Lehman Bond ETF

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:86.43)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

I've raised the bar somewhat so that we don't get suckered by yet another failed rally. I'm already on record as saying the bear market ended, possibly with October's 82.42 low.  But I'd feel more confident about this if TLT takes an uncorrected leap above the two peaks shown. If it relapses instead, I would still expect no worse than a marginal penetration of the October low, followed by a sustained rally whose steepening pitch will leave little doubt that an important trend change has occurred.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:85.38)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

A crucial Hidden Pivot support at 83.53 doesn't look long for this world. Last week's dive came within 66 cents of it, but the bounce so far has been too feeble to suggest the uptrend will continue. But bulls would need to exceed July 10's 'external' peak at 87.05 to give this vehicle a fighting chance. I remain convinced, however, that T-Bonds are not far from a bottom despite the fact that Trump has been doing his utmost to turn them into shit. Perhaps it will take a full-blown recession to turn the tide for Treasurys? There doesn't appear to be one in the offing, but that could change quickly if stocks turn down hard for no apparent reason, as they always do at the onset of a bear market. Trump's daily flip-flops on Powell, however, are bullish for stocks, since he doesn't even have to fire the guy to strengthen the perception that tightening will be impossible on his watch.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:85.79)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

I went out on a limb recently with a prediction that T-Bonds had made an important low.  Last week's price action in this ETF was hardly reassuring, however. Not only did it breach a midpoint Hidden Pivot support I'd noted at 85.99, it also generated a bearish impulse leg on the daily chart. Let's give it the slight benefit of the doubt for now, since there are two remaining HP supports to be breached before we throw in the towel. They lie, respectively, at 84.76 (p2) and 83.53 (d).

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:86.99)

– Posted in: Current Touts Rick's Picks

TLT weakened last week after creating a bullish impulse leg on the daily chart, generating a theoretical sell signal in the process. If the so-far moderate decline is merely corrective, we should see a tradable rebound from the 85.99 midpoint Hidden Pivot support shown in the chart (inset).  That is what I expect, but if the support gives way, especially on a closing basis, expect the slippage to continue down to at least p2=84.76, or even to a worst-case d=83.53.  That would leave the important low at 83.30 recorded on May 22 intact, but only barely.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:88.13)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

Is this rally for real? We'll probably have our answer this week, since this vehicle will either vault above the 'external' peak at 88.21 (see inset), or it will chicken out and pull back to form a distinctive low before taking a running start. The first scenario would be more bullish, but the second would be no disqualifier. In either case, we'll monitor minor ABCD retracements, since they should not reach 'D'  if the rally is going to continue.  Correspondingly, ABCD rallies of minor degree should easily surpass p midpoints, and even D targets, for the bull to remain healthy. These rules should hold true even for patterns that play out in an hour or less on the one-minute chart.  FYI, the most immediate target for a tradable pullback low is 86.42 (assuming 88.16 is not exceeded first; that would shift the target higher). _______ UPDATE (Jul 2, 1:38 a.m. EDT): Buyers easily surpassed the external peak at 88.21, creating a fresh impulse leg and clearing the way for a new leg up to 88.86.  This ETF proxy for long-term Treasurys is rising because foreign money has been flowing copiously into the U.S. Trump has put America into ascendance, and the trend is just getting rolling. It helps that Europe is a basket case.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:86.49)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

I've identified bearish targets well below these levels at, respectively, 81.64 and 77.49, but I'm giving every countertrend blip the benefit of the doubt so that I am not caught unawares if an important turn comes. This blip was Thursday's gap-up rally above two prior peaks on the daily chart, one of them 'external'.  That generated a bullish impulse leg, implying Friday's mild sell-off was merely corrective. (The weakness also failed to reach a downside 'd' target, which adds to the short-term-bullish picture.) Let's see what the new week brings. If TLT can push above the 88.21 'external' peak recorded on May 7, that would be worthy of serious attention. ______ UPDATE (Jun 20): A tedious, disappointing week, although by no means cause for despair. TLT still needs to fist-pump above the 88.21 peak from May 7 to command our respect.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:85.35)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

There's no point in sugar-coating it: minor, bullish impulse legs on the daily chart have not been strong enough to reverse the horrific carnage in U.S. Bond markets. Absent some hitherto unimagined turn of affairs, we should expect TLT's slide to continue down to the 77.49 target shown, at least. The short-lived rally in early April to the green line triggered a theoretically profitable short, so we know the pattern is working. It now says p2=81.64 will be the next stop on the way down, so let's use that as a minimum downside objective for now,

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:86.27)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

Last week's push above the red line, a midpoint Hidden Pivot resistance at 85.91, is the most bullish price action we've seen in more than a month.  It has given way so far to a shallow consolidation with the potential to push this symbol to the 86.51 target shown. It would also make a pullback to the green line (x=84.60) an appealing 'mechanical' buy.  You could do so with a bid there and no stop-loss, since the textbook stop at 83.29 would probably be overkill. For now, use p2=87.21 as a minimum upside projection for the near term. Decisive progress above the pivot would shorten the odds of a further run-up to the 88.51 target.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:84.55)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

We should know soon whether Silver's mini-explosion upward, the second in three months, is just another false start.  From a Hidden Pivot perspective, the selloff of the last two weeks is not as bearish as it seems.  It triggered an attractive 'mechanical' buy on Monday when it touched the green line (x=86.95). This implies that a bounce will reach p=89.91, at least, before it can stop out bulls with a dip beneath c=85.00. Whether it can muster a finishing stroke to d=92.81 depends on how easily buyers penetrate p on the next rally. _______ UPDATE (May 18, 12:50 a.m.): Bulls held on by a hair when TLT dipped last week to a bottom just 20 cents from the 85.00 point 'c' low of the ostensibly bullish pattern detailed above.  _______ UPDATE (May 25): TLT popped a wheelie at an 83.66 voodoo support, but don't expect the bounce to get legs. The low occurred just inches shy of a chasm beneath the watershed low recorded in October 2023 at 82.42. It is too obvious a place for a good bottom to form, nor do T-Bonds much respect 'technical'  tops and bottoms. For now, all we can do is watch.

TLT – Lehman Bond ETF (Last:87.72)

– Posted in: Current Touts Free Rick's Picks

The short-term picture has turned mildly bullish with TLT's so-far timid poke above the Hidden Pivot midpoint resistance, p=88.91. It's not too late for a decisive blast through it, but we'll reserve judgment on the strength and durability of the rally until we've seen more. A conventional 'buy' signal has been in effect since TLT first touched the green line (x=86.95) two weeks ago. I'd rather buy on a pullback to the green line from our 'sweet spot' above p, however, and we should plan on doing so if the opportunity arises. _______ UPDATE (May 3): TLT did precisely what we needed, vaulting to the 'sweet spot' before receding toward the green line. The move has created a price we can bid 'mechanically' with confidence.  The trade should be good for at least a one-level move, from x=86.96 to p=88.91, with a stop-loss at 84.99.