The chart shows how July Silver replicated gold's reverse-pattern low last week. Although the actual bottom slightly exceeded the d=28.815 target, the subsequent bounce on Friday was strong enough to take the futures out of the danger zone. The move would become even more persuasive if the bounce can surpass 29.803, or better yet close above it. That is the midpoint resistance of a reverse pattern that began with a 29.525 low on June 5. The corresponding 'd' target of the pattern is 30.875, and we should expect it to be reached, at least, if p=29.803 is decisively penetrated.
Bolstered by inflation news that sent stocks into a tizzy, TLT made dramatic progress last week toward the 95.40 target shown. The durability of this Hidden Pivot target will test bulls' mettle, as will an 'external' peak at 95.02 recorded back in late March. Together, they will offer formidabe resistance to the uptrend, and their breach would signal a continuation of the rally. The next significant structural resistance above 95.02 lies at 96.40, and thence 98.67. There are voodoo number between each of these peaks where TLT can be shorted (or T-bond equivalents bought), so stay tuned to the chat room if you're looking for real-time guidance.
The wild, gratuitous price swings in the world's biggest commodity market could make energy consumers nostalgic for the 1950s, when U.S. policymakers, CIA hacks and political operatives firmly controlled Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran and other key producers. I've kept oil on the touts list nonetheless, but only as a placeholder, since technical analysis no longer gives me a confident basis for forecasting the next big move. I don't mean to suggest that crude is untradable. Far from it, actually, since the intraday swings are so fraught with duplicity, greed and fear as to have become routinely predictable. Nudge me in the chat room if you have a trading idea you'd like vetted. But don't ask me where I think oil will be trading in a month or two, or at year's end, since there is really no way of knowing. My best guess for the very near-term is that the July contract is bound for 80.21, predicated on the June 11 low at 77.22 not being violated first.
Last week's rabid short-squeeze punctured bull-market targets I've been drum-rolling for months in Microsoft, Apple and QQQ. Moreover, the bullish look of the S&P 500 chart shown above is so clear and compelling that even the most stubborn permabears will need to make room for more upside to at least 6118, a nearly 13% rally from these levels. If the uptrend maintains its current pitch, it would hit the target just in time for Papa Bear to come bellowing from his lair at the 'correct' time of year -- i.e., when autumn leaves start to fall. The long-term charts allow three other scenarios that should not be ruled out. The first would be for the bull market to flame out here and now, with the S&Ps lying just a split hair from the pattern's 'secondary Hidden Pivot resistance' at 5461. I would rate this scenario a 40% possibility. More likely is a continuation to 6118, and then a major selloff. This is based, as are all Hidden Pivot forecasts, on price action at the red line, a 'midpoint' Hidden Pivot at 4804 that got shredded back in December. If a midpoint resistance is easily exceeded the first time it's touched, that's usually a sign that the target itself -- in this case 6118 -- will eventually be achieved. However, as you can see in the chart, the move through the red line was gradual rather than dramatic. This implies that although a further run-up to 6118 is likely, it is not a lead-pipe cinch. Second Wind, and Then... Given the pattern's clarity, it is difficult to imagine that the S&Ps will quickly push past 6118 when they get there. There will almost certainly be a tradeable pullback, and the odds are about 60% that it will be the beginning of
Friday's shakedown was the most brutal we've seen in, well, weeks, but we can infer it was merely corrective, since the high which preceded it exceeded the important 'external' peak at 92.76 recorded on April 4. The downtrend has farther to go nonetheless, and if you plan on bottom-fishing, I'd suggest waiting until TLT falls to at least 90.31. Please note, however, that a failure of that "hidden" support to hold would imply more slippage toward the important low at 88.68 that occurred on May 29.
A two-day close above the trendline would likely signal an end to Bertie's insufferable tease. It is a consolidation, of course, but enabled by sponsors who evidently are too gutless to lift the lid until significantly higher prices seem like a sure thing. Perhaps they can enlist the help of Roaring Kitty or some other flashy stock tout who has the ear of a malleable Wall Street Journal reporter? In any case, when Bertie finally takes off, which it sure as shootin' will, you can bet that its infinitely patient handlers are shooting for $80k or higher. ______ UPDATE (June 15): We all know that Bertie will fly toward $80,000 just as soon as its handlers sense that the time is right. Not quite yet, evidently, since this bitcoin proxy has fallen moderately since it last flirted with the trendline shown in this updated chart. The above analysis can stand, to wit: It will take a two-day close above the trendline to trigger a breakout that should be regarded as inevitable. For your further guidance, the trendline will decline to around 71,171 by Friday.
I still consider a pullback to x=5105 more likely than a move straightaway to D=5542. A subsequent rally to the target would not be a done deal, either, given the mild struggle bulls have had surmounting the midpoint Hidden Pivot's gravitational pull. Impale it they did not, and that leaves the pattern's completion to D at least mildly in doubt. We can still use p=5397 as a minimum upside objective, since that is the most logical place for this rally to stall.
Those who think the wizards at the Fed have engineered a soft landing for the grotesquely pumped U.S. economy are in for a rude awakening. Strip out the "wealth effect" from mega-cap stocks driven mostly by hot air and short covering, and the economy is already in recessionary muck. Although yacht sales reportedly are still brisk and nearly every American has booked an exotic cruise, retail sales to the broad middle class have slipped so badly that even lowly Dollar Tree is struggling for air. Consumer confidence has begun to fall because wages are again losing ground to inflation. A look ahead is even more dispiriting with AI breathing down everyone's neck, since it is potentially the biggest job-killer the global economy has ever faced. While work-saving innovations may have created more jobs than they've destroyed, it's difficult to imagine how that will happen in an era where the machines themselves are capable of rooting out inefficiency more ruthlessly than any human could. Tesla as Savior So what would a soft landing imagined by Wall Street look like? It would probably start with a 10%-15% selloff in stocks-- not quite a statistical bear market, just enough to allow investors to do some bargain-hunting ahead of the next big run-up. Car manufacturers would sink into genuine recession, but it would be cushioned by Tesla's unique ability to ride out the storm with fabulous high-tech innovations yet to be imagined. Tesla shares have already fallen nearly 60% from their 2021 highs just above $400, so the worst, we'll be told, may be past. The Street's spinmeisters would also be fixated on the prospect of lower fuel prices, lower inflation and lower interest rates. The mainstream media, too stupid and lazy to deviate from the popular narrative, would give these fantasies a boost
Gold has repeatedly resolved double tops in favor of bulls for many years, but always differently. The current pair of peaks is tightly spaced, giving the impression of weighty distribution. The 2530.40 rally target on this continuous weekly chart is viable nonetheless, and there is no reason to presume it won't be reached. But that does not preclude a sharp pullback first to the red line (p2=2071.70). It makes a logical target if bulls are to be rebuked yet again for their steadfast belief in the quaint idea of gold's historical primacy as money. For now, let's draw our inferences from the lesser charts of August Gold, which currently provide an easy path down to 2300-2320. ______ UPDATE (June 7, 12:15 p.m.): Gold has in fact followed an all-too-'easy path' south, to a so-far low today of 2320.20. That is the upper threshold of the corrective range I'd forecast. However, I'd be surprised if the futures did not take out May 3's 2308.70 low and then diddle 2300 just for good measure.
The easy, decisive pop through p on the first attempt implies not only that D=49.15 will be reached, but that last week's pullback to the red line offered an attractive opportunity to get long mechanically. Even so, further accumulation and a running start may be needed to supply the requisite thrust, so we should be prepared for more backing and filling between 43 and and 45 before GDXJ leaves the launching pad. There has been almost no mention of this vehicle in the chat room lately, but I will provide tradable guidance if it is requested. _______ UPDATE (June 7, 12:27 p.m.): Today's vicious plunge triggered a 'mechanical' buy signal when it touched the green line (x=42.20). This Hidden Pivot level is tied to the 49.15 target given above. However, there are no guarantees that the implied bounce from between here and C=39.88 will get any farther than p=44.52.