Buy Signal Update – 5/7/2021

The S&P 500 futures just barely tagged 4216 and then pivoted almost instantly. As predicted, the index is moving sideways today. Do your best to try to enter around the 4215 WEM high level if possible. Otherwise, you can try for a dip early next week. It might make sense to wait toward the close. On uptrend days, the market often curls back over during the last hour. FOMO (fear of missing out) might nip that in the bud today, but patience is usually rewarded.

Tech continues to be noticeably weak, we will see how the rest of the day goes, but rotation favors cyclical and inflation beneficiaries. Notably, the April employment report missed the estimates by a country mile. 200,000 new jobs versus estimates of 1.5 million. Someone should get fired for that miss.

Wages were up 0.8 % – more evidence of inflation. When wages begin to respond, it will be hard to put the genie back in the bottle.

Have a great weekend.

New Buy Signal – 5/7/2021

Buy signal corrected – buy is 4208, not 4108.

The Navigator swing strategy has triggered a new buy signal at 4208 on the S&P 500 index futures. It is recommended that the buy signal be executed towards the close today or on a return to 4215, where weekly options expire. 

The Founders Group is 100% invested using the S&P 500 Mini-Futures Contract. Risks are extremely high, so be very, very careful and use stops. You can use other indices or sectors by analogy.

Due to the Weekly Options Expiration at around 4215 on the S&P 500 index, the market-makers will likely drive the price back down toward this level before the close. If so, that would be a good place to get positioned today.

If the market makers cannot drive the price lower, an unlikely outcome, then wait for a dip on the one or two-hour chart to get involved – even if it is next week. The point is, we are now buying dips as we enter this last phase of the rally before a larger correction unfolds.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 5/7/2021

Friday Morning, May 7, 2021

There are afternoon drives, and then there are afternoon drives. Yesterday afternoon looked like a Range Rover conquering Mount Everest at 100 m.p.h. All the bears remember is looking up at the tire treads as they got run over. And thus begins the 3rd (and perhaps final) run from the March lows, before the summer doldrums and fall correction sets in on the larger, 18-month cycle. This run is the 3rd push higher and the fifth wave in Elliott parlance, confirming our suspicion that the consolidation from April 19th through yesterday was part of a 4th-wave correction/consolidation.

Confirming that the shorter, 80-day cycle low is firmly planted, the NASDAQ 100 is pivoting (with relative weakness) from its 50-day line. Normally, the S&P 500 tags its 50-day line as well on the nominal 80-day cycle low. Instead, the index pivoted from the 21-day line. The S&P 500 did not tag its 50-day line, another bullish WWSHD (When What Should Happen Doesn’t). Added to a historic (never happened before) 13-day winning streak in the S&P 500 a few weeks ago, the price action can only be interpreted as extremely bullish, at least on the surface.

The S&P 500 also cleared its 5-day line yesterday afternoon – which is a “heads up” to a buy signal on the Navigator Intermediate-term swing strategy. My guess is that we will move through the trigger line today or Monday, solidifying the buy signal. I would have preferred more curl in the trigger line to bring us in lower than the old highs, but it is what it is. Also, I do not expect much progress today above the Weekly Expected Move (WEM) high at 4215 – as that is where weekly options expire at the close.

I was an aggressive buyer on the afternoon lows yesterday, but I was sweating bullets all the way. I practically wanted to pull a blanket over me and hide under the covers until the close. Maybe I was too aggressive. I often say, though, if it feels good, it is likely not a good trade. But it is definitely strange to be benefitting from breakouts in Dow stocks like Deere (DE) and Caterpillar (CAT). And the breakouts make sense in light of potential infrastructure spending ahead.

As a side note, when you have a three-week consolidation, you will find many stocks in volatility squeezes. If you need a scan for such stocks, shoot me an email at info@BluprintTrading.com. You will get the best bang for your buck choosing these stocks and riding these volatility squeezes as they fire long in a new rally.

Let me also identify two additional notables from this week and the last few sessions. First, the put/call ratio has spiked several times since last Friday, indicating too much short-term fear and that shorts could be easily spooked. That had a lot of influence on my aggressive actions yesterday afternoon – as the level spiked to .68, which has been the high end of the range since the March 2020 lows. If the market does not dip to accommodate the shorts by the close, they will cover, and that is what gives us the explosive rallies such as we saw yesterday afternoon.

Second, I cannot emphasize enough the influence of the Weekly Expected Moves (WEM) in the major indices. That is why I am constantly harping on the subject. This week, the WEM lows caught and saved both the NASDAQ 100 and the S&P 500. Market makers have to defend those levels or lose their proverbial shirts. Defend them they did this week. The NASDAQ 100 moved below its WEM low temporarily, but the market makers brought it right back so that their losses are minimized – if they have any at all – at expiration today.

Noting that these moves are influential, we need to look at the other side of that coin this morning. The WEM high in the S&P 500 is about 4215. That level may cap our gains today through the close, just as the WEM low cushioned the market earlier this week. 

One possibility is that 4215 caps us until the New York close, and then the futures will shoot higher in the short, post-closing session. Then, if all goes according to plan, it could make sense to hold longs over this weekend as there is a possibility that the futures will gap open Sunday night and Tuesday morning, no longer constrained by this week’s options expiration.

All of that sounds bullish. But lets at least look at the other side of this briefly. The more bearish case is that we stay stuck in the balance range and make another run lower. It is possible but less likely. All the reference points appear below.

Whatever you decide to do today, or on an intermediate-term basis, be cognizant that the risk in this market is as high as I have seen in my 34-years as a professional. Use stops, spreads, and whatever else it takes to protect your capital. For day-traders, your disaster stop is critical.

Morning Plan

We will open with a solid gap higher after a late day spike,  putting both spike rules and gap rules into play. Click on both terms and get familiar with them as a framework for how early trade may play out. The overnight high is a new all time high (ATH) at 4914. 

As with any true gap, look for the counter trend move first (fade) and note how much of the gap fills if any. Spike rules will tell us bias in the slightly longer-term as they will define whether or not prices from the late day rally yesterday are being accepted or not. Note the outcome after today’s session.

Given the Weekly Expected Move high at 4215, and today is weekly options expiration at the close, do not be surprised to see a brick wall at 4215, which could take us sideways for most of today’s session.

Keep in mind the bullish implications of new all-time highs. There is no overhead resistance – as nobody is stuck above us in a bad location. In fact, it is the opposite. Shorts will be forced to cover – though it appears that they had their opportunity last night in the Asian session. 

Upside references today will be the WEM high and all-time high at 4214/4215 (13,529 on the Nasdaq 100). Downside references will be the Navigator trigger line at 4208; the roundie at 4200 (roundies and half-roundies are always key psychological levels); yesterday’s high at 4197.25; and the top of the single prints and 10-day point of control at 4180. I am bullish above 4180 , though I do not expect much additional progress today with the WEM high as an obstacle. We can (and likely will) move above the level, but I will be betting that the move will be temporary as market-makers defend 4215 until the New York close.

Since options expire at the close, one remote possibility is that short-covering and exuberance push the S&P 500 far enough past the WEM high that the market-makers are forced to buy futures to hedge their portfolio deltas. I have not seen this happen in a long time – but it is a possibility. It is a guess as to the level required to trigger this mechanism, but I would guess at least 50 points above 4215 could trigger the market-maker buys.

Have a great day.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 5/5/2021

Wednesday Morning, May 5, 2021

This morning is nearly the reverse of yesterday. The S&P 500 will be opening above yesterday’s range with a true gap higher so gap rules will apply this morning, but in the opposite direction from yesterday. The market will open in the upper half of the overnight range, with inventory nearly 100% long. Last night, the market nearly filled yesterday’s gap down and tried to find acceptance back inside the old balance range above 4167 – and we will open within that range this morning.

When overnight inventory is 100% long, we expect a counter-auction at the open, where the overnight traders take some profits. With a true gap, that can be part of the initial fade.

I would analogize where we are to working on the top floor of a skyscraper. Everything looks fine in your office as you are walking around and talking to your colleagues, until you go to the window. If you click to enlarge the chart below, you will see what I mean.

Monthly Chart - S&P 500 Index from the Day I Started in this Business in 1987

Other than a minor correction low yesterday on the 80-day cycle, neither the S&P 500 nor NASDAQ 100 indices broke their trends. With the S&P 500 index holding above the 21-day EMA and the NASDAQ 100 still below it – my short-term bias remains neutral.

The catalyst for the cycle low yesterday was some remarks released from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, indicating that higher interest rates may have to be tolerated to cool the economy because the extra $4 to $6 trillion in deficit spending was needed by the Biden administration regardless of its impact on the economy and inflation. Kudos for a bit of honesty.

Then, apparently, Ms. Yellen was taken out to the woodshed behind closed doors. The market later turned around when she backtracked on her earlier statements and towed the party line. “The inflation is transitory, and there is no need to raise interest rates.” Well, Janet, that did not seem to lower my expenses, now did it?

Although we are in the middle of the gap and also back within balance, I will start the session by noting whether or not overnight inventory corrects at all and, if so, how much. Whether or not prices can trade back into yesterday’s range will be important in gauging strength today and identifying the best trade in the daily timeframe. I would avoid this gap area and trade later rather than earlier, giving the market some time to show its hand before engaging with it.

A gap-and-go scenario will play out one of two ways today. We can get an early fade that will fail where we would expect it to then reverse higher, or we could have an initial drive lower that puts the single prints into play right away. The short is either at the balance area low or on a cross back down through the open in the first setup. The second setup is always harder to pull off as there is less of a reference as to where to place a stop.

With value (where 70% of the volume traded) significantly lower yesterday, my focus today will be on the gap and where prices trade in relation to its top and bottom.  Above the top of the gap is more bullish, while below the gap puts prices back into yesterday’s regular session range and confirms yesterday’s negative action.  The divergence between the NASDAQ 100 and the S&P 500 on the daily charts is considerable and adds to the complexities of where we find ourselves in this market. 

Be careful today. There are a lot of cross-currents.

A.F. Thornton

View From the Top – Interim Update

Tuesday Evening, May 4, 2021

Sometimes I can be dumb as a skunk (no offense to skunks). I was getting all excited this morning, thinking the market top had finally arrived. I shorted several indexes yesterday (Monday) and started handing out parachutes to less fortunate traders who went all-in long yesterday at a poor location. It is a wonder I wasn’t popping champagne corks.

But, from all appearances thus far, we merely put the bottom in on a minor correction today – likely of the 80-day cycle variety. Perhaps completion of a fourth wave in Elliot Wave parlance – with a fifth and final wave about to take us higher. This also was the “minor” low possibility I mentioned in Sunday night’s weekly outlook. I had already profitably covered some of my shorts at the open today (dumb – I should have kept all of them until mid-day). I have been such a chicken lately (no offense to chickens). I suppose I have been overly protective of my capital due to the positive and rational economic and political environment. Of course, I am being facetious.

I sent out this alert as we approached the important support zone mid-day, where I covered the rest of my short positions on the S&P 500. Reviewing everything tonight, the volume spike today and the second spike in the put/call ratio since last Friday makes me believe that the low is in – at least for now. That does not necessarily portend new highs – likely some indexes and sectors will see new highs and some won’t. It all depends on the success of this next attempt to pivot higher.

We shall see what tomorrow brings, but the indexes are more likely than not to pivot higher here. The S&P 500 might even attempt new highs before finally rolling over into the 18-month cycle correction. I am not so confident about the relative strength of growth or tech stocks and their dominant index, the NASDAQ 100. The index would be lucky to reach its recent all-time high. All of this leaves me in a 24-hour wait and see mode.

The difference between a minor low and a major one, and the complications we face here, has to do with our new friend – inflation. The positions of the cycles also influence the outcome – and the longer cycles have wide variations in their troughing windows. 

To satisfy the criterea for an intermediate correction, nearly all 11 S&P 500 sectors will need to participate in the precipitous decline. Today, tech bore the brunt of the decline as we continued to see rotation back into the value/cyclical sectors, particularly those that benefit from inflation. This creates a math problem because different sectors have different weightings and influence on the indexes. With the highest index weighting at 27%, Tech can weigh the major indexes down like an anchor – even when the other sectors are trying to float.

The labels below from today show the current sector weightings in order of their influence. Four out of the 11 sectors were still positive (green versus red) today. Healthcare would be defensive and expected to perform better in a decline, so it does not count as much in my analysis of the day. But Financials, Industrials, and Basic Materials are risk-on sectors that all benefit from higher inflation and interest rates. Energy benefits as well – and it was barely negative.

Also, there is a bullish, ascending triangle in retail (XRT). Even Warren Buffet believes retailers have pricing power here. By the way, have you noticed the shrinking package sizes at the stores lately? Sneaky! Incidentally, Mr. Buffet announced that he was terrified by current market valuations at the recent Berkshire Hathaway meeting. 

So for the moment, what we are seeing is another rotation out of tech and into sectors that can both preserve their profit margins and benefit from the inflation that is brutally attacking the economy, consumers, and lower-income Americans – courtesy of the Uniparty (both Democrats and Republicans) run amock. 

Our rulers have fallen in love with the printing press and seemingly lost their minds. Or, from a more dystopian perspective, they are purposely levying inflation – the most hideous, regressive, underhanded, and hidden tax known to humans on unsuspecting and Americans. Lower and middle-income earners will suffer the most – just as they always do. Our rulers suggest that only Americans making less than $400,000 will see a tax increase. Really? What a joke! Does that include inflation? Obviously not.

I laugh when all the headlines read, “Inflation is Coming.” Look around, friends; it is already here. Look at housing prices, gas prices, grocery prices, car prices, etc. – what the hell do they mean “it is coming”? The recent rise in lumber prices alone adds $36,000 of additional cost to the price of the average newly constructed home.

I can hardly discuss inflation, as I am seething with anger watching our politicians take this country down the same road as 1920s Weimar Germany. The current crop of politicians are so unbelievably arrogant in ignoring history’s lessons. I am darn sick and tired of their new love with MMT (Modern Monetary Theory). It is not unlike the Covid-19 vaccine- we are all current guinea pigs of inadequately tested and proven theories. 

With MMT, particularly the leftist politicians and bankers think they can print as much money as they want because the US Dollar is the current world reserve currency. The truth is – MMT really stands for “more money today.” The hell with the future. It is the current ruling class version of the argument “this time its different.” Those are the four most dangerous words in financial market history. IT IS NEVER DIFFERENT – no matter how much smarter this group thinks they are than their predecessors throughout history.

Here are the lessons of history – in case one of these morons ever reads this. There isn’t a single fiat currency that has lasted as a reserve currency for more than four generations in the history of the world. Moreover, there is no dominant world power that has lasted more than four generations at the global helm in recent memory. That is what a fourth turning is all about.

I am seething because I have to sit and watch our corrupt political class walk us right into a collapse, surrendering world domination to China. Sometimes, I even believe a cabal in our government wants the collapse so they can reboot us in the authoritarian model of China and the World Economic Forum’s Great Reset. The US Constitution is a terrible inconvenience for these people. They prefer to toss it out in favor of the surveillance state.

Know this; there are no accidents or coincidences. It is almost as if “heads” – the central planners win – “tails” the people lose. I can hardly contain my disdain for Washington, D.C. these days, and the incompetent, ego-maniac bureaucrats that run it. Our founders feared this day would come from the outset of the country.

And let me be clear; I see little (if any) difference between Republicans and Democrats, save a very, very few good ones on each side. 

Make no mistake about where we are – this is the people versus the ruling class. This is not about Democrats versus Republicans, conservatives versus liberals, or one group identity versus another. All of that is a smokescreen to attempt to distract and divide us. God forbid if all of us got together on our common ground and threw all the “&*%(#$” out. If the people don’t get a grip soon, the Uniparty will take this country – and our assets – down. And it will happen sooner rather than later.

So maybe we party on from this minor low – I haven’t decided yet. I don’t want to be the last one to turn the lights out. I cannot possibly convey how bad things could get if we don’t turn these corrupt, asinine policies – and the inflation that follows – around soon. You know it in your heart. 

Unlike the ruling class, you have common sense, haven’t taken a payoff, and have no agenda other than a decent life for your friends and family.

Thanks for letting me rant.

A.F. Thornton

Update 1 – 5/4/2021

Careful here – we are coming into important support for both the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ 100 – so look for a possible bounce. I just covered some beautiful shorts (see morning commentary). 

Adding further caution (if you are short), the put/call ratio is high, up around .71 (a level associated with recent minor lows). The indexes are approaching these multiple support structures with the put/call ratio and the daily chart cocked for a short-term low.

I want to see these support areas play out before taking any further short positions. I like to buy when fear is high and sell when it is low. At the moment, fear is high – at least relative to recent declines and certainly in the very short term. I prefer to cover my shorts in the circumstances, otherwise I am trading with, rather than against, the crowd.

But it is notable that the NASDAQ 100 gapped down and through the daily 21-EMA, slicing like a knife through butter. Of course, this is intraday and the day is not over, I am in love with profits, not my opinion. Don’t get too bearish yet and bag some profits here if you took my advice this morning and shorted at the balance area lows.

AF Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 5/3/2021

I encourage you to review the View from the Top published last night for an intermediate market perspective. As you will recall, we have been dealing with a balance range in the market (S&P 500) bounded at the bottom by 4166 and the top at 4193. In fact, it is a consolidation that dates back the April 19th peak.

Last Thursday, we had a “Look Above and Fail” per the Balance Rules. Taking that as a cue that the market was ready to roll over, traders took the price down to the bottom of the balance range on Friday, where the shorts piled in, spiking the put/call ratio to a level nearly as high as the fear the ratio expressed at the recent March lows. 

Yet, no new sellers emerged and the market successfully defended the lower boundary. Now those shorts are trapped with bad location. I feel bad for these traders, but the fact that the market held the boundary low is a bullish, contrary indicator (WWSHD – when what should happen doesn’t}.

As I had suspected and written here Friday, these traders now need to buy to cover their shorts. We have already seen this manifested in Globex last night, and price has managed to move back slightly above the balance range, but still below Thursday’s fake-out and Friday’s highs.

So this morning, we will open with a true gap higher, and gap rules technically are in play. As with any true gap, assume there is potential for fade with the caveat that we are opening within a larger balance area (with the fake-out high) which may mute some of the shock and awe. I would shy away from any gap fill setup that is not opening out of range.

So a breakout above Thursday’s all-time high at 4199 is our upside reference. A break above there could take us to 4250. The bottom of the balance area at 4166 is the obvious downside reference with multiple tests at that level. A break there puts 4160.00 into play.

We have the short-covering and early month fund flows on our side today, but don’t lose sight of the lofty levels. Set a disaster stop and be on alert for liquidation breaks. I believe we are finishing the final leg of the rally before the 18-month cycle correction gets underway.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Outlook – 4/30/2021 – Update

S&P 500 Futures - 5-Minute Regular Session Intraday Chart

As represented by the S&P 500 index, the market has reached this morning’s target – the bottom of the balance range.

I would expect a bounce, as the market is oversold on a 5-minute time frame, and we have some divergences at the low. But any price acceptance below the range has the potential for a tone change.

Be careful, but it does not take much of a stop loss to try a long trade here. Your job is always to find low-risk entry points in either direction and supported by the probabilities. The afternoon drive should start shortly.

A.F. Thornton

Epilogue – 4/29/2021

The morning outlook will follow. This Epilogue is lengthy, so you may want to save this for a later time when you can really sit down and focus. Then start by clicking on the above chart to enlarge it. Either place it in a separate window or print it so you can follow along. Study and repetition are as important in day trading as with any serious endeavor. The market rarely has any new moves. The moves have all happened before because human nature does not change. We capitalize on that concept for one of our edges in trading.

Some setups do stop working in time. We expect that. When everyone starts doing the same thing, it tends to cancel out the setup. To the extent required, I stay on top of the waning popularity of any setup as it loses its edge. Edge is what this endeavor is all about.

But typically, maintaining my edge is not a problem. The reason most of what I teach here does not tend to change or lose its edge is that I teach you how to “think.” Thinking is in short supply everywhere these days, and trading the financial markets is no exception. You might understandably yearn for easy, rote, and mechanical responses to the markets. Who wouldn’t? If this – then this. But the truth is that mechanical rules have their place but are not the end-all. Even I don’t solely rely on my mechanical algorithms.

All that being said, today was a fabulous day trading day and one for your notebooks. Grab the chart, print the Gap and Balance rules, and print the morning and interim outlooks. Now, let’s relive the day, starting with the pre-market outlook.

Summarizing, I noted pre-market that a combination of Balance Rules and Gap Rules would be working together at the open. I cautioned that recency bias might lead you to believe that Balance Rule #2, “Look Above Balance and Fail,” would be unlikely to apply. I cautioned you to keep an open mind. Sure enough, the rule prevailed.

When the market gaps above a three-day balance area, by definition, the market is subject to a reordering of thinking. The reordering question is; will market participants accept the new, higher overnight prices or reject them? That is how the auction process works. Equally significant today, the top of the balance range at 4193.75 was the ceiling for the last eight market sessions. A breakout of eight-day resistance was even more consequential in the context of a “Look Above and Fail” related to the three-day balance range.

The measured move for a break out of balance is double the balance range. Yesterday (Thursday, 4/29), the market opened at that calculated move. Perhaps that was one indication that the opening gap would start to fill, and traders would test the validity of the breakout by forcing the price back to the range top level.

Significant gaps such as the one today don’t always fill the same day, and many times the market goes sideways the rest of the day digesting the new gains – a form of price acceptance in and of itself. Other times, especially on smaller gaps, you can have a “Gap and Go” scenario where the market blasts out of the open market and never looks back. Strong internals usually supports Gap and Go (e.g., breadth, advances versus declines, advancing volume versus declining volume, and up versus downticks).

Also, this morning we came into the session with overnight inventory 100% long – so we would expect a counter-auction at or near the opening. I even suggested shorting a violation of the low of the first one-minute bar as a starting point in the pre-market outlook, with a stop a few ticks above that bar. For the first half of the day, that is all you had to do. But even without that more sophisticated approach, you could have followed the applicable balance rule as set forth below:

Look Above and Fail. Prices move above the balance area high but fail to find acceptance and reverse back into the balance area. Now you have a short trade, with your stop above the high just made above the balance area, with a target to cover at the opposing low end of the balance area.”

Using my suggested, sophisticated approach this morning, I teed up a five-minute candle chart with all key levels marked. (By the way, I do this every day, and so should you.) I then shorted a violation of the low of the first one-minute bar using the S&P 500 E-mini futures as my instrument of choice. I executed at 4204.50. Subsequently, I had to ride the trade up a few ticks, and then the index rolled over in my favor.

Let me briefly digress here to say that you could have used the same approach with the NASDAQ 100 index, other stock indexes, and sometimes individual stocks. My instrument of choice turned on sector leadership out of the gate this morning, which favored the construction of the S&P 500 index. Making the appropriate trading vehicle choice will be a topic for a separate discussion down the road.

So, now I am in the short trade, and I followed price down to the top of the balance area at 4193.71, using a dual violation of a downtrend line and the Navigator™ Algo Trigger as my trailing stop to lock in profits, as the market moved lower and in my favor.

The top of the Balance Area at 4193.71 was my first logical target, as Balance Rules are not triggered until price materially enters into the Balance Area, but the rules anticipate such a retest. I was also motivated by a rational, anticipated counter-auction to correct overnight inventory. As well, a full or partial Gap-fill was a reasonable expectation, given that the market already opened at the targeted, measured move of the breakout from balance. So far, so good.

At the initial target, the top of the Balance Area, the index barely hesitated and soon cut right through the balance area top and right into the balance area. I had not been stopped out as yet, so now I had my second target – generated by the Balance Rules – the balance area low around 4166.

There was no guarantee that the market would reach or stop at the Balance Area low. With the appearance of a critical reversal top developing on the daily chart intraday, the market could have deteriorated further, capitulating and solidifying the nominal 18-month peak.

While I still expect that peak around the first week of May, we are in the zone for the peak even here and now. For the most part, however, I was 90% sure that the market would pivot higher from the expected target, and I sent out the interim update this morning literally as the market approached the Balance Area low at 4166. You can observe the position of the index from the chart included with the morning’s interim update.

Even though I was almost sure price had achieved the target, if the market wanted to further capitulate for more gains, I let the trade ride up a bit, allowing the market to take me out of the trade with a violation of both the trigger stop and a trendline break.

As a result, I covered my short positions at 4178 or $1500 per contract. The day margin on the contract is $550. So, I used $550 of my capital for each contract to make $1500 (triple my investment) in just a few hours. Had I used a micro, the profit would have been $150 per contract, using $55 of capital for the margin.

By the way, the advantage of trading multiple contracts is that there would be nothing wrong with covering a few of them near 4166, picking up another 10 points or $500 per contract, and letting the remaining contracts ride on the original plan. Always keep that in mind, including using multiple micros if you don’t have the capital to trade multiple E-minis.

Better yet, you could also do what I did today – if you can make the mental leap. One of the most challenging things for a trader is to instantly switch gears from long to short or short to long. It is a complex mental shift and not always appropriate. Sometimes I can do it, sometimes not.

It is usually easier to switch gears when my first trade has already gone substantially in my favor, and I am using setups or specific rules to guide me. Otherwise, it is best to take your trades in the direction of the prevailing macro trend – currently bullish.

The point is, using the rules and our recent narrative, you will realize that the signal to cover my shorts was a simultaneous buy signal, which I gladly executed.

Most trading systems, including mine, have a reverse button. So now, I reversed the short trade to long, using the same algo trigger I had used on the way down and a new, rising uptrend trendline as my stop to lock in profits as the new trade moved in my favor. The new trade was the mirror image of the earlier short.

It is not always clear where the up target will be in such a reversal, and I did not necessarily expect the somewhat rare “V” bottom we experienced today, but that is what the market delivered. Usually, the market would recover about half the decline and then roll over again, perhaps providing a third trading opportunity.

So now I am long at 4178, moving my stop up with the trigger and trendline. The algo trigger/trendline break sell signal came late in the day at 4202 for a profit of $1200 per E-mini contract or $120 per micro. The entire intraday swing trade delivered $2700 per contract for me. But for many, even $270 per micro would have been more than acceptable. It all depends on your risk tolerance and account size.

In conclusion, then, I started with a bit of thinking, followed by a reliable setup, adhered to the setup rules (with a dose of some technical analysis), and the rest is history. That is your “Look Above Balance and Fail” trade.

I hope this has been instructive. Feel free to email me at info@BluprintTrading.com with any questions.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Outlook – 4/29/2021 – Update

This morning – I mentioned balance rules applied which you can find here. The second rule is applicable today – and it is classic:

“Look above and fail. Prices move above the balance area high but fail to find acceptance and reverse back into the balance area. This is now a short, with a stop above the high just made above the balance area, with a target to cover at the opposing low end of the balance area.”

Now, click the chart to enlarge it. The balance area high is marked at about 4193 and the low at 4166. While we were expecting a counter-auction at the open, both because overnight inventory was 100% long and we had a true gap (likely to fill at least partially), the market should have turned at or near the balance area high around 4193. When it didn’t, the target was the lower end of the balance range – 4166. The S&P 500 index just completed that process. This was a classic application of the rule.

While a bit sophisticated and more related to gap rules, had you placed a short a few ticks below the low of the first one-minute bar, with your stop a few ticks above it, you would still be in that short now, depending on your exit strategy. Of course, you could also have shorted as you dropped into the range.

Put this update in your trading notebook.

Let me also comment on the WWSHD (when what should happen doesn’t). This is a failed breakout – unless there is a major turnaround before the close. Add that to your market narrative. Moreover, after earnings announcements, several key stocks popped higher and then reversed. This trend has been going on for a few weeks now. This indicates to me that the market is getting tired.

Two FAANGMAN stocks, Apple and Google, blew out their earnings last night. Fed Chairman Powell had kind words. President* Biden promised us a utopian future if we only give him another $6 trillion – on top of the current $30 trillion of debt already on the books. I am not even mentioning the unfunded liabilities off the books.

After all of this, the market delivers a failed breakout? My friends, the 18-month cycle peak is likely close at hand. By the time most traders realize it has started, the market will likely already be halfway through the correction. It will be swift and brutal, at least in the early stages.

The market may pivot now that the bottom of the balance range has been tagged. If it doesn’t, look out below. Next stop – 4117.

The Navigator Swing Strategy remains 100% cash.

Be careful!

A.F. Thornton

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