Pre-Market Outlook 9/24/2021

The market managed to conquer both the 5 and 50-day lines yesterday but needs to add the 21-day line to its belt to complete the recovery and trigger a buy signal. Then, the question will be whether the market can move into a blow-off stage and achieve new highs, or simply move sideways for a bit between the swing low this week and the old all-time high. My best guess is the latter scenario is more likely than the former.

In the Founders Group, we are back to buying the dip on the hourly charts. Our preference is the S&P 500 with a mix of Energy (XLE) and Financials (XLF). I will have more to say over the weekend. As it is Friday, I will not be day trading today, but I would look to yesterday’s half-back at 4411 for a bull/bear threshold.

Staying above 4411 keeps the recovery alive. Moving above yesterday’s high at 4455 is bullish. Moving into the lower half of yesterday’s range would keep the bears at the table for now.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook 9/22/2021

As I take a deep dive into the current problems in China, I get a bit excited at first. While our illustrious elites have been trying to convince us that China is ready to overtake us at the global helm, the Chinese are in the process of clamping down on their semi-capitalist economy. That may be a primary reason that the Chinese Evergrande property developer (maybe we should call them “Never Grand”) is choking). President Xi is even donning Mau outfits of late.

The CCP does not want to share power with tech oligarchs or other capitalist Chinese billionaires. They are taking a lesson from Donald Trump’s experience.  What do you think would happen if Facebook or its Chinese equivalent “banned” Chairman Xi as they did with the U.S. President? We all know it would never happen. So the CCP and Xi are shoring up their power base.

If Xi is reasserting a more communist form of central economic planning (his), this is good for China’s competitors such as the U.S. and Europe. Central economic planning doesn’t work. Don’t get me wrong, even a communist economy can compete for a time, especially with slave labor. Perhaps that is why our illustrious ruling class here at home has opened our borders to millions of illegal migrants. Our elites like slave labor too.

I say I get excited “at first” about the Chinese crackdown because “stakeholder” capitalism is just as scary a trend here at home. When I put my money in a company, I am seeking profits, not nirvana. Of course, I want the company to follow the law and be a good corporate citizen. But I save the loftier goals for my charitable contributions. And the best thing that could happen to our country right now is decentralization, not central planning.

Some say defund the police. I say defund Washington D.C. We have the central government our founders feared. Like Rome, it is likely to be our undoing. Does anyone believe that we still have a Republic? I certainly don’t.

Of course, these thoughts arise in the context of the Fed announcements today. The Fed is the penultimate exercise in central planning. Think of it as Wall Street’s version of Cocaine. It takes more and more to get high (or higher as it were).

The Dot Com bubble comes along. Dropping interest rates still works to ease the pain. Then the Financial Crisis hits. Decreasing rates to zero isn’t enough. So the Fed started buying bonds and increasing its balance sheet (taking on debt and known as Quantitative Easing). As the latest crisis de jure seems to be passing, the Fed tries to normalize and start shrinking its balance sheet in 2017 and 2018. That does not go so well – as the stock market drops 20%.

Then the Pandemic hits. Some governments drop rates below zero. The real rate in the U.S. is now well below zero with inflation. But that isn’t enough either. So now the Fed has to buy even more bonds (QE III).

The point is that each period of tightening monetary policy is shorter, while each period of easing is longer. Each period of tightening is a lower interest rate than the last until we actually contemplate negative rates, and each round of increasing the balance sheet is at least double the last one. It is no wonder that inflation is becoming a serious problem.

They say it is lonely at the top. Russia no longer owns U.S. Treasuries. They prefer gold. China has substantially reduced its holdings. Japan has reduced its holdings as well. Soon, the only buyer of U.S. Treasuries will be the Fed. We call that a Ponzi scheme when Bernie Madoff does it. How does that work anyway? Can we really sell the debt to ourselves?

We all know that this won’t end well. But you can make a hell of a lot of money in the final stages. A not so unlikely scenario is that we make another “blow-off” run out of the current trough. The rally could literally blow your socks off. If the Fed is Cocaine to the markets, FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) is Cocaine to a “blow-off.”

Imagine you are coming into year-end having been protective of your client’s capital, and then the market decides to put another 15% to 20% on the board. Many a money manager that misses the gain will be fired. So FOMO kicks in, and the protective, sensible managers throw in the towel and jump in with both feet. That is typically how bull markets end. On the charts, the line is parabolic.

Where does that leave us today? Perhaps the only tool politically feasible for the Fed right now is to talk about talking about tapering bond purchases or raising rates. Likely, they cannot and will not do it. Don’t forget, Chairman Powell ostensibly wants to be reappointed in February. He won’t cross Janet Yellen or the Biden administration. That is how it works in the affairs of men and women and the other 98 genders.

Whether it is Congress with the deficit or the Fed with their balance sheet, it is always about kicking the can down the road, until we run out of road. Perhaps the most shocking aspect of this is how much longer it lasts than our instincts tell us it will.

In my chair, I have had this feeling in the pit of my stomach since March. I am sure that I am not alone. It feels like we are defying the laws of gravity.

On the other hand, with China clamping down on their free markets, and assuming our overlords clamp down ours somewhat less, the U.S. can continue to get away with what amounts to monetary murder. Because the only thing that facilitates the insanity is the fact that the U.S. dollar is still the world’s reserve currency. When that status is seriously threatened, Humpty Dumpty will take a great fall. I hope I am on our farm in Kefalonia, Greece on that day.

Today’s Plan

We have achieved the time and price objectives for the nominal 80-day cycle and would expect to move out following the Fed announcement. I don’t normally day trade on Fed announcement days, though I don’t expect anything beyond jawboning today.

We may finally be entering the sideways market I have been expecting for some time. And we could also be heading for a blow-off top from here. Regardless, I will be looking for an Algo buy signal for the Navigator swing trading strategy. But we have to conquer all of our key lines to shift back to a bullish posture. The rally needs to be monitored carefully as the market’s behavior has been weaker of late.

Key levels for day trading today will be 4411.50 which is the top of the recent gap, 4385 which is yesterday’s high and the bottom of the gap, and the swing low at 4293.75. Keep in mind that yesterday’s low at 4329.25 is also the Weekly Expected Move low and should be the worst case for the rest of the week.

I would assume further balance within the confines of yesterday’s regular session range with potential for change above and below. The larger move may easily come later today once the FOMC announces.

This is one of those days when context and news precludes a specific day trading plan, which is why I avoid day trading on such days.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 9/21/2021

Sometimes the crowd makes me want to laugh. The headlines yesterday told us that a correction might finally be starting in the stock market. And, of course, the China real estate market is going to crash the global economy.

My question is, where have these jokers been for three weeks? The market started the correction the day after Labor Day. The decline is closer to ending, not starting. It is quite probable that the market is already attempting a rally out of the 80-day cycle low. Of course, I will wait for confirmation from the algorithm, but we are much closer to a rally attempt than further declines, at least for now. The measured move has been made and completed at yesterday’s low.

The first task will be to close above the 5-day line. We tested the line overnight. So a move above the line at 4396 (basically the roundie at 4400) is bullish. Sellers were unable to gain traction at all last night, turning higher at the 21-week line, well above yesterday’s low. That line, often providing support in an 80-day cycle markdown, sits at 4341 or so. Yesterday’s low sits at 4293.75.

A retest of yesterday’s low is always possible, but it would be wise to stay bullish as long as the market holds the overnight low at 4341. The Fed meeting starts today, and we will have an announcement tomorrow. Do you really think the Fed will begin tapering in light of the China situation and the stock market’s woes? Would or could they have tapered anyway? I think not.

My best guess is that the market holds in the overnight range and launches a new rally tomorrow. There is work ahead to be sure in retaking all of our important lines, but I will not join the bearish crowd quite yet. They are always a day late and a dollar short. We went to cash early this month and will look to deploy it. By the way, Energy is holding up well in the correction so far.

A.F. Thornton

Interim Report – 9/16/2021

The action today is a bit more bullish than bearish. Traders tested both ends of yesterday’s range, but the turn at the low came higher than yesterday’s low, so that gives a small hat tip to the bulls. The chart has some volatility to it, but the bottom is rounded.

There have been some nice trades in the trips back and forth today – but the trend remains sideways until it isn’t. Essentially, yesterday and today are almost inside days from Tuesday (depending on whether you are looking at cash or futures), so it amounts to a trading range.

In our ongoing Chinese saga, the Australians just canceled their order for French submarines in favor of U.S. nuclear subs. This will be the second country we have allowed to have these subs – so it is a rarity. Great Britain was the first. Understandably, President Macron is furious in France, but it underscores the rising tensions over Taiwan in the region.

We need to keep a close eye on the Taiwan issues, and perhaps Ukraine in Russia. Our adversaries will make their move when they perceive us to be weak. The disastrous Afghanistan exit has exacerbated the risks.

A.F. Thornton

Interim Update – 9/14/2021

You can see from this morning’s bulletins that we are having fun with the website programming.

As the market has been one time framing lower now for six RTH sessions, there is a downtrend in place and that downtrend line marks your shift to a bullish case. The line is dynamic so mark it on your charts. I would use 4460 on the December contract as the line right now – but it changes as price moves.

Another good proxy for a bullish reversal is to look for the price to come up through the 21-EMA on the hourly chart and successfully retest the line to make sure it will hold.

On the bear side, the sellers are working to break 4434.50 which continues their rare moment in the sun.

Treasuries (as measured by the TLT) seem to be breaking up out of their symmetrical triangle – portending lower rates. So the pressure may be off the Fed as far as tapering, but the greater concern is why rates are falling. Is it a flight to quality? Is it evidence that the economy is slowing? Is it a combination of both?

Fear seems too elevated to bring us a huge selloff, so I am still of the mind that this is part of the 80-day cycle trough developing. The precise due date for the low is the 22nd.

The cycle lows rarely follow the calendar as closely as we do but this corrective phase should be ending within a day or two of that target. The next big wave down is the 20-week cycle due in late November. That is where it promises to get more interesting.

Stay tuned,

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 9/14/2021

The bears sold off for 5 days, which is significant compared to other pullbacks since the pandemic low. The sell-off came earlier than in recent months on the cycle. We are in an 80-day cycle markdown, so it was slated to be a bit more serious.

Next week’s FOMC announcement will be important. That increases the chance of the market starting to go sideways.
We found support yesterday at the bottom of the bull channel, which is just a few points below Friday’s low.

September or October should be the high of the year and the start of 15 to 20% correction. There is a 40% chance it has already begun.

There have been many selloffs comparable to this one since the pandemic low. The bulls bought each one, and they will probably buy this one as well.

It has been strong enough so that the bulls will probably need a micro double bottom this week before they can get back to a new high.

We might get sharp acceleration up to above 4600 before a more serious correction begins, possibly after the September 22 FOMC meeting. If so, that would probably be a blow-off top.

Yesterday’s low is now the key line in the sand. Consumer inflation came in slightly below expectations this morning, but still high by recent standards.

We are watching developments in China vis a vis Taiwan closely.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 9/8/2021

I consider yesterday to be the first full business day after summer. Except for the Tech Monsters, there was quite a bit of broad-based but minor selling.

Concerning our market proxy, the S&P 500 futures, we tested the balance area low at 4410.75 yesterday and breached it overnight. But we are back into balance at this writing. So sellers did not pile in, at least overnight, giving us a WWSHD signal.

Also, when the balance area is breached and the price returns into the range, it frequently travels to the other end, which would be the all-time highs. Anyway, as this was also the down mode of the minor, 10-day cycle – nothing significant has been violated yet.

But, key levels have shifted focus to areas below the current price as any movement below yesterday’s low would be significant.  You have the overnight low at 4497, also in the realm of the roundie at 4500. The top of the single prints is at 4492. Balance Rules remain in play for the larger range (4410.75 to the all-time high). 

The concept “When What Should Happen Doesn’t” applies to today’s session.  Failure to find acceptance below 4410.75 keeps things status quo even with the overnight price exploration since we don’t “count” that towards structural repair or change.  

In the bigger picture, today puts us exactly two weeks from the next FOMC announcement.  The focus will start to shift towards that meeting gradually.  Thus far, sellers have been noticeably absent in this market, and there is no obvious catalyst that would attract them until the meeting.  Sector rotation continues to keep the overall market healthy.

A.F. Thornton

Interim Update

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Have a great holiday weekend.

A.F. Thornton

New Navigator Swing Buys – 8/30/2021

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

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

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

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

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

This brings us up to 50% invested.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 8/30/2021

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Today’s Plan

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

A.F. Thornton

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