better than 300% year-to-date return.

I will be looking to re-enter the market (at least for a short-term swing) if the opportunity presents itself. As I have continued to point out these past few weeks, it is still a bit premature to get overly aggressive on the short side. The SKEW (premium in OTM puts versus calls) hit historic highs on Friday. So buying OTM puts is very expensive right now due to demand. The SKEW indicates that the institutions are substantially hedged – but it likely makes more sense to sell premium rather than buy it when the time is right.

As always, I will try to do better next time. I do sincerely hate leaving money on the table.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 6/4/2021

The market reacted positively to the April employment report released this morning, showing the unemployment rate dropping to 5.8%. As you know, I don’t typically day trade on Friday.

The Employment report got prices well above yesterday’s high. Still, we have now come back into range. We also have overnight inventory that is relatively balanced with an almost equal distribution of time spent on either side of settlement.

Even if there is a small true gap higher by the time the bell rings, we would still be well within the larger balance area where there is a lot of value range if you look to the last week of the market action. For these reasons, better trades are likely to develop later rather than earlier today.

The second thing to note is that I would only focus on two fundamental levels today – the overnight high at 4210.25 and yesterday’s low at 4165.25. On the NASDAQ 100, find the equivalent levels, keeping in mind that the index already bounced from the WEM low yesterday.

It is likely that anything between these levels is simply going to be responsive trade that doesn’t bring about any meaningful change.

Change is an important word. Trading is all about anticipating change and trying to either get ahead of it or get aboard.

The market is looking for a catalyst in my view, and when that arrives we will see the picture more clearly.

Chop, chop – is the buzzword for today.

A.F. Thornton

View from the Top – Interim Update

Every once in a while, the market likes to humble me. Yesterday, the S&P 500 bounced at the 21-day line as expected and returned to the 4195 area, where I was looking to get short. However, the market ran out of time – but still – so far, so good. Then the price recovered enough to negate the Algo sell signal mentioned yesterday morning – standing the probability on its proverbial head. The sell signal may yet return today.

Nevertheless, the Founders Group honored our 5-day line stop at 4190, and the market failed to close above the 5-day line by the close. So I remain comfortable in cash at the moment. I am still looking to short rallies – but I am not getting aggressively short as yet.

Yesterday, the S&P 500 managed to close inside its wider range (between 4215 and 4180). But the NASDAQ 100 failed to get back inside its analogous range.

Former market leaders like Apple and Tesla continue to break down, which negatively affects the indexes. Bitcoin perked up a bit yesterday, but it is still throwing a pattern that typically points lower.

On the surface, then, it would not seem that the picture is any more transparent today than it was yesterday. The S&P 500 continues to move sideways – and that can chew up premium if you are investing with options.

Beneath the surface, the action continues to be about rotation. Rotation is healthy – correlation is not, especially on a down day. In thinking about how to illustrate this, I thought I would show you the positive extreme first:

In the chart above, you can see that the XLRE Real Estate ETF continues to move above its May peak to new highs. That makes sense in light of recent inflation trends.

On the opposing side, you can see from the chart above that the XLK Technology ETF has a lower peak than May. Given the lofty valuations, that makes sense too. The money rotating into the other sectors has to come from somewhere.

Then you can see from the last chart above that the SPY S&P 500 index ETF is almost matching its May peak, somewhere in the middle of the two previous price charts. 

Stepping out then, we still have Communications (XLC), Energy (XLE), Financials (XLF), and Real Estate (XLRE) moving higher at the expense of our former leaders in Technology (XLK), Utilities (XLU), Health Care (XLV), and Consumer Discretionary (XLY). We find industrials (XLI), Materials (XLB), and Consumer Staples (XLP) are moving sideways with the S&P 500.

With the pie chart below, you can begin to see how each sector influences the S&P 500 index. For now, the math is such that the aggregate of current sector performance moves the S&P 500 sideways. When I cannot achieve my goals in the S&P 500 index futures, I will look up the top 10 holdings of each sector fund that is moving. Because the ETFs are cap-weighted, I can often buy options on one or two top holdings to meet my goals. A good resource for this is ETFdb.com.

It is vital to carry the current leadership forward, as trends tend to persist. Institutions have barely scratched the surface investing in many of these existing, leading “value” sectors and will likely reposition themselves further if the correction I am expecting materializes.

I sketched a head and shoulders topping possibility in the NASDAQ 100 chart above. The pattern projects a low down to 12,200. I am not a huge pattern trader, as our brains look for them – even when they don’t exist. I will point them out when I see them, however.

The NASDAQ 100 index has likely seen its lows for the week, bouncing off its Weekly Expected Move low yesterday. I see the same H&S pattern present in Apple (AAPL). If the design materializes, the S&P 500 might fall to the May lows in sympathy with the NASDAQ 100 – a target around 4050. I would speculate that these levels will establish the bottom of a new trading range. But again, I am guessing. Guessing is what we do while we wait for the market to do its work.

I see the trading range possibility because, as yet, the market appears to be digesting current valuations – not rejecting them. The sentiment is neither frothy nor particularly supportive – almost dead neutral. We do have the cycle correction ahead, but there is no way to predict the depth or the exact start date. The dip could visit the 200-day moving average, an unpleasant journey to 3750 on the S&P 500. However, with the average in a nice upward slope, why not simply move sideways into the line over a few months of the summer?

The linchpin in all of this is Federal Reserve policy. If the Fed eases up slowly, something they clarified yesterday, maybe they can engineer a soft landing such as I am describing. They made clear yesterday that they might slow up corporate bond purchases – but not treasuries. The market will find that palatable. 

Part of the market’s recovery yesterday was due to the Biden administration easing up talk of higher corporate taxes, offering a minimum 15% corporate tax instead. The market liked that too.

Stay tuned, as the road ahead promises to be interesting.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 6/3/2021

Yesterday was classic WWSHD and, as Peter Reznick over at ShadowTrader.net calls it – “Door #3 action. 

As to Door #3, the reference is about sideways rather than trending up or down action (Doors #1 and #2). Yesterday, we tested both of our key levels that should have brought about change (4215 on the upside and 4198 on the downside), and they didn’t. As to WWSHD, buyers should be frustrated as they had some acceptance over the start of the single print area at 4210, which fizzled.

What bothers me is that as we approach the top of the range, it feels like my grandmother slapping my hands when she caught me in the cookie jar. The selling has been aggressive at the top of the range all week, leaving us with so-called “b” market profiles. 

A “b” profile looks like the alphabet letter, where time spent, and volume is thin along the upper stem, indicating very aggressive sellers up the line. The shape is wide at the bottom, where all the rotation action settles. 

The belief is that longs are trapped, still trying to exit the market – but they need to be quick at the higher prices. While not a hard and fast rule, “b” profiles tend to appear at the end of uptrends, so carry that forward in your narrative.

Tuesday and Wednesday's S&P 500 Volume and Market Profiles with the Daily Candle Alongside - Both are Examples of "b" Profiles, with Tuesday's (the first) Profiles Being the Best Example

The 5-day EMA held the line yesterday – though just barely. So we were still in the game with the Navigator swing strategy. Unexpectedly, the Asians took us right back to the top of the range in Globex last night.

The Plot Thickens

I wrote all of the above last night before Europe opened, as I usually put my initial thoughts down early in the evening, then update them about 30-minutes before the New York open. I would have added that the Fed was jawboning the market down again yesterday – indicating that they were getting ready to taper bond purchases – or quantitative easing as it has come to be known. That put a negative quell on the market mid-day.  It is axiomatic that the Fed still holds the keys to this market uptrend.

Now we can add that the Europeans came into the markets in a sour mood. New York has followed suit pre-market. So the roll-down to 4173.50 per the “look above and fail” in our balance rules on Tuesday is now complete. 

Unfortunately, this price action has tripped our 5-day EMA stop on the Navigator Swing Strategy at 4190, and the Algo sell signal on a negative momentum divergence. A volatility squeeze that is now firing short could easily magnify the downside. It likely will make sense for the active trader to short rallies instead of buying dips from here. 

I need to mention that technically, the Algo signals are not valid until today’s candle is complete. Still, it would take a dramatic recovery in the candle to invalidate the signal. It has happened before, but it is not the most probable outcome. We have to make our decisions on probabilities, not certainty. My bias is not constructive, even though I do my best to be objective. 

For today’s trading plan, overnight inventory is nearly 100% short this morning, The S&P 500 will open with a true gap down right into the 21-day line, and I would expect overnight traders to buy on the open to take profits on their short positions. Of course, gap rules apply this morning, focusing on #2 and #4.

Unlike when the profile structure is repairing, the rotation to the low end of balance can be completed in an overnight session. We can already see buyers stepping in at that level as prices just below it were rejected recently – and we also see some positive reaction to the unemployment numbers this morning. Early trade, then, could be tricky.

Regardless of whether there is a fade or not, assume that there is overhead supply from the larger balance area above us. That means traders can sell counter-trend rallies towards yesterday’s low around 4195 given the correct corresponding context.

Should the opening drive be lower and acceptance found below the overnight low, look towards the Weekly Expected Move low at 4153 for support. That should be the worst case for the week. 

Beyond the WEM low is the 4120 balance area low. The uptrend and 50-day lines also converge there. Falling through 4120, then, would confirm that the 18-month cycle correction is underway.

While I expect a bounce at the open, I think cash is the best place to be for now, unless you want to shift gears and short rallies.

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