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.

Convergence

By -

There are no guest posts in the hopper, so today probably won't be the wild and woolly new post every 37 seconds experience that you witnessed last week. So I thought I'd put up a post this morning and let it linger a few hours.

I noticed something terribly interesting this weekend when looking at my long-term charts: the S&P 500 has almost perfectly touched its 61.8% retracement level ranging from the October 11, 2007 high to the March 6, 2009 low. We all know that.

But what's more interesting to me is that, at the same time, the S&P 500 is also just underneath its 61.8% fan line spanning from the low of (wait for it.………) June 30, 1932. This is my mombo long-term set of fans which have, in my opinion, represented important areas of support and resistance over many decades.

The bottom line is that I think that, at long last, we may have finally have a clear, firm terminus to this countertrend rally. God knows we've waited long enough.

0501-sixtyoneeight

This is What I *HAD* Expected…….

By -

The biggest "macro" disappointment I've had in the markets and my trading over the past six months is simple to explain, and I came across a chart this morning which does a nice job capturing it.

My expectation was that the markets, having rallied mightily from March to October, would crest at a major resistance level and simply roll over and resume their fall. So far, any falls have been nothing more than a tease.

There was a fall in late October; that got trounced by higher highs; there was a healthier fall in late January and early February; that was obliterated by dramatically higher highs. Yesterday's 200+ point dip might have been the beginning of simply another fake-out.

My expectations for the market were much closer to what NBG – a Greek bank, shown below – experienced. I guess the required fundamentals for my expectations had to be a lot worse than what we're seeing in the U.S.

0428-nbg 

Have we just seen the wave 5 top on SPX? (by Springheel Jack)

By -

I've been looking at SPX this morning and the evidence that we may just
have seen the end of wave 5 of 5 looks compelling. If so we have just
made a major top. Let's consider the evidence.

Firstly I was
looking at ES this morning and I see that a possible H&S pattern is
forming with the right shoulder on that pattern developing now. Looking
further at it and dropping my preconception that a rising channel is
forming I now see that recent action fits much better with a rising
wedge:

100416 ES 60min Wedge and HS Pattern

Now
I am fairly convinced that we are in wave 5 of 5 up from the low in
March 2009 here, though we may instead be looking at a wave 3 extension
for the bearish interpretation. What we are looking at here is a
textbook wave 5 termination pattern and I have an example from EWI of
one here for comparison:

100416 EWI Ending Diagonal Rising Wedge

Looking
at the SPX chart for the wave 5 of 5 up since the Feb 5th low, I have
marked in the wave count for what I think now looks like the highest
probability count unless we make a new high today:

100416 SPX 60min Wave 5 Channel

To
add further weight to this scenario, jacksoo pointed out this morning
that we hit significant resistance yesterday on a line drawn from the
November ES high:

100416_ES_Daily_Trendlines_and_Patterns

This
all adds up to a compelling scenario that this wave top may well now be
in. There is still some room for upside in the rising wedge of course,
and there is also a little wiggle room on the resistance trendline from
the November high, depending on how it is drawn, but not much. If that
H&S finishes forming today then I think that it will signal an
excellent short on a break of the neckline at 1201.5 ES, at which stage
the rising wedge will also be at breaking point. If the lower trendline
of that rising wedge, currently at 1203 ES, is broken on an hourly
basis, then that will also be a signal to position short.

If the
wave top is in, then we should now at minimum now see an abc retracement
that should take SPX back below 1100. If the move since March 2009 has
been a rally rather than a cyclical bull market though, then the top may
be in, and we could then be starting a move towards a new low.

One
caveat of course is that wave 5's can extend too. As ever in this
strange market, some caution is required. Good trading everyone!

USD Retracement Will Push Equities Up (by Springheel Jack)

By -

My last post was on how the USD uptrend still looked intact despite the
sharp pullback into Wednesday's close. That remaining the case though
was dependent on USD reversing back upwards on Thursday which most
definitely failed to happen. The USD rising channel is not yet broken,
but there is now every reason to think that this USD wave up since
December peaked at 82.24:

100404 USD Daily Rally Channel

GBPUSD has broken up decisively on Thursday and EURUSD now looks poised
to do the same. They may yet turn back down, but that looks less likely
than a further move up.

In the context of the longer term, we are likely to have been watching
only the first wave (of 5 waves) of the third wave up since USD bottomed
at 70.7 in 2008. We should now see a significant retracement of the
wave up since December before the 3 of 3 starts and a much larger and
longer move up in USD begins. I have marked likely retracement targets
on the daily USD chart above. Here also is a look at the monthly USD
chart for the long term USD picture with what I think is the most likely
wave count:

100404 USD Monthly Long Term Bear Market

If this USD wave up has finished, this is likely to have a very dramatic
effect on equities as well. I've said before that an ongoing strong
subwave up in USD was likely to at least cap equities into trading
sideways even if there was no corresponding equities retracement, and
equities have indeed been trading sideways for a couple of weeks now.

I was expecting that this would continue for another couple of weeks
while the balance of the USD wave up played out, and that we would then
see a powerful last wave up in equities while USD retraced. It now looks
likely that this is happening now rather than later, and if we are now
starting a period of USD retracement and consolidation that is likely to
last a few weeks, then during that time we should expect to see
equities surge ahead. On the SPX 60min chart you can see that the main
channel up since the low on Feb 5th is very much intact, and that we are
likely now to be starting the fifth and final subwave up within that
channel. I've marked the likely wave count on the chart and the fourth
wave seems to have formed an ascending triangle with a target in the
1200 area:

100404 SPX 60min Wave Structure since Feb 5th

In the longer term the main rising channel since the bottom in March
2009 is also very much intact. I have also marked the likely support and
resistance levels on the daily chart:

100404 SPX Daily Rally Channel and SR Levels

On quite a few charts we are seeing major reversals and breakouts here.
FXI has broken up decisively from a broadening descending wedge, gold
and oil seem to be breaking upwards too. I'm also seeing this on a lot
of individual stock and ETF charts that I have been looking at over the
last couple of days.

How far could equities rise? Difficult to say of course. I've liked the
61.8% fib retracement at 1229 for a while now and think SPX is likely to
get there, though it may go further. I have a target of 18 on XLF from a
broken and resolving rectangle:

100404 XLF Weekly Rectangle

The nightmare chart for bears is the Vix chart of course. On the weekly
chart there is a year-old gently declining channel where the next target
is somewhere between 13 and 14 depending on the time taken to get
there. Could it really get that low? I wonder, but the level of
misplaced complacency reached over the last year is already astounding:

100404 Vix Weekly Fan and Channel

We are not so much climbing a wall of worry in this market as surfing an
ever expanding wave of complacency that government intervention can and
will cure all economic ills.

When the government's credit starts getting tight, and that is likely to
happen within a year of two at most and perhaps much sooner, then we'll
see how much of this subsidised optimism can survive in an market operating without the Bernanke Put.