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‘AAPL Indicator’ Predicting a 10% Plunge

– Posted in: Free Rick's Picks The Morning Line

The modest bear market rally begun in October likely ended last week when stocks turned sharply lower after failing to achieve clear 'Hidden Pivot' rally targets. Now, if the selling should continue to exceed minor abcd targets as occurred last week, that would affirm that Papa Bear is back. AAPL in particular, the world's most valuable stock, took a dive that has another 10% to go before good support is likely to materialize near $120 (see chart, above). The smart money that manipulates AAPL was finding it increasingly difficulty to distribute stocks to widows, pensioners and rubes. Making the shares affordable to the masses was their intention when they split the stock 4:1 in August 2020. AAPL was trading for around $600 at the time, priced well beyond the reach of most individual investors. How the Game Works The split allowed AAPL's canny institutional sponsors to rig the stock's price action so that AAPL could forge steeply higher without requiring large infusions of cash. This simple trick was always performed in the dead of night, when volume typically dries up. The smart guys would pull their bids, letting AAPL fall for no apparent reason. With sellers exhausted ahead of the opening bell, it was easy for the thimble-riggers to trigger off a short squeeze, gapping the stock well above the level where overnight selling had begun. It was even easier to create bullish gaps when AAPL wafted higher overnight on thin volume, since the day began with shorts already spooked out of their wits and hemorrhaging losses. Covering their positions was costly because DaBoyz backed off their offers, causing the stock to soar on light volume. Very little stock changes hands in these gaps. AAPL could be trading for, say, 147 on the close, and then open the next morning

Fed Shows Deflation Who’s Boss

– Posted in: Free Rick's Picks The Morning Line

Bloomberg News, buzzed on Fed Kool-Aid as always, thinks the banksters have engineered a soft landing for deflation. Although it's true that price bubbles in everything from used cars to styrofoam surfboard blanks have begun to detumesce, there is no reason to think the shrinkage will stop when inflation falls to some 'comfortable' level. That's not how deflation works, especially when it is correcting excesses of the biggest financial bubble ever. In residential real estate, the implosion has been mild enough so far that sellers actually seem to think they'll get their price if they wait long enough. Sitting pretty? Only in their dreams. With 30-year fixed mortgages currently averaging 7.5%, many first-time buyers might be starting to wonder whether they will ever own a home. They need little convincing in the meantime that we're in a recession, even if owners of unmortgaged homes priced above $2 million think the U.S. economy is hunky-dory. Muddling Toward a Crash If business merely muddles along in 2023 without slipping deeper into recession, the gap between buyers and sellers can only widen. To the extent this is already happening, we're in the beginning of a silent crash in residential property values. It is particularly deceptive because mortgage-based transactions have dried up, turning price discovery opaque. Incipient deflation is more visible in commercial real estate, with vacancy rates above 15% in Houston (18.9%), Dallas (17.6%), San Francisco (15.5%), Washington (15.2%) and Chicago (15.08%). These figures grossly understate the problem, since many urban centers are slipping into a self-perpetuating spiral of declining tax revenues, decaying public amenities and an exodus of workers to places that are more livable and affordable. Texas, Tennessee, Florida, Arizona and Nevada are among the biggest gainers, California the biggest loser. San Francisco, for all of its natural gifts, could be

AAPL – Apple Computer (Last:142.18)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

AAPL looked like hell last week, stopping out the point 'C' low of a weak bullish pattern, but making little headway on the obligatory bounce.  Desperation will not provide the distribution opportunities its handlers seek, but their one good trick  -- gapping the stock down on the opening in order to exhaust sellers -- hasn't been working lately because shorts are not as easily spooked.  Well below the pattern is a downward sloping, red line. It is the lower trendline of a channel I'd said could contain some big swings in 2023 without allowing a major breakdown or breakout. For your information, the upper channel-line will come in at around 172 this week, the lower at 121.  In theory, that would free the stock to swing wildly over a 51-point range as we enter the new year.

ESH23 – March E-Mini S&Ps (Last:3976.50)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

After stumbling out of the gate last Sunday evening, DaBoyz just couldn't get it going. It was two steps up, four steps back all week before they threw in the towel on Friday with exhaustion selling in the final hour. The intraday high had missed p=4029.25 by more than a smidgen, implying more weakness lies ahead. If I'd lowered my expectations at the opening, I might have seen this juicy reverse-pattern short come into focus. Oh well.  If the futures take out last week's lows, I'd wait until they fall to at least 3863, a voodoo number, before attempting to bottom-fish. _______ UPDATE (Dec 12, 9:37): Not a bad trick, getting this hoax to waft 60 points higher with nary a bullish buyer in sight. It was all short-covering, and it failed to surpass even a single 'external' peak. That would require a print above last Monday's 4047 peak. Let's see if bears are sufficiently unnerved to supply the necessary lift. My guess st the moment is yes, although I doubt the rally will breach the next significant external peak, 4119.25. Since we should never have to guess about such things, here's a chart that can not only tell us everything we need to know, but also enable us to profitably trade the move however high it goes.  _____ UPDATE (Dec 13, 10:45 p.m.): What the heck was that all about??? We'd wanted the faked death dive portion of the day to touch our 'mechanical' bid at the green line (4022.44). Although I'd said in the chat room that the six-point gap wasn't close enough to x to do the trade, it would have qualified based on the new, mainly visual standard I am using to judge such opportunities. In any event, the 4245.25 target remains viable as a short-term

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:106.29)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The nasty, two-day plunge that ended the week has set up a paradoxically appealing 'mechanical' buy at the green line (x=106.12, stop 104.65).  The best 'mechanical' trades are supposed to look scary, and this one certainly does.  I can't guarantee that a round lot bought with a 106.12 bid will bounce all the way to D=110.49, but I'd say odds of at least a one-level rebound (i.e., to p=107.57) are about 80%. If you've been paper-trading the more frightening 'mechanical' set-ups, I'd suggest that you sit back, relax, and continue to keep score in order to develop enough confidence to trade them with real money.

CLF23 – January Crude (Last:74.04)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

Crude futures can be pretty vicious, but if this were nearly any other vehicle, I'd suggest bottom-fishing D=67.74 with a very tight stop-loss and a truck to hold it all. Given the ease with which sellers crushed the midpoint Hidden Pivot at 75.54, the downtrend is nearly 100% certain to achieve the target. But it's just as likely to put in a tradeable bottom very near there. However, the pattern, although quite serviceable for most other vehicles (other than the p.o.s. grains) is certain to be 'read' by other experienced traders. That means that bids at D are going to get stopped out a few times on the lesser charts before the inevitable reversal takes flight. We are more than up to the challenge, but be prepared to do some work. _____ UPDATE (Dec 12, 10:19 p.m.): Weeks can go by without anyone mentioning crude in the chat room. Is there any interest?  Are any of you trading it? _______ UPDATE (Dec 13, 10:52 p.m.): There appears to be more interest in trading the micro-contract, so I will swap it for the full-size contract starting Sunday. I remain skeptical that this rally will be more than a flash-in-the-pan.

DXY – NYBOT Dollar Index (Last:104.96)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The dollar's weak bounce from p=104.09 implies that still lower prices are likely. Considering that the midpoint pivot lies just beneath a key low at 104.64 recorded back in August, the rally should have been stronger, since many bulls would have been stopped out when the breakdown occurred. We'll monitor the expected breach of the 104.09 Hidden Pivot, since, if it gets crushed, that would portend more slippage to as low as D=100.18. That would represent a still-moderate 12% correction from September's 114.78 high -- not too bad considering the steepness of the rally that saw the Dollar Index rise from 89.21 to 114.78 between early 2021 and October 2022.

GCG23 – February Gold (Last:1780.80)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The February Comex contract ended the week with an effortless upswing that fell a tad shy of the pink line, a p2 secondary Hidden Pivot at 1827.00. Assuming the confidence of buyers hasn't diminished over the weekend, we should expect them to reach the 1858.20 D target by no later than midweek. A pullback in the meantime to the red line (p=1795.90) would trigger a 'mechanical' buy, stop 1775.10, that could be traded using an impulsive 'camouflage' trigger on the 5-minute chart. ______ UPDATE (Dec 5, 4:23 p.m.): The gratuitous viciousness of today's selloff is telling us that too many were too bullish when the day began.  The 'mechanical' trade would be $6400 in the red if done conventionally (not recommended), although the position has so far avoided getting stopped out by a heart-stopping $3. A less risky 'mechanical' buy would trigger at the green line (x=1764.70), but I would suggest this only for subscribers with the Hidden Pivot chops to cut the risk down to no more than $1,200 or so (on four contracts).

AAPL – Apple Computer (Last:142.92)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The bullish pattern shown, which projects an 8% rally to 159.36 over the near term, lacks only a fist-pump through the midpoint pivot at 149.86 to make the finishing stroke n odds-on bet. AAPL's timidity is understandable, since the stock hasn't been strong enough to lead the broad averages higher when they are tired.  That's because sales of pricey iPhones are facing simultaneous recessions in China, Europe and the U.S.  Even so, as my quite bullish outlook for the S&Ps implies, AAPL is headed higher come hell or high water. The pattern shown looks promising for risk-averse trading on the way up, particularly on a pullback to the green line from our sweet spot just above 152. ______ UPDATE (Dec 5, 4:51 p.m.): AAPL did in fact thrust above 149.86, albeit only fleetingly in a move criminally engineered by the Ivy-educated thugs who control the stock. The equally sharp pullback has so far missed touching the green line by 26 cents, but when this happens, the stock would become a 'mechanical' buy, stop 140.35. _______ UPDATE (Dec 6, 8:14 p.m.): The 'mechanical' trade triggered, then proceeded to go underwater for the rest of the session. The pattern was a good one to gamble on, but if it fails to make money, I'd have to conclude the stock is in more trouble than I'd imagined. It's going to be increasingly challenging for its handlers to distribute to suckers as recession begins to tighten on iPhone sales around the world.

CLF23 – January Crude (Last:74.27)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The modest reverse pattern shown (see inset) gives January Crude an easy path to at least 85.28, a Hidden Pivot resistance that looks obscure enough to short with a very tight stop-loss. An easier opportunity would come on a pullback to the green line (x=76.52), where you could bottom-fish with a tightly constructed 'reverse' pattern. The trade is likely to work best if the pullback is sharp and swift. It would require a stop-loss at 73.59, just beneath the pattern's point C low. I have sketched the retracement with crude pulling back beneath the green line to remind you that it is neither a support nor a resistance, nor a target, nor even a Hidden Pivot (which will always be a p or D level). ________ UPDATE (Dec 6, 8:20): See my 13;22 post and follow-ups in the chat room for a detailed explanation of an on-demand trade that worked nicely in almost-real time. Here's the chart.