All posts by AF Thornton

Morning Notes – 4/18/2022

Good Morning:

  • Sellers remain in control, and we remain in cash.
  • Futures are down 0.3% to 4378, but up from overnight lows of 4355.
  • Today’s volatility should stay high with an implied move of plus or minus 1.17%.
  • Resistance is at 4400 and 4420 (SPY440).
  • Support comes in at 4355 (SPY435), then 4300.
  • Risk remains elevated as long as the market is under the Hedge Wall at 4400.
  • The market may gap down with a True Gap, and both Gap Rules and Spike Rules are in play.

Good luck if you are trading today. I skip a lot of Mondays because they can be weird sometimes. However, the overnight low almost delved into the Weekly Expected Low green zone, so that I will stay alert. Reference the Weekly Navigator Oracle published yesterday for more details.

A.F. Thornton

Navigator Oracle™ Weekly Letter – 4/17/2022

We come into this week with our models, once again, in cash. I want to cover interest rates and the U.S. Treasury market, then the S&P 500 Index in this week’s issue. I will be focusing on the weekly chart and what it may be telling us. 

The bottom line is that we should be coming into a short-term bounce in the trading range. But we are likely to go lower in the first part of the week before a turn. But make no mistake, the top of this bear is still unfolding.

The hallmark of a trading range is confusion. There is a lot of confusion to go around. That is the primary reason we have a reprieve rally.

My challenge is always effective brevity on these pages. I could write a book on any one of these subjects. But time does not permit, and I would likely stretch your tension span.

So I will cut to the chase. We will start with the U.S. Treasury market and interest rates since that is where all the trouble is. But let’s briefly visit inflation to lay the groundwork.

Inflation

Prices should begin to climb at a slower pace, perhaps around 4 or 5%, for the foreseeable future. You already know that “Putin’s Price Hike” is nonsense, so let’s leave blame aside and focus on the problem.

Inflation results from money printing (now reversing per Quantitative Tightening). Inflating the money supply leads to demand-driven inflation. But inflation is also driven by structural supply shortages caused by the China Virus and, more recently, Deglobalization. 

Deglobalization (bringing manufacturing and other things we previously imported back home) requires a longer-term transition with inefficiencies, higher production costs, and higher prices.

The market is confused, the hallmark of a trading range, because it does not believe that the Fed can, needs, or will raise interest rates or implement Quantitative Tightening at the promised levels.

On the issue of need, the inflation itself is already leading to demand destruction. Consumers cannot afford the higher prices, their wages are not rising to keep pace, and they are cutting back, as evidenced by the Retail Sales figures missing their mark last week. There will be no need to raise interest rates as promised because the economy (and demand) is already peaking.

On the issue of can, the Fed is in no position to sell off its balance sheet as promised in Quantitative Tightening. There are not enough people who want the U.S. paper, as the treasury market is the most illiquid in a generation. Also, the Fed will be competing with the U.S. Treasury itself, which needs to sell $1.5 trillion to finance the latest budget deficit. There are few buyers for various reasons – a subject for another day. 

On the issue of will, the Fed will need to discount treasuries to sell them. The fear is that the Fed could lose control of interest rates and the bond market – perhaps necessitating yield curve controls if they dump into an illiquid market. You can see why the Fed delaying QT is more likely than trying to sell into a market that does not want any more U.S. Treasuries, especially with the elections ahead.

The Fed may eventually cap interest rates with yield curve controls as it realizes it has lost control of the bond market and interest rates.

On the supply side, the transition from globalization to deglobalization will be a painful process. I could write volumes on this. Even though demand destruction will happen from higher prices and a possible misstep by the Fed tightening into a slowing economy, it will not stop the higher inflation coming from these challenging structural supply changes.

With the election on the horizon and the Democrat Party slated for destruction, I would not be surprised to see the Biden Administration implement wage and price controls to make the public feel as if the administration is doing something. Such action will worsen inflation, as happened under the Nixon Administration.

Inflation Expectations Pressure Interest Rates

This is a chart of the U.S. Treasru Bond ETF (TLT) reflecting bond prices and the 10-Year U.S. Treasury Yield Index (TNX) reflecting the interest rate. The price and rate are inversely correlated.
This is a chart of the U.S. Treasru Bond ETF (TLT) reflecting bond prices and the 10-Year U.S. Treasury Yield Index (TNX) reflecting the interest rate. The price and rate are inversely correlated.

Combine the look from the chart above with the inflation discussion. Yields have risen parabolically already, as bond prices have fallen into a waterfall decline (usually when the price is oversold and close to a trough). A rate peak should coincide with the 40-week interest rate cycle peak and resistance at the top of its long-term interest rate channel.

A pause in rising rates is overdue and is likely coming as peak fear precedes the early May Fed meeting and announcement. If rates fall and bonds rise, the stock market will likely follow the bond market higher. The opposite is also true.

Interest Rates Pressure Stocks

This is the weekly chart of the S&P 500 index futures, with key levels highlighted.
This is the weekly chart of the S&P 500 index futures, with key levels highlighted.

With the inflation and monetary policy backdrop, the bullish case is that we are coming down to form the right shoulder of a head and shoulders reversal pattern. The pattern projects the all-time high, likely establishing the top of a trading range.

  • Few expect a rally to get underway – which means the sellers could be exhausted.
  • We have the pattern.
  • Declining volume on the pattern increases the likelihood it is valid.
  • The yield curve is not inverted (measured traditionally).
  • The yield curve actually is steepening – which is not recessionary.
  • The right shoulder should coincide with the 40-day cycle and early May Fed meeting, if not sooner.
  • The February/March lows marked the bottom of at least a 20-week cycle, the principal cycle I monitor. And perhaps the 40-week and 18-month cycles bottomed too.
  • In other words, we just passed through a significant trough and inflection point.
  • It is unlikely that the price would fail here, as the market would instantly crystalize into a bear market, leading to the next major cycles peaking on the left side of their arc. (left-translation).
  • I believe that it is too early for the market to capitulate here. It is more likely to occur this fall.
  • Left translation would be ominous, and I won’t rule it out.

The bearish case is also powerful.

  • We have closed on the lows for two weeks in a row.
  • We fell below all key moving averages, including the 50-week line.
  • We are potentially in an Elliot Wave “3” that could take the price down to 3600 or lower in left translation.
  • Traders could easily get trapped and tricked by the right shoulder referenced above failing.

What to Expect This Week

This is a 15-minute RTH chart of the S&P 500 Index Futures with the projected weekly range shaded.. Selling is advisable in the red zone and buying in the green for the week ahead.
This is a 15-minute RTH chart of the S&P 500 Index Futures with the projected weekly range shaded.. Selling is advisable in the red zone and buying in the green for the week ahead.

The options market predicts a 175-point range for the week from 4300 up to 4475. Neither end of the spectrum would resolve anything, including the symmetrical right shoulder pivot closer to 4200. The probabilities of staying in this range are 70%, but notably, Friday’s candle closed slightly below last week’s range. Volatility sometimes makes the market less efficient, and the boundaries don’t hold.

Note that we have been in an inherently more volatile put-driven market. A lot of protection expired on Friday, leaving the market more vulnerable to a negative Gamma spiral early in the week than in February and March. The price flip to positive delta and gamma would not start until 4445.

On a final note, the Monday and Tuesday following monthly expirations have generally been negative, ending in fairly deep price troughs and reversals. So I expect weakness into Tuesday, where we should get a bounce. As the price action unfolds, I will save the details for the daily subscriber charts and reports.

I hope you have a good trading week ahead. Be careful as anything out of left field (e.g., Russia/Ukraine) could negate this forecast. Stops are critical.

A.F. Thornton

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Afternoon Notes – 4/14/2022

  • Good afternoon:
  • This will be a short note. I was glad we sold at the Open today for a nice profit. That was the peak of priced on the day. It was downhill into the close.
  • The market left us kind of hanging as to the intermediate picture, but the overall performance was negative and exceeded our volatility estimates after more negative Fed speak hit the tape. 
  • It is difficult to discern much on these big expiration days, as there are a lot of buys and sells to close out option positions, rather than for investment reasons.
  • World events continue to be negative, and the Global Banking system is on the edge.
  • I will cover everything in the weekly outlook over the weekend

Happy Easter!

A.F. Thornton

Morning Note – Updated Day Trading Levels Chart

We exited our SPY and QQQ leveraged call positions in leveraged accounts and all of our cash SPY and QQQ positions in non-leveraged accounts near the Open and at the first resistance levels identified in the morning notes (450 and 347, respectively).

We will reevaluate over the weekend.

Here is the subscriber chart I shared with you this morning, updated for the Open price.

This is the updated subscriber chart from the pre-market notes this morning. The leveks have been adjusted for the Open.

Again, day trading on expiration days is tricky, especially on Monthly Expiration.

A.F. Thornton

Morning Notes – 4/14/2022

Good Morning:

  • No, not crazy. Well, not crazy about the market. As to life in general? Maybe.
  • The wife did accuse me yesterday of “Doomscrolling” and why I should stop. She said being constantly connected has downsides, including getting pulled into a cycle of online negativity.
  • I was dumbfounded. All I have done is point out that we are on the cusp of World War III, the country has the highest public and private debt to GDP ratio ever, inflation is at record levels for my lifetime, mortgage rates have doubled in less than a month, interest rates generally have skyrocketed, we are in an “everything bubble,” and our government is being run by inept, corrupt, lawless and autocratic commies.
  • I think I am very disciplined about what I read, don’t you agree?
  • The morning’s news is that Elon Musk, bless him, has made an unsolicited offer for Twitter to take it private. And Elon believes in free speech. Wow! There is yet hope that we can turn this country around.
  • But since the Deep State literally owns Twitter (and CNN and MSNBC), watching them turn Elon Musk into Donal Trump will be interesting. Before long, he will be a racist, homophobe, extremist who will “threaten our democracy.”
  • By the way, “Threaten our Democracy” should be added to “Putin’s Price Hike” as the new mantra of the talking head lefties.
  • The offer is $54 per share, and it closed at about 46 yesterday.
  • Retail sales came out this morning, and they were lower than expected. Considering both inflation and hoarding, the number is actually much worse than it first appears.
  • Yesterday Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned countries, especially China and India, that they better get on board with punishing India and Russia. Otherwise, she may lead the charge to punish the fence-sitters financially.
  • I am sure they are all shaking in their boots.
  • The European Central Bank is talking tough but left rates unchanged. Familiar, isn’t it?
  • And yes, I can be intermediate bearish, and short-term bullish. We need to work runs in both directions on a swing trading basis. As mentioned yesterday afternoon, we will deleverage, at the very least, today. We may go back to cash. A profit is locked in.
  • Futures held a quiet overnight session until the Retail Sales report disappointed.
  • Nevertheless, we look for half the volatility today compared to yesterday, with an implied move of plus or minus 0.67% or 30 points (open/close). Resistance remains at 4450, then 4475. Support shows at 4435, then 4420 (SPY420 equivalent).
  • You will need to adjust my figures depending on where the market opens. If it opens below support, the stated support could become resistance and vice versa. Remember that I write these notes typically between 3:00 am and 4:00 pm PST.
  • But as should be clear from the weekly chart below, 4440 is THE key inflection point at the moment. Acceptance below that level strengthens the bear case. Acceptance above hat-tips the bulls and validates the potential reversal patterns pointing to the old highs.
This is the pre-market chart presented to subscribers each morning showing the trading parameters we expect for the day.
  • I thought you might enjoy seeing the pre-market chart that Navigator Day Traders™ receive each morning. The area bounded by the red and green shaded zones is what I call today’s Sandbox. That is where day traders should play.
  • Try not to decode all the nuances, but focus on the range and where it makes sense to initiate long and short positions.
  • I have to adjust the range slightly for the actual Open, but the top of the red area and the bottom of the green area is the 30-point range from the Open mentioned above.
  • This range is adjusted for gamma. The raw implied move from yesterday’s close is about 24 points for the day. I pay attention to both.
  • Also, note the rising wedge forming on the chart, which may lead to a reversal to lower prices this morning.

This is a pre-market intraday 15-minute chart for subscribers showing today's Sandbox and other key levels for the trading day ahead.
This is a pre-market intraday 15-minute chart for subscribers showing today's Sandbox and other key levels for the trading day ahead.
  • I would suggest a slight bullish bias today, as the continued unwinding of short positions into expiration still gives us some Vanna tailwinds.
  • The Volatility Trigger incidentally is 4440, our key bull/bear threshold. Because we are dancing around it at this writing, it is more difficult to discern direction this morning.
  • But it is monthly and weekly expiration today. Besides taking profits on our existing positions, it is not a great day trading day so I won’t be trading.
  • I will be watching the overnight low at 4432.50 and high at 4455.75 for the initial direction clues. But there is a lot of volume at 4440ish overnight. At least initially, opening below the level might turn it into fairly significant resistance.
  • On the hourly charts, there is a triple bottom at 4380 and a swing high at 4470. Likely, whichever one of those levels breaks calls the next intermediate move. I seriously doubt that will happen today, but carry the levels forward in your narrative.

Happy Easter, and let’s all pray for our country this weekend.

A.F. Thornton

Afternoon Notes – 4/13/2022

Let’s try a slightly different format for the P.M. notes today. I want the notes to be authentic, but I always tend to filter them and clean them up. I am a perfectionist at my core.

The notes are meant to reflect a page out of my daily trading journal. I set up my day each morning and then evaluate how well the day met my forecast.

The importance of keeping a trading journal cannot be overstated. It helps me refine my process and continue to refine what works and what doesn’t.

So let’s try this more authentic approach and see what you think:

From the AM Notes:

  • Another interesting aspect of inflation comes from money manager surveys wherein a large percentage of money managers still believe inflation is transitory.
  • They are being dragged screaming and kicking into the idea that inflation is sticky and the Fed will get aggressive to stop it.
  • In other words, sticky inflation is still not fully priced into markets, despite what the interest rate markets say.
  • And so, the debate will continue until inflation is fully priced into the markets.
  • And it’s also why Wall Street’s biggest bear, and the author of the monthly Fund Manager Survey, Michael Hartnett, writes that “we remain in “sell-the-rally” camp as the January – February sell-off was the appetizer not the main course of ’22.”

Results:

Today’s positive stock market action confirmed the inflation “transitory” theme. 

Think about it. The market is only down half as much as it was at the February 24th invasion low, yet the fundamentals are worse.

War in Europe is escalating. Interest rates are higher, inflation is more persistent, the Fed speak is more hawkish.

Yet, the NASDAQ 100 and related tech sectors, arguably the hardest hit by the interest rate shock, have Head and Shoulders Reversal patternd forming on their daily charts. The pattern (if it takes) projects a move back to the all-time highs.

No, this is not a screaming buy based on the weight of the indicators. But if we are about to come up through the “middle” of a trading range, we would not expect to find the same confirmation we might see at the bottom or top.

I constantly remind everyone that price action is more important than anything else. The price action does not reflect the current Wall Street negative narrative. 

We practice what we preach – and did some swing buys today.

    From the AM Notes:

    • Yesterday’s put buying increases volatility today. Fully 50% of the SPX, SPY, and QQQ Gamma expires between weekly and monthly expiration tomorrow. 
    • With all the put buying yesterday, we forecast a plus or minus 68-point range from the Open. That is a full 120-point playground for the day.
    • Support is at 4400, then 4375, with resistance at 4420, then 4450.
    This is an intraday 5-minute chart of the S&P 500 Futures. The chart shows that the market stayed within the Sandbox zone and turned from the 4450 resistance announced in the Morning Notes.
    This is an intraday 5-minute chart of the S&P 500 Futures. The chart shows that the market stayed within the Sandbox zone and turned from the 4450 resistance announced in the Morning Notes.

    Results:

    The stock market rose 58 points from the open, just below our 68-point target and within today’s Sandbox (bounded by the red and green shaded areas). But note how we could predict the greater volatility today with the additional Put Gamma added yesterday. Yesterday’s range was about half the range today.

    Ultimately, the market stalled at the 4450 identified resistance, also the Hedge Wall and Volatility Trigger line.  But as predicted, 4400 provided support (the market opened at 4393). The market hesitated at the 4420 First Resistance but punched through to the second level.

    The exact chart you see above was provided to Navigator Day Trading™ subscribers pre-market, only the price was blank and filled in throughout the day as if it were following our morning script.

    The market tends to follow our Morning Scripts more often than it doesn’t. But nothing is perfect, which is why we use stops.

      • With volatility elevated from earlier this month, traders are unlikely to carry many short-dated puts over these next few days and into the long weekend.
      • Therefore very short-dated volatility will likely come for sale (plus the back-to-back expirations). Selling the volatility drives Vanna.
      • The Vanna tailwinds should give us a bullish edge into tomorrow’s expirations, but we think this Put interest removal takes away some market support for next week, particularly Monday.

      Results:

      As expected, the market performed bullishly, with the Vanna tailwinds helping the market climb over 1.3%. The market went nearly straight up from the Open in a positive Gamma / Vanna spiral. 

        Conclusions

        We believe the market is pivoting today, possibly generating Head and Shoulders Reversal patterns in technology (QQQ and XLK), technology-related sectors (XLC), and consumer cyclicals (XLY). A bit looser rendition of the pattern is visible in the S&P 500 (SPY) and the Dow (DIA).

        Growth stocks and technology sectors tend to be interest-sensitive. This potential turn higher likely coincides with interest rates hitting short-term peaks at their long-term resistance lines after the latest parabolic climb. Surely, interest rates are due to pause here, even if they will resume the climb later.

        Take a look at the chart below of various U.S. Treasury securites, courtesy of Kimball Charting Solutions (interest rates are inverted – higher rates as the lines fall and lower as they rise):

        This chart shows the current interest rates (inverted) on the 2,5,10, and 30-Year U.S. Treasuries. All of these rates should pause here and take a break here (and their corresponding bonds should find support).
        This chart shows the current interest rates (inverted) on the 2,5,10, and 30-Year U.S. Treasuries. All of these rates should pause here and take a break here (and their corresponding bonds should find support).

        So What Did Today’s Session Add to the Narrative?

        First, the Founders’ Group executed two Navigator Swing Trader™ buy signals using May 20, 2022, SPY and QQQ at-the-money calls (or buying the cash SPY or QQQ ETF for non-leveraged accounts). We allocated 40% of our portfolios to each position.

        The QQQ buy came around 9:40 AM EST as the QQQ broke to the upside of a reversal pattern at 340.50. We bought the SPY around 11:40 AM EST as it crossed back up and through the WEM low at 439.

        • The hardest part of what we do sometimes is trading against the prevailing Wall Street Narrative and we did so today. Partly, this is because In the new paradigm, stocks and bonds are correlated – meaning they generally will rise and fall together. In the past, bonds would rise on any scare when stocks would fall and vice versa.
        • Today’s equity buys could have been driven by traders anticipating a short-term peak in interest rates. The next Fed Meeting is still two-weeks out – so there is still some runway ahead of us. Two weeks can be a lifetime in these volatile markets.
        • Today’s buys could also have been triggered by Vanna tailwinds or other options expiration-related distortions, meaning we would need to sell the options tomorrow. 
        • We likely will take profits on the options tomorrow, perhaps switching the leveraged accounts to cash ETF porisiton. I don’t want to have the theta premium decay of a three-day weekend anyway. I would rather reposition on Monday.
        • Regardless, the stock market is behaving bullishly for now, and bonds are at long-term support. If these two asset classes pivot higher here, the Founders’ Group will benefit. Stops are already above break-even, so we have nothing to lose.
        • Moreover, and focusing just on the reversal pattern in the QQQ, if the pattern completes, it projects a measured move to the all-time high from last November.
        This chart shows the NASDAQ 100 ETF (QQQ) with a potential Head and Shouders Reversal pattern forming at the 50% rallly retracement inflection point and the Founder's Group's new long entry this morning.
        This chart shows the NASDAQ 100 ETF (QQQ) with a potential Head and Shouders Reversal pattern forming at the 50% rallly retracement inflection point and the Founder's Group's new long entry this morning.
        • Wouldn’t that catch a lot of investors off guard?
        • But if the pattern prevails, I would point you back to our Current Stock Market Thesis.
        • Using the 1970s, the Dow Jones Industrial Index (a potential model for the current stagflation environment), went sideways for years. I have been predicting the current market could emulate a similar pattern and go sideways in a trading range. Perhaps we see that prediction unfold.
        • Whether it does or doesn’t, we will scalp some gains here. Until the stock market sustains new all-time highs, the bear isnt hibernating.
        • A move back to the old highs and then another reversal would confirm my suspicions.
        • We haven’t achieved the sideways pattern yet and we are clearly speculating, but keep it on your radar.
        • For now, our summary narrative remains that we have a bullish tape, at least in the short-term. And it may be confirmed by rates potentially peaking short-term.
        • And we are taking advantage of the fact that the majority of Money Managers are still predicting transitory inflation, and don’t believe that the Fed can, will or even needs to do what they have promised to fight inflation
        • The plan is to take our leveraged profits tomorrow, perhaps retaining cash positions in the SPY and QQQ ETFs. 
        • Tomorrow is the last trading day of this week, and we will reevaluate over the weekend to potentially add leverage back on Monday.

        What do you think? Do you like this new format? Email me directly and let me know your thoughts.

        A.F. Thornton

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        Morning Notes – 4/13/2022

        Good Morning!

        • Another interesting aspect of inflation comes from money manager surveys wherein a large percentage of money managers still believe inflation is transitory.
        • They are being dragged screaming and kicking into the idea that inflation is sticky and the Fed will get aggressive to stop it.
        • In other words, sticky inflation is still not fully priced into markets, despite what the interest rate markets say.
        • And so, the debate will continue until inflation is fully priced into the markets.
        • And it’s also why Wall Street’s biggest bear, and the author of the monthly Fund Manager Survey, Michael Hartnett, writes that “we remain in “sell-the-rally” camp as the January – February sell-off was the appetizer not the main course of ’22.”
        • Yesterday’s put buying increases volatility today. Fully 50% of the SPX, SPY, and QQQ Gamma expires between weekly and monthly expiration tomorrow. 
        • With all the put buying yesterday, we forecast a plus or minus 68-point range from the Open. That is a full 120-point playground for the day.
        • Support is at 4400, then 4375, with resistance at 4420, then 4450.
        • With volatility elevated from earlier this month,  traders are unlikely to carry many short-dated puts over these next few days and into the long weekend. 
        • Therefore very short-dated volatility will likely come for sale (plus the back-to-back expirations). Selling the volatility drives Vanna.
        • The Vanna tailwinds should give us a bullish edge into tomorrow’s expirations, but we think this Put interest removal takes away some market support for next week, particularly Monday.

        •  Subscriber charts are up.

        Be careful today!

        A.F. Thornton

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        Afternoon Notes – 4/12/2022

        This chart breaaks down the four primary measures of inflation after adding in today's CPI numbers.
        This chart breaaks down the four primary measures of inflation after adding in today's CPI numbers.
        • Let’s first knock out the inflation report, now that I have had a chance to dig into it.
        • The top line CPI number was horrific but in line with consensus expectations. The core numbers (the elements of inflation that are less volatile) came in a bit lower than consensus.
        • The CPI and PCE have slightly different baskets and methodologies derived from two different branches of government. The PCE has been more accurate and the Fed seems to prefer it.
        • And some simple math indicates real hourly wages are down again for March, with inflation this high. That makes 13 out of the last 15 months that real wages have fallen.
        • The fall in real wages coincides with the Biden regime taking office. I thought they cared about the working class?
        This chart shows the S&P 500 Index today (black line) with put activity (blue line) and Call activity (gold line).
        • The blue Put line rising all day indicates a lot of Put selling. Usually, this positively impacts the market as Dealers have to buy futures to hedge their portfolio deltas. But the market rolled over after the initial morning pop.
        • I don’t have to explain the morning rally, as it fizzled by the end of the day. But as indicated in the morning notes, short-covering likely drove the initial gains (short the rumor buy the news). 
        • Nevertheless, the index should have continued to rise. Options activity does not always influence the market, but today’s aggressive Put selling often coincides with a short-term bottom.
        • So the market remains wandering in the desert between 4400 and 4500, and the influence of expiration this month looks neutral to slightly positive for prices.
        • So I will go out on a limb to suggest that the WEM low at 4400 will hold this week, and we could see the price pop back up to test the neckline of the topping pattern discussed this morning at 4475.
        • The next catalyst will be JP Morgan Chase’s earnings tomorrow morning. The forward guidance will be the most crucial driver, whatever the earnings may be.
        • I don’t think the crowd expects banks to do well with an inverted yield curve and a recession potentially ahead.
        • Sadly, the situation continues to deteriorate in Europe, with Russia sending warships toward Finland,  another country that wants to join NATO with Austria. Both countries border Russia.
        • It reminds me of one of the most potent axioms I learned when I was younger – “What you Fear, you Create.” Putin should take a page from that book.
        • But I am frustrated by the lies and manipulation emanating from the information stream.
        • It is tough to discern truth from falsehoods, especially with the Biden regime.
        • But I give the left and the Biden regime credit for discipline, if nothing else. They repeat all the same talking points like a page out of the Stepford Wives (dating myself again).
        • Truly, if I hear another leftist repeat “Putin Price Hikes” again, I will throw something at the television. Are all these leftists on MSNBC and CNN robots?
        • They must believe we are stupid, and maybe we are. But it isn’t very respectful.
        • Did Joe forget we were all putting gas in our cars and buying groceries long before Russia invaded Ukraine? How about the price of houses, used cars, lumber, etc., long before Putin invaded his neighbor?
        • Nice try, Joe! Why don’t you let our oil and gas industry out of its handcuffs, and we will starve Putin of his primary income? The last time we did that, it bankrupted the Soviet Union.
        • If Russia does nuke us, I hope they start with Washington D.C. It may be our only chance to recover.

        A.F. Thornton

        Morning Notes – 4/12/2022

        This is a chart of the broad Wilshire 5000 U.S. stock market index, one of the broadest measures we have for the stock market. Courtesy of Daneric Elliott Waves, we see a wave count indicating that we may be starting the Primary {3) Wave down.
        This is a chart of the broad Wilshire 5000 U.S. stock market index, one of the broadest measures we have for the stock market. Courtesy of Daneric Elliott Waves, we see a wave count indicating that we may be starting the Primary {3) Wave down.

        Good Morning:

        • At the moment, the simplicity of analyzing the broad market in the chart above, courtesy of Daneric Elliott Waves, cannot be understated.
        • Daneric makes the following excellent points, and I agree: 
          • This Wilshire 5000 Index weekly chart shows a solid five waves down and three waves corrective “up.” And prices rejected at a simple neckline of a simple head and shoulders broken pattern that had met its initial downside target.

          • The market has a simple count, a simple look, and simple technicals; why try and out-think things at this stage?

          • Even the simple technicals of a positive diverging RSI at the wave (1) low on a daily chart suggested prices would peak above the point of initial divergence (wave 4 of (1) down).

          • And thus, it was fulfilled, but that fulfillment is over. There are no more bullish technicals to “scream” higher prices are coming.

          • We made that case at the (1) low, and the price fulfilled those technicals in the rally that ensued. There is nothing technically or even sentiment-wise suggesting buying the overpriced market at this stage.

          • I won’t say rallying up to new highs won’t happen. For sure, we have seen how the madness of crowds can linger on seemingly forever.

          • While most of you know that I am not a big Elliott Wave fan because the waves are subject to so much interpretation in real-time, sometimes the strategy can be helpful when the count is clear. This may be one of those times.
          • An alternate count could accommodate one more small bounce to get us through Easter.
          • But if the overall wave (2) is complete, as suggested in the chart above, then wave (3) lower, and all its ugly, nasty subwaves may be in store for the market.
          • And that is the true danger of betting on bear market “bounces.”
        • And bounce we should, as we closed yesterday near the WEM low at 4400.
        • But we are now in negative Gamma territory, with higher volatility, and we are midstream in at least one Head and Shoulders Top pattern that projects lower prices.
        • We will see how well the options market has priced the week ahead if it respects the WEM. Nobody wants Good Friday to turn into Black Friday, so one might hope that the WEM low at 4400 holds for the rest of the week.
        • As reliable as the WEM framework is each week (the probability is about 70% that the boundaries will contain the price action), don’t dismiss the other 30% of the time when the boundaries fail.
        • If the WEM low doesn’t hold,  you will witness what it looks like when you are coming down from the nosebleed seats in a Primary (3) wave down.
        • The two leading indicators we have been following closely, Junk Bonds (JNK) and Transports (IYT), are now trading below their March lows, and the S&P 500 is likely to follow.
        • What buying there is has been concentrated on defensive names. Investors have been dumping tech and other growth stocks.
        • Recall from the Morning Notes that the market is not hedged like it was in March, and there is a notable air pocket between current levels and the March lows.
        • Anything is possible when you tag the WEM low on a Monday. Price even sliced through the 50-day line today like it wasn’t there.
        • Air pockets are the wake left after a rip-your-face-off short-covering rally one-time frames higher end over end and does not spend much time or experience volume at price.
        • Bank earnings are also on deck this week, starting with JP Morgan Chase on Wednesday and more banks on Thursday. Forward guidance will be critical.
        • I am asking myself, what will change this downward trajectory?
        • Support today lies at 4420, then 4400, with the next significant support down and through the air pocket to 4310. Look for resistance at 4450, then 4475. 
        • With call buyers absent recently and put buyers finally showing up yesterday, volatility is rising, as it usually does in put-dominated markets.
        • The Expected Move today is plus or minus 56 points from the Open.
        • The March Consumer Price Index print came in a fraction higher than consensus at 8.5%. Don’t you love “transitory” inflation?
        • At this writing, the futures market is taking the CPI news positively, nipping overnight losses that reached down to 4382.
        • Dealers undoubtedly breathed a sigh of relief with the rally, as it negates their need to defend the 4400 WEM low.
        • So why the rally? Don’t forget that the White House tried to get ahead of the CPI report yesterday by preparing us for an alarming number. Perhaps the market took the brunt of the loss yesterday.
        • There could also be short-covering by traders who bet on an even higher number above consensus.
        • And, there is the WEM low where we should expect a bounce anyway.
        • These are complicated waters to navigate.
        • Always remember that returns are ultimately about flows – not narratives.
        • Until the market recovers the Volatility Trigger ( now 4475), put flows and high volatility will drive prices.
        • Subscriber Morning charts are up.

        A.F. Thornton

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        Afternoon Notes – 4/11/2022

        This is a 5-minute Chart of the S&P 500 Futures showing how price interacted with the Gap, 50-day line and the other support levels called out in the Morning Notes
        This is a 5-minute Chart of the S&P 500 Futures showing how price interacted with the Gap, 50-day line and the other support levels called out in the Morning Notes

        Good Afternoon:

        • As it usually is on a True Gap, the first clue to the day was how the market managed the morning gap per Gap Rules.
        • After the price gapped down to our second support level at 4450, traders rejected every attempt to fill the Gap. The overhead spikes on the first few 5-minute candles look like cactus spines.
        • At that point, unable to fill the gap, you start the day with a clear, negative bias.
        • And since the next logical support below is the 50-day line (the only important moving average left standing), you can usually bet the market will find its way there, and it did.
        • So the market moved down just above the 50-day line and 4420 support and went sideways until the final hour of trading.
        • During the final hour, the market puked into the close, and our final support line at 4400, also the WEM Low.
        • It is never fun to start the week at the WEM low, but that is where we find ourselves in the shortened holiday week.
        • In normal circumstances, Dealers will defend the 4400 level for the rest of the week, but if they lose the battle, they will have to sell futures into the decline, exacerbating it.
        • Notably, Monthly Options Expiration is on Thursday this week due to the Friday holiday. We will evaluate the bias later in the week, but right now, it looks like 20% of the float expires.
        • Navigator Day Traders™ had two good trades today, one long and one short.
        • Now, let’s jump out of the day trading weeds, and see what today adds to the larger narrative.
        The 2-Hour S&P 500 Futures Chart shows we broke the neckline of a head and shoulders topping pattern, with a minimum measured move down to 4250, but could also test the March lowa just above 4100.
        The 2-Hour S&P 500 Futures Chart shows we broke the neckline of a head and shoulders topping pattern, with a minimum measured move down to 4250, but could also test the March lowa just above 4100.
        • As is evident in the two-hour chart above, today’s action breaks a head and shoulders topping pattern with a minimum measured move down to 4250.
        • We are once again trading below all the important moving averages on the monthly, weekly, and daily charts, including the 200-day line.
        • From an options perspective, we are now well below the Volatility Trigger, with increasing negative gamma along the way. This shifts the options bias negative with greater volatility (bigger bars and wider swings).
        • This time, the market is not hedged like it was in March. There were so many hedges on in March, that it created a lower boundary that caught the market. There are no similar hedges to catch the fall at this writing.
        • Investor sentiment is neutral – so it is not much help either way.
        • And when you look at volume on the daily chart, the green bars going up are a lot smaller than the red bars coming down. The relationship between the positive and negative volume indicates distribution and institutional selling.
        This is a daily chart of the S&P 500 Index Futures with the volume histogram below the price action. Note that the green volume bars on the recent rally are a lot smaller than the red bars coming down now. That is an indication of institutional selling and distribution.
        This is a daily chart of the S&P 500 Index Futures with the volume histogram below the price action. Note that the green volume bars on the recent rally are a lot smaller than the red bars coming down now. That is an indication of institutional selling and distribution.
        • So we carry forward in our narrative that this rally attempt has failed at the 62% retracement of the January to March decline – which is typicall where they fail. The intermediate downtrend has resumed and it will likely move down to retest the February/March lows. That paints the larger picture bearish. The rally higher likely had more to do with short-covering than enthusiastic investors.
        • We will expand further, but there is the possibility that the trendline coming from the March 2020 lows catches this fall, forming the right shoulder of another head and shoulders pattern, but this time a reversal to take the market higher.
        This daily chart of the S&P 500 Futures shows how interaction with the rising trendline from the March 2020 China Virus crash low, could end up forming a reverse head and shoulders pattern to take the market higher.
        This daily chart of the S&P 500 Futures shows how interaction with the rising trendline from the March 2020 China Virus crash low, could end up forming a reverse head and shoulders pattern to take the market higher.
        • So there is your hope for intermediate-term bulls. You gotta have hope, right?
        • For now, Navigator Swing Traders™ will remain in cash, and we will see if the opportunity presents itself on the green trendline in the chart above.

        My advice to everyone is to buckle up. There is no precedence for our current situation, at least not in recent memory. Moreover, we are ostensibly in a Primary (3) wave down in Elliott Wave jargon, and those are the waves that try men’s souls. Wait, there still are men, aren’t there?

        A.F. Thornton

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