A downside target at 918.60 loomed as of 1:30 a.m., but any fartherwould be telegraphing more downside over the near term to as low as 904.80. Both targets will remain valid unless 932.50 is exceeded to the upside. That would breathe new life into April Gold, but the rally would have to continue to at least 938.30 to put bulls in a position of further opportunity. Opportunity would mutate into something more tangible, however, if the futures can close for two consecutive days above 959.50, an important midpoint resistance.
The correction from yesterday’s highs looked to be struggling against a buoyant tide at 2 a.m. The target of the downtrend was 790.50, but we’d risk a few ticks bottom-fishing at its the midpoint sibling, 799.25, especially if that price were hit in the dead of night. If the futures were to turn higher without having gotten down to the midpoint, the rally should be presumed bound for at least 822.50, and possibly to as high as 843.75 by Thursday. _______ UPDATE (4:14 a.m.): The futures have rallied six points after making a delicate low not far above the 799.25 midpoints flagged above. I’ll suggest canceling bids there, since we should generally look to get on board on the first pass. The reversal from above the pivot is mildly bullish but would become much moreso if the rally goes on to exceed 812.25. _______ FURTHER UPDATE: The futures shot up 15 points on the opening on more Geithner doublespeak, peaking initially one tick beneath the 822.50 target given above. They subsequently pulled back six points before making a marginal new high at 823.50. Now, 843.75 is my minimum objective (and thence 855) , although as of 12:45 p.m. there evidently were still too many bulls on the bandwagon for the futures to leap anew.
For some time, we have held a nearly riskless bearish position, six June 23-25 puts spreads that we legged into for a debit of 0.08 apiece. That means that we can lose only $48 plus commisssion at most, but gain as much as $1152 if GDX is trading 23 or lower come June. More immediately, though, this vehicle could create a robustly bullish impulse leg with a relatively modest thrust surpassing 38.88. Let’s speculate on this by bidding 1.95 for two June 43 calls (GDXFQ) on the opening. If you are not filled right away, lower the bid to 1.80, day order. Check here before the opening and intraday, since I may alter the price. ______ UPDATE (10:31 a.m.) We bought the calls for 1.95, the low of the day so far, since they opened for 1.95. Do nothing further for now.
Currency and metals traders take note: The Dollar Index is stealing up on a Hidden Pivot resistance at 84.62 that should show precise, decisive stopping power. It is short-able with a tight stop-loss in any case, but if the stop is hit and the futures move above the target within 15 minutes of first touching it, that would indicate still higher prices to come over the next 3-5 days, at least. However, it would take nothing less than 86.55, however, to turn the hourly chart bullish.
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Take any dozen good reasons for being bearish right now and they still don’t equal the bullishness of the chart shown. The undeniably compelling rally objective is 13085, a 4.8% move from current levels, and one can only surmise that the dusting the 12158 midpoint received on the last pullback (12/28) all but clinched a finishing stroke to the higher number. Moreover, it implies that bears shouldn’t get their hopes too high even if, in the next few days, the Dow plummets 324 points to retest the midpoint support. As of now, that would signal not weakness, but a screaming opportunity to get long. Hard to believe, really, but that’s what the charts say.









Why the Bull Rampage Isn’t Over
by Rick Ackerman on March 25, 2009 5:08 am GMT · 3 comments
We hold a tiny position in Goldman Sachs (GS) right now that’s doing fine despite the stock’s exceptionally violent swings. In fact, if the underlying shares are trading at or near $115 when the April options expire in 23 days, our paper gain from two measly calendar spreads and a naked-short “kicker” could approach $1900. Nor can we get dinged for more than pocket change as long as the stock, which settled yesterday at 110.23, is trading anywhere between zero and $130 when the April options die. The even greater value of this trade, however, is that it has caused us to focus relentlessly on a stock that can tell us precisely what’s on Wall Street’s mind. To judge from yesterday’s action, we must warn bears: The rampage isn’t over. » Read the full article