Could Silver Wheaton and T-Bond futures be thinking the same thing? Indeed, something very BIG may be stirring in both of these issues, and so I'd strongly suggest that you check out today's touts to see what it might be.
Friday, August 17, 2012
GDXJ – Junior Gold Miner ETF (Last:20.54)
– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's PicksGDXJ didn't quite make it down to the 19.60 correction target where we'd intended to buy it. That's okay, since there will always be another opportunity. For now, though, rather than chase the stock to its nearest rally target, 21.50 (it could conceivably gap to there on the opening bell) we'll look to buy the reaction. My inclination is to leg into a call spread that would eventually become stock, so stay tuned. Click here for a free trial subscription that will allow you to be notified of trades like this one in real time.
SLW – Silver Wheaton (Last:31.65)
– Posted in: Current Touts Rick's PicksWe took note of Silver Wheaton's unaccustomed exuberance during the tutorial session earlier this week. The stock looks like it's just starting to develop thrust. Could this be an early indication that mining shares will lead bullion prices higher this time around? If so, that would represent nearly as dramatic a shift as we are seeing in the bonds, whose decades-long bull market may be in its death throes. The logical implication is that inflation is about to return in a big way. Hard as it is for me, a hard-core deflationist, to believe this, I'm prepared to let the charts do my thinking for me. Regarding getting long in Silver Wheaton, I should have been paying closer attention when it bottomed near $23 in May. Still, it's never too late, especially since the stock could be at $100 if silver prices are headed to new highs.
ESU12 – September E-Mini S&P (Last:1413.00)
– Posted in: Current Touts Rick's PicksFun while it lasted, eh? We'll short the little sonofabitch again, for sure -- just not today, with the week drawing to a presumably buoyant close. If I were to interpret the accompanying chart (see inset) as I would Gold's, there'd be no avoiding the conclusion that the September E-Mini S&P is going to 1480.50 -- equivalent to a 500-point Dow rally from these levels. The good news is that Mr Market will not possibly be able to avoid serving us a juicy short -- juicier than we're used to, anyway -- somewhere near the target: the pattern is simply too clear to produce any other outcome. We'll play this one from the long side while we bide our time, but for today I'll leave it to you to find a way in that suits your style. With no more 'external' peaks to reference, finding camouflage cover is apt to be more difficult, although certainly not impossible.
A Tidal Swell of Delusion Lifts Stocks
– Posted in: Commentary for the Week of March 8 FreeWith U.S. stocks blithely on the rise against a darkening global economic picture, we keep telling ourselves it’s only a movie, it’s only a movie, it’s only a movie. Except that it isn’t a movie. It’s an epochal tide of delusion; it is quite real; and if it hasn’t yet reached flood levels, it will soon, inundating stock markets around the world. For now, though, even as those once-tireless engines of growth, China, India and Brazil, grind their way toward economic limbo and the growing likelihood of synchronous global recession, it is still evidently possible for the Wall Street Journal to fairly rejoice over July’s modest 0.8% rise in retail sales. Hallelujah! At long last, Americans have opened their wallets. After a three-month string of declines, the Journal need hardly have reminded us that three-quarters of U.S. GDP is consumption-based and that a sustained uptrend in retail sales is therefore crucial to reviving consumer confidence and, in turn, economic growth. Would that a one-month credit-card spree were sufficient to lift us from the Great Recession! The term “Great Recession” itself is used by everyone outside of politics and the news media to scandalize economists’ declaration in 2009 that the recession had ended. Yeah, sure. Tell that to twenty million homeowners who are still underwater in a housing market that has barely upticked on 3% mortgages. Or to millions who are either unemployed or earning far less than they did before the financial crash. Or to legions of former shopkeepers who have abandoned storefronts and malls, turning the retail landscape into a visual reminder that the recession never really ended. The Journal is hardly alone in cheerleading every statistical uptick that could serve to distract us from the previous day’s grim economic tidings. The public may have a short memory, but
Using Puts and Calls for Leverage
– Posted in: TutorialsWe looked at the charts of some popular vehicles as usual, but this session also contains a beginner-level discussion of how we can use option strategies to leverage Hidden Pivot swing points. Although an option calculator is useful for determining the fair value of puts and calls, it takes considerable expertise to use one. You'll see that there are ways of getting around this problem if you can "read" the grid of option bids and offers that comes with most trading platforms.


