Archives 2021

View from the Top

Wednesday Evening - 5/18/2021

Interestingly, I had been expecting the larger, 18-month cycle to begin topping soon, and likely it will. In the process, perhaps I have diminished the importance of the more minor, common cycle corrections that occur along the way. And what those corrections typically do is put in a low and then retest it about a week later. If all is well, the market progresses upward. Sometimes, the broad indexes can even mask the damage occurring under the surface in these minor corrections. Nevertheless, these corrections are minor because the sectors are not correcting in unison – lacking the correlation and capitulation associated with intermediate corrections.

Ask anyone who owns Bitcoin about this dip. At one point this morning, Bitcoin was down nearly 50% from its peak. In any other security, we would call that a bear market. Yet, the cryptocurrency managed to turn around today and finish significantly off its lows.

Holders of the QQQ or NASDAQ 100 index saw a nearly 7% decline at the trough last Thursday. The S&P 500 saw a 5% decline. Those are still rotten apples when you have to eat them.

Yet, in the context of an expected”crash” that was supposed to hit us (as divined by some leading gurus), the recent declines don’t seem so bad. We may even be entering a series of rolling sector corrections reflecting the multi-tiered market forces contrasting inflation and deflation.

Frequently, the countervailing forces result in a trading range market in the major indices that lasts for a while. Often, the market will dip below the trading range to finish the next cycle trough in the sequence – such as the nominal 18-month trough we are expecting to finish in about five weeks.

In the roadmap for day traders this morning, I pointed out the various vital levels and support at hand, especially the Weekly Expected Move lows. The WEM lines have been on the chart since last Friday. I constantly harp on the importance of these levels because they matter nearly every single week. 

How did the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 end today? Market Makers pushed the indexes right back to the Weekly Expected Move lows – almost to the penny. As long as the indexes stay between the Weekly Expected Low and High, the Market Makers who sold weekly premium all week get to keep their money. Outside those levels, they can lose and lose in a big way. 

Knowing this, when the market dipped below these levels and hit other important support this morning, a low-risk entry point for longs presented. It was a fabulous day to take that trade. On the S&P 500 alone, the trade was worth $3000 plus per futures contract. I like to trade ten contracts and sell the first five at a lower target to achieve break-even, taking risk out of the trade. Then I ride the other five contracts with a trailing stop and let the market decide when I should get out.

Looking at the big picture then, the bears had control yesterday and today at the open. They should have been able to drive each index down and below last Thursday’s lows. They couldn’t get the job done.

For the Navigator Swing Strategy, the market gapped open and underneath our stops. Traders had every incentive to drive the market down to and below everyone else’s stops sitting under Thursday’s lows. If nothing else, the order flow alone is profitable for them.

In fact, the lows came in higher on the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, and Russell 2000. And the bottom line is, the bears had their chance and blew it. At that point, I am buying S&P 500 futures in the day trading account, so why take the Navigator stops? Granted, this is the exception to the rule. So I waited for the close and stayed the course.

Now buyers are back in control with a very successful retest under their belts. We shall see what tomorrow brings and I take nothing for granted as the market has had a few surprises in store lately. But today was a good day for the bulls, having been on their heels at the open.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – Update

Two critical concepts got you an awesome long trade this morning. Note them, if they are not already part of your toolbox: (i) the CBOE Put/Call Ratio, and (ii) the Weekly Expected Move low.

CBOE Put/Call Ratio

Before the turn higher this morning, and with a sense of panic in the air, the Put/Call ratio not only spiked – it gapped open to .89. That was the highest level since last October, in the range of last Thursday, and an indication that short-term fear was so overdone that a long trade was low risk. In other words, it was your first clue that the market would likely survive here.

Then, you have billions of dollars at stake if the market makers cannot keep the S&P 500 above 4105 by Friday’s weekly options expiration. Even after the first dip last week, deep as it was, the market makers brought the market all the way back to close at the WEM low by the close Friday. You simply cannot underestimate the power of these forces.

You have these two concepts, plus the traditional support of two trendlines and the 50-day line on the S&P 500. Moreover, sellers were unable to push the market back into last Thursday’s low, much less through it.

For day traders doing multiple contracts, I would take profits on half here at 4093, and keep the runners with a rising stop. For the Navigator swing strategy, we are holding our intermediate positions.

A.F. Thornton 

Morning Outlook

Pre-Market - Wednesday, May 19, 2021

The markets have generated important information the past few days, and it is mostly unsupportive to the bullish case – at least as to what we should be bullish about. My conclusion is that there is little, if any, tolerance for material price exploration below the overnight low in the S&P 500 index this morning without concluding that financial asset markets are failing here. 

This could suggest that the18-month correction is underway, perhaps a bit stealthy at first. At the very least, the behavior suggests that the transition to high inflation expectations is distorting the picture as money moves to more tangible asset classes, leading to a multi-tiered market that may end up driving the financial indexes sideways for awhile. I want to step back if that is the case, as the transition could be very tricky in the initial stages until new trends are solidly in place. 

Both the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 indices are hovering in the vicinity of their Weekly Expected Move lows, and the trendline both indices found as support last Thursday. The trendline marks the lows that date back to the beginning of this up-leg in early March. With April retail sales and Fed minutes in play this morning, the market may find its footing – but that is a tough call at this point.

We will open with a true gap lower putting gap rules into play today. As with any gap greater than 10 points or so, gap rules #2 and #4 will rule the day.

NASDAQ prices will open just below the trendline. That is important because for sellers to get and maintain control by holding a trendline break, they will fight the overnight buyers covering their short positions at gains as overnight net overnight inventory is 100% short. Remember that job one in trading is to get inside the collective head of everyone else.

So the open today will be about the opposing forces of the overnight inventory correction versus opening below trend in the NASDAQ 100. Pay very close attention to early activity even if you are not actively trading it.

For the early fade, the usual techniques are valid. Either buy the first one-minute high or buy any cross back up through the open should the opening drive be lower. Target overnight halfback but also keep gap rule #2 in mind as you do so.

The gap-and-go trade playing for the potential trending day is always the most difficult to pull off because there is oftentimes not a good reference for a stop loss – especially with the Weekly Expected Move lows ready to catch the falling prices. Assume that any early fade that is weak can be a short on the cross back down through the opening print.

AF Thornton

Morning Outlook – 5/18/2021

I had a few technical problems to work through now that I am at my final destination. Sorry for the delay. Not much has changed in the outlook. Buyers have been in control for three sessions and overnight, but seem to be evenly matched with sellers at the moment.

4179 is the key level on the S&P 500. If buyers can push through that level, they can maintain control as they have the past few days.

Overnight, the NASDAQ 100 was leading the S&P 500, and the overnight action carried the index above the algo buy trigger. But as we often say, the action must be confirmed in the regular session. So far, traders are exploring the strength of the overnight low, we will see if they can bring it back up to test the top levels.

The key to this market continues to be the behavior of the 10-year treasury rate. To me, the chart looks like rates will move higher. Then the question becomes how much of a jump can the tech stocks can successfully handle. If we lose the tech sector, it will be challenging for the rally to hold together.

Stay tuned.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Outlook for Day Traders

I am unexpectedly traveling this morning, so this will be a post from my cell phone. Incidentally, I have passed through both New York and Paris so far this morning and the airports are packed, a stark contrast to a month ago when you could have the airports and planes to yourself. Europe is notable because they have been closed and just re-opened some countries on May 14th.

We had a V reversal at the end of last week with two bull bars stacked on top of each other in the S&P 500. The market turned right where it should and the trend is intact in all four major indices. Notably, tech is still weak and maybe other than Google (GOOGL), there is not much that would interest me in FAANGMAN+T.

In rank order, 10-year rates and the financial sector are the keys to the short-term kingdom. I will put out a macro picture later in the week when I get my feet back on the ground.

Commodities, whether they be metals, materials, agricultural, or energy are all on the move and threaten to displace the stock index quartet in relative strength. Gold is on its downtrend line and could break through (though gold has a tendency to be a heartbreak trade). The DBC and DBA commodity ETFs have now broken long-term downtrend lines – a major trend reversal.

Today, we want to see the S&P 500 stay in the top 1/3 of Friday’s bar at worst and continue higher at best. We are testing around the half-roundie pre-market. The 5-day EMA would be the line in the sand by the close. Otherwise, opening inside of Friday’s range at this writing gives us no early clues to the open.

A small pullback is in the cards after two bullish back to back days, but don’t count on it.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – 5/14/2021

Just One More Thin Mint...

One of the funniest movies I ever saw was “Monty Python’s Meaning of Life.” Admittedly, I was punch drunk after staying up four days taking law school finals.

There is a scene where an obese man is stuffing his face, and at the end of gorging his meal, he asks for “one more thin mint.” After swallowing it, the man blows up from so much food. It reminded me of how I feel about the market this morning. It may want “one more thin mint” before it finally blows its top.

Yesterday went precisely according to plan. It was an inside, short-covering day. The short-covering was something to behold, as it usually is. But it was almost too good. And I am reminded that an inside day is typically a continuation – not a topping – pattern.

Yesterday, every index either bounced from its 50-day line or trendline – just as the indexes should in a bull market. Not a single one of our quartet, the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, Dow, or Russell 2000, broke the uptrend. Nor has the overnight crowd been able to drive the indexes further south in the last 24-hours. Each one of these indexes has moved across its channel, allowing for a final, higher wave – perhaps that 5th and final Elliott Wave – to take us up to complete the intermediate top.

And even the declines into Wednesday’s lows were symmetrical, three-wave or what we call “two-step” patterns. Three-wave patterns are corrective of the prior trend, not impulsive as would reflect a trend reversal. There are what we call “head and shoulders” patterns to reverse higher in both the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 futures this morning. I even see “V” reversals on the 195-minute charts.

Another item of significance is our old friend 4115 on the S&P 500 Futures. The level provided support for a month before we finally broke through it mid-week. It was our “balance area low,” as we referenced it the past few weeks. This prior support should now be resistance.

The 21-day line sits just above 4115 at 4130. The futures are invading that space this morning. A close above 4130 on the S&P 500 today would be significant.

A close above 4177 would save the proverbial butts of the Weekly Options Market Makers. The Weekly Expected Move low sits right at that level for expiration today. Granted, part of the breakdown Wednesday was caused by these players neutralizing their deltas by selling futures, but there might be a few of them left to help drive the market to that level.

The final underpinnings in the bullish possibility this morning are the spike in the VIX (volatility index), Put/Call Ratio, and volume on Wednesday’s lows. For the most part, these spikes are as high as we experienced around the election last year when we were bottoming the second wave of this China Virus rally after a few months of sideways action. Short-term spikes in volume and fear are associated with a low that will hold, rather than a market about to break lower. 

That does not mean that the low will hold down the road. But it makes a rally more likely than a decline, at least in the short term.

If all of the above leads to a pivot higher here, we can anticipate another algo buy signal today, or more likely on Monday. And we would have to attribute the adverse action this week to a news-related distortion caused by the oil pipeline shutdown and ransom scheme.

You already know the bear case if you have been following these pages. We hit the proverbial brick wall at the current level, then reverse lower, confirming the intermediate, nominal 18-month peak.

Let me also mention another distinct possibility here. We always tend to think of rallies and declines, leaving out the distinct possibility of the market getting stuck in a trading range. If so, we would have the bottom in place now, and we would stall at the old highs and reverse lower again. We could play that ping pong game for a few months, perhaps with a final break as the nominal 18-month trough arrives about six weeks from now. Keep that possibility in your back pocket.

All of this underscores the importance of keeping an open mind to all possibilities, no matter our opinions. In one sense, I would feel better about this latest scenario, having lost some money executing on a buy signal precisely a week ago today. The signal rolled over on the news events and stopped us out Monday morning. Of course, that is why we use stops, as nothing is perfect in life or trading.

Today’s Plan

This morning we have overnight activity that has moved above the highs a bit on inventory that is 100% net long.

As we have a slight true gap higher at this point, the early session may be a tug of war between the inventory that needs to correct and the shock and awe that we are trading above the May 12th high. The morning activity will tell us a lot about the market.

Overnight activity has broken the downtrend of the last four sessions in the S&P Futures. Note that this trendline is very steep. Even with today’s gap, prices are still below the 21-day line.

Also, note the potential “V” reversal in play, and we will see if it takes hold. The measured move is the S&P 500 all-time high. Key resistance levels above are 4115 (prior support), 4130 (21-day line), and 4177 (the Weekly Expected Move low).

Sorry for the delay this morning. I am in the midst of an emergency. Check back later as I will be adding some charts to this discussion.

Pre-Market Outlook – 5/13/2021

This morning, I woke up from a dream that Jimmy Carter was still President. Maybe I was subconsciously triggered by yesterday’s gas lines and the rising inflation. Does anyone remember “wrap-around” mortgages? How about Ted Kopple and day “_____” of the Iran Hostage Crisis? And then there was the beginning of the end on Sunday, August 15, 1971. President Nixon announced that the United States was abandoning the Gold Standard on that hot, Sunday, summer evening:

“The third indispensable element in building the new prosperity is closely related to creating new jobs and halting inflation. We must protect the position of the American dollar as a pillar of monetary stability around the world.

In the past seven years, there has been an average of one international monetary crisis every year …

I have directed Secretary Connally to suspend temporarily the convertibility of the dollar into gold or other reserve assets, except in amounts and conditions determined to be in the interest of monetary stability and in the best interests of the United States.

Now, what is this action—which is very technical—what does it mean for you?

Let me lay to rest the bugaboo of what is called devaluation.

If you want to buy a foreign car or take a trip abroad, market conditions may cause your dollar to buy slightly less. But if you are among the overwhelming majority of Americans who buy American-made products in America, your dollar will be worth just as much tomorrow as it is today.

The effect of this action, in other words, will be to stabilize the dollar.”

Well, it eventually took a Fed Funds rate of 18% to stabilize that dollar, tricky Dick! And Jimmy Carter, though I disagreed with his politics, never stood a chance. He is a very decent man. But Nixon, having laid the groundwork, dealt President Carter a lousy hand. And to think, the world was panicking over the Vietnam War deficit spending. Weimar Germany, the Great Depression, and the world war that followed were still very real experiences to that generation. What would that crowd think of our debt now? Perhaps death is kinder than we know, laying that generation to rest before these times. One thing is for sure, as far as we know, there has never been a complaint from the grave.

Sometimes, it is simply the luck of the draw as to the timing of a presidency. Land on the wrong cycle, and your fate is cast. But when all of this is said and done, August 15, 1971, will mark the beginning of this country’s end – at least as we knew it. With the current debt, deficits, and unfunded liabilities, it is difficult to believe that the United States will avoid the downfall of every other fiat currency in history. Perhaps we will all be studying Mandarin soon.

Today’s Plan

We have overnight inventory balanced in the S&P 500 futures. We will be opening towards the top of the overnight range, with prices having explored slightly lower levels from yesterday’s close. Treasuries were flat overnight and have yet to respond with a routine, correction-based flight to quality. Treasuries seem to be pacing the S&P 500 index, a somewhat unusual correlation.

With opening inventory balanced and prices opening inside of yesterday’s range, there is little to guide us at the open. On the daily chart, prices are close to 3 ATRs from the mean and sitting just a hair below the 50-day line. Price also sits on the intermediate trendline and on top of a gap from April 5th. All of this (plus short covering) should lead to a meaningful bounce here. If so, any recovery should lull less experienced investors into complacency. You know, “don’t worry, everything is fine, dear.” If we don’t bounce this morning, carry that forward as another chink in the armor.

In a failure to bounce, we enter the April 5th gap and volume air pocket down to 4014. Given the S&P 500’s affinity for hopping in 50-point increments, it is a short step to 4000. The market could bounce there. If not, additional support lies in the 3925 to 3975 range – with 3950 (the next 50-point increment) as a good target. The 21-week line, also critical support, sits at 3940.

I am a bit torn in my outlook this morning. The put/call ratio spiked yesterday to a level not seen since the November election. The ratio suggests a lot of accumulated shorts, and they are a fickle crowd. It does not take much of a rally for them to panic buy and cover their positions. 

On the other hand, the retail crowd may just be waking up to the fact that a precipitous correction is underway. The late arrivals could aggressively sell any rally attempt today – taking us back down the aforementioned ladder. 

The likely compromise between the two opposing forces, especially coming off three days of expanded range, would be a balancing/trading range day inside yesterday’s regular session range. Responsive trade later today from the established range would be the likely, best trades.

The new overnight swing low is bearish, at least partially testing the unfilled early April gap. But regular session activity is the only activity that really counts in a gap fill.

Note that the market has started to pay attention to rates again as the recent tech weakness recoiled from higher rates and infected the indexes. Keep a chart of the TNX handy.

As long as prices hold within yesterday’s range, I am a responsive range trader today. Should prices get out of range to the downside, I will target the overnight low first and then look to the full gap fill outlined above.

Good luck today.

A.F. Thornton

View from the Top – Interim Alert

Welcome to our Nightmare

It might be hard to believe this evening, but 40% of the stocks in the S&P 500 hit new all-time highs on Monday, and that may actually be a record (and a buying climax). In March 2020, I projected an “ideal” date for the peak of the 18-month cycle to be May 8, 2021 (this past Saturday). It was not hard to predict, as I used the average length of nominal 18-month cycle peaks going back a few years. But even as of Monday, I doubted my own work, and then we were stopped out of our remaining positions in the Founders Group on a violation of the 5-day line. 

There were still many constructive charts on Monday. This market has been nothing, if not relentless. But the news of the cyberattack on one of the largest oil pipelines in the country was too much to bear. As we have seen in the last 48-hours, the ripple effect through the economy poured more gasoline on the inflation fire – no pun intended. We now see gas price shock, lines at the gas station, and more transportation bottlenecks. So the catalyst arrived, and down we go.

I was watching two key stocks this morning for clues about the future. One was Visa, and the other was the XHB (Homebuilder’s ETF). That covers consumer credit trends and the largest purchase consumers make (that has been inflated to the moon over the last 12-months). As you will see below, both are telegraphing unpleasant circumstances.

Even this morning, the market fought hard to hold support for the first few hours. But if you followed the playbook in the Pre-Market Outlook, it was a rewarding day. And there is little doubt that the 18-month peak has arrived, with the only remaining question being how far down we will go before the decline is finished. 

As mentioned over the past few days, the 200-day moving average is a typical target for the 18-month cycle trough, usually followed by a retest. The correction then ends with a somewhat scary capitulation – a dastardly down day that may trigger exchange circuit breakers on heavy volume. Only time will tell. Of course, there may be nothing normal or typical in the current circumstances.

Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of this initial stage of the downdraft is that there was nowhere to hide (except cold hard cash and a slight blip higher in the Energy ETF). U.S. Treasuries – normally THE haven during a stock market decline – were off significantly today. The inverse of the U.S. Treasury sell-off is that interest rates actually rose on the day – a most unusual circumstance in such a steep stock market decline. The U.S. Dollar rallied – perhaps driven by the attractiveness to foreigners of higher U.S. interest rates and a flight to safety.

The inverse stock/bond behavior is a shout-out to our old friend, WWSHD (When What Should Happen Doesn’t). If stocks decline, interest rates should fall, making the U.S. Dollar less attractive. The counter-scenario at hand might portend a deeper (as opposed to shallower) trough ahead of us.

For now, the put/call ratio and volatility index both closed a bit overdone on the fear side. We should get a short-covering bounce in the morning off the 50-day line on the S&P 500, also the former channel top line. It is hard to believe that we already got to the 50-day line today. As you know, that was my ultimate target if we broke support this morning, but I thought it would take a few sessions to get there.

Typically – or perhaps better stated – ideally, the market would rally a bit here and give us the penultimate shorting opportunity on a long, third wave down in Elliott Wave terminology. We shall see.

In the meantime, there are more stocks to short in this decline than I have money to short them. We will start with the pumped-up popular stocks with no earnings. We can work it from there.

By the way, at one point tonight, Bitcoin was off nearly $10,000. Apparently, Elon Musk decided that Bitcoin was bad and no longer acceptable to Tesla because it had too large of a carbon footprint. Of course, this was after Tesla recently sold their Bitcoin for a $1 billion profit. How about a “green” donation, Elon? Apparently, Bitcoin tripped hard on the news.

One more quick point, if you would kindly indulge another small rant. The Fed released a paper last week discussing the dangers of the asset bubble underway. In a series of Fed governor speeches over the past week, the Fed has been jawboning the market down. 

Any notion that the Fed will save this market, then, is sadly misplaced. They want it to fall. If it falls, the ensuing calamity will likely temper inflation, and the Fed won’t necessarily need to raise rates and bankrupt the U.S. Treasury.

Wall Street having already been alerted, the Fed can now lay the problem off on the 8 million new retail traders in the market since last year. Wall Street will cheerfully introduce the newbies to the concept of “south” now that they only understand “north.” If that is not enough, the Fed can consign losses to all the “buy and hold” 401(k) plans out there.  You know, “invest for the long-term.” Perhaps stated another way “stay in until we get out.” 

A good stock market walloping also should scare the little people into spending less and maybe getting a job for the meager serf wages offered. Maybe the wages can even fall further, with the ongoing, massive, illegal immigration. They need jobs too! 

By the way, how many baby boomers are about to retire? The number is historic, you say? What is it the young people text to each other these days, “Laugh out Loud?” Do you see how this works?

Ahh, the World Economic Forum’s Great Reset – “You will own nothing, but you will be happy.”

For now, it’s Davos or bust. These are, indeed, extraordinary times.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook – Update (Charts Added) 5/12/2021

11:35 am EST - S&P Futures 4082

It has been quite the battle this morning, and bears have managed to tip prices below yesterday’s low and the overnight spike low from the CPI report. The tempo is unusually labored thus far. 

Also, the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 are breaking their trendlines at current prices. The S&P 500 is trading below the balance area low we identified yesterday at 4115. Notably, the day is not over, and things can look completely different by the close.

At current levels (and we don’t know if participants will accept prices here quite yet), the Dow (which had kept the stock markets propped up until the last minute) is now trading below its 21-day line. That means all four major indices are now operating in unison (S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, Dow Industrials, and the Russell 2000), below this key reference line. 

Also, this morning, one of Sentiment Trader’s risk-off models has flipped to defense. Again, all of this is preliminary but helps build the case for the intermediate, 18-month cycle peak we have been expecting.

There is a lot of chatter about ending unemployment benefits early so that workers are motivated to accept an apparent plethora of available jobs (at meager wages). Chatter about the Fed being way off the mark on inflation containment causes market participants to anticipate a change in Fed policy, no matter what the current policy statements may be.

Think of current Fed policy as the punch bowl at the party. Everything changes if they take the punch bowl away. Having said that, the longer they wait, the worse it will be for the markets when the bubble bursts. 

Of course, this assumes that the Fed does not want inflation. That is a huge assumption for a Federal Reserve that has cozied up to the U.S. Treasury – which now has a massive debt (and wants to add $4 trillion more). Believe this – either that debt has to be monetized (inflated away), or the U.S. will risk a default, either outright or by robbing entitlements such as Social Security or Medicare.

As I indicated yesterday, I have been experiencing that vertigo feeling lately – an uncomfortable feeling that we are not on solid ground and our country has lost its footing. I still feel like I am working on the top floor of a tall building. Everything looks fine working on my floor, until I look out the window and it is a long way down.

A.F. Thornton

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