Monday, October 24, 2011

Stocks Adrift on a Sea of Lies

– Posted in: Commentary for the Week of March 8 Free

The markets have opened lethargically Sunday night, although the S&P index futures are threatening to break out of a tiresome four-point range that has contained them for nearly five hours.  It’s eerily quiet, like the noiseless moment in a slasher film just before the chain-saw wielding psychopath leaps from the shadows.  Even the headlines are pregnantly subdued, a 7.2-magnitude earthquake in Turkey overshadowing all else. Other top stories-of-the-hour include the celebration in Libya of Qaddafi’s bloody, ignominious end;  the latest non-developments in the global Occupy movement; an unexpectedly kind word for Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg from the late Steve Jobs; and -- this just in! -- a Rangers victory in game four of the World Series. If you could chart the mood of the moment, it would feature Bollinger bands so tightly constricted they almost touch. Technicians use this tool to predict explosive moves when things seem a little too calm, as they do right now. The biggest story due out sometime this week or early next will divulge the actual details of the Merkel-Sarkozy plan to save Greece -- and therefore, presumably, all of Europe. We marveled here last week at how the two leaders have brazenly sought to milk yet a few more weeks of agitated calm from a troubled world by merely drum-rolling the latest bailout scheme without providing any inkling of its design. This reminded our colleague Bill Buckler, editor of the Oz-based Privateer, of the South Sea Bubble, wherein shares were floated in “a [British] company for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is.” Indeed. A similar fraud, later known as the Mississippi Bubble, had been perpetrated a year earlier on French investors evidently as gullible as they were greedy. You’d think the Brits might have had second

Strategy for a Quiet Sunday Night

– Posted in: Free Rick's Picks

If you're in the habit of fading the trend on a quiet Sunday night, you'd be long index futures and short bullion at the moment, shortly before 11 p.m. EDT.  Silver seems to be holding gold back, but we needn't speculate on the outcome, since there are clear Hidden Pivot benchmarks to tell us which side, bulls or bears, is controlling the action.

DXY – NYBOT Dollar Index (Last:76.43)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

I'm not big on head-and-shoulders patterns because they are everywhere one looks for them, but if the one shown keeps pounding away at the neckline of this misshapen specimen it could trigger a two-point break.  Alternatively, buyers would need to drive DXY above the 77.95 external peak to regain the offensive. If weakness implies the euro is about to surge, the headlines that we should expect to accompany such freakish behavior are difficult to imagine.  Maybe this: Europe Goes All-In on Greek Debt.

ESZ11 – December Mini S&P (Last:1230.00)

– Posted in: Current Touts Rick's Picks

We're still using a rally target at 1256.50 that was given here previously, since last week's rollercoaster ride never dipped beneath its 1185.25 point 'C' low. If the target were to be exceeded on a closing basis or by more than 1.50 points intraday, that would portend more upside over the near term to at least 1271.50, the Hidden Pivot target of a somewhat larger pattern. Night owls looking for a way to board will probably have to drill down to the 1-minute chart to come up with 'camouflage,' since price action is nervously trendless at the moment.

SIZ11 – December Silver (Last:31.315)

– Posted in: Current Touts Rick's Picks

A small "external" peak at 32.150 remains the number to beat, since that would generate a promising new impulse leg on the hourly chart. The futures got a running start on this task early Sunday night, but buying sputtered out somewhat shy of a 32.005 target. If the weakness persists, the first place you could look for a bullish turn -- and a potential 'camo' buying opportunity -- would be at 30.610, the 'p' midpoint support of the pattern shown.

GCZ11 – December Gold (Last:1640.50)

– Posted in: Current Touts Rick's Picks

he December contract did all we asked of it Friday, setting up a buoyant opening Sunday night that has immediate potential to as high as 1664.00, a Hidden Pivot 20 points above the evening's so-far high. A midpoint resistance at 1649.20 must be exceeded first for the rally to get off the launching pad.  However, long entry will be difficult, even via camouflage, because the midpoint lies just inches from Friday's high 1649.80, a breakout number that other traders will be watching. _______ UPDATE (12:08 p.m. EDT):  A $27 rally brought the futures to within 70 cents of my target before relapsing down to a so-far low of 1651. The rally refreshed the bullish energy of the hourly chart, creating a camouflage pattern that would have yielded a small profit so far (A=1647.70 at 6 a.m., B=1663.00, C=1651.00, and X=1654.90 for a "successful" trade to the 1658.80 Hidden Pivot midpoint.)  For your guidance, and because my earlier advice was explicit with respect to the 'camo' opportunity, I'll track two contracts from an initial position of four. Assuming two others were exited at 1658.80 (aka 'p'), the two that remain have a theoretical cost basis, reduced by profit-taking, of 1651.00. Exit one of the contracts now, at around 1654.00, and we'll tie the last, with an imputed cost basis of 1648.00, to a "structural" stop-loss at 1647.70.