All posts by AF Thornton

Epilogue – 6/18/2021

Well, now you get to see the outlier. The market (S&P 500) broke to the upside of the falling wedge at about 11:00 am EST and staged a rally but only back to the 50-day EMA line on the daily chart. The market makers tried to push the market through the line unsuccessfully for the rest of the day to attempt to recapture the WEM low at 4188-89.

We came into the last hour around the 50-day line at 4175 and there was still hope to climb the 14 points back to the WEM low. Still, when it was clear about 10-minutes before the close that the market makers were not going to have their way, the S&P 500 dropped 25 points in 10-minutes. 

That was the waterfall I mentioned in my first writing today when market makers all run for the exits at the same time to neutralize their deltas. The only saving line was the half roundie at 4150 – a typical 50-point increment inflection point – at least good for a bounce.

There is no way to sugar coat this – the close was ugly. We closed well below every major intermediate support identified this morning. I find it difficult to argue that the intermediate trend is intact. It appears to have been obliterated in less than three sessions past the Fed announcement.

There will be many stocks to short from here, nearly as systematically as we bought them in the past year. That is my best guess anyway after spending the day in church without my phone or any other monitoring capabilities.

More on Sunday – perhaps even a video.

Stay tuned – glad we are in cash.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market 6/18/2021

As indicated yesterday, I am not trading today, nor would I with quadruple witching (monthly and quarterly options and futures expiration). There will be no commentary today as it is an important religious holiday here in Greece. Since just about everyone on this island is either a relative by blood or marriage to my wonderful wife, appearances are important.

The Navigator Swing Strategy remains 100% cash as it has been for the past week or so. As to day trading today, as previously set forth in these pages weird things can happen on quadruple witching days. As a perfect example, we see now (at 8:33 EST – the time of this writing) the S&P 500 making another pass at the WEM low –  putting in a brand new (post-Fed Meeting) low at 4173.50. I hand calculate the WEM low to be 4188 – while the computer calculation is 4189. The point is that many people will lose money today if the S&P 500 futures close below the WEM low level.

I was forbidden from sneaking another trade to or from the WEM low here, but I will sneak in a few comments. In this area, between say 4165 and 4188, we have the important rising intermediate trendline at 4193, the Fed Day reversal low at 4183, the 50-day EMA at 4176, and the 6/3 pivot low at 4165. That is a lot of support.

But for today only – I would key in on the 4188-89 WEM options expiration low. There is nothing else to probabilistically cradle the market below 4188-89 after expiration this afternoon. The WEM low will act as a magnet.

While the Weekly Expected Move low holds the market 80% of the time, on the occasions when it doesn’t, especially on an expiration Friday, we could experience a waterfall decline of sorts as market makers rush to neutralize their losses by selling S&P 500 futures contracts. That would be the exception to the rule. 

Otherwise, I would expect the market to move back to the 4188-89 level or higher before expiration at the close today – from wherever the market decides to pivot higher after this latest or any further sell-offs later today.

You don’t blindly buy the WEM low. You buy the pivot from the ultimate low or lows the market achieves today (maybe using a 15-minute chart as your primary analysis for the turn). So in one scenario, you may be buying close to the WEM low and continuing higher above it, with a successful retest of the Fed Day low around 4183 in place. Also, however, you could be riding a buy trade from a much lower level back up to the WEM low at 4188-89 by the close. Do you see how this works? Treat the WEM low as a magnet as long as the S&P 500 is trading below it.

Beyond that, the market needs to close above the rising, intermediate trendline currently around 4193 to keep the intermediate trend alive. The S&P 500’s negative divergence (meaning the broad market is not confirming the new high in the NASDAQ 100 by a long shot) is concerning. 

But for the NASDAQ 100 firing its last shot higher yesterday, I would be betting that the intermediate trend is finally rolling over. I will have more to say over the weekend, as I am not 100% confident in the analysis yet, but rolling over is my leaning.

Trading much below the 6/3 low today, which sits at 4165.25, could trigger the outlier, waterfall decline from which the market will not recover back to the WEM low. Admittedly, this is something we rarely experience. For now, traders could be running the stops under the Fed Day reversal low at 4183 – only to load up inventory to bring the market right back to the 4188-89 level to take profits late in the day. Right now, the market looks to be forming a falling wedge pattern to reverse higher on the 24-Hour futures data.

With yesterday’s settlement all the way back up at 4212, we would be dealing with a gap this morning (and perhaps a true gap if we open below yesterday’s low at 4183). If so, GAP rules would apply.

Also, keep in mind that we would be opening outside our recent balance area, which has the southern boundary at 4205, with the 5-day EMA just above there at 4209 and the 21-day EMA just below at 4204.

Summarizing then, a close below the 5-day EMA (4209), 21-day EMA (4204), 50-day EMA (4176) and the intermediate trendline itself (4192) nips the intermediate trend. It definitively shifts our strategy from buying dips to shorting rallies for swing trades. Day trades have to be considered day by day.

Best of luck if you decide to trade today, and enjoy your weekend.

A.F. Thornton

Epilogue – 6/18/2021

I closed out another nice trade on the S&P 500 E-mini Futures about 15 minutes before the close – the trade I had mentioned mid-day that once again keyed off the Weekly Expected Move low at 4189. Combined with the middle of the night trades, and I am trading conservatively, 

I captured significant sums today working that same S&P 500 WEM low, sprinkled with a few NASDAQ 100 contracts that I clearly sold too early this morning. Anyway, today was a good day-trading day for me. And go figure, I squeezed out some good gains in what can only be described as a bit of a strange and bifurcated market.

Yesterday, a potential leadership change manifested when the financials turned around after the Fed announcement and press conference. But investors were having none of that today, with more rotation from cyclicals and financials back to tech and other growth stocks. Typically, the day after is a better harbinger of the future than the day of the Fed decision.

Maybe the rotation does make sense, as the NASDAQ 100 had been in a consolidation since last August. The time flies, and cyclical/value names have had plenty of fun in the sun. That is why I need the weekend to take a look at all of this from 30,000 feet. This is the second time in a month that I underestimated the NASDAQ 100. Apparently I was in good company today – but it still ****** me off.

I am not trading tomorrow, nor will there be any outlooks or commentary. First, it is unwise to trade on quadruple witching expiration. Also, Friday is a religious holiday here in Greece and everybody will be in church. When I say everybody – I mean everybody. 

I am told that they will all gossip if I don’t attend – and that is not good in these small villages as gossip is the main industry already. There is a quaint Greek Orthodox church on nearly every corner. They are as prolific as Walgreens at home. 

The beauty of these churches is something to behold. I really enjoy them, and they are quite similar to my Catholic upbringing – at least if I understood Greek. I didn’t understand Latin either. You might recall that the Catholic church split off from what became the Greek Orthodox church in the Great Schism. 

Speaking of a great schism, that is a good description for the NASDAQ 100 (NDX, NQU1, or QQQ) today. The NASDAQ 100 headed north in what almost amounted to a solo climb, while the S&P 500 (SPX, ESU1, or SPY) and nearly everything else headed south. By the day’s end, the S&P 500 and a few of the sectors had improved, at least climbing a small hill and closing near the highs of the day.

The broad market, then, looks like it is already in a correction and waiting for the NASDAQ 100 and growth stocks to join. The NASDAQ 100 is throwing a lifeline out to the rest of the crowd to pull them up. I am not sure who will win. For now and with my bad knee, I will grab a beer and watch from the ski lodge.

I look forward to figuring all of this out and wish you a happy weekend (early).

A.F. Thornton

Mid-Day Update – 6/17/2021

Bizzare – that is my primary thought here. Let’s start with 10-year US Treasury yields paring back under 1.5%. Clearly, that favors growth and tech. Next, the NASDAQ 100 screamed out of the open straight up to tag a new all-time high before stalling. Next, the S&P 500 went straight to nowhere – stalling right at the overnight high. Financials (XLF), Basic Materials (XLB), and Energy (XLE) are getting clobbered – all down north of -3%. Energy is approaching -5%.

The S&P 500 ran into the supply mentioned this morning. NYSE breadth is nearly 3:1 negative. NYSE Tick distribution has been negative all day. The broad NASDAQ breadth is even.

Honestly, I don’t know what to make of this at all. Is the QQQ and/or NASDAQ 100 a solo artist? A one-hit wonder soon to join the living dead? Or, will it pull everything else back up with it? I would favor the former over the latter. But at this point, I don’t know. I am wondering if any of this has to do with quadruple witching tomorrow? Maybe that is where the term “witching” comes from. Is it another full moon?

I woke up at 4:30 am here, and that is when both indexes were retesting their lows overnight in the futures market. Trading rehab never worked for me. Naturally, I took a dive toward my keyboard. I picked up two contracts on each of the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 futures (counting once again on the WEM lows holding through Friday). I woke up to blissful profits, but sold at the 15-minute / 21 EMAs on the cash indexes about an hour after the open. I could not have imagined the NASDAQ 100 would keep going.

All I will say for now is that I would keep my powder dry until the picture is a bit clearer. The divergence here between tech and the rest of the market is not healthy. I need the weekend to figure all this out. I have seen some weird markets and weird times, but this dystopian drama we have all been experiencing seems to get stranger and stranger.

I just picked up two S&P 500 minis off the 4189 WEM low for a trade. Hang in there with me until we can ready, fire, aim again.

A.F. Thornton

Pre-Market Outlook 6/18/2021

Focus on these three levels this morning – 4213 (the overnight high), 4196.50 (the low of our recent four day balance area) and 4183 (the overnight low which also clusters with the WEM low of 4189 and the 21-day line at 2199. All of these numbers relate to the 24-Hour S&P 500 Index futures but you can run similar lines on the SPY or SPX cash index.

The FOMC can change the market’s tone, and sometimes that is exactly what they intend. But we got the usual word salad yesterday, and the initial reaction to the announcement was mixed. Prices initially recovered 100% of what they lost, but then pulled back into the close. Then when it came to Globex, we found the markets not only revisiting the lows but putting in marginal new lows, before recovering slightly into the NYSE open here in a few minutes. Today will give us the true clues to our near-term future.

It is important to note that the intermediate trend has not yet been violated. While the day was rocky and the range was wide, it can only be viewed as negative in the context of the narrow ranges of late. Compared to the usual correction, the price action has not been particularly negative as yet.

While overnight inventory is 100% net short, we are still trading within yesterday’s range so the early trade is a “maybe.”  We are close to the overnight halfback – so maybe the overnight traders took their profits already and that further skews the early trade.

The key takeaway from yesterday, which held the 21- day EMA on both the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100, is that prices found acceptance below the low of the recent four-day balance, and overnight activity went further below that. Early trade could be governed by persistent overhead supply from that balance (especially the marginal new high longs I discussed yesterday). All of these participants may want to liquidate – but weak hands are out of the way for now with yesterday’s temporary plunge.

Mark the overnight high as weak as it went right to settlement and reversed. Should we see strength, assume moving up and through this level as a potential buy and then monitor for continuation.

Overnight activity tested the TPO VPOC from June 3rd. This would be the target with any further weakness. Below than, let’s talk again Monday as you should be shorting or in cash.

A.F. Thornton

The Walk-Back- 6/21/2021

In the news conference, Chairman Powell walked back and clarified the dovish stance outlined in the initial release. First, he clarified that rates would remain near zero – dovish. That is when the sell-off first abated.

Then, Powell indicated that the Fed would start selling some mortgage-back securities – which contracts the balance sheet and moves away from Quantitative Easing. This, along with introducing the tapering topic and more governors becoming hawkish, was enough to calm the hawks without alarming the doves.

So the market has recovered quite a bit from the initial decline. And that is why you have to give the market some time to digest all of this, sometimes even the entire next session.

Most notably, leadership completely reversed from tech to financials, which indicates that higher rates are ahead. The 10-year rate confirmed the same.

I will reserve my deeper analysis for the pre-market outlook tomorrow. So far, there is nothing extraordinary to concern us with today’s decision, except for a market that likely needs to take a rest, and this is just as good of an excuse as any. I must also assess a possible leadership change.

News often distorts the market, and today was no exception. Let’s see how we close and how the market behaves tomorrow.

Let me also harp again on the Weekly Expected Moves that I calculate every Friday for the week that follows. I specifically mentioned the WEM Low this morning – and the likelihood we would tag it in any move to the south. Once again, it was the WEM Low that caught the market in this decline. 

That is vital information to have and know. I picked up $2,500 off the low in a nice trade with a couple of S&P 500 mini futures contracts. That made spinning my wheels all day worthwhile.

Have a wonderful evening.

A.F. Thornton

Fed Update – 6/21/2021

S&P 500 24-Hour Index Futures - 2-hr Candles

The Fed sounded dovish (no apparent policy changes), and the market is unhappy so far. This is the misstep I worried about that would seem illogical at first blush. We like easy monetary policy, right? Unless inflation gets out of the box, which it has.

The price did not even seem to vacillate as usual. Instead, it just sold off right to the Gap area and Weekly Expected Move Low. The WEM Low and our downside target was 4189. The low so far is 4190.25. Ok, I missed it by 1.25 cents. Nobody is perfect.

Let’s see if anything is walked back in the news conference. The WEM low and the 21-day EMA are holding the market thus far, but the wedge is broken. Of course, anything is possible, but it is reasonable to conclude that the intermediate correction we expect is underway. The close will define where we sit, which depends on where the market stands.

Stay tuned – the next update will come after the close.

Special Update – 6/21/2021

The SKEW index, which measures smart money tail risk, just hit the highest level in its history at 161.35. While not a perfect timing indicator, this is not to be taken lightly. It could portend a Fed misstep, but what would that be? If the Fed fails to pull back on QE – is that a negative or a positive? Is the market looking for a hawkish or dovish Fed? This is not an easy call, but the price should tell us, and why I prefer to trade tomorrow.

Mid-Day Update – 6/16/2021

S&P 500 24-hr Index Futures Chart - 5-Minute Candles (Globex and 1st 30-min of Regular Session Shaded).

Not much happening as would be expected prior to the Fed announcement in a few hours. The S&P 500 sits in the middle of the prior three-day range. The CBOE Put/Call ratio is neutral. Breadth on the NASDAQ and the NYSE are almost in parity, but slightly positive. The NYSE tick distribution has been mostly positive. The four positive sectors are Real Estate (XLRE), Energy (XLE), Health Care (XLV), and Consumer Cyclical (XLY). The remaining seven S&P Sectors are negative, though only slightly so. Financials (XLF) are leading on the downside.

S&P 500 24-hr Index Futures Volume and Market Profiles - Magnified and Updated From the Pre-Market Outlook

Looking at the profiles, value (where 70% of the volume has occurred) and the VPOC are virtually unchanged from the prior three days. The more the market consolidates, the higher the expected move – so no changes from this morning. Target the all-time high on the upside, and the gap on the low side.

NASDAQ 100 24-hr Index Futures Chart - 30-min Candles

Of some short-term concern are the topping patterns on the 30-minute charts for the NASDAQ 100 and the S&P 500. Unless caught by the rising trendlines, these could be problematic.

S&P 500 24-hr Index Futures Chart - 30-min Candles

Again, today is a bit of a crapshoot – so no predictions. My next update will be about 30-minutes after the Fed announcement at 2:30 pm EST.

A.F. Thornton

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