I'm short JAG, and I am increasing the size of that short today. This is a nice topping pattern with plenty of potential downside beneath. Breaking that tinted area is the key next step.
Slope of Hope Blog Posts
Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.
Another One-Hit Wonder
I guess we should all know better by now, that Friday was simply the 382nd one-hit wonder dangled in front of the bears. At this point, even a nuclear strike on a major city would cause only a one-day dip.
There are occasions when technical analysis still works, however, so I thought I'd do a post about a recent instance of this. It's a quiet day, so this might be my only post until the close.
This is the kind of trendline break I really like to see; it has three steps:
(a) the red arrow is the initial break of the ascending trendline;
(b) the green arrow marks the point where the price has retraced precisely to the underside of the former support trendline; this is the perfect shorting point;
(c) lastly, for good measure, the blue arrow marks the point where a lower low is made; the trend is changed, and it's down, down, down for the stock
In normal markets, this kind of thing works all the time. I guess HMIN somehow got away with behaving itself As God Intended.
I’m a Balloon Kind of Guy….
Well, as we again face a market which is able to go up, even in the face of international turmoil, we could use a laugh or two. Here is one of my favorite George Carlin (patron saint of Slope) bits of all time. If you've got stuff to do, fine; press Play and listen to it in the background. It is Carlin at his finest. Now gimme a balloon!!!
A Promising Start (by Springheel Jack)
Support finally broke on Friday and there were impressive falls on SPX and Nasdaq while oil spiked up on riots suggesting that the Egyptian dictator Mubarak may be replaced soon.Why's that important for oil? Because Egypt's Suez Canal is a potential choke point for shipping world oil supplies and because the toppling of Mubarak might lead to an aggressive islamist government in this key western ally in the Middle East.
We'll see how that goes but rioting in Egypt looks set to run for a second week this week and Middle Eastern stockmarkets, which are open on Sundays, were down a further 3% to 5% yesterday. Things look promising for more downside on equities in the west too as ES failed to hold the support levels at 1276 and 1273 on Friday and traded as low as 1262.5 overnight. The next target support level that I have on ES is the potential H&S neckline at 1258 and I'm expecting that we'll see that hit this week, though we might well see a bounce first. That matches exactly with the lower trendline of the rising wedge on the SPX daily chart:
NQ failed to hold the key 2267 level on Friday, and is now rising in a short-term channel that looks like a bear flag. If it breaks downward the obvious target is the lower trendline of the broadening top in the 2220-5 area:
Encouragingly for equity shorts, the technical picure on EURUSD now also looks increasingly bearish with a significant break downwards on Friday. For two weeks now EURUSD has been breaking through a succession of three progressiverly shallower trendlines and is now bouncing from a potential H&S neckline. If that plays out the pattern target is at 1.338:
Copper was looking divergently bullish on Friday morning, made my 439 target, reversed to channel support at 433.6, and is now moving up towards declining support in the 444.5 area. I'm expecting that target to be made, and (slightly less confidently) am expecting a reversal there towards the larger channel support in the 425 area. A break above 444.5 would look very bullish and the next short term top will be signalled by the break of the short term channel:
Silver is continuing to look extremely bearish, and reversed at the top of the current declining channel yesterday. I'm expecting a move down within that channel to the key support level and potential H&S neckline at 25. It is possible that silver's H&S has already formed higher with a target at 22, and if 25 fails to hold, that is where I would expect silver to go. A break up through the declining channel would look very bullish and would put the immediate short scenario into serious question:
Oil is the star of the current geopolitical show at the moment of course, and has broken up convincingly from the declining channel that had seemed likely to take it to the potential H&S neckline at 82. Added to that potential H&S pattern we now have a potential (continuation) IHS forming with the neckline at 93.5 and the target in the 102 area. If the crisis in Egypt deepens this week, that will be one to watch:
We may be watching a very significant reversal forming here, and if the SPX rising wedge breaks downwards then I'll be looking for a retracement into the 1200 SPX area, which I'd expect to hold unless Atilla at Xtrends is right about equities having already made a very major top.
Egypt – Into the Looking Glass (by BKudla)
For this post I will only focus on the food problem for Egypt, and why it is a window on the demons released by our insane monetary printing, and the unwillingness of command and control countries to de-link from a parity dollar policy. The FED is pumping dollars to force China, et al to revalue, allowing for us to export, raise tax funds, and velocity through inflation. Unsustainable food and oil prices will force the hands of these governments to do just that, is the thinking. The game of chicken is on, but an unintended domino in a volatile part of the world fell this week, and has the potential to engulf us all.
Look at the slides and narrative from http://209.157.64.200/focus/f-news/2665495/posts?page=3. You can plug in nearly every North African/Middle Eastern country into this picture, but China, Russia, and India are also in the same boat. Add to this tight supply and the real likelihood that Russia, Canada, and Australia produce less than normal, and we have some big problems coming.
"Egypt is reported to be the world’s largest importer of wheat. In 2010, the oil minister stated that Egypt imports 40% of its food, and 60% of its wheat. The problem this year is that world wheat production is down (at least in part due to weather problems in Russia) so world exports are down:
Figure 4. World wheat production and world wheat exports from USDA
A longer term problem, though, is that world wheat production has not been growing to keep up with growing world population. Part of this lack of growth may be competition from biofuels. Part of the lack of growth also relates to the fact that the “green revolution” improvements (adding irrigation and fertilizer) are mostly behind us. While irrigation and fertilizer greatly improved production at the time of the change, gains in production since 1990 have been much smaller.
The cost of imported food, particularly wheat, has risen, partly because of the relatively smaller harvest, and partly because the cost of production and transport is rising because of rising oil prices. Figure 5 shows the close relationship food prices and oil prices. The Food Price Index used in this graph is the FAO’s Food Price Indexrelated to food for export; Brent oil prices are spot prices from the EIA.
Figure 5. World food price trend is similar to Brent oil price trend.
With oil prices higher now (because world production is close to flat, and as countries come out of recession, they want more), food prices of all types are higher as well. Oil is used directly in the production of grain and indirectly in storage and transit, so its cost becomes important.
The higher food prices contribute to the overall inflation problem that Egypt already had. In 2010, the CIA Factbook estimated the inflation rate to be 12.8%. Since wages don’t always rise to match inflation rates, inflationary pressures have no doubt put more pressure on the government to increase subsidies, at a time it cannot really afford to do so.
Impact on the Rest of the World
Why does everyone else respond so strongly to Egypt’s problems?
One reason is that other Arab countries are also feeling some of the same pressures. Food prices are rising everywhere. Many low income people spend in excess of 50% of their income for food, so a rise in food costs becomes a real issue. People have come to depend on oil and food subsidies. If they are taken away, or not raised sufficiently to compensate for the higher costs of imports, it is a real problem.
Oil prices seem to be affected as well. If the Suez Canal should be closed because of disruptions, it could affect oil transit, particularly to Europe. According to the EIA:
An estimated 1.0 million bbl/d of crude oil and refined petroleum products flowed northbound through the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean Sea in 2009, while 0.8 million bbl/d travelled southbound into the Red Sea.
The amounts being transported through the Suez canal are now likely down a little from these amounts in 2011, because of reduced imports/exports worldwide, but they are still substantial. Europe’s oil imports are about 10 million barrels a day of oil, according to Energy Export Data Browser (using BP’s data). If all of the amounts that flowed northbound went to Europe, they would amount to about 10% of Europe’s imports, or about 7% of Europe’s consumption. In fact, some of these exports go farther–in particular to the US, or to Canada, so the amount in question is probably lower than this relative to Europe’s consumption, say 4% or 5%. But even a small shortfall is a problem, in a world that needs oil for transport, food production, heating, and many other uses.
The inability to send products southbound through the Suez Canal is likely to also be a problem. Part of what Europe does is refine oil, keep the products it needs, and send other products to customers elsewhere. The whole system is set up assuming close to “just-in-time” production and delivery. While there is some storage capability, after a few days or weeks the system is likely to start running into problems. Those in need of the refined products being sent southward through the Suez Canal will be facing a shortage, and Europe will have excess supply. Of course, it is possible to use longer shipping routes, but this uses more oil for shipping and takes longer, so is more expensive. There is also a time-delay when the new system is put in place.
All of these problems (relating to both north and south-bound oil traveling through the Suez) can be worked around, but there could be a period of disruption for a while, as supplies begin traveling a longer route."
If you have not already, I suggest buying MOO, RJA, JJG, and DBA on any weakness. The revolutions may end, but not the food crisis.








