Archives April 2021

It is Not Too Late, But it Probably Is…

Taxing Our Way to Prosperity

It has been a strange week. We start with the proposal to raise U.S. corporate income taxes to 28% (from 21%) and impose a minimum 21% “global” corporate income tax. The proposal is part of the new $2.5 trillion “infrastructure” package. I put infrastructure in quotes because, as they have done with so many other words, the new rulers in Washington have redefined the term. Perhaps New York Democrat Senator Kristin Gillibrand said it best:

Our new rulers also redefined racism and gun ownership this week as an emergency “public health” crisis. I guess the designation is some lame attempt at a constitutional cover for President* Biden to dictate executive orders from on high. But Trump was a dictator, right? Truly, I despise all of these policies and Presidential Executive Order abuse, no matter who does it.

Also, don’t get me wrong. The new rulers see that revenue is an integral part of good accounting practices and that is a good thing. It’s just that the proposed 21% minimum global corporate income tax requires the Biden Administration to conspire with as many foreign governments as possible to stifle global competition for companies, wealthy individuals, and jobs. This would allow countries (like ours) to tax as much as they want without fear that these companies and their wealthy overseers will leave for greener pastures. 

This new, global tax kind of reminds me of price-fixing. Hopefully, some foreign countries still appreciate competitive capitalism and won’t accede to the U.S. Wokie demands.

The U.S. proposal envisages canceling exemptions on income for U.S. corporations from countries that do not legislate a minimum tax to discourage shifting their operations and profits overseas.

The proposed increase in the headline rate to 28% from 21% would partially reverse the Trump administration’s cut in tax rates on companies from 35% to 21%. More importantly, the US proposal includes an increase in the minimum tax included in the Trump administration’s tax legislation, from 10.5% to 21% — the benchmark minimum corporate tax rate that Yellen has propounded for other G20 countries.

Of course, there is that old axiom  “corporations don’t pay taxes people do.” When corporations are taxed, people pay in the form of higher prices for goods, lower wages for workers, fewer jobs, lower corporate earnings, and dividends, not to mention lower stock valuations. The proposal seems counterproductive in a world attempting to recover from the elites’ Global Panic Pandemic. 

You can be sure that a global minimum individual income tax is around the corner too. That would spoil my plan to get the hell out of this country if it keeps embracing Marxism, higher taxes, and oppressive leftist policies. As the book “Atlas Shrugged” by Ayn Rand remains one of my favorites, I want to know where John Galt is headed. I will follow. 

Of course, the Wokie goal is to prevent successful corporations and people from checking government power by finding a competitive alternative – whether that be another city, state, or nation. 

Just wait, the U.S. red states with no income taxes – like Florida, Texas, and Wyoming – will soon be punished by the ruling class in Washington for their no-tax policies – as will the people who move there. There will be no more shopping for the best governments, with the best tax and business policies and lowest tax rates. This new, autocratic ruling class must standardize mediocrity and inflate government power. Dow 40,000? Probably not.

And Then There is the Inflation Problem/No Problem


In another strange move reminiscent of a communist country last week, the Federal Reserve has decided to stop publishing weekly money supply statistics (M1 and M2) in favor of monthly. Why? It seems the latest round of politicians in Washington are more autocratic (and less tolerant) of contrary opinion than the last group. The “peeps” are asking all these pesky questions about the money supply and inflation. For example, could it be inflationary that M1 has risen from $4 trillion a year ago to $18 trillion? Now we can’t have all these pesky questions from deplorables, can we? Look, increasing the Money Supply does not cause inflation they tell us. Just like increasing the national debt to $30 trillion or 138% of G.D.P. no longer matters either. After all, money is just a “construct.” As with many issues lately, “we the people” need to just shut up and sit down. After all, the global Wokies know what is best for us!

For the moment, only one view is tolerated in Washington, D.C. – that is unless you want to be “canceled.” Fortunately, they can’t cancel me because I use their own foibles and idiocy to pull money out of the markets daily, I don’t need them. Well, I do need them in a way, because I profit from their stupidity. And I don’t think they will stop being imbeciles just to spite me. 

Lessons from 1920’s Germany and 1989 Japan

Just for giggles, I thought I might spend a little time examining the hyperinflation-induced collapse of the 1920’s Weimar Republic (Germany) and the asset bubble explosion of 1989 Japan. This is just in case the Wokies are wrong. I mean, what could be the harm in comparing notes?


The collapse of the German Mark led the Great Depression by a few years. As you might recall, the U.S. Stock Market lost 90% of its value in the 1929 crash and did not recover its losses until November 1954.

Japan collapsed in 1989, followed by persistent deflation and resulting in driving their stock market down 90% from the 1989 peak to the 2008 low. Japan has yet to fully recover, some 31 years later. 

I wasn’t alive in the 1920s, but I well remember the 1989 Japan peak. At the time, they called it Japan, Inc. Japan was buying up real estate and golf courses in the U.S. Not only did they own Rockefeller Center in New York, I recall them buying Columbia Pictures. The Japanese Imperial Garden was said to be worth more than the State of California. Japan was set to rule the world with its enviable production methods and quality (brought to them by an American). But alas, the bubble burst and Japan has remained in convalescence.

In my opinion, the German and Japanese lessons can be better understood in the context of what is misunderstood by the Wokies and others now – or purposefully obfuscated. But first, let me share my backstory.

The Backstory

The story of how I gained my “armchair economics” degree in banking is long but bear with me as it will all tie together in the end. In 1997, I had co-owned and co-founded a trusted company, brokerage firm, and investment management firm with my former wife. We started the Scottsdale, Arizona-based firms in 1987, just ahead of what turned out to be the infamous Savings and Loan crisis and collapse of Arizona real estate. I even served as a director on the board of a local television station with Charlie Keating – the poster child for the Savings and Loan debacle. I will save that colorful story for another time, but I will reconsider some of the problems he caused in the banking world that eventually came back to haunt us.

Suffice it to say, it was not the best time to start an investment business in Arizona. Nevertheless, through an accident of fate, I was soon introduced to the director of a prominent Midwest state banking association. At the time, interest rates had been falling from their historic highs to the point that money was leaving the small banks for the stock market – via the help of a small but successful and growing brokerage firm called Edward D. Jones. Edward D. Jones and their capable, well-trained, small-town brokers had been raiding the local bank C.D.s as they matured.

Unlike California and Arizona at the time, the Midwest states were economically healthy and remained “unit banking” states and unreceptive to “branch banking.” States like Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Mississippi, and Missouri had hundreds of banks – and each was individually owned and operated as a community bank. I recall that Oklahoma alone had 450 separate, individually-owned banks. If an intersection had a bank on every corner, each bank was owned by a different family with their own money at risk. In fact, there were 30,000 banks in the U.S. at that time. We now have barely 5000 left, and the number dwindles every day as the big five (too big to fail) banks dominate the landscape.

I worked with this creative banking association director to create a competitive investment management program that my trust company would ghost and private label for each bank to help them compete with Edward D. Jones and keep their customers. A number of the state associations endorsed the program and formally introduced it to their banks. With the credibility of the associations behind us, the program became very successful and diversified us away from the savings and loan crisis and real estate collapse in Arizona. 

I traveled the Midwest incessantly during this time, going bank to bank and getting to know the owners, their families, and the customers. It was one of the most informative and pleasurable experiences of my life. What is relevant about this story for this discussion is that I got to experience a first-hand view of community banking in our country’s Midwest region, a region that solidly anchors this country and our traditional American values and wisdom. The bankers knew their region, their customers and took qualified, discretionary risks in funding small businesses. Nothing was commoditized – centralized executives far removed from the region evaluated loans case by case. I always joked that if you started in the middle of our country, it just got weirder in both directions as you got closer to the coasts and water.

Then, in 1997, I had the opportunity to help start a small business bank in Phoenix. Since we were managing so much money at the time, and we were literally parking millions of our customer funds in other banks and mutual fund money market accounts, the idea of starting a bank and bringing those funds in-house was appealing. We were the controlling shareholders of the bank.

Starting the bank turned out to be disappointing. Thanks to Charlie Keating and his fellow S & L swashbucklers, we had to sign “Lincoln covenants” (named for Mr. Keating’s failed Lincoln Savings). Essentially, the covenants prevented us from doing business or keeping deposits at our own bank – because we could supposedly and potentially abuse our positions as controlling shareholders, just as the S & L swashbucklers had done. That kind of defeated the purpose of starting the new bank in the first instance. Nevertheless, the experience was invaluable.

Insights from the Banking World and Inflation

The point is, I learned how things really work in banking and the money supply, blowing apart several prevailing economic myths persistent to this very day. Let me explain; then, I will tie all of this back to our current challenges.

Business schools and economists still teach a theory that banks are intermediaries. Supposedly, banks take deposits and pay interest, then lend the deposited funds out at a higher interest rate. They are virtually guaranteed a profit if they minimize their loan defaults but are believed to have no impact on the money supply. Yet, nothing could be further from the truth, and bursting this myth is critical to understanding where we are now and the path ahead of us.

Here is how it really worked as I personally experienced it. If you come to my bank for a loan, I don’t tap the depositors’ accounts and write you a check. After all, what would the depositors say when they needed their funds, and the funds were not in their accounts? What would they say if they got their monthly bank statement and the money was gone? It does not work that way, and I don’t understand why this myth continues to be propagated – unless it is useful to the oligarchs.

What actually happened is that your loan became a book entry on my balance sheet. I would book your loan as an asset, maybe offsetting a small amount to add to reserves. We didn’t tap the customer deposits at all. Instead, and this is the wringer, the loan was credited to your account as a new “deposit.”  In essence, your loan created money almost out of thin air, thus increasing the money supply. 

Even if you deposited all or part of your loan at another bank, the new bank could spin that book entry to more loans and new money supply. In fact, bank credit may very well be the biggest contributor to the money supply that exists – at least before Quantitative Easing. And when credit contracts or loan standards rise, the money supply contracts, as will the economy along with it. That is how it really works in the real world.

That may very well explain why another prevailing myth – that lowering interest rates will boost economic growth – is so dead wrong. We can start with Japan lowering its interest rates following the 1989 peak. No matter how much Japan lowered rates, it made little difference in their 30-years of pain and lost decade of the 1990s. 

And how has this theory faired in our own country lately? If lower interest rates boost economic growth, shouldn’t GDP have been 10% annually these past 10 years? We have had falling rates for years, especially since 2008. Yet economic growth in the U.S. – in a word – sucks. 

Europe has negative interest rates; how is Europe doing? Not so well from recent, personal experience. I cannot believe that the central bankers are this dumb, so there must be other reasons why they continue to propagate this myth. We can speculate on that another time.

Higher interest rates lead to economic growth, and lower interest rates lead to economic decline, in my own experience. Maybe it is all just a timing thing but think about your own experience. One cannot help but conclude that our fearless leaders have this all backward – or cause and effect are confused.

The only thing I have experienced in my life that led consistently to economic growth – and what I observed first hand at the Midwest community banks and my own bank as lenders – and even what I have experienced owning my own businesses – is the availability of capital and credit – especially for small business. 

Everyone agrees that 70% of jobs in this country (and in Europe) are created and maintained by small businesses. If capital is loaned to or invested in small businesses – especially businesses with new ideas, products, and services – not only will you get economic growth, but it generally won’t be accompanied by inflation. 

Who better to make those lending decisions than small community banks with their ear to the ground? They know their region and know their customers. With discretion, they will do a much better job placing capital than behemoth, centralized banks. Both Japan and China are modern examples of this proposition’s truth – yet our own country is sliding backward.

Lessons from Japan

Japan’s demise stemmed from two primary problems. Most of their newly minted “money supply” funds went into asset purchases, just as we see now in the U.S. stock and real estate markets. Because there were only 20 banks for the entire country, decisions were centralized and made by executives far removed from the front lines.

The Japanese used their real estate assets as collateral to obtain more loans and buy more assets. The more real estate values rose, the more they borrowed. Sound familiar? It is not unlike the Gamma squeezes going on now in the U.S. stock market. Someone buys a call option. The market maker who sells the option then has to buy the underlying stock to neutralize her delta risk and hopefully keep the premium. As more calls are purchased, more stock is purchased, leading to higher and higher prices. When you roll the tape backward, the same process reverses.

With real estate, as the price falls and the collateral is threatened, distressed real estate sales must follow. The process repeats itself into more loan defaults and more distressed sales. So what did the money creation from all that credit gain Japan in the final analysis? Prolonged pain.

The money did not go into new businesses, ideas, efficiencies, etc. So when the bubble burst, there had been nothing gained in economic growth to fall back on. That is the simplest explanation of what happened and why it has taken so long for Japan to recover. Almost 25% of all Japanese bank loans defaulted. When you consider that most banks are only required to maintain capital equal to 10% of assets – you can see that the entire Japanese banking sector became insolvent.

As China increased its economic commitment to capitalism, they studied the Japanese debacle. As a result, China implemented a community banking model not unlike what I had experienced in the Midwest in the 1980s and 1990s. China’s program has been very successful – and you will see why below.

Lessons from Germany

Germany was somewhat of a unique case. They were printing money to pay revenge reparations to the rest of Europe for World War I. Once again, Germany did not invest their newly minted money productively – it went mostly to pay reparations. 

What surprised me in my studies is that for at least 18-months before the German Mark collapsed and the hyperinflation set in, Germany experienced a phenomenal, growing economy with zero unemployment. Everyone was making money in real estate, the German stock markets, etc. Of course, it was built on a house of cards. The speed of the collapse also was stunning. I worry that our country may be in a similar position – as the good times roll.

The Bottom Line

We started this discussion with the Federal Reserve’s decision to stop publishing weekly M1 and M2 money supply statistics at an unprecedented moment with nearly a five-fold increase in the money supply in a very short period of time. Theoritically, such an increase would be inflationary – but the Federal Reserve is now claiming that the money-supply does not affect inflation. No doubt, Milton Friedman is rolling over in his grave.

However, in one sense the Federal Reserve is correct but it will not help their cause at this time. What we have learned in the last century is that the aggregate money supply is less important than how it is being spent. If the money is primarily used for asset purchases, we will have asset inflation (as we now see in real estate and the stock market) and there is not reason to expect that to end any differently than it did in Japan.

If the funds are used for consumption (e.g. all of the untargeted stimulus checks) – that will lead to inflation in goods and services. We are experiencing that now. How far it goes and how bad it gets is difficult to forecast – but it is a terrible, hidden and regressive tax on those who can least afford it.

If the newly minted funds go to small businesses with new ideas, or to modernize and become more efficient, then we will have sustained, non-inflationary economic growth.

Morning Outlook – 4/16/2021

April showers are supposed to bring May flowers, so does that count for four inches of snow this morning? Living in the Rocky Mountains has its strange moments.

I will put out more details over the weekend, but the Navigator Swing Strategy remains 90% in cash and 10% in Gold. We were so leveraged (and made so much money) coming up to the old highs in both indexes, that we have not felt compelled to jump back in as yet. 

The Gold was a contrary play that appears to be paying off. There has been a subtle shift to risk-off assets in the past 48-hours. Treasury bonds rallied inexplicably yesterday – given we were coming off the highest consumer inflation reported in the past 10 years. If one turns their attention to Ukraine, perhaps the Russian troops mounting on the border could explain the rise. The US is telegraphing a lot of weakness right now to China and Russia. I would not be surprised to see both countries move on Ukraine and Taiwan simultaneously.

Meanwhile, back at the day screens, keep the macro picture and the pending nominal 18-month cycle peak in mind. The back-to-back overnight patterns and continual new all-time highs tell us that momentum buyers remain firmly in control. Don’t fight it – do what works until it doesn’t.

The overnight lows are weak. Should they be tested, assume the potential for lower price action and monitor for continuation. Then think sequentially in terms of key signposts.

I don’t trade Fridays – but best wishes for a prosperous day.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Outlook 4/15/2021

Thus far, yesterday has all the characteristics of a liquidation break, one we were expecting (today is the 15th – the dead middle of the month). Liquidation breaks shake out the weak hands in the market, making it possible to achieve more progress. Of course, we are not expecting too much more, as the larger cycles will top soon.

The potential for strength today is underscored by short-term traders likely still short from yesterday’s operations. Assume that any price action above the overnight highs (4145.25 for the S&P 500 and 13,945 for the NASDAQ 100) can be a “go with” initiative situation. 

As always, monitor for continuation and look for contextual support from strong internals (up/down volume, advance/decline lines, and up/down ticks). I will also trade from the framework that pullbacks into yesterday’s regular session range are more likely buying opportunities than weakness. I don’t think that such pullbacks would rotate all the way back to yesterday’s lows.

While that may be my opinion going in today. any trading below yesterday’s low has potential to change the tone. Given the overbought nature of the larger picture, and the cycles that often dip mid-month, more selling is possible – so don’t anticipate a trade. Wait for buy signals and triggers to confirm the scenario before jumping in on the long side. 

Given a large liquidation break that was bought back up overnight, selling below yesterday’s lows is less likely, but cannot be eliminated as a possibility. Value was overlapping to higher yesterday, and selling was not uniform across all sectors. Value is more important than price – ALWAYS. Profits favor the prepared.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Outlook 4/14/2021

Mailchimp, our primary email publisher, had an outage this morning and was just restored. This delayed our morning forecast from being emailed. However, if you don’t see an outlook before the open in your email, don’t hesitate to check our website at www.bluprintquantitative.tempurl.host. Click the “Morning Outlook for Day Traders” category and the outlook will be there, even if the email forwarding service is down. This is the first time we have experienced this, so hopefully it will be the last. The outlook is published regardless. The original outlook is in italics below. I might as well update it, now that we have some market data behind us.

Overnight distribution is relatively balanced so the issue this morning is whether or not we can trade out of the range on increased tempo and stronger internals in either direction. Both extremes of the overnight range have potential go/no-go breakout implications.

Buyers remain firmly in control. The market is acting exactly as it should when it is deeming accelerating prices to be fair. A liquidation break would be healthy at some point to further strengthen the market. Investor focus will be shifting to earnings now.

If the break is higher, monitor for continuation and look for contextual underpinnings to be confirming. Should it be lower, expect the same if there is to be any tradable follow-through and target yesterday’s points of control.

Your edge is your market-generated information and narrative. Your M.G.I. is comprised of price events that happen and price events that should happen but don’t.

Now for the update. the NASDAQ 100 got the liquidation break anticipated, and this is healthy. It is coming into the top of its recent breakout range at about 13850. If a buy signal otherwise presents for you in this area early enough today, it may be a good place to go long for the rest of the day. We are not there yet, but the decline is accelerating vertically which usually indicates exhaustion. Incidentally, the XLE is looking interesting on the daily chart, with the potential double bottom in place.

The S&P 500 is holding up better, boosted by energy and financials, on the heel of some nice bank earnings this morning. Earnings announcements will have a greater influence as we move forward over the next few weeks, the end to which likely will bring us the nominal 18-month cycle peak. Today smacks a bit of the XLE and XLF climbing at the expense of the NASDAQ 100 – but we will see of that is more than a one-day wonder.

A.F. Thornton


Morning Outlook – 4/13/2021

I would have kept it simple today, as everything continued to be balanced yesterday and overnight. Responsive trade from the overnight highs and lows (and going with a breakout in either direction supported by the internals) would have been the best advice. That advice still holds for the S&P 500, though a sudden surge in the NASDAQ 100 at this writing may tilt the S&P 500 bias in favor of a break out to the upside (see below). I am now looking for sideways to higher in the S&P 500 today.

As I was writing, the NASDAQ 100 pushed above its balance/consolidation range and looked to be where the action is. It is now slated to gap open with a true gap, and gap rules will apply. This gap puts the NASDAQ 100 into the new, all-time high territory. Perhaps the S&P 500 index will follow suit – but so far looks to be significantly underperforming the NASDAQ 100. I will be trading the NASDAQ 100 today as a result.

The NASDAQ 100 breaking to all-time highs adds some excitement to this final leg before the nominal 18-month top sets between now and mid-May. We typically get a dip into mid-month (the next payroll contributions) here, and the 40-day cycle dip is due any time, so continue to keep that on your radar screens. I am still finding lots of good stock swing trades – so it is hard to reconcile the good setups I keep finding with anything other than a minor dip this week.

Yesterday’s action continued to bolster our bullish narrative – so best wishes for a good trading day.

A.F. Thornton

Epilogue – 4/12/21

Both the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 Indexes stuck right to my script yesterday, delivering another balanced day and profile inside Friday’s ranges. The best trades were right from the edges as predicted. Holding their own following multiple up days in a row, a balanced day of consolidation adds to the bullish narrative for now. 

But the same cautions abide, as we expect a minor dip into mid-month, and we continue to be on alert for the 18-month cycle peak sometime between now and May 15th. We will know it when we see it.

Morning Outlook – 4/12/2021

I need to abbreviate this morning to stay timely. The most important advice I have this morning is not to get lost in the weeds of your day trade screens. The mid-month dip is due this week, likely to coincide with the 40-day cycle dip due any time. We should get one last flip up from there, and I don’t necessarily expect a new high. Then, the nominal 18-month cycle top should present and end this latest run from March 2020 – and this will coincide with the simultaneous peaking of every cycle of lower degree. 

Think of all of this as an “M” pattern. Don’t lose sight of this upper time frame activity while you are mesmerized in your 1, 2, or 5-minute world. This entire “M” activity likely will be concluded before May 15th, which is the latest forecast I can come up with for the 18-month cycle peak. David Hickson covers the sequence well. If you click on the picture below, it will take you to his latest cycle forecast:

Today, consider the potential for balance which would be healthy. This scenario would have the NYSE session today trade completely within the framework of Friday’s session and potentially even within the overnight session. If so, responsive trade the edges only.

As Friday achieved new all-time highs, there is little to go on for upside continuation. Should there be a breach of Friday’s high, monitor for continuation and look for strong internals to underpin price action before attempting an initiative, breakout trade.

The overnight low is a weak low as it tagged a very nuanced level where it reversed. Assume that there could be a short (given proper context – e.g weak internals) below the overnight low. As with a breakout above Friday’s high, “monitor for continuation” and make sure that context corresponds as the current tone is obviously not favoring sellers right now.

A.F. Thornton

4/9/2021 Epilogue

By Monday, Friday seems like ages ago. Moreover, I have been traveling all weekend, so I will be doing abbreviated discussions this morning, I have two unfinished writings for later today, and will perhaps be shifting to a horizontal position for a few more hours of sleep.

Nevertheless, if you read the Morning Outlook from Friday, we nailed the path. The NASDAQ 100 filled Thursday’s gap. In the process, it nearly tagged the Weekly Expected Move high from above. But the index held, and came back up through the open. Had you taken a long trade from the open crossover up, you would have had a very happy day. As soon as New York closed, and with the weight of the last market makers holding out for hope lifted, the after-hours futures spiked even higher.

The S&P 500 stuck to our script as well. Having already filled its Thursday gap on Thursday, the S&P 500’s task was to hold the Thursday regular session low and it did. Any hope that the market makers could tap the Weekly Expected Move high for some relief was dashed right from the start. It must have been a painful week to be an S&P 500 index market maker. I don’t feel too bad for them though, as they win most of the time.

As with the NASDAQ 100, screens went green when the S&P 500 index came back up through the open, delivering a nice, steady upswing throughout the rest of the day.

All in all, Friday’s action adds to the bullish narrative, as did the entire, spectacular week.

A.F. Thornton 

Morning Outlook – 4/9/2021

Let’s start here:

When day trading, sometimes we tend to get lost in the weeds. We are likely in the midst of a bit of a momentum blow-off, coming out of volatility squeezes and pushing through the Weekly Expected Move highs for the week. In the chart above, I highlight the last two momentum blow-offs since the 2020 March China Virus lows. In one or two days, we erased a couple of weeks’ worth of gains. 

One way to prevent this, especially if you are buried in your day trading screens, is to always set a disaster stop. That way, no matter what hits the tape if you are trading with your microscope, you are covered. There is no level in particular to target – just decide what the maximum loss is you want to take in an unanticipated liquidation break. Obviously, it needs to be wide enough so as to permit normal fluctuation.

Looking at the S&P 500 as our proxy this morning, the Asians explored prices all the way up to 4102.50, but could not hold the level and closed back inside the top of yesterday’s regular U.S. session.

The Europeans then gave it the old college try, but could not even get it as high as the Asians, and are holding near the Asian close at 4090.75 at this writing. As you can see from the first chart above, we remain at the top of the daily trading channel, approaching overbought territory with nominal 40-day and 18-month cycle corrections looming – and indexes operating at various levels of divergences. I have seen healthier environments and will be taking longs cautiously.

Price exploration was even less convincing in Globex for the NASDAQ 100. Overnight inventory is net long, and we are coming in this morning testing the top of yesterday’s gap after rejecting 150 points overnight. A full or partial gap fill is possible. Trading below yesterday’s low and into the gap would change the overall tone to negative, and don’t discount the possibility that the market makers could try to press down to the WEM high to let their weekly options expire profitably. This is why Fridays are not my favorite day-trading days. Screens go green if we come back up through the open. 

Comments are much the same for the S&P 500 index. Overnight inventory is net long, and we are coming in this morning with the price inside of yesterday’s regular session. The S&P 500 already filled its gap yesterday. 

Use yesterday’s point of control at 4086 as your bull/bear bias line. Trading below yesterday’s low would change my overall bias to negative – and could indicate that the 40-day cycle correction is underway. Here too, as with the NASDAQ 100, the market makers could try to press down to the WEM high to let their weekly options expire profitably. Screens go green if we come back up through the open. 

Best wishes for a profitable day. I am sitting today out – it is a travel day for me.

A.F. Thornton

Epilogue – 4/8/2021

The slop fest chop continued through to the close, not an ideal scenario for day traders, right? Well, that depends. Let’s review where we started this morning.

After large gaps at the open such as this morning, Gap Rules caution us that such large gaps often fail to fill on the first day and can be difficult to trade as the markets digest the overnight gains. Moreover, I cautioned that one way to assess the likelihood of a Gap and Go scenario versus chop and digestion is to assess market internals at the open. Today, market internals opened both weak and mixed, almost ensuring sideways price action – otherwise known as balance. The NASDAQ 100, which I will use as my example, gave us a classic, balanced day.

When I write about expectations for balance – this is what balance looks like. When I discuss “responsive” trading, I am referring to trading from either end of the balance range. In other words, traders “respond” to the edge of the range, not hesitating to take long and short positions throughout the day.

Today, you got to observe the potential for responsive trading in a balanced session firsthand. Your assessment skills in early trading can be critical to the outcome. Today, I dropped $300 on my first few trades before making the correct assessment and righting the ship. It goes with the territory.

Knowing you are trading a balanced or trading range session, what can you do if you feel the need to trade? Personally, I prefer to skip these days once assessed – but there are a couple of other choices. 

Looking at the NASDAQ 100 from the market/volume profile angle – you have the classic bell curve. Note that the volume histogram (number of contracts traded) dries up as the price rises or falls. Today, 13733 is where the most volume occurred and the most time was spent, making it the fairest price of the day. Traders were unwilling to expand the range in either direction. 

That is how the auction process unfolded today, and the chart below gives you the proper visual reference. Traders explored both directions but landed in the middle.

Once you see the bell curve forming and you have established the initial range on the minute chart, you fade either end of the range/profile back to the middle. In other words, you trade the range. You can use the value area high and low to initiate long and short trades, as the case may be. Today, the value area (rectangles drawn on the profiles above) was not that wide, but it can be extensive in other sessions. 

You can draw a rectangle around the traditional price chart range and trade it from that perspective, perhaps riding from the range top to the bottom. However, top to middle and bottom to the middle is the safest, most conservative trading strategy. 

Always pay attention to key turn-times throughout the day, as a rally/decline to break the range could start at such times. Monitor for improving internals to assess the likelihood of a break. Make sure you look at a heat map of the S&P 100 to see if the large-cap leaders can overcome a negative advance/decline line. Also, note the yellow line on the traditional chart above. That is the volume-weighted average price, also a key level to cover trades initiated from either end of the range. 

One final way you can trade such days (once the volatility calms down an hour after the open) is to drop down to a 1-min or 2-min chart, then use the Algorithm Trigger for entries and exits, perhaps trading more contracts since the range is limited. Any combination of these methods can filter and take the best trades.

By the way, never underestimate the value of observation. At the end of each day, study a 5-minute chart for the day. Where were the turns? What time? What did the turns look like? What were the internals doing at the time? Before long, you incorporate the information into your brain, and the moves become intuitive.

The range today where 70% of the volume occurred essentially tilted upward from 13700 to 13750. Recall that the market progresses up and down, stalling and fighting at these 50 point increment levels. Always carry that forward. Step back and look at where you are and where the market is trying to go – when the market is encountering support and resistance. The information can be helpful to your confidence.

Perhaps the most important Market Generated Information to add to our bullish narrative today is that the markets held above their gaps, and traders accepted prices there. This helps bury the options market makers before tomorrow’s expiration and could force them to buy more futures as any hope of maintaining price within the Weekly Expected Move range may be dashed.

On the negative side, the volume was light again today, and there are some strange Intermarket relationships I will discuss tomorrow. Also, all the unfilled gaps below us will act as air pockets in an intermediate decline. That is when you need your parachute if you were not lucky enough to timely exit your positions.

Notably, today, gold is in a volatility squeeze, coming off an “h” reversal pattern. I am keeping a close eye on it. A countertrend trade up the channel can be very profitable off a volatility squeeze.

You can see what the squeeze has done for the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 over the past week, and perhaps Gold will follow suit. Gold can be a crazy character at times, but it is still worth throwing the line in the water. In the swing strategy, we increased our position in Gold today to 10%. 

Still, we sold the remainder of our equity positions at the open today, anticipating a small cycle pullback into early next week and cognizant of the nominal 18-month cycle looming over us. That cycle could last another month before it peaks, or it could peak next week. We don’t know but carry it forward in the narrative.

Finally, I am a bit perplexed by Oil and Energy (XLF) failing to lift off with the rest of the risk assets recently. With Gold rising, Oil stalling, and a lousy employment report today, my WWSHD (When What Should Happen Doesn’t) needle is spinning.

A.F. Thornton

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