Category Founder’s Trading Journal

S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / Today’s Close – 4084 / +61.75 pts (+ 1.54%)

Originally Published Friday Afternoon, September 9, 2022
Updated Sunday, September 11, 2022

Navigator Swing Strategy™

Support/Resistance Chart Highlights and Zones
Support/Resistance Chart Highlights and Zones

Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

Navigator Trading Sandboxes™

Click here to learn about Trading Sandboxes and how they work. The table below lists the granular price obstacles a trader will encounter inside the expected move ranges. The colors correspond to the “DEM” and “WEM,” marking the range on the chart above. The DEM and WEM help us narrow our focus for the day and week ahead. We also included a few important price levels outside the range boundaries – for the less probable occasions when the price exceeds the edges.

S&P 500 Expected Move Table of Key Price Reaction Levels
S&P 500 Expected Move Table of Key Price Reaction Levels

To successfully navigate this data, traders need to monitor the price auction with volume profile histograms for the day and a cumulative profile aggregating the last 10-20 sessions. As price travels north or south from level to level, volume tapers off at reversal points, and the process begins anew in the opposite direction. Professionals call this “price discovery.”

Enhanced View

Support/Resistance Chart Highlights and Zones
Support/Resistance Chart Highlights and Zones

Founder's Journal and Trading Notes - Weekly Perspective

Below are a few relevant excerpts for today from A.F. Thornton’s trading journal. Check out the full notes with a Subscription, which also includes access to Mr. Thornton’s live charts in the Founders Trading Room. The full journal contains Mr. Thornton’s daily trading plan and reflections on his daily gains and losses. 

References to “the Market” below mean the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini Continuous Futures Contract (now December 2022). 

    A few excerpts on the week and Monday's trading plan...

    • Apologies for the update, but a lot of the numbers needed to be footed to the new, front-month futures contracts. I simplified the charts a bit too.
    • The week ahead includes important retail and wholesale inflation reports (likely to be a yawn), with Quadruple Witching expiration on Friday. The options market gives us a 95-point DEM range for Monday and a 185-point WEM range for the week.
    • I think the Goldman Sachs trading desk best summed up my thinking on Friday. The pain trade is higher. The CPI matters little at this point – it is horrific no matter how you view it. The 4th Quarter performance chase has begun. And the question is – have you hedged your upside? Perhaps the rally has legs into quarter-end. Just don’t count on it.
    • Other than those non-economic motivations, why is the stock market rallying? I don’t pretend to know for sure, which is the beauty of relying on objective signals. Our job is to communicate the buy and sell signals to subscribers as the Navigator Algo generates them. We follow instructions and wait for the narrative to catch up. 
    • Now our task is to wait for the next sell or short signal. It could arrive Monday – or six months from now.
    • Presently, the rally underpinnings lie in the dissonance between potential and realized risks. POTENTIAL risks abound, but the economy has not exactly fallen apart (yet), and unemployment remains low (for now). It is a slow-moving train until it starts downhill.
    • And a lot of cheap money is still sloshing around the system – even though it may not formally show on the broker-dealer order books. Traders are in front of their screens, just holding their orders off the book. If the money is not there, then who is buying? Where is the volume originating? 
    • Sideline cash is historically high, as is the Street’s surge in buying downside protection (Puts and VIX Calls) over the past few weeks. The rally may reflect another FOMO match lighting the shorts’ pants on fire. Don’t forget that money managers face third-quarter performance music in a few weeks. And their performance this year leaves a lot to be desired.
    • And then we have that flight to quality thing with the dollar and geopolitical unrest. What an incredible advantage it is for our country to have the global reserve currency. It is sad that our leaders have sewn the seeds of its destruction.
    • And did you think about this rally explanation? Has the Orwell Administration saved a little juice for the November midterms?
    • As I have previously stated, the stronger the stock market is, the easier it will be for the Fed to hike rates again. Market rebounds are a gift. There are rumors of a full 1% increase at the next meeting. Yet, we know something will break eventually. We won’t be complacent.
    • Here is a thought: if higher rates aren’t reducing inflation (likely), maybe the Fed will raise their inflation target from 2% to 3%. It is the Fed equivalent of changing the definition of “recession” or “vaccine.”
    • Whether bullish or bearish, the angle of attack in the past few sessions is unsustainable. Price needs to level out for a few candles, or it will dive into a stall like an airplane with its nose too high. And even if this is a healthy turnaround rally, a retest of the September 7 low is probable – maybe on options expiration (9/16) or the Fed rate bump (9/21).
    • The market closed slightly above the previous week’s high, the 5-Week EMA, and the Key 5-Week Navigator Algo Trigger – positives, to be sure. Conquering the 5-month EMA and then the 5-quarter EMA are the next goals for bulls. 
    • Friday’s price closed near the high of the day. Still, the volume dropped considerably from prior sessions (Wall Street’s last day of summer), and the price encountered resistance around 4080. But it conquered the 50 and 100-day lines, and the 50-day line is poised to cross above the 100-day line. These accomplishments trigger Commodity Trading Adviser (CTA) trend-following buys – and that is a big crowd.
    • Look, Friday might be a one-hit-wonder. If not – kudos to the market. Another pain trade punishes the weary.
    • Some bad hombres are in the S&P 500 4080 neighborhood, including the 50% retracement of the recent decline, a minor down trendline from June 16, our proprietary Trend Direction Trigger (the market closed right on it), and a macro low volume node on the cumulative profile. A low-volume node is like being in a valley. Does price want to climb the hill in front or behind it? See the histogram on the right side of the price charts above.
    • W.D. Gann, supposedly one of the greatest stock traders of the early 1900s, always emphasized that corrections geometrically link price AND time. We tend to expect crashes and capitulations – perhaps overemphasizing price. Yet markets can also resolve lofty valuations over time by moving sideways in trading ranges. Take a look at the chart below for examples.

    100-Years of the Dow Jones Industrial Average

    100 Years of the Dow Jones Industrials shows the two important types of corrections. The 1929 Crash was almost a pure price correction. It was relatively quick on the grand scheme of things, but extremely painful. Yet the periods from 1966-1983 and 1999-2013 linked time into the equation - moving sideways as the lower channel lines rose to eventually intersect price. Unlike a quick crash, the time element draws the corrective process out, perhaps prolonging the pain and frustration while also avoiding a 90% collapse like 1929.
    100 Years of the Dow Jones Industrials shows the two important types of corrections. The 1929 Crash was almost a pure price correction. It was relatively quick on the grand scheme of things, but extremely painful. Yet the periods from 1966-1983 and 1999-2013 linked time into the equation - moving sideways as the lower channel lines rose to eventually intersect price. Unlike a quick crash, the time element draws the corrective process out, perhaps prolonging the pain and frustration while also avoiding a 90% collapse like 1929.
    • In other words, the longer the bear takes, the less likely price will surprise us with a crash into the bottom or midpoint of its longer-term channel. Instead, the price moves sideways as its lower or mid-channel line rises to intersect with it. The time/price mechanism merits a separate discussion, but keep the concept in mind.
    • I am still eyeing the Descending Broadening Wedge formation on the daily chart. You might want to review this pattern again. A textbook formation would suggest that the price won’t look back from the 9/7 low. 

    Descending Broadening Wedge Pattern

    Compare to Now

    S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Weekly Chart - Is this a bullish Descending Broadening Wedge Formation?
    • Thinking that the bottom of this bear could be in place is extraordinarily difficult to imagine. But in all my years with financial markets, I cannot remember a bear market ending when I was giddy or optimistic. The bear cannot end without a narrative for the world ending as we know it. Sound familiar?
    • But I still raise the potential of time and price combining into a long-term trading range to correct the current bubble. I have raised the possibility since January, when I first forecast what has now unfolded. The price objective of the descending formation pattern is the old high, not a new one.
    • I will pull up my climbing boots on Monday and follow the auction up the north slope or south as conditions warrant. Stay close to your email/text alerts for signals this week.
    • I am mindful that we are sitting on gains of 142 S&P 500 points achieved in only two trading sessions in the Navigator Swing Strategy. I know we should wait for the next signal, but I am not fond of returning gifts. Are you? Maybe we should exit or take partial profits on a whisper from the hourly strategy?

    A.F. Thornton

    *** At today’s close, readers and subscribers who chose to mirror the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ buy signal on 9/7/2022 have gains of $7125 per Emini futures contract (181%) and $708.00 per SPY call (63%). An investor could have purchased three calls at the buy signal point for roughly the same cost as one futures contract.

    BluPrint’s business model for retail services is sharing the buy and sell/short signals generated by our proprietary Navigator Algorithms™ for the S&P 500 index. Subscribers can implement the signals with the SPY ETF, SPX or SPY options, S&P 500 EMini (and micro) futures, or a combination of these instruments as the context warrants. 

    Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. They have different characteristics with comparative advantages and disadvantages. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee that you will achieve similar results, nor do we.

    A.F. Thornton is not a financial advisor, nor is he your financial advisor. He only expresses his opinion based on his experience. Your financial situation and experience may be different. This blog is for educational and inspirational purposes only. Your investments are solely your responsibility. You must conduct your own  research.

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    S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / Today’s Close – 4005.50 / +25.50 pts (+ 0.64%)

    Published Thursday Afternoon, September 8, 2022

    Navigator Swing Strategy™

    S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels
    S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels

    Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

    Navigator Trading Sandboxes™

    Click here to learn about Trading Sandboxes and how they work. The table below lists all key signposts a trader will encounter in today and this week’s expected move ranges. The ranges are colored in with a few important levels listed above and below the ranges. The colors correspong the the DEM and WEM on the chart above.

    To keep it simple. focus on the  color coordinated support and resistance clusters marked in the S&P 500 index chart above.

    Founder's Journal and Trading Notes

    Below are a few relevant excerpts for today from A.F. Thornton’s trading journal. Check out the full notes with a Subscription, which also includes access to Mr. Thornton’s live charts in the Founders Trading Room. The full journal contains Mr. Thornton’s daily trading plan and reflections on his daily gains and losses. 

    References to “the Market” denote the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini continuous futures contract. BluPrint’s public business model is sharing buy and sell/short signals generated from its proprietary Navigator Algorithms™ for the S&P 500 index. The Founders implement the signals with cash SPY ETF, options on the SPX or SPY, and S&P 500 EMini and micro futures.

      A few excerpts on the market and tomorrow's trading plan...

      • There were no surprises from Fed Chairman Powell this morning. We had to manage our stop actively in the volatility, but yesterday’s swing buy signal gripped nicely, and the volume was terrific on today’s follow-through rally. 
      • The rally is still guilty until proven innocent – judged a short-covering (Gamma squeeze) bear reflex rally.
      • The next resistance cluster is 4040 to 4050. Support lies from 3988 to 4005. A close at or above resistance is bullish and below support bearish. Generally, closes above 4100 are bullish. The zone from 3900 to 4000 is neutral. Price acceptance below 3900 is bearish.
      • Watch the price/volume relationship carefully. Keep an eye on Junk Bonds (JNK) to confirm the S&P 500 rally. JNK led the rally and likely will lead the next decline. Reference the table above for signposts inside the clusters.
      • I still believe the market will dip into the Hurst Nominal 80-day cycle low, coinciding with quarterly/monthly expiration and the Fed meeting (9/16 and 9/21, respectively). The dip does not necessarily forecast a new low (below 9/7 at 3883.50). 
      • Price could retest or come in higher. Retests are common a week after a new low. We will keep our rally expectations conservative in the circumstances and continue to move stops up to preserve gains. For non-subscribers – the 5-day EMA line is a good stop reference.
      • We continue to keep a close eye on the 10-year treasury rate. The US Dollar finally stalled, likely helping the stock rally.
      • Price bullishly closed above the Navigator Algo trigger line today.
      • Until otherwise indicated, the market is in its third wave down, arguably the cruelest leg of any bear market. The rally is likely a bear retracement rather than a new bull. The alternate thesis calls for a trading range, and Thursday’s low could be in the bottom of the range.
      • What if this is THE bottom? Nobody expects the bear to end here, which is why it could. Time will tell.
      • Negative Gamma pressure persists below 4000.
      • Tomorrow’s target is to reevaluate when the market tags 4040-4050. We will closely manage our stops.

      A.F. Thornton

      *** At today’s close, those who took the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ buy signal on 9/8/2022 have gains of $4062.50 per Emini futures contract (104%) and $443.00 per SPY call (39%).

      Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee that you will achieve similar results.

      Share with Friends and Family

      Word of mouth is crucial for growing our trading community and providing education and support for your trading decisions. Please feel free to share this with your friends and family if you find the information beneficial.

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      S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / Today’s Close – 3980.00 / +69.50 pts (+ 1.78%)

      Published Thursday Afternoon, September 7, 2022

      Navigator Swing Strategy™

      S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels
      S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels

      Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

      Navigator Trading Sandboxes™

      The daily and weekly trading sandboxes frame our trading sandbox – analagous to where we play for the day or week. To set the edges, we derive the sandbox boundaries from the Black-Scholes option pricing model

      There is a 68% statistical probability that prices will close inside the ranges for the day (DEM) and week (WEM).

      It is invaluable to know the boundaries in advance. Traders can focus on the important support and resistance clusters inside the sandboxes rather than a kitchen sink of levels and indicators. The predictability makes it easier to plan “what if” scenarios in advance.

      Still, working the boundaries can be tricky. We calculate them as of expiration – the applicable daily or weekly NYSE close. That leaves temporary tolerance for the expected moves to post outside the range before expiration. Don’t panic – the price typically returns inside the range expeditiously as dealers and market-makers defend the edges.

      But suppose the price moves substantially beyond the upper or lower boundary – perhaps more than 50 to 75 SPX points? In that case, dealer counterparties must buy or sell futures in the same direction as the boundary violation to hedge their inventory.

      This protective reaction is counterintuitive, as it worsens the range violation and can accelerate the outside move as much as two standard deviations (double the range). Fortunately, this happens only one-third of the time. This is why we respect the sandbox ranges but don’t marry them.

      As mentioned, knowing the boundaries allows traders to focus on the key issues they will likely encounter inside the limits for the trading day and week. The trader maintains awareness of important levels near the outside borders but does not expect to encounter them often.

      The expected move lows and highs can serve as important support, resistance, and reversal points during the day and week. As rather esoteric concepts. Few amateur traders know about the DEM and WEM, much less how to calculate the edges.

      When the price exceeds the boundaries, traders can fade the price back into range with the dealers as expiration approaches. Dealers and market makers are considered smart money. Trading with them is akin to trading with the “house” and far better than trading against them.

      Founder's Journal and Trading Notes

      Below are a few relevant excerpts for today from A.F. Thornton’s personal trading journal and notes. Check out the full notes with a Subscription, which includes access to Mr. Thornton’s live charts in the Founders Trading Room. The full journal contains Mr. Thornton’s daily trading plan and reflections on his daily gains and losses. 

      Be forewarned that the notes can sometimes be offensively blunt and politically incorrect, as Mr. Thornton occasionally vents about geopolitical and economic issues influencing financial markets.

      References to “the Market” in the journal and Blog refer to the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini continuous futures contract. BluPrint’s primary business focus is applying its proprietary Navigator Algorithms™ to the S&P 500 index using the cash SPY ETF, options on the SPX or SPY, and S&P 500 EMini and micro futures as the investment vehicles.

      The Navigator Algorithms™ dictate the buy and sell signals for BluPrint’s Navigator swing strategy. But Mr. Thornton also applies the algorithms to day trade intraday charts down to 2-minute candles. His live, intraday charts are available throughout the day in the Founders Trading Room with a Subscription,

      The algorithms also show whether the S&P 500 is in an uptrend or downtrend. The direction of the index has a considerable influence on the path of individual stocks. The Navigator Algorithms™ can serve as an initial screen to help determine whether you have the wind at your back in stock trading.

        A few thoughts and tomorrow's trading plan...

        • Not surprisingly (see yesterday’s notes), a short Gamma squeeze started in Globex on Tuesday evening / Wednesday morning, triggering a short covering signal for the aggressive Navigator SwingStrategy accounts at 3923.75 soon after the NYSE Open.
        • The short-covering signal closed out the short-swing positions established on 8/16/2022 at 4302.75 on the index futures. 
        • Each futures contract earned 379 points for a 440% gain per contact. Each SPY put option (.SPY220916P425 purchased on 8/15 for $856) earned $2350 per contract for a 275% gain. Conservative cash swing accounts that took the 8/16/2022 sell signal, but did not short the index, avoided a -7.5% index loss from 8/16 to today’s close.
        • Always remember that shorting the market with leveraged futures and options involves a high degree of risk. Futures are especially risky as you can lose more than your original investment, at least theoretically. It would take a very extreme market event to lose more than you invested as long as you use stops.
        • We issue the buy and sell signals, but it is up to subscribers to choose the instruments to implement them. Soon, we will offer a program that permits you to open an account with an independent broker that automatically mirrors our trades for you as we execute them.
        • Of course, past performance does not guarantee future results. Also, our customer base cannot always immediately act on a text or email signal. Results may vary depending on when and at what price members complete their trades.
        • We also issued a long (buy) signal for Navigator Swing Strategy accounts at 3923.75. We moved the stop up all day, ending the session at 3962.50.
        • The retracement at hand could very well result in a short-lived whipsaw; we never know for sure. If the market heads south, support lies at the top of yesterday’s single prints (3946) and the candle midpoint (3956). You know where our stop is (3962.50), just under yesterday afternoon’s lows.
        • As mentioned yesterday, the 3900 Put Wall was the inflection point to hold the market for now – even though the market dipped as low as 3883.75 in Globex. By no means do I believe that the market is out of the woods. Closes above 4100 are bullish. The zone from 3900 to 4000 is neutral. Any price acceptance below 3900 is bearish.
        • This retracement has the potential to recover as much as 50% to 60% of the August 16 – September 8 decline, though I wouldn’t count on it. I still believe the market will dip into the Hurst Nominal 80-day cycle low, coinciding with monthly expiration and the Fed meeting (9/16 and 9/21, respectively). We will invest and trade accordingly.
        •  I would apply the day timeframe reversal logic to swing accounts with the newly established long positions. And that brings up the plan for tomorrow – Thursday, 9/8/2022.
        • Federal Reserve Chairman Powell will speak before the market opens, catalyzing what comes next. The only surprise would be some easy talk premised on Global economic challenges. I don’t believe the market expects this.
        • Some follow-through gains are likely, as Powell’s hawkish stance is already well-known and unlikely to change. The market started the retracement rally because it was oversold – not because it expected sugar from the Fed Chairman tomorrow. More than likely, the retracement is a dead cat bounce. But the market has already baked in big bad news around the Globe for the short term.
        • We have seen these short squeeze, rip-your-face-off bear-market rallies take us higher than one would expect, so I am looking for some follow-through buying tomorrow to retest 4000 and likely run higher through the stops above 4319. A move to the WEM high (4050) and 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the 8/16 – 9/7 decline (4055) is possible by Friday.
        • Keep a close eye on the 10-year treasury rate, which is still flirting with a new high. New 10-year highs could tank the market, but a peak in the US Dollar (DXY) might offset it. Let’s hope for a double top in the 10-year rate. 
        • Junk Bonds (JNK) threw a nice, positive divergence to the S&P 500 the past few sessions evidencing some risk appetite. Momentum also positively diverged. Both actions often precede or coincide with important intermediate lows.
        • Though not entirely clear, the market has either completed the first leg of the (3) wave down in the larger picture – or has one more thrust down to 3866 to achieve the first leg. Either way, we are in a retracement with a max target of 4055 for the rest of the week. We will continue aggressively raising stops on longs until we are comfortable that the rally has enough legs to widen the protection. 

        • Day traders should watch for a pivot back down beginning at 4035. Longs might sell into any stop run above 4019 and go home.

        • As always, I listed all key support and resistance in the table above – with the WEM and DEM sandboxes shaded. More importantly,  I marked the important clusters on the first chart above. 
        • The levels help you know where to anticipate a pause or turn, but there is no substitute for monitoring the auction level by level to see where the price wants to stick or reverse.
        • Price closed above the 5-EMA on the daily chart – a good start for bulls. But one day does not make a trend – especially with current volatility. Continue to keep an eye on the CBOE equity put/call ratio – but the shorts were already on the ropes today and likely unwound many positions. Yet, the sentiment is still negative enough to continue the rally – even if short-lived.
        • Until otherwise indicated, the market is in its third wave down, arguably the cruelest leg of any bear market. But as we saw today, expect the market to wear you down before delivering the negative goods.
        • I am still looking at an ultimate bear market target of 3000 before year-end, give or take a few hundred points.
        • Don’t forget that all key levels reverse polarity when materially breached. Support becomes resistance and vice versa. The table above shows resistance and support when I published today’s Blog. Move the support and resistance labels as appropriate after the NYSE open. Anything above the current price is resistance, and below is support.
        • Negative Gamma pressure persists – count on more. Dealers will continue to hedge their inventory by selling futures into declines, worsening the down thrusts. But this effect also works in reverse. Dealers must buy futures into rallies, making them stronger and longer. We call this behavior Gamma squeezes or spirals. Did you see this play out today?
        • Heavy volume marked the lows these past few sessions, and the market experienced stalling (high volume with very little price movement) as it wedged into this morning’s low. Volume was above average on the sweep turnaround candle today, but it could have been better.
        • Very serious global tensions continue to mount. Russian President Putin scolded the West today as he pointed out that the Ukrainian grain and food shipments, finally moving through the ports, were snatched up by the EU, with only two ships delivering food to developing nations. He called out the West for its selfishness and hypocrisy. If true, Putin might be right. Maybe Hunter was in charge?
        • As mentioned before, we are experiencing a moment in time that requires us to prepare for the worst. It would help if you had a contingency plan for yourself and your extended family. 
        • It is always advisable to have such a plan, with extra food and water on hand. But perhaps it is more important now than ever before.

        A.F. Thornton

        *** At today’s close, those who chose to short the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ sell signal on 8/15/2022 at 4302.75 booked profits today when we closed out the trade for $16,137.50 per Emini futures contract (375%) and $2350.00 per SPY put option contract (275%). These are the final results for the last Navigator Swing Strategybuy signal. 

        Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee that you will achieve similar results.

        Share with Friends and Family

        Word of mouth is crucial for growing our trading community and providing education and support for your trading decisions. Please feel free to share this with your friends and family if you find the information beneficial.

        Facebook
        Twitter
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        LinkedIn

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / Previous Close 3910.00 on 9-6-2022 / -14 pts (-0.36%)

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels
        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels

        Published Tuesday Afternoon, September 6, 2022

        Navigator Swing Strategy™

        Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

        Navigator Trading Sandboxes™

        The daily and weekly trading sandboxes form our windshields for daily and weekly trading. We derive the sandbox boundaries from the Chicago Board Options Exchange. The exchange uses the Black-Scholes option pricing model to set the edges. 

        There is a 68% statistical probability that prices will close inside the Daily Sandbox for that day (Daily Expected Move or DEM) and Weekly Sandbox for that week (Weekly Expected Move or WEM).

        With the daily and weekly range identified in advance, traders can focus on the important support and resistance clusters that will present inside the boundaries, rather than the kitchen sink of levels and indicators. The predictability makes it easier to plan “if this – then that, if not – then what” scenarios in advance.

        Working the boundaries can be tricky. The probabilities and boundaries are calcualted as of expiration (which occurs at the daily or weekly NYSE close). That leaves  some tolerance for the expected moves to temporarily post outside the range boundaries prior to expiration. 

        However, suppose the price moves substantially beyond the upper or lower boundary – perhaps more than 50 to 75 points? In that case, dealer counterparties must buy or sell futures in the same direction as the boundary violation to hedge their inventory. Otherwise, they stand to lose billions. 

        This protective reaction is counterintuitive, as it makes the boundary violation worse,and can accelerate the outside move up to two standard deviations (double the range). Fortunately, this happens only one-third of the time.

        Knowing the boundaries gives traders an edge for several reasons. First, it allows traders to focus on the key isssues they are likely to encounter inside the boundaries for the trading day and week. The trader maintains awareness of the important levels just outside the ranges, but does not expect to encounter them often.

        Second, the boundary levels themselves can act as important support, resistance, and reversal points during the day and week. Also, when the price exceeds the boundaries, traders can fade the price with the dealers back into range as the options approach expiration. Dealers and market makers are considered the smart money. Trading with them is akin to trading with the  the “house.”

        Founder's Journal and Trading Notes

        Below are a few relevant excerpts for today from A.F. Thornton’s personal trading journal and notes. Check out the full notes with a Subscription, which includes access to Mr. Thornton’s live charts in the Founders Trading Room. The full journal contains Mr. Thornton’s daily trading plan and reflections on his daily gains and losses. 

        Be forewarned that the notes can sometimes be offensively blunt and politically incorrect, as Mr. Thornton occasionally vents about geopolitical and economic issues influencing financial markets.

        References to “the Market” in the journal and Blog refer to the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini continuous futures contract. BluPrint’s primary business focus is applying its proprietary Navigator Algorithms™ to the S&P 500 index using the cash SPY ETF, options on the SPX or SPY, and S&P 500 EMini and micro futures as the investment vehicles.

        The Navigator Algorithms™ dictate the buy and sell signals for BluPrint’s Navigator swing strategy. But Mr. Thornton also applies the algorithms to day trade intraday charts down to 2-minute candles. His live, intraday charts are available throughout the day in the Founders Trading Room with a Subscription,

        The algorithms also show whether the S&P 500 is in an uptrend or downtrend. The direction of the index has a considerable influence on the path of individual stocks. The Navigator Algorithms™ can serve as an initial screen to help determine whether you have the wind at your back in stock trading.

        • Considering the negative energy news out of Europe over the weekend, the markets held up remarkably well today. I am suspicious that there might have been some Fed assistance – but who ever really knows (other than them)?
        • The 3900 Put Wall was the inflection point where the market danced most of the day after the opening rally and immediate sell-off, a typical pattern of late. I am suspicious that 3900 could morph into resistance if the price finds acceptance below. We shall see what the next few days bring.
        • The market is working its way lower, and my target would be 3865 or so before we get a significant flip.
        • Keep in mind that I am never married to any working theory. I go will always go with the flow.
        • I listed all key support and resistance in the table above. I also marked the important clusters on the first chart. The levels help you know where to anticipate a pause or turn, but there is no substitute for monitoring the auction level by level to see where the price wants to stick or reverse.
        • Watch the 5-EMA on the daily chart – traders are still shorting off the level. Closing above the level could be bullish. Also, keep an eye on the CBOE equity put/call ratio. It rose into the high end of the range today and creates the risk of a rip-your-face-off short-covering rally or meaningful reversal point. The sentiment is about as negative as I have seen, presenting a contrarian’s paradise. That is unless the crowd is right…
        • And we are reminded that the market is in its third wave down, arguably the cruelest leg of any bear market. But you can expect the market to tease and wear you out before delivering the negative goods. 
        • Tomorrow (Wednesday) will be tricky. There is a cadre of Fed Governors hitting the speaking circuit. The first question is why? What expectations will they attempt to manage? Will they try to offset the European contagion with a more doveish tone? 
        • Regardless, the speakers are sure to cause some volatility, which is likely why the options market has priced in a 130-point expected move range for the day. I don’t typically day-trade until after the Fed Govs hit the speaking circuit.
        • The 30-Year U.S. Treasury rate closed at a new high yesterday, and the 10-year rate is close to a new high. My best guess is that new highs in the 10-year rate eventually mean new lows in the stock market – below the June low at 3639. But close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
        • I am still looking at an ultimate bear market target of 3000 before year-end, give or take a few hundred points. And, after all, what are a few hundred points among friends?
        • Don’t forget that all key levels reverse polarity when materially breached. Support becomes resistance and vice versa. The table above shows where the S&P Futures traded when I published today’s Blog. Move the support and resistance labels as appropriate after the NYSE opens. Anything above the Open is resistance, and below is support.
        • The parabolic U.S. Dollar, which threatens to take down all the emerging, debt-ridden, global economies, is finishing a rising wedge pattern on the daily chart. The pattern telegraphs a decline coming soon – some welcome relief for the third world debtors. By the way, shouldn’t the debt-ridden “third world” now include the United States Banana Republic of America?
        • A falling dollar is usually good for stocks – but the parabolic dollar uptrend must reverse.
        • Traders continue to add protection, moving the Put Wall, Zero Gamma, and Volatility Trigger lower. 
        • Negative Gamma pressure persists – count on more. Dealers will continue to hedge their inventory by selling futures into declines, worsening the down thrusts. But this effect also works in reverse. Dealers must buy futures into rallies, making them stronger and last longer. We call this behavior Gamma squeezes or spirals.
        • Heavy volume continues, and the daily chart candles have one-time framed lower for quite a few days in a row. Continue to watch how much volume is moving price. Stalling (high volume with very little price movement) often precedes important lows.
        • Don’t forget that the Hurst Nominal 80-day cycle is due to trough soon and could give us a left translation bounce – perhaps from the 1.618 Fib target (approximately 3866). The “perfect” cycle low date coincides with the 9/21 Fed Announcement.
        • Very serious global tensions continue to mount now that Russia has formally weaponized energy. The Germans are no longer laughing at President Trump’s Russian energy dependence warning, are they?
        • As mentioned before, we are experiencing a moment in time that requires us to prepare for the worst. It would help if you had a contingency plan for yourself and your extended family. 
        • It is always advisable to have such a plan, with extra food and water on hand. But perhaps it is more important now than ever before.
        • I plan to be as self-sufficient as possible if there is a need to ride out the economic and political storm. 
        • But my plan is all about keeping my trading screens running. How could I possibly live without trading? I can last a few days without food and water – but my screens?
        • I will be the guy who shorts the crash and doesn’t get paid because the brokerage firm goes bankrupt.

        A.F. Thornton

        *** At today’s close, those who chose to short the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ sell signal on 8/15/2022 at 4302.75 have gained profits of $19,637.50 per Emini futures contract (456.39%) and $3133.00 per SPY put option contract (324.66%). Final results will vary depending on the ultimate exit price of the position at the next Navigator Swing Strategybuy signal. 

        Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee you can achieve similar results.

        Share with Friends and Family

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        Beginning the New Week

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / Previous Close 3924.50 / -44.25 (-1.11%)

        Published Monday Afternoon, September 5, 2022

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels
        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels

        Navigator Swing Strategy™

        Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

        Navigator Trading Sandboxes™

        Sandboxes form our windshield for daily and weekly trading. We derive the Daily and Weekly Trading Sandboxes from levels set by the Chicago Board Options Exchange using the Black-Scholes option pricing model to set the boundaries. 

        There is a 68% statistical probability that prices will close inside the Daily Sandbox for that day (the Daily Expected Move or DEM). The same 68% probability applies to the Weekly Sandbox for that week (we call this the Weekly Expected Move or WEM).

        Working the boundaries can be tricky, as we calculate the probabilities as of expiration (which occurs at the daily or weekly NYSE close). So there is some tolerance for the expected moves to post outside the range boundaries before expiration. 

        However, suppose the price moves too far beyond the upper or lower boundary. In that case, dealer counterparties must buy or sell futures in the same direction as the boundary violation to hedge their inventory. This protective reaction can both accelerate and exacerbate the move.

        Dealers lose many billions of dollars when options expire outside the ranges. When we trade with the dealers, we are with the “smart” money. Think of it as analogous to dealing with the “house” in Las Vegas.

        Knowing these boundaries gives traders an edge for several reasons. First, it allows traders to focus primarily on those key levels they are likely to encounter that trading day and week. The trader knows the important levels outside the ranges but does not expect to encounter them often.

        Second, the boundary levels can act as important support, resistance, and often reversal points during the day and week. Also, when the price exceeds the boundaries, traders can often trade futures back into the boundary levels as the options approach expiration at the NYSE close.

        Founder's Journal and Trading Notes

        Below are excerpts from A.F. Thornton’s personal trading journal and notes. The full notes with the detailed trading plan for today and the rest of the week are only available to subscribers. Be forewarnded that the notes can sometimes be offensively blunt, as Mr. Thornton highlights the various political, geopolitical and economic issues influencing financial markets.

        References to “the Market” below refer to the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini continuous futures contract. Our primary focus is trading the S&P 500 index using the SPY ETF, options on the SPX or SPY, and S&P 500 EMini and micro futures.

        Whether the S&P 500 index is in an uptrend or downtrend has considerable influence on the direction of individual stocks. The Navigator Algorithms™ can serve as an initial screen to help determine whether market head or tailwinds favor long or short trades.

        Wilshire 5000 - Current Elliott Wave Count
        Wilshire 5000 - Current Elliott Wave Count

        Highlights – The Week Ahead:

        • The options market prices a 240-point range (3810-4050 this week), which is extremely volatile for a shortened trading week. The trend is down, and the market is in Negative Gamma – so I am watching for downward Gamma spirals. 
        • It is also noteworthy that the WEM low would take us back into full bear market territory and a potential retest of the June 17, 52-Week low. I also remain on alert for European contagion (see below). The potential for earnings downgrades will be the next catalyst for lower prices, as are rising inflation and interest rates. Note that CTAs have $89 billion to unload beginning tomorrow, which is a whole lot of negative index volume.
        • The daily chart of the broad Wilshire 5000 index immediately above shows that the stock market is in its 1st leg down from the August 15 peak. While it is not clear that this 1st leg has ended yet, the price could soon retrace a micro “4” or perhaps even a short-term “2” wave up before another leg down begins. The point is not to be surprised by an uptick, just don’t count on it.
        • The most important takeaway for the week ahead is that the market has started the third leg down in the primary bear count (red numbers). The next down move will be a 3 (minor) of a 3 (major), where some of the most significant damage occurs in a bear market. The fact that the 3rd leg down arrives in the most seasonally weak period of the year is unhelpful to the bulls. As the composite, seasonal tendency chart for stocks shows, stocks typically decline between now and September 30, the end of the calendar quarter.

        Highlights – Tuesday:

        • The options market prices a volatile 100-point range (3874.50-3974.5) for Tuesday. If the price is retracing or consolidating, trading can be choppy, and it might pay to trade outside in from the developing Value Area High and Low into the highest volume node (Point of Control or POC). It takes time for such responsive trading ranges to set up, so I plan to be patient after the NYSE open tomorrow. Overnight inventory is net long at this writing, so Globex traders may fade the open to unload profitable overnight inventory.
        • I am watching the rising trendlines from the March 2020 China Virus crash and June 17 lows. Each line could provide some temporary support. The lines are easy to forget when I am in the weeds and trading down on a 5-minute chart..
        • I am also paying attention to the support and resistance clusters drawn on the first chart above for pauses and reversals. I am especially watching price reactions at the five and 50-day lines. I will use Thursday’s (9/1) candle as a potential breakout range for the very short term.
        • All other Key Levels are listed in the table above, except for the levels that aren’t available until the morning.

        Global Contagion – Europe Teetering on the Edge:

        • On Friday, G7 nations announced they had devised a worldwide scheme to impose price caps on Russian oil. (JP Morgan believes $380 Oil Possible If Russia Retaliates).

        • Russia has now retaliated. Here is the sequence of events that have transpired:

          •  FRIDAY: Russia will not sell oil to any country abiding by the price caps.

          • SATURDAY: Russia cut off all Natural Gas flows to the EU, openly declaring the cutoff as retaliation for sanctions and weaponizing the gas flows. Putin said there would be no more gas until the West removes sanctions.

          • MONDAY: OPEC plus announced it would reduce oil production by 100,000 barrels per day in a warning shot across the bow. “The 100k cut won’t impact physical volumes to the market, but it signals that OPEC plus is serious about cuts.

          • MONDAY: Europe announced it might suspend trading in power derivatives which is the equivalent of banning short sales in stocks. But this is much worse. The move is tantamount to destroying operating and financial leverage in a $2 trillion economy leveraged on top of less than $20 billion in Natural Gas. Industry players will refuse deals due to the inability to honor contractual promises. If Europe goes forward with the proposal, it is depression-type deleveraging for the EU.

          • MONDAY: Europe will create lines of credit and ease credit requirements for operations to continue running. The West in general (and Europe in particular) must do the only thing they can in a commodity crisis, attempt to financially paper it over as long as they can until securing supplies. The papering is inflation morphing into hyperinflation.
          • MONDAY: Rationing is back on the table again.
          • MONDAY: Crude Oil Futures are up nearly 3% over Friday’s close.
          • More headlines are coming out by the hour, but these are the material contagion points so far that affect all of us. This is a very dynamic situation. For a more comprehensive explanation, read: As Europe Implodes, It Plans “Radical Intervention…” 

        A.F. Thornton

        *** At Friday’s close, those who chose to short the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ sell signal on 8/15/2022 at 4302.75 have gained $18,912.50 per Emini futures contract (402.54%) and $2609.00 per SPY put option (392.81%). 

        Final results will vary depending on the next Navigator Swing Strategybuy signal. Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee similar future results.

        Share with Friends and Family

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        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / 9-1-2022 / +12.25 (0.31%) / Close 3968.75

        Thursday Afternoon Post-Closing Notes

        The S&P 500 Index followed today’s plan, reversing higher just above 3900, which was slightly above previously identified support, including the (i) the 6/17 – 7/14 rising trendline, DEM low, Put Wall, and the bottom of our Fib Buy Zone (61.8% retracement of the 6/17 – 8/17 rally).

        • Shorts should raise their Buy Stop to 4055.50.
        • Short covering drove the rally, and I suspect lower prices await us soon.
        • We continue to see spiking volume, perhaps underpinning today’s key reversal candle on the daily chart.
        • Today’s candle also ended with a DeMark nine-count exhaustion bar – another confirmation to expect a potential reversal, even though any pivot higher may be brief.
        • We could see the market rally for a few days up to the 5-day line at 3995, the millennial roundie at 4000, or perhaps as high as the 50-day line at 4023. 
        • Tomorrow morning’s (Friday) August employment report could be the catalyst for some upside follow-through, assuming it does not stop the rally in its tracks.
        • As a side note, population demographics reflect a materially decreasing U.S. labor force. As Boomers retire, there are fewer workers to replace them.
        • Demographic changes place the economy in a unique situation where a recession may not lead to as much unemployment as typically experienced in past recessions.

        Today will be my final publication until Monday. I am taking tomorrow off to enjoy a long weekend. In fact, I may take the next few weeks off – so stay tuned.

        As a side note, I will be revamping the Blog to a shortened format, and there will be fewer commentaries available to non-subscribers as we convert our site and channels almost exclusively to private membership.

        I hope you enjoy your long weekend as I plan to. If it gets too hot, turn off all your appliances, unplug your electric car, and buy a nice fan. Before air conditioning in Arizona, people dipped their sheets in water before bed and slept on the wet sheets to keep them cool overnight. Those were the days before air conditioning.

        Oh, and don’t worry about your smart meter or thermostat. As many people learned who joined the “voluntary” discount program with the power company, the electric overlords have taken control of your thermostat. The “Outer Limits” comes to mind when the lords of electricity take, then later return your household temperature control after the heat wave. At best, you won’t be able to turn your temperature below 78. Jimmy Carter is envious – he had no such tools in the 1970s!

        And, of course, if you try to override the power company – you will be arrested as a threat to Democracy!

        A.F. Thornton

        *** At today’s close, aggressive investors who chose to short the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ sell signal on 8/15/2022 at 4302.75 have gained $18,912.50 per Emini futures contract (439.54%) and $2609 per SPY put option (292.81%). Final results will vary depending on the next Navigator Swing Strategy™ buy signal. Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee similar future results.

        Share with Friends and Family

        Word of mouth is crucial for growing our trading community and providing education and support for your trading decisions. Please feel free to share this with your friends and family if you find the information beneficial.

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        Thursday Morning Supplemental Notes

        • This note supplements yesterday afternoon’s Founder’s Trading Notes from yesterday. Refer to the notes for charts, key levels, and today’s trading plan.
        • Premarket indications have us opening in the lower third of the overnight range on 100% net short overnight inventory.
        • Tee up Gap Rules this morning, as there is potential for early trade for knowledgeable and experienced traders.
        • With the market approaching the 61.9% Fib retracement just above 3900 (bottom of the Fib Buy Zone on yesterday afternoon’s chart), be careful if you intend to initiate any new short positions. The climbing put/call ratio signifies that the short-term decline could end. 
        • Price also encounters an uptrend line at 3900, connecting the 6/17 and 7/14 lows, and 3900 is the new Put Wall, often with significant support from the options market. 
        • With no pause in the selling since the Powell smackdown of 8/26, the risk of a reflex rally is becoming greater than further declines, at least in the short term.
        • As it is the 1st trading day of a new month, positive flows may have a bullish influence on the market, and the shorts are getting too comfortable.
        • Price is also at the tip of a falling wedge pattern on the hourly charts, which often leads to a price reversal higher if the pattern takes.
        • I often remind myself that pigs get fat and hogs get slaughtered.
        • Subscribers can join me in the Founder’s Room this morning.

        A.F Thornton

        Expanded Month-End Discussion

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / 8-31-2022 / -31 (-0.78%) / Close 3956.50

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels
        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels

        Published Wednesday Afternoon, August 31, 2022

        Navigator Swing Strategy™

        Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

        Navigator Trading Sandboxes™

        Sandboxes form our windshield for daily and weekly trading. We derive the Daily and Weekly Trading Sandboxes from levels set by the Chicago Board Options Exchange using the Black-Scholes option pricing model to set the boundaries. 

        There is a 68% statistical probability that prices will close inside the Daily Sandbox for that day (the Daily Expected Move or DEM). The same 68% probability applies to the Weekly Sandbox for that week (we call this the Weekly Expected Move or WEM).

        Working the boundaries can be tricky, as we calculate the probabilities as of expiration (which occurs at the daily or weekly NYSE close). So there is some tolerance for the expected moves to post outside the range boundaries prior to expiration. 

        However, suppose the price moves too far beyond the upper or lower boundary. In that case, dealer counterparties must buy or sell futures in the same direction as the boundary violation to hedge their inventory. This protective reaction can both accelerate and exacerbate the move.

        Dealers lose many billions of dollars when options expire outside the ranges. When we trade with the dealers, we are with the “smart” money. Think of it as analogous to trading with the “house” in Las Vegas.

        Knowing these boundaries gives traders an edge for several reasons. First, it allows traders to focus primarily on those key levels they are likely to encounter that trading day and week. The trader knows the important levels outside the ranges but does not expect to encounter them often.

        Second, the boundary levels can act as important support, resistance, and often reversal points during the day and week. Also, when the price exceeds the boundaries, traders can often trade futures back into the boundary levels as the options approach expiration at the NYSE close.

        Founder's Journal and Trading Notes

        Below are excerpts from A.F. Thornton’s personal trading journal and notes. The full notes are available to the Founder’s Group and other subscribers. The messages highlight Mr. Thornton’s daily trading plan. The notes can sometimes be offensively blunt, as he highlights the various geopolitical and economic issues influencing financial markets.

        References to “the Market” below mean the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini continuous futures contract. Our primary focus is trading the S&P 500 index using the cash SPY ETF, options on the SPX or SPY, and S&P 500 EMini and micro futures.

        Whether the S&P 500 index is in an uptrend or downtrend has considerable influence on the direction of individual stocks. The Navigator Algorithms™ can serve as an initial screen to help determine whether market head or tailwinds favor long or short trades.

        • I will be in the Founder’s Group Trading Room tomorrow (Thursday) with subscribers. Tomorrow’s job numbers and Friday’s employment report loom as potential stock market catalysts.
        • The bears took control of the tape this morning after the first 15-minute candle and a failed attempt to take out the Globex high.
        • The half-roundie contained the losses today at 3850. Still, it was another ugly day with a 31-point loss from Tuesday’s settlement. Any traders who got sucked into yesterday’s early session peak likely experienced even more pronounced losses of as much as 70-points.
        • Thematically, the market continues its slide following Federal Reserve Chairman Powell’s smack-down speech this past Friday. The money markets continue to price a .75 Bps hike at the upcoming September 20-21 Federal Reserve Open Market meeting and announcement.  
        • We expect the market to continue to weaken into monthly options expiration on September 16 and perhaps into the September rate hike announcement after the Fed meeting on September 21. 
        • Generally, price acceptance below 4000 in the past few days is bearish. Looking at the options market, I consider 4000-4100 as neutral and any move back above 4100 as short-term bullish.
        • I slightly adjusted the WEM Sandbox, now set from 3940 to 4140 for the remainder of the week. The DEM Sandbox contracts for tomorrow (Thursday), with a floor of 3912 and a ceiling of 4000.
        • Note that tomorrow’s DEM low drops below the WEM low. There is some tolerance for such a dip, with the price returning inside the WEM range by Friday’s weekly expiration at the close. 
        • But as we have seen lately, at about 35 points under the WEM low, dealers are forced to sell futures to hedge inventory. I added the 1.5, and 2.0 WEM low standard deviations to our key levels in the list above in case prices don’t hold.
        • Because we are starting a new month, I recommend that you track September’s opening price and August’s high, low, and midpoint. 
        • Mark these levels on your chart, as the market often reacts at the levels in the new month. Any level could be a reversal point, even for a short period. 
        • Also, amateurs place stops around these levels, which often contributes to the reversals. As you know, I like to get positioned to ride into stops, anticipating a reversal.
        • On a negative note, the August monthly candle closed on the low – but had traveled slightly less than halfway down July’s monthly candle. 
        • Bears were happy to see that August’s monthly candle failed a breakout attempt above July. 
        • Bulls don’t want the market to grind into the bottom 1/3 of the 420-point July monthly candle. The .618 retracement of the July 14 – August 16 rally is 4105 (the bottom of the Fib Buy Zone on the chart above). Watch that level closely.
        • Breaching 4000 on two closes potentially converts the millennial roundie to resistance, already set by the options market as the DEM high tomorrow (Thursday).
        • Don’t forget that all levels reverse polarity when price pierces them. Support becomes resistance and vice versa.
        • In addition to traditional support and resistance, we continue to project Fibonacci downside targets from the 8/16 – 8/24 – 8/26 triad. The price already pierced the 1.0 downside target at 3998.25, and we seem to be on the way to the 1.618 target at 3964.25. 
        • The failure at the one-to-one projection negates an ABC two-step correction, making the current down leg from the 8/16 peak impulsive, directional, and bearish. The daily trend is officially bearish again, or if still bullish, it hangs by a thread.
        • There is a falling wedge pattern forming on the hourly chart. The pattern counsels us to anticipate a potential reversal from 3900 in a “4” Elliott theory retracement wave. The 3900 level has morphed into important support in the past few sessions, replacing 4000 as the new Put Wall.
        • As mentioned in previous notes, the key to the options market price influence would be whether traders added to put positions, moving the Put Wall, Zero Gamma, and Volatility Trigger lower. Traders did add to short positions in the past few sessions, moving all of these levels down.
        • Negative Gamma pressure is commensurately lowered from 3950 (mentioned yesterday). The additions to option put positions in the last few sessions negate any hope of the Negative Gamma leveling out at current levels.
        • Negative Gamma will continue to pressure dealers to hedge their inventory by selling futures into declines, worsening the down thrusts.
        • Recall from Monday that I mentioned it is normal to expect positive fund flows for a few days at the beginning of a new month. So far, flows are not moving the market higher at month-end. This demonstrates considerable selling pressure exceeding the positive flows. If the price fails to rise in the first few days of September, use the failure as a contrary (bearish) indicator.
        • Did I forget that September is the stock market’s weakest month?
        • Volume continued to spike today, which can coincide with an intermediate low. Keep an eye on volume, how much it moves price, and in what direction.
        • Lately, the volume moved price proportionately lower, in a good price/volume relationship. What would be helpful is to see spike volume on a wide-ranging turnaround/reversal candle on the daily chart.
        • Don’t forget that the Hurst Nominal 80-day cycle is due to trough soon and could give us a left translation bounce – perhaps from the 1.618 Fib target (approximately 3850 -see above).
        • Very serious global tensions continue to mount vis a vis Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China. We are living history in very dangerous times.
        • Europe’s economy, significantly impacted by energy, water, and food shortages, is teetering on the cliff’s edge. The situation is unprecedented in modern times. The contagion will eventually arrive on U.S. shores.
        • President Orwell will give a speech tomorrow intended to demonize former President Trump and his supporters. It is hard to imagine him doing something so unwise, but we shall see.
        • The current President and his fellow Orwellians fail to recognize that Trump did not create Make America Great Again (MAGA); MAGA made him.
        • It would seem wiser for President Orwell to explain how he managed to destroy, embarrass, and demoralize our country in such a short time after the Trump administration handed it to him on a silver platter. The only plausible explanation is that he did it on purpose with the rest of the World Economic Forum cabal.
        • If I were President Orwell and affirmatively pro-American, I would start by apologizing to the country. Then, he should admit where he was wrong, pledge to do better, and plan to get the train back on track. The American people are very forgiving to authentic, well-meaning leaders.
        • Like many of my fellow and esteemed investors and forecasters, I always endeavored to be measured and responsible in my outlook. Yet, top-notch business leaders like Warren Buffet, Charlie Munger, Ray Dalio, and the like are vigorously ringing alarm bells. This is uncharacteristic and indicates serious, systemic problems at work. The last time Warren Buffett was this negative when he wrote an editorial to the Wall Street Journal warning of the 2000 market top.
        • It is not typically advisable to predict that the sky is always falling, like Chicken Little. Nor is it wise to be the boy who cried wolf.
        • I have never experienced a time such as this when such knowledgeable, capable, successful, and even-keeled investors, business leaders, and economists are warning that the sky is falling and the wolf is at the door.
        • Sure, they could all be wrong; some probably are. But the alarm bells are not coming from the usual fear-mongering crowd. The predictions are extraordinarily dire, and I am paying closer attention than usual.
        • A year ago, Fed Chairman Powell followed up his Jackson Hole conference with a speech telling us that inflation was transitory. He has been admittedly wrong, even recently confessing that the Federal Reserve did not understand inflation. I shudder to think what the world will look like a year from now.
        • We are experiencing a moment in time that requires us to prepare for the worst. It would help if you had a contingency plan for yourself and your extended family. It is always advisable to have such a plan, with extra food and water on hand. But perhaps it is more important now than ever before.
        • I plan to be as self-sufficient as possible if there is a need to ride out the economic and political storm. It never hurts to have a good plan just in case things get crazy.
        • As the World Economic Forum’s Klaus Orwell and his fellow Orwellians promise, by 2030, “You will own NUTTING – NUTTING! But Klaus, Bill Gates, and their many globalist friends “VILL be very happy!”

         A.F. Thornton

        *** At today’s close, those who chose to short the last Navigator Swing Strategy™ sell signal on 8/15/2022 at 4302.75 have gained $17,312.50 per Emini futures contract (402.36%) and $3,090.00 per SPY put option (246.80%). Final results will vary depending on the next Navigator Swing Strategybuy signal. Futures and options are leveraged instruments that involve high risk, volatility, leverage, and loss. With leveraged futures, you could lose more than your original investment. Past performance does not guarantee similar future results.

        Share with Friends and Family

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        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures / 8-29-2022 / -28.25 (-0.70%) / Close 4031.25

        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels
        S&P 500 Index Continuous Futures Daily Chart - Key Levels

        Navigator Swing Strategy™

        Subscribers receive real time email signals and can sign up for instant text alerts).

        • Current Status: 100% Cash / Aggressive Accounts 100% Short
        • Last Signal: Sell / Short Signal on 8/15/2022 @4302.75
        • Index Losses Avoided: -6.3% / 271.4 points ***
        • Prior Position: Closed Long Signal on 7/18/2022 @3832.25
        • Buy Stop (Shorts): 4075.50

        Navigator Algorithm™ Trends

        • Short: Bearish
        • Intermediate: Bearish
        • Long: Bearish

        References to “the Market” below mean the S&P 500 Index. The quoted numbers are from the front month E-Mini continuous futures contract. Our primary focus is trading the S&P 500 index using the cash SPY ETF, options on the SPX or SPY, and S&P 500 EMini and EMicro futures.

        Whether the S&P 500 index is in an uptrend or downtrend has considerable influence on the direction of individual stocks. The Navigator Algorithms™ can serve as an initial screen to help determine whether market head or tailwinds favor long or short trades.

        Good Morning:

        • The 4000 level on the S&P 500 and the 50-day line contained further losses yesterday (Monday) and overnight. The millennial roundie level is psychologically important – any material breach of the level invokes program selling.
        • Globex traders temporarily bested yesterday’s high, moving the market as high as 4072.75 overnight before settling in the middle of a Doji candle at 4135.25. A Doji candle indicates that the market is balanced today, with bulls and bears having equal power.
        • The market will open this morning with an orthodox Gap higher. While not a True Gap, I still keep Gap Rules in mind, as they help me determine the initial market sentiment. 
        • The market will open in the middle of the overnight range. Mark the open, and treat any return down through the open as a potential sell signal (see Gap Rules). 
        • There are very few positives. I mentioned the potential macro Descending Broadening Wedge pattern that began at the January peak as a potential bull flag, perhaps framed in the context of the 2009 Bull Channel.
        • As you know by now, I don’t place much confidence in chart patterns, but I will point them out when I see them. It is difficult to imagine the stock market moving to new highs in the current environment, but it is always tough to determine when the narrative is negative enough for a contrary move.
        • And if you are a contrarian, you are in good company because almost no one expects the market to hold 4000. But your core thesis is that the crowd is wrong at turning points.
        • At some point, a trading range (narrow or wide) could present on the charts as the market bides its time.
        • For example, when I look at the volume profile for the entire bear market (the histogram on the right side of the chart above), the price action does look like a trading range measured from the top to bottom of current prices since the January peak.
        • The high volume node (middle) is now at 4140, and volume tapers off as the market approaches the 3639 June low, just as it tapers off as price moves upward to the January 4800 high.
        • Perhaps we are already in a range similar to the 1970s. See the “Current Stock Market Forecast” in the Category menu to your right.
        • All else being equal, the market should attempt to first test the overnight low at 4026.75 and then yesterday’s low at 4006.75.
        • If the levels hold, the market will head north to test the mid-point of yesterday and the overnight ranges, then on to yesterday’s high at 4064 and the overnight high at 4072.75. We moved the buy stop for short positions a few points above the overnight high (See above).
        • Key support lies at 4000, then 3966, and then the WEM low at 3950.
        • Resistance shows at 4050, 4075, then 4100.
        • The WEM is 3950 to 4170 this week, with today’s DEM at 3970 to 4090.
        • The market’s reaction at these levels is your first sentiment indicator and telegraphs whether bulls or bears are controlling the tape.
        • We are approaching month-end tomorrow, which usually leads to positive fund flows on the last few days of the month and the first few days of the new month. That is, unless 401(k) participants have steered their allocations away from stocks. Who could blame them?
        • Typical montly flows may be enough to give prices a temporary floor. Price fell so fast on Friday that it likely needs to catch its breath. 
        • If the market continues its downward trajectory over the next few sessions, it is doubly negative considering expected flows. Use any such behavior as bearish sentiment.
        • One thing is for sure; this market is unprepared for any good news. What if Russia surrenders unconditionally to Ukraine, as President Orwell requested yesterday? Or, perhaps more likely, the reverse happens?
        • The new Founders Live Trading and Chart Room will be open Thursday and Friday this week. Tuesday and Wednesday are month-end, not typically conducive for day-trading. Money managers tend to shuffle their portfolios around to dress them up, leading to less predictable price behavior.
        • The Navigator Swing Algorithm remains 100% cash from its last sell signal on August 15th. There are, as yet, no buy alerts.

        As always, stay tuned.

        A.F. Thornton

        *** Currently, gains are $13,550.00 per futures contract (314.91%) and $1896.00 per SPY put option (146.99%). Gains could be higher or lower depending on the next exit signal. Futures and options involve a high degree of risk, volatility, leverage and loss.  Past performance does not guarantee similar results.

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        Sunday Notes – 8/28/2022

        Happy Sunday:

        • Fortunately, the Navigator Algorithm Swing Strategy took us to 100% cash at 3302.75 on 8/15.
        • The summer rally subsequently peaked at 3327.50.
        • If you are new or have doubts about our strategy’s success, I encourage you to review the last few weeks of this Blog. We earn triple-digit returns year in and year out, and while the past is no guarantee of the future, you have every opportunity to achieve high returns too.
        • Of course, we can only identify the recent peak in hindsight, but our algorithm sell alerts near the recent rally peak were worth their weight in gold.
        • Since the exit, we have been day-trading S&P 500 EMini futures in the Founders Room, earning anywhere from 16-24 points per contract each session.
        • In the Navigator Swing Strategy, we planned to wait for the market to fall to the 4120 high volume node/mean and then gauge the market’s reaction and performance.
        • The market should have reversed higher at 4120 if a new bull market was truly underway.
        • The market did turn higher for a few days but then rolled violently lower on Friday after Jerome Powell spoke for 10-minutes.
        • As a side note, I think the Fed pulled a Biden on the Fed Chairman and held him to 10-minutes, so he did not say anything to screw up the intended hawkish narrative.
        • In the Founders Room, we took a low risk to stop long entry last Wednesday at 4127 and sold into the initial Friday morning rally at 4195 when we were live on YouTube. We posted gains of 65 points per contract.
        • After a nice morning gain such as Friday’s, I like to hang it up and enjoy the weekend.
        • Nothing is worse than carrying the negativity of a Friday loss into the weekend. Better to take a bird in the hand, not the one in the bush.
        • After the Fed announcement, I moved on to other things. So I likely was one of the few who made money long on Friday but also missed the shorting opportunity.
        • The market eventually locked into a negative Gamma spiral, fueled by dealers selling futures to hedge the breaches of the WEM and DEM lows.
        • And yes, I got FOMO just like anyone would. But I would rather carry FOMO than losses into the weekend.
        • I should have followed my advice and taken advantage of the risk of the lower, two-sigma move I had discussed since Monday. But I did not truly believe that the movement would manifest.
        • I suppose this is my example of recency bias. The bottom of the projected two-sigma move was 4162. The market closed Friday at 4159.
        • I hope some of you took advantage of my advice, even though I didn’t.
        • I was also right that the initial price reaction to the Fed announcement would be higher, then lower after a few bars.
        • Back to our swing trading plan and quoting from the 8/23 Blog: “Below the 4120 level, the market looks more bearish, but there is bull thesis tolerance to the 50-day line at 3976 and the lower end of the Fib range at 3900.”
        • By Friday, the 50-day line had moved to just above 4000 at 4005.
        • I also mentioned that any price acceptance below 3900 would kick the idea of a new bull market. We will see what happens this week.
        • The options market, now late to the volatility party, is pricing in a 220-point WEM range with a floor of 3950 to a ceiling of 4170 for the coming week. Dealers and market-makers are trying to make up for blowing the range last week. Once bitten – twice shy.
        • Holding 4000 is psychologically key right now. 4000 is a big round number. It seems unlikely the level will hold, but anything is possible, and we have already seen a bounce slightly above the level overnight.
        • Globex traders took the price down to test the 50-day line at 4005, the 1 to 1 projection of the “A” wave (see chart above), and the 50% retracement of the summer rally.
        • Overnight buyers showed up around 4000, and the market had turned higher at this writing.
        • Beyond 4000, the next major support is the WEM low at 3950, then the next high volume node at 3910. Remember that 3910 hurdle on the climb up?
        • The next support is 3865. I prefer not to discuss lower targets tonight; we can save that for later in the week. I don’t want to jinx a Monday morning crash.
        • If the market should be so lucky, resistance now shows at 4066, 4080, and 4120, with major resistance at 4150.
        • As I always counsel investors and traders, price is far more important than news, though there is plenty of bearish information.
        • What disturbs me in the price action are the two breakaway gaps that started the first leg of the decline from August 16-23rd, followed by the anemic retracement of a few days.
        • Now, we have a nearly vertical 170-point down bar to start the second phase of the decline following the Fed announcement at Jackson Hole on Friday.
        • The price action shows very aggressive selling on increasingly high volumes. The waterfall character of the declines bodes caution for longs.
        • Anyone long this market looking for a chance to get out just passed an opportunity to exit at a mere 10% correction from the January peak. Longs may very well remember this last exit opportunity fondly.
        • Also, the negative price action may telegraph typical Elliott “3” down wave behavior.
        • Consider the entire decline from January 3rd to June 17th as the first leg or wave “1” down and the subsequent summer rally from June 17th to July 16th as the likely “2” wave up.
        • That would potentially make the wave we are in now a “3” wave down, where the most damage occurs in a bear market. In the circumstances, and given the aggressive selling, extreme caution for bulls is warranted.
        • On a positive note, the falling wedge / expanding triangle pattern in the bear since January could be a Descending Broadening Wedge pattern in a high time frame.
        • The DBW pattern typically marks a bull flag on the rare occasions that it presents. A bull flag could lead to a resumption of the up trend that preceded the pattern.
        • And it is not unusual for the pattern to reverse higher at the 50% correction of the last leg down (about where we are now) or perhaps on a retest of the June low.
        • I am not a pattern fan because very few of them give you an edge these days.
        • The probabilities are typically 50/50, which is not an edge, but I would be remiss not to point out the pattern. See a complete analysis of the pattern by Bulkowski here.
        • The chart pattern could lead to another “pain trade,” which would be higher and shock most traders after Friday.
        • It seems so obvious that the market should continue lower that it bothers me. It cannot be that obvious, and rarely is it that easy.
        • And that is why one should always endeavor to keep an open mind. Profits depend on it.
        • I won’t likely put out any Morning Notes unless warranted. You know everything you need to know from this writing for now.
        • We will day-trade until the Navigator Swing Algorithm kindly flashes its next buy alerts.
          As always, stay tuned. Our Fourth Turning is an interesting time to be alive as we witness history unfolding before us. Let’s hope we live to write about it.

        A.F. Thornton

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