Archives July 2021

Pre-Market Outlook – 7/21/2021

Everything I need to know about life I learned in Kindergarten, right? Remember that book? Lesson 57 – How is this one not like the other one? Compare and contrast?

Comparing recent lows is the central question this morning because this one looks just like the rest of them. So far, the market is emulating every other pivot off the 50-day line this year. And it presents the exact problem I feared Monday. We are out Friday, at least as to our sole, remaining 10% XLF position. Now, do we go back in? That is more of a swing than a day-trading question, to be sure, but it is quite the dilemma. 

Then there were the fund flows yesterday. Treasuries backed off their Monday blow-off climax. Value and cyclicals (including XLF) clobbered growth and technology. Small caps came back to life as well. My first inclination would be that the rotation I expected last Friday is coming a bit late off the liquidation break. The day after monthly options expiration is notoriously bearish, as is mid-month anyway. So the deferred gratification is explainable.

Yet, what if all of yesterday was just massive short-covering? I could see the shorts piling on the weaker value, cyclical and small-cap stocks and indices Friday and Monday, saying to themselves – this is finally it – the 10% to 20% correction. Why not short the weak sisters? More short positions to cover, so more gains yesterday? Maybe rotation, maybe not.

Acceptance is a huge issue in life, and particularly in trading. So do I accept that this is another gigantic “liquidation break?” Is it the beginning or end of something? Do we get the double-dip like May or the “V” bottoms like the others? Is this the 18-month cycle peak? This bottom looked more rounded than a typical “V,” but one must keep an open mind.

Then there is always this: how will the market screw the most people? Aha! We will make the dip look just like the others, draw them all in, then Whack A Mole! Do you see why I have preferred day-trading lately? How can anyone sleep at night worrying about that?

For day-trading, the decisions have been both easier and rewarding. I will take credit for calling the bottom Monday to the tick. I have to take credit when I can – as it makes up for the bad calls. And I had two good trades – pointed out in these pages practically in real-time. There was the short squeeze into the close on Monday. Then there was the Gap and Go that gapped and went per the Gap Rules yesterday.

I hope you don’t mind me sharing these thoughts. As I often say, the circus in my head would make Barnum and Baily envious.

Today’s Plan

Yesterday’s rally had a virtually perfect inversion of the bearish internals from Monday’s rout. The structure was very poor, with the market profile split into multiple distributions. This is normal on a day that is dominated by short-covering, which is an emotional event. While I’m not outright calling for it, note that most rallies off lows start with this type of day structure.

This morning we have a bit of divergence between the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ 100, with the latter trading negative and much weaker. This dynamic and the very balanced overnight inventory in the S&P 500 likely sets us up for some balancing and range day trading for today. When they negatively diverge, the NASDAQ 100 will draw gains from the S&P 500 and vice versa.

The action on Monday left a poor low at the bottom of the distribution. Carry that forward as in need of repair.

The outlook is more neutral in the bigger picture now as both the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 have rallied back to about the midpoint of the recent downdraft.

My signposts for potential change would be the ONH at 4338.50 on the top and the start of the single prints at 4303 on the bottom. Price action between these levels would indicate a balancing of yesterday’s one-sided trade. Price action outside of it gives us the potential for change.

Also, pay attention to divergence today. The spread between the /ES and /NQ is quite large currently coming into the open. If you are not sure which is dominant, wait as they usually sync later in the session.

A.F. Thornton

Mid-Day Update – 07/20/2021

Looking at the above two-hour candle chart of the S&P 500 Index Futures with 24-Hour Data, you will see that the market has made a symmetrical ABC correction back up to the 5 and 21-day EMAs, also the roundie at 4300 and the measured move off this morning’s break-up from the ON trading range. I rode the Gap and Go trade with two contracts, scaling out of them for almost 59 points. As mentioned yesterday, this volatility can be very conducive to day-trading.

The question now is what to do next. These two-step moves are the hallmark of corrective, as opposed to trending action. If the rally continues higher to maybe a 1.618 move off the “A” to “B” portion of the leg projected from the “B” dip, thereby destructing the symmetry, we can have more confidence in a trend reversal. You can learn more about this by studying Elliott Wave or other materials on corrections.

So this is a critical juncture. I postulated it could take several days to do this, but the market is moving rapidly back to this important level. This could turn out to be a good short, but I would need some confirmation that a turn back down is under way. Internals are very positive today, so an immediate reversal may not be in the cards. I simply want you to be aware of the issue.

When you have a large bar such as the one on the two-hour chart above, it is not easy to be assured that the market is turning down again until the low of that bar is taken out. That would be a poor location to be short from. So I will be watching the lower time frame charts for a turn. The point to get is the importance of the juncture.

Whether or not the intermediate trend has turned down, we could bump along this area until we turn back over for a retest. Incidentally, I forgot to mention that the market also had support yesterday from the WEM low at 4245, so keep that level in mind.

Pre-Market Outlook 7/20/2021

I am struggling to adjust both from sea level back to the mountain elevation, not to mention a 10-hour time zone shift, so bear with me as I am exhausted and thus behind on some of my detailed charts annotating. I will have them later today.

Yesterday confirmed that the market has a tinge of normalcy left, as we finished the fifth down day in a row, broke the very short-term trendline, and bounced from a logical and important support zone. By the way, we might have just experienced the first consecutive five down days since the March 2020 China Virus crash. 

Support came from the gap and breakout area of the three-month consolidation from March to June in the S&P 500. So you have to ask yourself, what (if anything serious) has the market violated here? 

The answer is nothing yet, other than a retest of the last breakout coinciding with the 50-day line. And given the spike in volume, fear, and volatility, the market is perfectly capable of moving from here back to new highs if it wants to resume the intermediate trend. We may need a retest of yesterday’s low before the trend resumes in the next week or so, but we sit on that intermediate trendline and channel bottom now.

I would expect a few days of recovery back to the 21-day line to test it as resistance now that we sliced through it as support. My main point here is, no matter our opinion, and no matter how strongly I suspect that the 18-month cycle has topped, we have to keep an open mind to all possibilities. This market frequently defies any sense of logic, as one would expect with such aggressive Fed intervention. When I have an intermediate buy signal on the algorithms, you will be the first to know. 

Meanwhile, our job as day traders is to take advantage of the volatility. You do this by reducing position size and taking a bit more of a scalping approach to trades. You can already infer that yesterday’s low is now a critical line in the sand. This morning’s gap higher has buyers building on that low.

Pulling back to a wider view shows us that there is still a huge unfilled gap above us from yesterday. Opening prices are going to start the day within that gap. The market doesn’t like gaps, and gaps should fill. If they don’t, we have a When What Should Happen Doesn’t (WWSHD) moment, which gives us some important and objective Market Generated Information (MGI) to work with. Failing to cross the overnight high (ONH) today would be a sign of weakness.

Given the size of the gap above us and the fact that overnight activity filled very little of it, and we are currently well off of the ONH, it tells me that short covering may be already on the wane. Yesterday’s regular (RTH) session can be a very different animal from the overnight one, but those are the initial impressions.

Gap rules are in play for today’s session. The overnight inventory is 100% net long, so we know what should happen in early trade, which would be the corrective move. Early trade will tell us a lot about the nature of the short covering in the overnight session. A lack of early fade will mean that buyers are not done, and we should bias long, monitoring for continuation as we go.

Note that the ONL and settlement are almost identical, around 4254. That means that once all overnight longs are relegated to the “wrong” column, screens will go red around the world as well. I would bias short below that level. The RTH Low (4224) was poor yesterday and should be carried forward for a potential further short trigger as it needs to be repaired. I could argue that it is a weak low because it was a bounce from the 50-day line – a nuanced level for short-term traders.

Good luck today,

A.F. Thornton

 

 

 

Interim Update – 7/19/2021

Can You Say Short Squeeze?

It took a bit, but the short squeeze finally gripped. Look, when you see the index basing around the lows and the put/call ratio high and rising, you know that these shorts are poorly positioned, not being rewarded, and likely to panic by the close. They often all head for the exits at once and buy to cover.

Today, it had to be especially difficult to hold the short on the S&P 500 when the index moved back above the 50-day line, usually strong support and an institutional money manager buy point. If you were short, there would be a lot going through your head with that in mind.

I rode two contracts into that high and covered with about 50 total points of profit. As to the market, I am not convinced that the correction is over, but more likely, it is just getting underway. It will zig and zig, giving us a lot of nice trades like this.

I will do the usual play-by-play in the Epilogue later tonight. It is good to be home and have nine screens again. Did I mention how much I love trading? If not, let me do so again now.

A.F. Thornton

Interim Update – 6/19/2021

With the put/call ratio as high as it is and some poorly positioned shorts, we may have just put in the low of the day when traders traded only 88 contracts at 4324. Ticks and momentum both positively diverged. Whether it is the LOD or not, we should be getting close.

As the afternoon drive tees up at 2:00 pm EST, I believe there will be a short squeeze. If not then, it likely will come nearer to the close. I want to alert you just in case. 

If you are short, don’t be too greedy and book some profits here. If you want to take a long position to ride the short squeeze, you should be on alert as we are wedging into a turn at or near current levels.

The internals are brutal today – so this is definitely not the garden variety minor low we have been experiencing. Today likely begins the correction, it does not end it.

A.F. Thornton

Mid-Day Update – 7/19/2021

The S&P 500 is unquestionably short-term oversold, with the CBOE put/call ratio spiking to levels associated with a short-term low. The CNN Fear/Greed Index dropped down as low as 18 this morning, again showing extreme fear. The S&P 500 futures found initial support at the 50-day line, with the NASDAQ 100 finding support at its 21-day line. The low is untested at this point, and does not look like a “V” bottom.

I am following the lines of demarcation (FLDs) on the cycles using the daily chart.  We have now broken the nominal 20 and 40-day FLD lines, in sort of a cascading effect indicating the distinct possibility that we finally have our 18-month cycle peak. The bounce so far this morning looks sloppy and choppy, so a retest might very well happen before we can be assured that a short-term low is in place. 

Below the 50-day line, we have a trendline connecting the May, June, and July lows. That sits just above 4200 and could provide some support on further weakness. Don’t forget that we have the 200-day line just below 4000, as another target for a 10% correction. Typically, it takes some zigs and zags to get that far, if it happens at all.

All of this is normal and I am not prepared to get too negative, beyond what we would expect for an 18-month cycle low. Instead, I will let the price unfold and tell me what to do next. I am going to sit out the rest of the day. I have not found a good trade in the day session yet, though I will continue to check in to look for a potential double bottom or similar turn.

Likely, the next move would be a rally in the S&P 500 index futures back up to test the 21-day line, which may now become resistance in an intermediate down trend. That would be a fabulous short, should it present.

Stay tuned,

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 7/19/2021

Due to time constraints, this will be an abbreviated version which I will supplement later this morning. Make sure you have the CBOE put/call ratio up somewhere on your screens – as the shorts will run for cover at some point in a squeeze. The ratio is at the high end of the pandemic range. Also, review “View from the Top” published this morning.

This large gap will cause an increase in volatility which opens the door to higher volatility options trades. This same volatility also makes day trading more lucrative than usual as the setups are the same, but stocks travel further and faster.

Gap rules are in play, to put it mildly. Overnight inventory is close enough to 100% net short. We have lots of market profile levels around where we will open and just below. Focus on the prominent VPOC’s at 4256.25 and 4239 and the GAP top and bottom at 4251.25 and 4246.25. The overnight halfback could also be a key pivot point at 4292. Take all of the levels in order – looking for pivots, as well as acceptance above or below. Always remember that the market likes the ’50 point increments, so all the points congregating around 4250 could likely provide the initial support in this decline.

Focus also on bigger picture dynamics today. This overnight move has futures trading well below the 21-day line on the S&P 500 (4200) and to a lesser degree on the Nasdaq 100 (14545) as well. This is noteworthy for both futures. In the S&P 500, there is potential to trade to the 50 (about 4230), while in the NASDAQ 100, it’s quite a bit further away (currently at 14017). When volatility gets elevated, your focus should shift away from more nuanced/granular levels and more towards the larger signposts that everyone trades on the daily charts.

As with any large, true gap, the potential for an early fade is there. Early failure to take out the ONL can be a signal. Aggressive traders can also buy the high of the first one-minute bar or repurchase the cross through the open should the opening drive be lower. Monitor for continuation and target overnight halfback first. Be very familiar with gap rules #2 and #4.

Any continuation lower (trending day) obviously needs acceptance below the ONL first. Internals will be important to note. Downside follow-through is often accompanied by a lack of positive ticks for the better part of the first hour.

If I haven’t stressed it enough, don’t assume you need to catch anything early on these days. Large gaps are the hardest type of day to trade early, as all moves are against the backdrop of how much the market has already moved overnight. It’s hard to trend early on top of that.

Good luck today.

A.F. Thornton

View from the Top Down – 7/19/2021

In this Weekly Series, We Examine the Market From a Big Picture, Swing Trading Perspective. We Use the S&P 500 Index as our Broad Market Proxy, and All References to the Market Refer to the S&P 500 Index Unless Otherwise Noted. The Market Remains the Most Significant Variable in Higher or Lower Stock Prices, Influencing 60% to 70% of Individual Stock Price Movement. The Decision to Be Long or Short Based on the General Market’s Direction is One of the Most Important Decisions Investors Will Undertake.

Bottom Line

We tripped the stop on our 10% position in the XLF (Financials ETF) Friday (6/16), and this was preceded by several Navigator sell signals in the S&P 500 index Thursday (6/15). The XLF was our only swing position, so we are back to 100% cash, but the key question this morning is whether the bulls, once again, will buy the several-day pullback or whether the long-expected, intermediate correction has finally worked its way into the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 indexes. 

Arguably, there has already been a stealth correction well underway in many economically sensitive sectors since April – but masked in the indexes by the weighting of a narrow group of large-cap growth stocks. Another rotation from tech and growth back to value and cyclicals could keep the rally alive or at least put the market into a trading range for the foreseeable future. However, we would need to find the bottom of that range in this pullback. 

Sentiment indicators are already showing considerable short-term fear, so I would expect a fairly quick resolution of this first down leg. Unfortunately, that does not tell us where the price will pivot or where we go from there. Watching the Morning Outlook for Day Traders will help you identify the key levels for a turn.

Technical Discussion

Coming from the top of the short-term trading channel on Tuesday (7/13), by Thursday (7/15), the market had closed below the previous day’s close (at minimum a “heads-up” alert). This also generated a preliminary (yellow) Navigator Swing Sell Signal, with further confirmation from a close below the Navigator Algo sell trigger. However, the 5-day line held, if just barely. 

By Friday (7/16), the market closed below the 5-day line, with the weekly bar closing below the prior week’s low for the first time in five weeks (another important “heads-up”). All of this occurred on multiple breadth, momentum, and strength divergences failing to confirm the recent index highs at the channel top, which consummated a selling climax and throw-over at the top of the channel. Our sole position, a 10% position in the XLF, closed below its 5-day line Friday, triggering our stop. This resulted in a small loss and put us back to a 100% cash position in the Navigator swing strategy.

The price action this past week underscored some key takeaways from last week’s View from the Top report. I had pointed out the negative breadth (and other divergences) in a market (using the S&P 500 index as our proxy) that was long overdue for an intermediate correction. The 18-month cycle top still loomed large. At best, though, the cycle bottom has such a time variation that the potential cycle topping zone can only provide some context to what we can currently observe in real time on our screens. 

In fact, I believe that the cycle has been operating stealthily in many sectors since April and may finally be catching up to the major indexes. One expectation I communicated was the unlikelihood of July closing as another positive month, given the statistical probabilities. Naturally, that supposition would need to manifest soon, as we are 2/3 of the way through the month. 

Also, I have been pointing out the Butterfly harmonic sell pattern in the NASDAQ 100 over the past few weeks. As the NASDAQ has been the recent market leader, its breakdown from the pattern would be a negative development for the broad market. 

Finally, I pointed out the rally in defense/risk-off sectors and asset classes, such as treasuries, as eerily similar to signals I observed in January 2020, right before the China Virus crash. While not predicting a crash, I pointed out that the rally in stocks and treasuries basically was a contest. Only one of these asset classes could be right in the current circumstances.

Nevertheless, I also pointed out that the relentless bulls would continue to buy one to three-day pullbacks until such buys stopped working. This morning, we will get a chance to test the bulls, as the market is trading such a pullback right to the 21-day line. The 21-day line typically divides the short-term up or downtrend. It also provides support for the market more often than it doesn’t. After that, more support congregates around the 50-day line.

If you backtrack several months, you also will see that most of our pullbacks this year have been right at this same mid-month period into monthly options expiration and only lasted a few days. Friday was monthly options expiration, in addition to weekly. 

Recall that the June pullback on quadruple expiration Friday left a scary bear bar closing at its low and below the 50-day line, only to see the bear breakdown fail the following Monday. The market followed through and continued the next bull leg up through last week. The bulls will be similarly tested once again today.

Also supporting the bulls, the CNN Fear Greed Index (above) is down to 23, and the CBOE total put/call ratio (below) spiked again on Friday. So sentiment would support a short-term low and turnaround here, though there is no indication whether the 21-day line will be good enough for a pivot point or whether we will need another trip to the 50-day line or some other level. 

And even if the market turns quickly again, there is no assurance that the trend will resume. Recall my prediction in the last writing that a trading range is a highly likely outcome of the bull micro-channels breaking down on various time frames.

A Shot at the Fundamentals

I still ponder the question, why are interest rates falling and economically sensitive stocks weakening? Three issues likely form the heart of this current market dissonance. 

First, inflation is devastating the purchasing power of individuals. My wife has been in Greece for five months, but for a few days when she came home, and all of us had to return when her father took an unexpected turn for the worse. My wife is a very conscientious consumer. Yesterday was her first trip to the grocery store since this past February. Needless to say, she was shocked by the prices.

Inflation is a deadly, ominous hidden tax that angers me to my core and hurts those at the bottom of the economic ladder the most. This administration promised to help those at the bottom, not hurt them. One only needs to look at the price of housing, gasoline, and food to ask the question, how are the current policies working for the poor and middle class? 

If the Fed isn’t in the pocket of the current administration, it will begin the process of reversing its dubious, inflationary monetary policies soon, and the markets may be anticipating the end of the liquidity party.

Second, the extended unemployment benefits end in September. As well, many of the mortgage, rent, and other debt relief programs will expire soon. The transition out of all of these subsidies has to be a concern to current market participants.

Finally, we are experiencing a third China Virus wave with cases increasing daily. As it is called, the Delta strain is apparently quite virulent, highly contagious, and vaccine-resistant. More masks? More lockdowns? More shots? Who knows, but sometimes the fear of something is worse than the something itself, at least for the financial markets.

Any combination of these fundamental factors could be the catalyst for a one to three-month, intermediate correction, long overdue in this market. I patiently await this correction to aggressively deploy capital. I have done this too long to plunge in near a top, no matter how good it looks. We just got stopped out of the XLF, even though we kept the position small and bought it after nearly a 6% correction and double bottom off the trading channel. So just because something is low, does not mean it cannot go lower.

Conclusion

This week, I have shifted my stance from “neutral to bearish” to “bearish.” Really, my opinion does not matter. The change in my position telegraphs that I want to go back into the market on a good downdraft instead of a minor one. I need to see a true correction and pivot on the daily chart to garner my interest in a swing position.

While we should get a short-term turnaround or bounce today or tomorrow, that may be a time to raise cash. Markets rarely form an upside down “V” top. Usually, they will climb back up one more time and either test the old high or fall slightly short of it, if the intermediate correction is finally underway. The evidence is mounting that the trend is (at the very least) transitioning sideways, if not into the anticipated full-blown, intermediate correction.

During this period of unusually high risk these past few months, I have been quite satisfied with day trading, as opposed to holding overnight positions. Watch the Morning Outlook for Day Traders, updating three times daily, for guidance. However, paper trade for a while before you plunge into day trading. Day trading has its own foibles to challenge us.

I am understandably frustrated that stops and sell signals were taking place on the two days I was stuck in airports and on airplanes traveling, though I did my best to drop a few paragraphs to keep you updated. I was on a single, direct plane flight for nine hours on Friday between Frankfurt and Denver when the most critical market violations occurred.

What I find difficult (and have these past few months) is that while our swing-trading sell triggers have been excellent, the need to turn around and reenter on a buy signal almost instantly and in such an overvalued market is not so easy to execute, especially having just exited a few days earlier. If that becomes necessary here, it won’t be easy either. Every step higher in this market involves increasing and considerable risk.

If you still hold some XLF, you can see if we get a turnaround today with the bulls, but I have learned over the years to be rigid with my stops even though we get whipsawed once in a while. The XLF was doing all it should until Friday, when it got caught up in the widespread selling. That was my one fear in taking the position.

Patience is a virtue here. As always, be careful.

A.F. Thornton

Brief Comments – 7/16/2021

There is nothing more fun than flight cancellations in Frankfurt, not to mention spending the night in an airport “hotel by the hour.” I used to think that hotels by the hour were sketchy, but that is a story for another day. One good thing, my wife loves the “Tiny Houses” show on HGTV. “Wouldn’t that little house simplify our life.” she says. “So cute.” After spending the night in a stuffy cubicle of a room, I think she is cured now.

Did I forget to mention that we now need new PCR tests while stuck in this airport? They are only good for 36 hours – and that expired yesterday. It takes 24-48 hours to get the results – unless you pay about 750 Euro (about $950) for a six-hour result. That is more than the plane tickets home.

They are turning away people with vaccines which is even more fun, as many do not have the proper paperwork or did not wait long enough after the vaccine to travel. Apparently, there is a waiting period after getting the vaccine before you are safe to travel and not pass the virus to others. Like what? I know; you get the vaccine, and now you are contagious? This is the craziest vaccine I have ever encountered.

But at least now I know how to say an “F” bomb in about seven different languages. I think I learned some other swear words too, but I will wait to look them up on Google translate before i accidentally share them. 

And, incidentally, I would never fly Lufthansa again. They do not know how to handle the problems they cause for their customers. It is the worst airline I have ever encountered, and I have flown a lot over the years.

Since the vaccine caused my father-in-law’s death, I am not jumping up and down to get mine if I ever get it. And with all of the above, to say I am looking forward to my nine trading screens and home is an understatement.

More importantly, nothing has changed in the markets, at least as far as our S&P 500 index market proxy goes. We have seen a small pullback to the trendline over the past few days. The put/call ratio spiked – meaning that the fear spiked as it does at lows, and I would have bought yesterday’s low had I been in front of my screens. The volume spiked similarly as it does at lows. As I have said, the bulls will keep buying these small pullbacks until it stops working.

Yesterday morning, we had a gap down per gap rules and then the expected short-covering rally on inventory adjustments from Globex. After traders established the 30-minute opening range, we went on to a breach and retreat trade, (also a downside breach of the recent multi-day balance range). So this was a short rather than a long trade to the measured move at double the range. As to the multi-day balance range, the move down qualified as a look below and fail per our balance rules, likely meaning we will head back up to the highs again.

The 30-min opening range trade is a good, reliable trade on most days. Even though this was a downside (as opposed to upside) breach, the analysis was the same. The market sold off and then reversed at the measured move (double the range), with a “V” reversal back up and into the close. All of this fluctuation still held the 5-day line on the Daily Chart, more or less, which is all we ask at this point.

I still expect the market to go up to the 4404 magnet we have been discussing, and perhaps eventually higher to 4500. Not that the market really cares what I expect. But that is about as far as I can stretch it. Of course, we are smack in the middle of the month, where we typically see pullbacks and weakness.

The XLF (Financial Sector ETF) has held its own as well. It delivered a positive return in an overall negative environment yesterday. The August calls remain a bet on slightly higher interest rates, driven by higher than expected inflation. So we will continue to hold this position. 

The concern would be the XLF getting caught up in a macro, intermediate correction long overdue. So just like the S&P 500 index itself, an XLF close below the 5-day line (with a little wiggle room) continues to be my stop threshold.

Also, if money gravitates to a risk-off preference, the accompanying treasury buys could keep a lid on rates and bank spreads. Banks need higher rates and spread to drive their earnings.

A.F. Thornton

Brief Comments – 7/15/2021

I am in an airport and posting from my phone, so this will be brief. As to our core S&P 500 market proxy, while there was some selling in yesterday’s regular session, the value area remained completely unchanged. Prices did not test the overnight low. Today we have an overnight session somewhat weaker which has taken out that prior Globex low but is currently trading above it and just inside of yesterday’s regular session range.  

Given the current price level, Balance Rules will be in play this morning, as will Gap Rules if we open below yesterday’s regular session range. From there, I would evaluate the morning session as follows:

  • The first order of business will be to see if prices open on a true gap or not.  If so, given that overnight inventory is 100% net short (give or take a few ticks), the propensity for short-covering exists. 
  • If we open within range, then there is no true gap, and we should assume that short-covering is already underway.  If so, yesterday’s regular session low will be the important key level to discern if we are trading in or out of balance and will be my bull/bear line in the sand for today.  
  • On any strength, assume yesterday’s POC is the target.  This is the obvious high volume node that should serve as any upside magnet.  
  • Any acceptance below yesterday’s regular session low would indicate a potential for a “look below and go” as per the balance rules. If so, target the Top of the Single Prints first and monitor for continuation. Tempo and tone will have a lot to do with whether or not this happens as will any divergence between Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500.  The market will need both sides to be selling for any real follow through to occur.

AF Thornton

Subscribe!

Free Blog content and videos delivered to your email.

Health and Wealth Podcast Coming Soon!

We value your privacy, never sell your information, and detest spam!