Archive for September, 2009

Friday’s Trading – 9/25/09

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Weak Internals and Weekly Candles
The market’s internals were so weak on Thursday that they almost have to improve today. The odds favor some sort of bounce, however it’s no slam dunk. The market can go sideways as the internals improve, and if it does so, then it may simply be consolidating the downtrend.

SPY, QQQQ, IWM, XLF, DIA, and XME are all drawing bearish Harami candles on their weekly charts so far. If they all stick, then the vote for a down week next week will be unanimous. USO agrees too.

Make Up Your Mind FOMC
Is it 0% as far as the eye can see, or is it tightening with “greater force than is customary?” according to Fed Head Warsh (in an otherwise boring and pointless piece):

“…I would hazard the view that prudent risk management indicates that policy likely will need to begin normalization before it is obvious that it is necessary, possibly with greater force than is customary…”

SRT Alert
Now is a good time for shorts to go on Slow Rounding Turn alert. If the market starts to creep upward, no matter how feeble the move looks, you have to take it seriously because the SRT just might rip your face off. See SPY’s intra-day chart from September 1-3 for an example of an SRT.

Thursday’s Trading – 9/24/09

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Ghost Ships Haunt Christmas
The nation’s retailers expect this Christmas season to be flat with last year’s, which was the worst in 42 years. And they will be hiring far fewer seasonal workers – maybe 100,000 fewer this year. Wall Street Journal story here. Now we know why the Shanghai Composite has topped out, the Baltic Dry Index has been declining, and all those ships have been mothballed: retailers in the USA have very low expectations for the Christmas shopping season.

Here’s the staffing formula: figure out how many extra workers you hired last Christmas as the world was ending. Then SUBTRACT 100,000.

Can you imagine? Retail jobs will be 100k below the Apocalypse – AFTER the feds have injected trillions of dollars into the economy.

Appalling.

Bulls Impaled by Stupid Spike
Yesterday, I was skeptical about the “Super Spike” that Joe Terranova predicted on CNBC’s “Fast Money” Tuesday night. Today, Terranova got a spike all right – a Stupid Spike jabbed right into his eye. SPY did indeed find its October 6th gap to be “a formidable barrier” as I mentioned yesterday.

And now SPY has printed a pattern that looks suspiciously like a double top, which you can see clearly on the 60-minute chart. The first peak is at the exhaustion gap at the open on September 17th and the second peak is at the FOMC spike on Wednesday. SPY left behind a small gap on the morning of the 16th, and that gap provided support on the 21st. So that level, the 105.75 area, would be the neckline of the double top. If SPY pierces that level on healthy volume, the pattern projection gives a target of 103.30 with a 100% extension.

However, a further extension is possible because this sell-off has caught many traders leaning the wrong way. Everybody on Fast Money Wednesday pooh-poohed the sell-off, so it looks to me like there are a lot of trapped bulls who will likely be selling into any bounce. So, SPY might be able to fill its September 8th gap down at 102.07, and that would be an excellent place to look for a substantial bounce. Gap support is often an excellent entry point to buy a pullback. Just look at how SPY bounced off its July 30th gap when it dropped down to test it on August 17th.

Wednesday’s Trading – 9/23/09

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

The IWM finally closed its October 6th gap on Tuesday, and that is a significant bullish development. Now it is SPY’s turn. The top of it’s October 6th gap is 109.97. SPY has eroded some of the resistance at the lower end of the gap, but it should still prove to be a formidable barrier – especially now that CNBC talking heads have begun jabbering about the “Super Spike”.

Speaking of spikes, the VIX spiked down right at the bell on Tuesday. Maybe traders were buying call options to get ready for the FOMC to launch the Super Spike with their announcement at 2pm. You see? It’s all planned out; easy as pie.

But then again, maybe it was this story that knocked the futures down Tuesday evening. The Fed probably won’t turn off the digit spigot today, but leaking this repo story to the press is probably designed to start letting the market down easy. The economy is still weak, but the soaring price of gold may force the Fed to implement the dreaded exit strategies sooner than they would like.

Here is the best part of the story:

“More trading partners may be needed since primary dealers have been shrinking their balance sheets the past two years, and likely can’t absorb an additional $500 billion of securities…”

The Fed is trying to scrounge up enough banks to which it will sell bonds! Can you believe that? The banking system is wrecked to the point where the Fed is struggling to conduct open-market operations.

Marc Faber is an Idiot

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

In this video, Marc Faber calls unemployed Americans “global village idiots.”

This is absurd. When American factory workers are fired, and the plant is moved to Asia, is it because the Americans are too stupid, lazy, and uneducated to “contribute to the global economy?” Certainly not.

In fact, if India were to fall off the face of the Earth, we idiots would have no trouble whatsoever writing our own software. If China fell off the face of the Earth, we would have no trouble at all assembling our own iPods. And we certainly don’t need Mexico to assemble our cars.

Note to Faber: An apology is in order.

Note to global economy: Jobs from the USA have been sent to you courtesy of foolish trade policies, such as NAFTA. You have been very lucky. Maybe your luck will hold, or maybe President Obama will repatriate a few jobs from your country…

Tuesday’s Trading – 9/22/09

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Nearly every sector was red on Monday, but tech held the market up, no doubt because of Dell’s purchase of Perot Systems. The NDX futures have also been strong so far tonight probably because Michael Dell said that he was shopping for more companies. But will the rest of the market follow tech higher?

Counterbalancing tech at the moment are the banks, which are worrying about the G20 tightening regulation. The XLF left a good-sized gap overhead on Monday morning, so that will need to be filled if the market wants to rocket higher. The #2 leading ETF, the XME, also left an overhead gap behind, though it is much smaller than the XLF’s.

If the QQQQ can convince the XLF and XME to fill those gaps, the market may be able to rally on Tuesday. Otherwise, we may have another Doji day.