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Someone in the chat room mentioned the 1007.70 high recorded in mid-February as the potential starting point of an ABCD downpattern yielding a target all the way down at 842.80. That’s technically correct, but if you look at the pattern itself on the daily chart, it’s the sorriest excuse for a downtrend that we could imagine. For starters, the A-B leg had to back up twice, attempting running starts, merely to push past two external lows on its way to 882.70 (the ‘B’ low of the pattern). Then, spent from this bullying attack on support, sellers failed » Read the full article
The futures continued their waft toward 848.25, a Hidden Pivot that looks like a high-confidence target, although not quite a hula number. Around 1:30 a.m. Thursday night, the rally was an a modest retracement, creating minor abc patterns that do not seem well suited for bottom-fishing. However, if someone put a gun to my head and said, “Make a profitable trade, or else!” I’d probably attempt it at 820.00. That is the ‘d’ target of a very delicate pattern on the five-minute chart. Here are the price points: a=829.00 (9:20 p.m. EDT); b=823.75; c=825.25. _______ UPDATE: The futures took a 4-point bounce off 819.00 on their way lower, so the recommended trade was not a clear winner. Weakness persisted on the opening after reality evidently dawned on investors in the form of glum consumer spending figures. The numbers threw cold water on the uber-crackpot notion that shoppers were somehow going lead the economy out of the woods. There were no useful downside targets an hour into the session, nor was there even a bearish impulse leg on the 30-mnute chart. This suggests that bears were vulnerable to a trap unless the tempo of the selling picks up (which it well could).
The Dow seemed inexorably and imminently bound for at least 8059.88 when the bell ended yesterday’s spree, although it will always be a coin-toss predicting how anything will open the next day — especially when the next day is a Friday, and especially when that Friday caps a week when arrant stupidity and hubris were at their very boldest in the political, public and financial realms. A higher target at 8143.59 (or if any higher, 8155.14) is analagous to the one at 848.25 proffered at exactly for the E-Mini S&P. These last two targets can be shorted aggressively with stops a bit wider than we generally use, since topping action at or near them looks very likely. _______ UPDATE (10:43 a.m.): The Indoos broke lower to begin the day, but not very persuasively, since they managed only a faintly bearish impulse leg on the 15-minute chart. It could conceivably open up an opportunity to buy at the c-d correction midpoint later this morning, although point ‘c’ has yet to form. Here are the coordinates thus far: A=7931 (Thursday’s high); B=7772 (This morning’s low, rounded); and C=(so far) 7818 (also rounded).
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Gold Shrugs Off Market Mania
by Rick Ackerman on March 27, 2009 1:13 am GMT
We view the action in gold yesterday as constructive, even though its ups and downs didn’t net out to anything terribly exciting. Notice how the little orgasm early in the morning exceeded a 944.60 peak recorded a few days earlier. That created a bullish impulse leg on the hourly chart — always an encouraging sign. The rally detumesced, ending the day on a disappointing note, but it was not quite the selloff we might have expected, given the strong performance of the broad averages. Clearly, although bullion has been lackluster as stocks have risen in the last week, it is no longer getting hammered just because investors » Read the full article