Last week's waft maxed out the pattern shown, nearly touching a potentially important D target at 176.52. The actual high at 176.39 fell just 13 cents shy. We bought some 2 June 165 puts at or very near the low of the day just in case, but don't get your hopes too high. Because the pattern has taken more than four months to play out, we might expect a pullback of at least a few weeks' duration to give buyers a rest. However, they will be tempted in any event to push past the resistance in order to to take on three formidable 'external' peaks recorded, respectively, at 176.15, 179.81, and 182.94, the all-time high notched in January 2022. Anything above that would still beckon caution, since there is a Hidden Pivot resistance to overcome at 184.96 with some stopping power. What a head-fake that would be! The stock will be easily shortable if it moves into the midst of the prior peaks listed above. Since subscribers seem not to trade the stock, you'll need to nudge me in the chat room for timely guidance. Meanwhile, offer half of the puts to close for twice what you paid for them. ______ |UPDATE (May 23, 6:28 p.m.): The puts doubled to 0.57 today as the stock's downtrend lengthened, so you should have cashed out half of the position to leave you with no skin in the game. There was a raucous cavalcade of buyers in the chat room on Friday when the 0.28 bid I'd advised caught the lowest price ever paid for the 2 June 165 puts. Today, however, only one subscriber seemed to have noticed that the puts were on the move. I suggested keeping 25% of the position for a bigger win than you might currently imagine is
June Gold would become a tempting 'mechanical' buy on a pullback to the green line (x=1816.60). Failing that, we might expect the futures to continue to jack bulls and bears alike with the kind of skittishness that makes trading such a challenge. For all the histrionics we endured last week, settlement was little changed from the week before. Other than an uncompelling voodoo number around 1930, there is not much to recommend for trading purposes as the new week begins.
Although I've flagged a potential bottom-fishing trade in June Gold using 'mechanical' levels, July Silver would become a fetching 'mechanical' short if buyers push it up to the green line (x=25.19) this week. The implied entry risk of $6200 per contract would warrant a trick-shot entry using a small reverse pattern, but that shouldn't present a problem for seasoned Pivoteers. Worst case over the next 2–3 weeks would be 21.460, although I doubt sellers have the moxie to accomplish something so dastardly.
GDXJ looks like it will continue to grope its way lower to reflect softening quotes for bullion futures. If the bloodletting should reach the green line (x=35.58), however, it would trigger a 'mechanical' buy that we should not pass up. Corrections that traverse Hidden Levels from above p2 down to x often yield profitable 'mechanical' entries at the low, even if the anticipated bounce does not always achieve the D target. If bulls were going to find traction somewhere above x, it would have happened with last Thursday's dip to D=37.73 of a corrective pattern begun on April 13 from 43.89. Alas, the support was breached, suggesting there is more downside to endure.
The rally target at 115.32 has been on the marquee for so long that I'd taken a relaxed view of its likelihood of being achieved. However, last week's ratcheting fall threatened to kill the bullish project with a dip beneath the 'c' low at 98.88 that would invalidate the rally pattern. The chart would still be bullish overall, but more tenuously so, since structural support from lows recorded last November near 92 would beckon a test. In the meantime, expect TLT to continue working its way down to 98.88, if only to further discourage the few bond bulls out there. ______ UPDATE (May 31, 8:15 p.m.): The way this vehicle nitwits around, you could almost lose sight of the fact that it represents one of the deepest, most liquid markets on the planet -- and also one of the most important. One could draw a parallel to Joe Biden, a hair-sniffing, thieving, demented old coot occupying what was formerly the most important leadership position in the world. Ahh, for the good old days!
Maybe. Yeah, right. A headline here just two weeks ago implied that stocks were about to go bananas: Why a Permabear Is Certain We're Going Much Higher. Hubris aside, this was based on the very bullish chart of just one stock, Chipotle (CMG). It had just crossed the $2,000 threshold and appeared -- still appears -- bound for a rendezvous with a Hidden Pivot target at $2,739 that lies $600 above Friday's close. Some might question the logic of using a projection for a single stock to make a prediction about the stock market as a whole. I am confident that my method, more intuitive than factual, will prove superior to the benighted, self-serving blather coming from the likes of Jim Cramer, various talking heads on the financial news shows, and from Wall Street shills who get paid by the word to tell us why we should be bullish. These mongers of gladness will always try to connect the stock market's performance with supposedly objective facts tied to the economy and corporate earnings. Unfortunately, and has been demonstrated time and again, this is like trying to predict the behavior of a sea snake by analyzing the contents of the ocean. And in case you haven't noticed, the "facts" that the talking heads cite unrelentingly are used almost solely for one purpose: to justify buying stocks at any price, no matter how grim the economic outlook. (And it is indeed grim, with little doubt that a collapse in commercial real estate is imminent, accompanied by a potentially catastrophic wave of bank failures.) Vaporous 'Wealth' None of which argues that stocks cannot continue to climb heedlessly. It's not as though it takes bullish buying or even real money to make this happen. To the contrary, most of the big rallies occur on
Let's not waste too much time pondering what this sad sack of tailings is going to do next, since it hasn't done much of anything for more than a month. That's if you don't count the meaningless spasms that occur whenever the latest drivel from the Fed hits the tape. The futures will always be tradeable, of course, but only with the kind of close attention that's hard to muster with America in pre-holiday mode ahead of a three-day Memorial Day weekend that is just two weeks off. The work ethic, and all. I'll mention in passing that the June contract has triggered two profitable 'mechanical' shorts since the bear rally began in October, each producing a $12,000 win per contract. Considering the amount of time traders spent screwing the pooch in the process, that worked out to around $3.57 per hour. If ES falls anew to the red line, however, racking up a third 'mechanical' winner, I'll shift my focus to the 3424.50 downside target of the big pattern, shown here.
I've used a pattern similar to the one in Silver to show that both are in a precarious place, poised to fall at least 2% if their respective midpoint Hidden Pivot supports are decisively breached. So far, the pivots have held, but we'll need to monitor price action closely this week. Like July Silver, June Gold is a spec buy at the moment, presumably using a reverse-pattern trigger on a chart of small degree. Doing so on the daily chart would risk a little more than $1000 per contract initially, far more than the $150 or so we should be willing to part with. _______ UPDATE (May 16, 5:22 p.m.): June Gold has fallen into the bog of weak consolidation that occurred in the last two weeks of April. The most bulls should hope for is that the futures rebound sharply after maliciously dipping beneath the bog's low point, 1980.90 on April 19. Here's the chart.
Last week's plunge precisely to the red line, a midpoint Hidden Pivot support at 23.95, has validated the pattern and its 21.46 target. This is not necessarily as bearish as it sounds, since the futures will need to exceed p decisively, then close beneath it for at least two consecutive days, to imply they are bound for p2=22.704. For now , however, they would become a spec buy using an rABC trigger, since the midpoint pivot is always a logical place for a price reversal. Please nudge me in the chat room at the appropriate time if you are interested. ______ UPDATE (May 16, 6:13 p.m.): Sinking, soon to drop off the edge.
[Editor's note: The following commentary draws parallels between today’s bond market environment and the last great bear market in bonds, which bottomed in 1981. It went out last month to clients of my friend Doug Behnfield, a financial advisor and senior vice president at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management in Boulder. Long-time followers of Rick's Picks will be familiar with Doug's unconventional thoughts on the markets, since they have been featured here many times before. I have always referred to him not only as the smartest investor I know, but one of the smartest guys. I am grateful to him for allowing me to share his insights with you. The charts are my own, since they reproduced better than the ones that accompanied Doug's letter. Also, the photo of the annual Pamplona stampede is an emphatic touch of my own, since I share Doug's very contrarian bullishness on Treasury debt. RA ] Lately, I have been telling the story of my experience leading up to the all-time high in long-term Treasury bond rates that occurred in late 1981. I was kind of a rookie, having started at Merrill Lynch in late 1977 (at age 22). 30-year Treasury bond yields peaked at 15.25% in September 1981 and by then, 6-month CDs were paying 18.5% and the yield on the Merrill Lynch Ready Assets Trust money market fund was pushing 20%. Bond yields had rocketed from 10% to 15% over about 15 months so 30-year Treasury bond prices were down 35% compared to mid-1980. The reason rates got so high was attributable to steeply rising inflation and determined rate hikes by the Volcker Fed to put a stop to it. Back then CPI inflation had reached almost 14%. It was driven mostly by demand coming from an army of emerging Baby Boomers forming