All posts by AF Thornton

Morning Notes 6/3/2022

This is a daily chart of the S&P 500 Index with the Navigator Algorithm and Readout Panel Applied
This is a daily chart of the S&P 500 Index with the Navigator Algorithm and Readout Panel Applied

Good Morning:

  • Resistance remains at the 4200 Call Wall, with support at 4155 (SPY415), 4127, and then 4100.
  • The gravity line remains at 4211. Remember that sustained acceptance above that level adds to the bullish case.
  • Volatility is compressing now that we are above the trigger, so the move for today projects 44 points plus or minus the open.
  • Liquidity is still low (see the volume discussion below), so outsized moves are possible. The below-average liquidity explains why the realized volatility has exceeded implied volatility lately.
  • The street is, once again, well-hedged. Put buying has dried up, and the SKEW is extremely low, perhaps clearing the way for higher prices.
  • However, downside protection is still relatively cheap if one wants to hedge ahead of the 6/15 Fed meeting.
  • As I shared with one of our subscribers yesterday, I wake up these days wondering whether a systemic collapse, the beginning of the Biden Depression, or something worse is on the table. My wife doesn’t call me the “Doomscroller” for nothing.
  • Fortunately, I am usually wrong about these things – so let’s hope this is not the one time I am right.
  • And the stock market may already be counteracting my irrational fears. Yesterday, it retested the mean and bounced, precisely what the index should do if a significant low is in place.
  • And we remain in a Navigator Swing Buy signal.
  • As you will see from the chart above, the Navigator Algo painted preliminary buy signals (yellow arrows) at the literal low on 5/20, with another painted the next day on 5/21. Then it painted an all-clear green arrow on the cross of the 21 on 5/27.
  • Our Swing Trader subscribers have been making a killing in this run. Consider a subscription; you will be happy you did.
  • As a result, the bottom that began forming a little less than two weeks ago looks similar to any significant low I have seen in my career, except that volume support is not ideal.
  • Each day, the volume on bear candles still uncomfortably exceeds the volume on bull candle days.
  • Nevertheless, fear gauges remain elevated, and the progression off the low is constructive, so the market has room to run higher.
  • Aside from that, over the past four trading sessions, the S&P 500 remained in a 100-point balance range bounded by 4075 and 4175.
  • If the index breaks higher, the balance range projection predicts another leg up to at least the 50-day line at 4275 or so.
  • If you look back at the charts presented over the past week, that is where this bear retracement leg should end, assuming the index is genuinely completing an expanded flat “2” wave.
  • But even accomplishing the move to 4275 still leaves ambiguity. Both bulls and bears have a leg to stand on, even at 4300 or so.
  • For example, you can observe the potential formation of a head and shoulders reversal pattern with the neckline at 4300.
  • This pattern could take the stock market even higher, while traders are getting all beared up again in the next dip, which ends up merely being the right shoulder of the pattern.
  • And what would be the bull case? Besides most stocks having lost half of their value recently, the market could be anticipating a Fed pivot or perhaps a resolution of the Ukraine conflict.
  • The point is that there is always a catalyst to take the market higher, especially when the darkest days dawn.
  • Remember, the bad news is good because we don’t want the Fed to keep raising rates.
  • Overnight traders have erased about half of yesterday’s gains at this writing.
  • Let’s see if yesterday was a fluke, or whether we can keep this rally moving today.
  • Recall that the WEM this week is 4050 to 4250. For once, it would seem we end up somewhere in the middle.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Notes – 6/2/2022

Good Morning:

  • In just about any time frame, traders nearly always buy the first visit to the mean (21-period EMA) once conquered. Yesterday was no exception on the daily chart.
  • And there certainly is room to take the market higher and still be in the bear or a recovering bull.
  • But the bears caught an edge yesterday, as the bounce yesterday was anemic. Comments from Jamie Dimon, CEO of Chase Bank, accelerated the move into the 21-day line and muted the bounce as he advised that there was a financial “hurricane” coming.
  • Recall that Mr. Dimon was one of the few CEOs (and Chase was one of the few banks) who survived the Great Financial Crisis without a hat in hand to the taxpayers.
  • Mr. Dimon is a highly competent banker and an exceptional leader in managing risk.
  • Combine this with similar warnings from people like the head of the European Central Bank, and you will begin to understand the current pale that remains over the markets.
  • But I will give Janet Yellen, current treasury secretary, some credit where it is due.
  • In a rare admission, Ms/ Yellen stated that she completely screwed up her “transitory” inflation forecast.
  • These people are fallible humans, after all. And they suffer both from Groupthink and academic isolation.
  • Admitting you have a problem is always the first step to solving it.
  • Surprisingly, she has caught nothing but grief from her comrades on the left for admitting she got it wrong. I find the admission refreshing.
  • Futures have edged higher to 4120 overnight.
  • Our models suggest similar volatility to yesterday, with a plus or minus range of 45-50 points from the open.
  • 4100 remains the main support level and key to containing volatility.
  • 4150-4160 (SPY 415) remains solid resistance, followed by 4200.
  • There is a clear trend toward buying short-dated puts and selling calls in the options market.
  • The piling on of these bearish option plays could easily push the market over again to retest the recent lows at 3800.
  • The key for the markets is to hold the conjunction of the 5-day and 21-day lines currently sitting around 4075.
  • Global tensions and climbing food and oil prices add to the worries.

A.F. Thornton

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Morning Notes – 6/1/2022

Elliott Wave 2 Targets in S&P 500 Index
Elliott Wave 2 Targets in S&P 500 Index

Good Morning:

  • Yesterday’s price action mainly behaved according to the script, consolidating the short-covering gains from last week.
  • The geopolitical situation continued to deteriorate, and I will have more to say about that in the Weekly/Monthly forecast.
  • Futures are trading at 4130 after a quiet overnight session.
  • Today, we see support at 4100, with resistance at 4160 (SPY 415) and then at 4200 (Call Wall).
  • Calls continue to fill into the 4150-4250 strikes, which add to overhead resistance but also help reduce overall volatility.
  • We are likely to see short-dated hedging strategies lead us into the next Fed meeting. Protection is relatively cheap right now.
  • Today’s expected move is 44 points plus or minus the open, with the WEM range still set between 4050 and 4250.
  • Overnight inventory is balanced, so there is nothing to help guide us at the open. Let the market settle in a bit before day trading today.
  • I still believe that the S&P 500 Index can hit the 4185-4233 target mentioned last week and remain in the bear.
  • Sustained price action above 4211 would cause me to reevaluate whether the bear is still in place.
  • The market may continue consolidating last week’s gains for a few more days.
  • All eyes will continue to point to mid-June and the next Fed meeting and Quarterly options/futures expiration.
  • In the meantime, oil prices keep climbing, and our current overlords in Washington continue pursuing policies that are virtually certain to lead us into the economic abyss.
  • The European governors are also leading Europe into the abyss, so there is comfort in numbers.
  • In the meantime, Vlad and Xi are smiling at our demise.
  • There is no reason for them to nuke us. If Russia and China wait patiently just a bit longer, we are sure to destroy ourselves from within.
  • Other than a peace deal in Ukraine, there are not many positives to write home about. The monthly employment report should be interesting later this week.
  • We have a couple of Fed governors speaking today (Williams and Bullard) so be careful around 11:30 AM EST.
  • On the economic front, we also get JOLTS job openings, ISM Manufacturing, and the Fed’s Beige Book to give us some additional economic clues.
  • Recall that the bad news is good news for interest rates at this stage until it negatively impacts earnings.
  • We are always wise to follow the price action with no preconceived notions.
  • But the issue remains whether we just ended a cyclical bear with enough damage done to begin recovering.
  • It is possible, and if it were October, I would be more convinced.
  • The alternative is that there is more to come after we meander through June, July, and August.
  • I am betting that the May low is not the final low, which is more likely to be achieved on the 18-month cycle low later this year.
  • If my calculations are correct, and we know I am a genius at this (you can laugh now), we just finished the mid-point of the nominal 18-month cycle, and the ultimate low lies out in mid-September.
  • As they say, one day at a time.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Notes – 5/31/2022

Good Morning:

  • Futures have pulled back to 4124 at this writing, down from Friday’s highs of 4202.
  • The shift over 4100 has reduced volatility estimates, with the implied move for today now at 1.07% or about 44 points plus or minus the open.
  • Not that these estimates have turned out to be accurate lately, as realized volatility has been higher than implied volatility – outside the 68% statistical boundary.
  • I expect resistance at 4135 (the current Volatility Trigger) first, then 4150, and finally 4200.
  • Any sustained acceptance of prices above 4211 is bullish and builds the case that the recent low is more than a pause in the bear trend.
  • Support today comes in at 4115 (SPY 410) to 4100. Below that, there is a gap of 4000.
  • There are many times that I envy the Dealers and Market Makers with their inside knowledge of the book and virtually guaranteed profits, but Friday was not one of those days.
  • The professionals lost billions when the market tilted higher halfway through the session, ending the week at nearly twice the expected move high.
  • We also had a chance to see why my weekly/daily projections have a 68% probability of being correct – while ordinarily accurate, and they are not 100%.
  • This week, the options market is pricing in a WEM estimated at 100 points plus or minus Friday’s close for a total 200-point range roughly between SPX 4050 and 4250.
  • Was the parabolic move higher a surprise last week? It shouldn’t have been, not if you are following these pages. As we have been pointing out for several weeks, the street had been nearly 100% short with improving internals.
  • Notably, and other than 4200, new call positions are still lacking, and the rally was not supported by the kind of volume we would typically expect.
  • Nevertheless, bullish sentiment had dropped to nearly zero, and many signs pointed to an intermediate low, including the Navigator Algorithm Swing Buy signal last Monday.
  • If nothing else, all one had to do was follow Gap Rules on Thursday and Friday for some nice gains, and our Subscribers did. Consider a subscription as it more than pays for itself.
  • Subscribers picked up nearly 175 S&P points on Thursday and Friday alone, and an equivalent move in the NASDAQ 100. We used 50/50 SPY and QQQ June Monthly Calls for the positions.
  • Of course, a lot happens overnight that we missed, leading to those morning gaps, which can be frustrating.
  • We will work off some of last week’s gains at the open today from all appearances. But as the last trading day of May, there will be window dressing which could distort day trading.
  • I suspect that month-end will lead to some buying in the cases where money managers missed the rally. Remember our old friend FOMO?
  • So other than a short-covering rally and oversold bounce, where does this rally take us? Is this THE bottom or just A bottom?
  • Of course, nobody knows, and there is no shortage of opinions.
  • We will encounter considerable resistance around current levels and up to 4220. But I could even see the rally take us up to 4300.
  • Beyond 4300, I have my doubts. However, I let the price action and algorithms guide me, as you should already know. Strong opinions tend to lead to losses in this endeavor.
  • Increasingly, investors will focus on the June 15th Fed meeting and quadruple options/futures expiration on June 17th.
  • Even if this is the end of the correction, I would not be surprised to see a retest of the recent low at 3800 in the S&P 500 index into the mid-June Fed meeting.
  • Chairman Powell meets with President Biden today at Biden’s request to discuss the economy and inflation. Can you imagine the uproar if Trump had a similar meeting with Powell in similar circumstances? The left’s hypocracy knows no bounds.
  • I don’t see any Fed speakers scheduled today, which should help the bulls. But Consumer Confidence comes out later today. Similar readings to those expected have led to recessions 100% of the time in the past – no exceptions.
  • A few months ago, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seized the financial assets of his political opponents, a group of harmless truckers who were the equivalent of “Trump” supporters in Canada. Now he is coming for Canada’s handguns.
  • The actions of this Davos devotee and Chinese President Xi worshipper, less than a few days after he returned from Davos, are frightening.
  • Combine Trudeau’s actions with his worship of Chinese President Xi and the Chinese Authoritarian system, and there is a frightening reality gripping our neighbors to the north.
  • President Biden is coming for your guns too. And it is not just AR-35s; he also wants the 9-mm handguns.
  • Recall that there is more than one way to skin a cat.
  • How do you get around the First Amendment’s prohibition on censorship? You make the Tech companies do it for you,
  • How do you promote the dubious science of Climate Change? You price people out of oil and gas.
  • How do you outlaw guns? You price people out of firearms, outlaw bullets, chip away at it with red flag laws, etc. The left knows no bounds.
  • Anyway, I will have a lot more to say about all this in the monthly/weekly report coming out later this week, including China’s plans to take Taiwan and possibly land on the shores of California.
  • Indeed, you cannot make this stuff up. I feel like Mad Max arriving at the Thunderdome.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Notes – 5/27/2022

Good Morning:

  • Last week, the S&P 500 Index traded 80 points below the WEM low Friday morning, and I thought there would be no way that the market could crawl back above it before the close. I was sure that the market was ready to hand the Dealers a massive loss.
  • But the market staged a last-minute short-covering rally, and the Dealers escaped financial death by a thousand cuts.
  • Today, we are at the other end of the spectrum. The market is roughly 60 points above the WEM high this morning. Will the market sell 60 points of yesterday’s gains into the close, saving the Dealers once again? With the street as short as it is right now, we could be in the midst of that short squeeze and Dealers stand to have a challenging day ahead it so.
  • Nevertheless, I am always amazed at how powerful the WEM high and low are each week. The potential to reconnect with the WEM high could complicate day-trading today into the close.
  • Also, the options market continues to misprice volatility – with realized volatility differing significantly from implied volatility. This makes setting targets less reliable.
  • The Founder’s Group enjoyed nearly a 100-point profit on its SPY calls yesterday, but the market continued rising, indicating that we sold a bit early.
  • But a profit is a nice reward, even if we left some money on the table. Profits are why we do this – FOMO is not a strategy.
  • We want to reenter on a pullback, but we are mindful that we are going into a three-day weekend, and cash typically allows the weekend to be more restful.
  • Yesterday’s price action still looks mostly like short-covering. The move lacked confirming volume, so the jury is still out.
  • Nevertheless, we predicted the rally, and the following chart from Daneric’s Elliott waves is a good depiction of the current market structure and targets.
This Chart (courtesy of Daneric's Elliott Wave) gives a good rendition of the current Elliott Wave status of the S&P 500 Index with targets.
  • Futures are holding near yesterday’s close of 4070. With the push higher, volatility estimates are slightly lower, not that they have been accurate lately. Resistance is in the 4100 – 4115 (SPY 410 equivalent) area. Support shows at 4065 (the updated Volatility Trigger), then the 4000-4015 (SPY 400) WEM high area.
  • All eyes will be on the 8:30 AM ET Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) data. The environment remains somewhat illiquid, exacerbated by the upcoming holiday weekend (Monday, US equity markets are closed for Memorial Day). Thus prices may be excessively volatile in either direction.
  • Once again, we saw a pickup in call positioning at strikes overhead yesterday. We have not seen this in some time. As those calls fill in (and the index rises), volatility should also contract. The call buying is a bullish signal, but I remain alert that this could be a false breakout spurred by short-covering and the lack of liquidity.
  • Today’s expiration is not particularly large, but about 20% of S&P 500 Index Gamma expires, concentrated in the 4000-4100 range (SPY 400-410). We look for a test of one of those strikes today from the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) release, the Fed’s favorite inflation measure. Perhaps the PCE will be the catalyst to save the Dealers in a drive down to the WEM high.
  • Another complication is two Fed governors speaking today, including mega-hawk Fed Governor Bullard. Their strategy has been to talk the stock market down when it has rallied lately. The plan is part of their demand destruction goals, and talk is cheaper than higher interest rates, which could undo the economy.
  • But never forget, inflation is good for the government, seeing record income tax receipts, almost a 25% increase. Do you see how that works? Isn’t it a coincidence that government receipts are closer to the “real” inflation rate?
  • Gap Rules may be in play today, depending on the PCE Report. They worked beautifully yesterday, so follow them today if the market opens with a True Gap higher.

    As always, stay tuned and enjoy the holiday weekend. I know I need a break after a couple of difficult weeks for me personally. But at least we booked some significant profits. There will be plenty more in the volatility that lies ahead.

    A.F. Thornton

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    Morning Notes – 5/26/2022 – Update

    Because I mentioned it in the Morning Notes, the Founders Group is taking a profit on our S&P 500 calls entered yesterday at 3955. We are out at 4035, as we expect the price to return back to 4000 by tomorrow’s close.

    If we are wrong and the price keeps going higher, so be it. We have a nice profit. We are willing to reenter, but also mindful that we have a three-day weekend coming up.

    A.F. Thornton

    Morning Notes – 5/26/2022

    This is a daily chart of the S&P 500 Continuous Index Futures showing a potential trend reversal.
    This is a daily chart of the S&P 500 Continuous Index Futures showing a potential trend reversal.

    Good Morning:

    • Overnight futures are trading positively, around 4000 at this writing.
    • S&P 500 volatility estimates remain in line with the last several days, allowing for plus or minus 50 points from today’s regular session open.
    • It would appear from the Option Contract Open Interest released overnight that call positions were added above 4000 yesterday, with 4100 and 4200 adding 10,000 and 15,000 contracts,  respectively. That is not huge, but it was enough to kink the gamma curve.
    • The Volatility Trigger, one of the critical metrics we watch, moved down to 4000. That would typically indicate that volatility will contract above that level, and the market will return to “mean-reversion” behavior. Dealers will need to sell rallies and buy dips to hedge positions rather than sell into declines and buy into rallies – exacerbating the moves.
    • Our next focus is the June 15th Fed Meeting (also VIX Expiration) and June 17th monthly options expiration. Quarterly expiration also arrives on June 30th. How much “risk-on” behavior will market participants seek ahead of the Fed meeting?
    • Resistance is in the 4000-4015 (SPY400 equivalent) area, with support at 3960 (SPY 395) followed by 3900. More details about the 4000 resistance area appear below.
    • The market survived the release of the April Fed minutes relatively unscathed yesterday.
    • The S&P 500 index could be breaking the steep downtrend (depending on how you draw it), and perhaps it will even break the 7-week bear candle streak if the market stays above 3931 today and tomorrow (and it should).
    • Note that there is a positive bias moving into month-end next week. Corporate buybacks are also on the table again.
    • Overnight, the market is taking out yesterday’s high, but the price is also at the expected move high (WEM) for this week, roughly 4000 on the S&P 500 index. The vertical downtrend line also sits at 4000.
    • So 4000, give or take a few points, will be resistance for the rest of the week, hence the 4000 – 4015 resistance levels mentioned above. The Volatility Trigger itself can provide initial resistance at 4000 until it breaks.
    • There are positive divergences and improving market internals on the recent lows, making a rally somewhat more probable here, even if it is short-lived.
    • Watch for a True Gap higher at the Open and apply Gap Rules as necessary. But focus more on what happens when the Gap fails.
    • Remember that the WEM high is a formidable barrier to higher prices until next week when prices will have more headroom. Recall that dealers fight to maintain these levels, which have a 68% probability of holding.
    • One only needs to look at last Friday for proof. The S&P 500 Index recovered nearly 60 points in the last hour. Dealers and Market Makers staved off billions in losses by staging the last-minute rally to close a few ticks above the WEM low at 3900.
    • We have to go back to 1932 to find a similar 7-week bear candle streak as we just experienced, and I don’t need to remind you what an unpleasant period marked the Great Depression.
    • But alas, nothing goes straight down, and in most bear markets, we get a relief rally just about this time. I have been expecting it and mentioning the possibility on these pages over the past week.
    • And the mean (21-day line) is coming down to meet us. The market could break this line, but it could even rally back to the 50-day line if history is any guide.
    • When the Founder’s Group issued the swing buy signal at 3955 yesterday, we set the ultimate target to 4125. If past bears are any guide, that should be an achievable goal. Some precedents could take the market back to 4300, so we will see how it goes.
    • I also have less confidence in this signal than just about any signal we have issued recently. We are moving our stop to 3975 this morning to lock in some gains and may move it higher as the day wears on.
    • If you are not a subscriber (and you should be), Look for pullbacks on the hourly charts to take a position. But my overall concern for this rally and where it could take us relates to the sloppy overlapping price action on the hourly charts. Even the daily chart has a rising wedge appearance to it. Wedges are not guaranteed to lead to a price reversal, but I prefer a cleaner look to the rally.
    • This rally attempt posits a one-for-one relationship between the first and second down legs from the top. If it fails quickly, the index will likely need to complete a 1.618 retracement of the first down leg.
    • That brings the price down to 3500, which could also relate timewise to the June 15th Fed meeting.
    • So be careful here, do not get too aggressive, and do not be surprised if this rally fails. I view it as a bear market rally even in the best case.
    • As mentioned yesterday morning, the Founder’s Group also maintains an unofficial position (meaning we are sharing what we are doing instead of calling out a trade) in September Monthly TLT calls (U.S. 20-Year treasury ETF).
    • We expect longer-term treasury bonds to recover gains as short-term rates rise and long-term rates fall (yield-curve inversion).
    • Also, longer-duration treasuries may experience a flight to safety from further global tensions and as the economy shows signs of sputtering.

    Stay tuned,

    A.F. Thornton

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    Morning Notes – 5/25/2022

    Good Morning:

    • Futures rallied as high as 3969 overnight before rolling over when Europe opened.

    • Volatility estimates remain high, with another 100 point range projected around the open today,

    • Resistance is at 4000, with support at 3900. then 3877.

    • As we push toward the Memorial Day holiday this weekend, expect liquidity to deteriorate from its already fragile state.

    • This will continue to invoke 2-way volatility.

    • Allow for both rallies and declines to extend as Dealers buy and sell into them counterintuitively – forced by the negative gamma.

    • Traders will also be watching for the 2 pm ET
      release of the Fed Minutes from the last meeting. I expect the minutes to be hawkish as hell, and so should traders. Jawboning appears to be the Fed’s primary strategy at the moment.

    • Longer-term Treasury bonds (e.g., TLT) look poised to reverse the downtrend higher from a volatility squeeze.

    • Other Fed rate increase forecasting measures (e.g. Fed Swaps) seem to be backing off draconian rate hike forecasts a bit, with economic growth deteriorating and global tensions high.
    • So, long-term government bonds could be reversing their downtrend for the wrong reasons.

    • If the reversal reflects a flight to quality, stocks may not follow treasuries higher.

    • Option positions continue to accumulate at the 3900 strike. This accumulation can serve to make 3900 a more robust support level.
    • Contrast this behavior with the past few weeks, when traders bought mostly puts at strikes less than 4000, and the market seemed to have extra velocity on moves under that level.
    • This buildup of call positions at 3900 or greater (albeit light and just starting), plus the appearance of Dealers shifting to buyers at less than 3700, leads me to discount the risk of the capitulation Wall Street keeps expecting.
    • Yes, we could have strong moves lower, and I still give an edge for markets probing lower into June expiration.
    • However, the idea of a “limit down with VIX greater than 40 capitulation” seems less and less likely as the street is well-hedged from an options perspective.
    • Options positions are not the end-all, but they can represent a live model of Wall Street’s current positioning.
    • To the upside, an extended rally is unlikely until we get clarity from the Fed and/or a further buildup of call positions.
    • In short, the market remains tentative, and our intermediate and long-term models stay in cash, awaiting an algorithm buy trigger.
    • The Founders Group will begin accumulating September monthly calls in the TLT today to position for a rally in longer duration treasuries.
    • We also continue to day trade futures, but as yet, there is no solid buy signal from the Navigator Algorithms. They are, however, only a razor’s edge from the buy.
    • As they say, however, close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
    • The street is still very short, and it would not take much to send that group running for cover, perhaps after the Fed minutes are released today.
    • Durable goods orders came in less than consensus this morning. Remember, the bad news is good news, as it takes the pressure off rate increases.

    Stay tuned,

    A.F. Thornton

    Morning Notes – 5/24/2022

    Good Morning:

    • The market was still a bit tentative yesterday and appears to be on its heels again this morning due to disappointing forward guidance by social media company Snapchat.
    • Today we see resistance in the 4115(SPY 400 equivalent) – 4000 area. Support is at 3900, and then 3960 (SPY 385).

    • We are still on alert that yesterday and Friday’s action still reflects short covering. We need to see some solid follow-through above 4000 to be convinced of a true, intermediate low.
    • Let’s see what the rest of the day brings, but our guard is still up for now.
    • Capital preservation is still the rule of the day.

    A.F. Thornton

    Morning Notes – 5/23/2022

    Good Morning:

    • I will publish the weekly report later today. After a week away from the screens, I had to catch up over the weekend.
    • This week is not much better, as I have a time commitment to help a friend right some legal wrongs. Once a lawyer, always a lawyer, as the saying goes.
    • But the bottom line is that Friday’s retest of the 5/12 low was successful, but the leprechauns still managed to stop me out of my calls for a loss Friday, my first loss of the year.
    • I like the adage, how could I be so right and still lose money? But it happens – especially when I am not in front of my screens.
    • The formal buy signal comes if we close above the Navigator Algo trigger today. On Friday, the market closed on (but not above) the trigger. I call that a wobbler, and I don’t take wobbler signals in this environment.
    • Watch for a True Gap at the Open and apply Gap Rules. I would also apply Spike Rules, given the quick short-covering burst at the Friday close.
    • I am confident in calling an intermediate-style low on Friday, but the wild card is the Fed. The Fed has jawboned every rally attempt. The Fed has decided to use the stock market decline to tamp down inflation as they used advances to rescue the economy in the past.
    • So there is your wild card, making the market treacherous at best.
    • Subscribers will get the buy signal if it manifests today.
    • I am looking for solid resistance at 4000, with support at 3900, then 3875, and then 3800.
    • The Put Wall has moved down to 3700, with the Volatility Trigger (and positive gamma) up at 4350.
    • Volatility remains high, though this week’s WEM range drops down to just under 200 points. So the WEM high comes in at SPX 4000 (SPY 400), with the low at about SPX 3800 (SPY 379).
    • And we are still in negative gamma, meaning dealers have to sell into declines and buy into rallies, making the moves longer and more volatile.

    Good luck today,

    A.F. Thornton

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