Archives October 2021

View from the Top and Morning Outlook – 10/18/2021

In this discussion, I cover the “G Force” rally of the past few sessions and its sustainability. Also, when all the political ‘blame’ dust clears, Millennials coming of age may be the real force behind the current housing inflationary spiral just as the boomers were in the 1970s. Millennials are a bigger group than their parents were. Then I give the day trading parameters for today’s session which is likely to be a balancing day with responsive trading as the best strategy. You can click the link below and go to the website for details. Skip to the bottom for the day trading discussion.

Intermediate Trend Status

Last week, Captain Kirk (William Shatner) of Star Trek fame had his first actual space and weightlessness experience at age 90. He said the weightlessness experience was indescribably awesome, but he felt his “age” when the G-Forces hit him as he left Earth’s atmosphere. And this reminded me of the rally off the 80-day cycle low and “Cradle Trade” last Wednesday. Let’s call this the “G-Force Rally.” If you were short, the skin likely was blown off your face. Of course, you weren’t short because you tuned in to these pages. 

The Founder’s Group continues to hold its 10% S&P 500 Futures position but is looking to switch back into 25% SPY calls at the appropriate time. We want to sell the futures high and buy the SPY calls when the index drops slightly. Who wouldn’t? We will see how it goes.

Is the rally sustainable? Are new highs possible? Are they probable? The short answer is yes. For now, this looks like the seasonal September/October dip, which happened on the 80-day cycle trough for this particular year. 

As to the intermediate picture, I still favor the trading range hypothesis. The next G-Force downside comes on the next cycle trough for the 20-week loop, which is due late in the year. I will hone in on the date as we get closer to the cycle peak. For now, realize that this larger cycle, most likely peaking in November, may influence a trading range, with headwinds for significant new highs. As mentioned before, the 60-week bull channel that preceded the latest dip typically resolves with a trading range. But has anything about this Fed-induced blow-off been typical?

Notably, the July 19th low remained below the recent pivot. This leaves open the possibility that the 18-month cycle dip did anchor in July. That would be bullish. But it does not explain why the NASDAQ 100 went to new lows on this dip. 

I think it best to work the smaller cycles and keep an open mind to a more considerable decline as if the 18-month correction is still ahead. That is the more foolproof way to handle the issue. 

Longer cycles are always problematic to nail because of the principle of variation. If the window for the bottom can vary by 3%, that can be a month or more on each side of the projected trough, giving us a three-month window. Three months is mainly useless to target and trade a potential low in the markets.

A Quick Comment on Inflation

The inflation of the 1970s, especially in housing prices, had a lot to do with the Baby Boomers coming of age and starting to buy their first homes. The Millennials are now in a similar position. Millennials are a bigger group. 

There is such a blame game in this country, and I don’t hear anyone talking about this. Letting in 2 million or more illegals this year, whether you agree with the policy or not, also puts a lot of demand on everything from housing, cars, and food. Are politics and blame so important that nobody is talking about these demographic issues? Stay tuned.

Is the inflation transitory or here to stay? Look no further than the Washington Post this weekend for your answer. One of the lead articles is “Inflation Can Be a Good Thing.” The Washington Post to the current administration is like the Global Times is to the Chinese CCP. When the Post’s narrative shifts to “inflation is good,” when of course, it isn’t, you know inflation is not going away soon. Higher interest rates are likely to follow.

Speaking of the Chinese CCP and Global Times, did you catch the Chinese test of their new, “undetectable,” low orbit, hypersonic missile last week? Do you think we are going to challenge their storming and taking over Taiwan? Do you think the timing of the missile test is a coincidence? Stay alert.

Neil Howe On The Fourth Turning: How Bad Will It Get, How Long Will It Last & What Comes Next?

There is nothing like hearing from the author of The Fourth Turning, Neil Howe, himself. He has not given a public interview in a while. His co-author died a decade ago, and I wonder if either Mr. Howe or Mr. Strauss could have imagined how accurate their forecast would be when they co-wrote “Generations” in 1993 and the follow-up “The Fourth Turning” in 1997. Here is the interview link to Part I. You will find Part II here. The discussion is a bit complicated, to be sure. But it is worth your time.

In his latest interview, Mr. Howes had a few salient comments on our current predicament. First, he says that few people remain of the generation that knew how to handle a crisis. Doesn’t that just hit the nail on the head? Those left of the “Greatest Generation” are in their 90s or older.

He made another observation that could explain a few things we are experiencing as well. He said that liberal democracy is a delicate system that relies on progress. The Millennials may be the first generation in our country’s history that is not doing better than their parents. Spoiled rotten for sure, but democracy “regressing” may very well be a danger to its survival. If it isn’t working for Millennials due to the gross and rampant corruption in Washington D.C. and the wealth gap that results, is it surprising that Millennials are unhappy with the system?

And this goes back to my experience with a lot of things in life. There is always a lot of finger-pointing in politics and plenty of blame to go around. Presidents can make things a bit better or worse at the margins, at least as far as economics go. But most take the helm with much more significant and uncontrollable forces that were set in motion long before they got there. There is a bit of luck involved as to when they arrive and leave.

But as I predicted, the narrative is shifting once again as the market recovers from its gargantuan (tongue-in-cheek) 6% September/October correction. The supply disruption “end-of-the-world” narrative is shifting to “look at all the great demand.” I always get a chuckle out of all of this.

Millennials coming of age; millions of illegals crossing the border; don’t all of these people have to live somewhere, eat, and buy toilet paper as mentioned above? Could the explanation for demand and supply imbalance inflation be that simple? In a word, yes.

I don’t mean to let the current administration off the hook for their insane energy or immigration policies. And their vaccination mandate will go down in history as one of the biggest and most insidious blunders ever imposed on a society. But sometimes, it pays to cut through the noise and look for more straightforward explanations.

Today’s Day Trading Plan

Our Globex cousins tested the top and bottom of Friday’s range and got nowhere. So the market will open inside Friday’s range and is likely to balance a bit after the considerable run-up from Wednesday’s low. Look for responsive trading today. Use a VWAP and Volume Profile to establish a center, top, and bottom range.

Friday’s low at 4455 is also the top of Friday’s gap, and Globex traders could not invade the hole by much last night. We know that gaps eventually fill, but the longer it takes, the more bullish the market is. 

If we drop below 4455 and it becomes resistance, target the bottom of the gap at 4431.25. Otherwise, look for responsive trading around the VWAP today. Watch tone and tempo. How the market handles Friday’s gap will give us a lot of good macro information for the intermediate picture. And there is another gap further down, but let’s leave that for another discussion, should it become necessary.

Conclusions

Nothing has changed in the big picture. This era will, eventually, meet its maker. Too much-unearned wealth in undisciplined hands. Too much debt. Pick your poison. Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall…

Have a great day.

A.F. Thornton 

Pre-Market 10/15/2021

Another gap higher this morning, and gap rules normally would apply. However, today is weekly AND monthly options expiration.

Given the distance traveled yesterday and the fact we are at my initial target of 4450, there likely is an opportunity for the early fade.

From there, we usually see a lot of balancing on options expiration.

Next week is likely to tell us whether this is a one-hit-wonder or move up to challenge or at least tag the old high. I am betting on the latter.

Stay tuned for more details on the weekend.

By the way, I will formally name yesterday’s set up as the “Cradle Trade.” It will go in the glossary for future reference.

I don’t trade options expiration, so my next writing will be Sunday. Have a terrific weekend.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Comments 10/14/2021

I was up late battling the overnight Globex thieves who read yesterday’s post. The Founders Group went back to a 10% position using S&P Futures last night before our Globex cousins stole all my thunder. We intend to exchange the futures for a 25% position in at the money November 19th SPY calls today.

The market gapped open above all of the critical resistance identified in my last post. Now you see the setup I described working in real-time. Let the market settle in, and don’t chase it. Look for a dip on the hourly charts to enter.

I have no expectations for this rally beyond the 4450 target. We will see what they can do after that. And as I have said all along, when you break a 60-week bull microchannel, the probabilities are that you enter a trading range. A move to the all-time high is the most likely outcome before rolling over again.

And what lies ahead is a 20-week cycle low due later in the year – likely November. So we can look forward to that.

Meanwhile, enjoy the run, and I will keep you posted on trades. I will also keep you posted on what kind of leadership we see out of this run.

A.F. Thornton

Interim Update – 10/13/2021

This update describes my go-to long anchor trade, which may now be developing on the daily chart. There was nothing to do today, and confirmation requires the market to close above yesterday and today’s highs at 4365. If you want to explore the issues in detail, click the image above to go to the website.

At its core, all of our investment and trading algorithms incorporate two factors. The first and most important is price action. Price action is a science in and of itself. I continue to encourage people to consider Al Brooks’ trading courses and books on price action. There is no better teacher I know, and he leaves no stone unturned. You might want to load up on coffee first, and sequester yourself for a few months, but it is well worth the effort.

Everything else is context. Investors and traders must interpret all price action in context. Cycles and investor sentiment play a role. Volume colors the interpretation. Seasonality can be crucial to accurate forecasts. Of course, there are other vital issues like strength, breadth, and momentum. Then there are the algorithms; they are checklists of all of these issues prioritized into a computer program. 

If I were to combine price action and context into an ideal trade setup, my favorite long trade is developing and notated on the daily S&P 500 Futures chart above. The timeframe does not matter – I see the trade on the 5-minute charts all the time. But the trade does not often present on a daily, weekly, or monthly chart. When it does, as it is on the daily chart now, It is a powerful setup and has a high probability of success.

The setup starts with a short-covering rally off a swing low as price demonstrated on October 6th and 7th. The price rises and closes above the Navigator Algo trigger. A yellow buy arrow paints on the cross. Also, the price closes above the 20-period Future Line of Demarcation (“FLD” see J.M. Hurst’s work on Sentient Trader) and makes an equal measured move above it. I discussed this development a week ago on these pages. (Lately, the price has just blasted off the swing low, forcing traders to chase it. The trade never has a chance to materialize).

Then, the price comes back down to test the low. We get the green arrow as we tuck into the FLD and Navigator Algo trigger line and bounce. Of course, this means that the former low holds on the retest, as confirmed by a pivot. That is the buy. As of the close today, we can check almost all the boxes on the S&P 500 index daily chart, except the confirmed pivot. 

Taking out the last two session highs (10/11 and 10/12) at 4365 for a few hours and into the close would cement the pivot as a final buy confirmation. That also conquers the 5-day line (our stop line from yesterday) at 4360. 

But the price would also have to fight through the 21-day line (4375), 50-day line (4385), and the roundie/downtrend line (4400). That is no small task, and I would not blame anyone for just riding the trade to any one of those levels and getting out. However, the upside projection target is 4450 for the braver among us. From there, the price could even challenge the old highs. Is that even possible? More on this below.

It is noteworthy that should all of this transpire, a reverse head and shoulders pattern would present on the daily chart with a projection to new highs. One can only hope so if taking the long trade, but it is a bit too early to speculate. For now, carry the potential forward in your narrative.

Below us, the 21-week line at 4318 is the mean for weekly prices and support. The weekly mean gave us the recent lows, cradling the price and cementing the potential double bottom. Notably, the 21-week line often provides support in an intermediate decline.

What about context? We are coming into monthly options expiration Friday, marking a zone (slightly before or after) for recent swing lows. After four down days, the market finally registers oversold, quite an accomplishment over the past year. 

Add this too: longer-term fear indicators are at bullishly pessimistic levels we have not seen in a year. The news is dire. Vaccine opposition, supply chain problems, inflation, etc. As Ben Franklin once said – “buy on the cannons, sell on the trumpets.” 

Seasonally, we often see significant lows established in October. As well, the 80-day cycle low appears to be in place as of October 7th.

Naturally, I am licking my wounds a bit for getting stopped out yesterday (10/11), but that is irrelevant now. You fail in this endeavor unless you move on. Flexibility is the key. Anyway, stops have saved my bacon on more than one occasion, so I never regret them. Successful trading and Investing is about applying the probabilities and managing risk. 

How could new highs even be possible? I never know, but the market always finds a reason. How about spectacular third-quarter earnings – as they begin to roll out in the next few weeks? No doubt, they will be caveated by forward “inflation/supply chain problem” guidance. But the market focuses on good news when it wants to go up. FOMO kicks in as each milestone mentioned above is achieved on the daily chart.

If the market achieves new highs, I will attribute it to continued and accommodative Fed policy. Don’t get caught up in the tapering or any other talk. Fed chatter will be plentiful. Take your cues from action, not words – and price.

Could this long trade fail? Of course. There is a 30% to 40% chance. That is not small. If so, the 200-day line is a good target. We reset rather than regret. No whining.

The Founders Group will consider getting aggressively long on any sustained move above yesterday’s high – at least for a swing trade. Now you know why.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook 10/12/2021

We will open within yesterday’s range after a wild ride around the CPI numbers. Let the market settle in before taking any positions.

We went back to cash yesterday in our swing positions yesterday at the close, as our positions closed below the 5-day line stops and the SPX was trading below 4350 five minutes before the close, though it did manage to close above 4350 by a hair.

Key reference points today will be the swing low at 4317.25 and yesterday’s high at 4365. Anywhere in the middle, use a volume profile and/or vwap and assume responsive trade.

A.F. Thornton

Stops May Be Triggered 10/12/2021

If the cash S&P 500 index (SPX) is slated to close below 4350 in the last 5 minutes of trading, our stops will have triggered. Accordingly, the Founders Group will liquidate all positions for a small loss and move back to 100% cash.

We would place the Navigator Swing strategy back to 100% cash as well,. We would then treat the recent buy signal aa merely predictive of a brief short-covering rally.

Regardless of the stops, we will keep an open mind as developments unfold. We are still targeting the end of October/early November as the potential end of the correction.

It is a bit surprising not to see another attempt to test the top of the range before then, but we won’t argue with the market. If stops are triggered, perhaps the supply disruptions combined with vaccine-related labor dislocations are exerting significant and unanticipated pressure on the fundamentals.

A.F. Thornton

Update, New Buy, and Stops 10/12/2021

Recall that the gap higher last week triggered a Navigator Algorithm buy signal. However, given the market gapped to an overbought position, we have been using this pullback to establish our position.

So far, we established a 20% position in November 19th SPY (S&P 500) calls and a 5% position in November 19th XLF (Financials) calls by nibbling into the close of each of the last three sessions. We have targeted a maximum of 30% exposure, as it remains unclear whether we are positioning for a relief/short-covering rally or an actual reversal from a double bottom.

In one final trade to complete our 30% positioning for a rally leg higher, the Founders Group is taking a 5% position in IWM 222 calls expiring 11/19. The IWM is at 221.50 at this writing.

Because we are at the inflection point, we could still be selling everything by the end of this session because our stops were triggered. That is the nature of this type of positioning.

The first few hours were encouraging today as yesterday, but the market is back in sell mode at this writing.

The market continues to lean toward financials and energy as pressure on interest rates continues and inflation fears dominate. The IWM (Russell 2000) small-cap position we just established increases exposure to these areas. Moreover, smaller and medium-sized companies may be better poised to react to inflationary pressures.

It is essential to stay tuned today as our stops could still be triggered. We need prices to remain above their 5-day lines to continue to maintain long positions.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook 10/12/2021

The market closed right on our stop lines yesterday, dipped below overnight, and then came roaring back to go positive this morning. After the first hour, I will see where things stand to decide whether we add to positions or bail. What is clear for now is that there are sellers above 4400 and buyers below 4300.

The 80-day cycle launch has been weak thus far, with no follow-through. I am increasingly convinced that it may peak early with left translation, keeping the 18-month cycle in play. This also raises the possibility that the market may continue in a downward trajectory into late November.

Cycles or no cycles, the vaccine mandates contribute to supply chain disruptions as workers protest and outright give up jobs to avoid the jab. I cannot blame them. More and more evidence continues to surface that the jab is likely as risky as the disease itself and virtually ineffective against the Delta variant. The good news is that therapeutics are increasingly accepted and effective as the medical establishment slowly but surely emerges from its political fog.

Needless to say, this is a tough market to call at this stage. The overnight low at 4317.50 is the trapped door to lower prices. If 4300 fails, the market will show its ugly side.

The overnight high at 4365 is the door to higher prices and perhaps our target of 4450 or so. The roundie at 4400 must hold for the market to continue upward to establish the top of the trading range I have been expecting.

A.F. Thornton

New Buy and Stops 10/11/2011

The Founders Group is adding a 5% position in XLF at-the-money calls expiring on 11/19 in the Navigator swing strategy. The XLF price was $38.75 at the time of execution. In our case, we picked up the 39 calls expiring 11/19 39 at .94 each. This brings us to a 25% total invested position with the SPY calls.

Whether it is our SPY or XLF calls. we are using the 5-day EMA as our stop line. A close below that line, even for a few hours, would likely trigger our stop, and we will share our decision immediately on these pages.

A.F. Thornton

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