Saturday, March 19, 2011

Buying Opportunity At Hand But Vigilant Awareness is Necessary

Here's the Introduction to the latest BullBear Market Report:


 


In recent BullBear Market Reports I was able to successfully identify the apparent Wave 3 of (3) top at SPX 1344.  I advised BullBear Trading members that I was taking 40% of my long position off the table and closing long positions in Nikkei as well as exiting short US Treasuries.  I might have taken more of the position off but there was some doubt, until the Japan Panic hit, about the degree of the correction at hand.  All in all, the analysis and timing were quite solid.


On Thursday I went long SPX, Emerging Markets, BRIC, Nikkei, Grains and Agriculture and short US Treasuries.  I also have a small speculative long position in DollarYen.  I am tilting bullish on EuroDollar and bearish on USD at this time.


In this report I'll examine the current technical condition of the markets and the probabilities going forward using a range of tools including Elliott Wave analysis, Trendline and Fibonacci studies, momentum, breadth and sentiment.


A quick perusal of the blogosphere and mainstream financial media reveals that the predominant sentiment underlying the markets remains bearish.  Fear remains the primary driver of market participation.  Many have been quick to call a major top and few are willing to view the current decline as a buying opportunity. In fact I have not been able to find a single analysis or opinion which regards the current market setup as a buying opportunity, but a plethora which expect further bearish outcomes.  Here's a piece that hit my inbox:




 


This quote from a recent blog posting sums up the bear argument: "With an already failing economic recovery in the US, a black swan variable such as the Japanese quake, Tsunami and nuclear crisis may very well be the tipping point that sends the entire world into a financial and economic catastrophe."


Experienced, grounded traders know that panics in an entrenched bull trend produce bottoms and buying opportunities, not catastrophic declines.


Many technical gauges of market sentiment have registered levels of fear typically associated with intermediate term corrections.  The reaction to the events in the Middle East and Japan appear to have quickly catalyzed the remaining underlying bearishness into a healthy correction within a bull trend.  It's impossible to say what might have been, but it's possible we would have seen a correction of a lesser degree had Japan not blown up.  It really doesn't matter though, because eventually this larger degree correction would have occurred from slightly higher levels.  News has simply hastened the inevitable.  For those bullish on the markets, this is a fortuitous set of circumstances since it has most likely cleared the decks for a higher degree advance from here.


Assuming that the Japan nuclear debacle results in damage and risks as serious as those attending the Chernobyl disaster, would that in and of itself be enough to derail world economic growth or even the Japanese economy?  This is highly unlikely and there is no credible evidence that this would be so.  Markets have reacted emotionally as traders have sought to lock in profits and seek safety in the short term.  Emotional reactions create opportunity.


Tape reading is an important skill for the trader to develop.  It takes years of careful observation of many markets under many circumstances.  One of my favorite maxims: "When a market does not do what it should do when it should do it then it is probably about to do the exact opposite in a big way".  In other words, a failed setup is often more powerful than the setup itself.  With all the widespread, rampant talk of catastrophic market consequences stemming from "skyrocketing crude oil prices", food riots and revolution in the Middle East and the Japan earthquake, tsunami and nuclear plant crisis, the US equities market is currently trading a mere 5.5% off the high.  Three moderately strong rally days could entirely wide out this deficit.  There appears to be a significant gap between the talk and the walk here.


Of course other markets have not fared so well.  Japan has essentially crashed in a few short days, and is currently trading about 20% off its highs.  EuroStoxx 50 is off 12.5% from its high.  On the other hand, during the course of the entire Middle East/Japan panic, emerging markets have actually held position or even edged higher.  Emerging Markets (EEM) and BRIC (BKF) as a group have travelled sideways since the February 18 high and select markets are in fact higher now than they were then.  Other markets suchs as Canada's TSX are only marginally lower.


A review of the technicals reveals that almost all of the indicators I track have reset to positions from which the bull has consistently rallied to higher highs.  Generally the picture is of a market that has corrected from overbought conditions to set the basis for a renewed rally.


Having said that, it is important to note that there is a valid bearish setup at play and we do need to develop and be ready to implement a set of bearish trading criteria should the proper circumstances arise.  I'll be starting that process in this report.  At this time I would say we are much closer to fulfilling the criteria for a bullish continuation than we are to the criteria for a bearish reversal.  But stuff happens and we need to stay on our toes and keep our minds open to the full breadth of possibilities.


It's critical that the market continue to push higher above the recent low early next week.  If a lower low is made on the hourly chart then we would then have a clear 5 wave bearish pattern.  We would have a failure at resistance and a failure out of the uptrend channel.  In that event, I will want to exit all remaining long positions on the subsequent rally to resistance, which would likely test the broken trend channel, and go short.


This is the ONLY significant POTENTIAL bearish setup I have seen since the July 2009 low.  If the technical indicators were giving me cause for alarm I would be 100% in cash right now and waiting for a shorting opportunity.  I will continue to monitor the technicals so that if the charts and the technicals conspire to produce a bearish setup I will be ready to take appropriate action.  Next week may be the most critical week in the markets since April 2010! 


 




 


READ THE FULL 8 PAGE BULLBEAR MARKET REPORT HERE: 


http://www.thebullbear.com/group/bullbeartradingservice/forum/topics/031711-bullbear-market-report


 




 


Need some help staying on the right side of the markets?  Join the BullBear Trading room at TheBullBear.com.  You'll get this kind of timely, incisive, unbiased stock and financial market trading, timing, forecasting and investment technical analysis and commentary daily.  It's free to join, no credit card is required and if you like my work you just make a donation at the end of each month.


 



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Sunday, March 6, 2011

Gold in World Currencies

In just about every other world currency gold appears to be ready to roll over into a Wave 3 or C wave correction or bear market.

Gold in World Currencies

In just about every other world currency gold appears to be ready to roll over into a Wave 3 or C wave correction or bear market.

Gold in World Currencies

In just about every other world currency gold appears to be ready to roll over into a Wave 3 or C wave correction or bear market.

Dow Jones World Index

$DJW Dow Jones World Index has not even tested its intermediate term uptrend
suggesting correction is of minor degree: http://t.co/6Mr3h38

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Intermediate Term High for Stocks

Here’s the latest from Steven Vincent at TheBullBear.com:

http://www.thebullbear.com/profiles/blogs/intermediate-term-high-for

Here's the introduction to the latest BullBear Market Report:


 


Intermediate Term High for Stocks

The fear of a disruptive pan-Arabic revolution appears to have triggered a correction in world equities markets. Today’s high marked the B wave of an ABC corrective pattern and C down is now underway. My take at this time is that the downward correction is not yet over and a better buying opportunity lies ahead. While there is some risk of a resumption of the bear market it does not appear to be high at this time. Analysis suggests that we are in a relatively minor correction within the context of a larger bull trend.  The current decline is most likely a correction of the move from September to February.

Having said that, there are some signs of danger for world equities. The divergence between developed market equities and emerging markets persists, with many key EM indices showing signs of potentially rolling over into bear markets.

The US Dollar Index bears watching at this time. Very long term, long term and intermediate term charts are all playing with breaks of support. The fact that the Dollar has refused to rally even as selling has hit world stock markets does not auger well.

Dollar sensitive commodities such as Crude Oil, Gold and Silver may be sniffing out a major downwards revaluation of the greenback. Crude and Silver appear to be in high level consolidations before a continuation. Gold is hovering just above an important resistance level and just below its all time highs.

US Treasuries have rebounded and broken their downtrend as stocks have faltered. There has been a nearly perfect inverse correlation between Treasuries and stocks. In my current view, we should be looking for the correction in bonds to end for a shorting opportunity in Treasuries and a buying opportunity in stocks.

Certainly the inflation profile does seem to be in effect at this time. Dollar and Treasuries weak, gold and crude oil strong, stocks strong but faltering; the message of the market may favor the inflationist view at this time. While a major breakdown could come in the dollar, this wouldn't be the first time that it has threatened a major decline and yet pulled back from the brink. Crude Oil has been news driven to the current breakout highs; news driven spikes can be reversed sharply. And it's possible that gold is putting in a fifth wave high here. But sometimes it just is what it is. With so many key markets hovering at critical levels, traders should look sharp and be ready. Tradeable moves may be in the near future of these markets.


 




 


Need some help staying on the right side of the markets?  Join the BullBear Trading room at TheBullBear.com.  You'll get this kind of timely, incisive, unbiased stock and financial market trading, timing, forecasting and investment technical analysis and commentary daily.  It's free to join, no credit card is required and if you like my work you just make a donation at the end of each month.


 



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Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index to Dow 30 Industrials ratio chart

Here's another ratio chart that supports the "bearish intermediate/long term bullish" thesis: The Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index to Dow 30 Industrials ratio chart is showing a small divergence since late January. This warned of an intermediate term high. But there is no divergence on the chart now comparable to the huge disparity between these indices that led to the 2007 top. Also note the large bullish divergence that led to the 2009 bottom. Unless the ratio breaks its uptrend there's nothing here that gives concern for the long term trend.