Posts Tagged ‘alternative energy’

Mid-Week Dollar, Gold & SP500 Trend Trading

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

It has been a roller coaster week thus far as stocks and precious metals plunged on heavy selling volume on the back of a rising dollar, only to make a strong rebound Wednesday. While there has been significant intraday price movement, it was no surprise to us as we have been anticipating this pullback since discussing it in my Sunday Gold Newsletter.

Let’s take a quick look at the charts…

US Dollar Daily Trading Chart

The past couple weeks the dollar has traded in a choppy fashion, and last week I mentioned to subscribers to keep any new positions small. The dollar looked ready to make a bounce and if it reverses we will see stocks and commodities correct rather sharply.

Last week we trimmed some profits on our gold and SP500 trading positions in anticipation of a rising dollar/lower equity and metals prices. The dollar is currently in a down trend so we are still trading with the trend, but the next couple sessions could potentially change that.

As you can see on the chart a similar pattern to what we saw during the May/June top earlier this year has now formed in reverse this month. It’s a simple pattern I call a drop-n-wash. It is like dropping a knife – you panic, then take action (move foot, then wash the kife). That is typically how the market reacts to this type of price pattern after an extended trend has taking place for a long period of time.

The dollar made an obvious breakdown which the entire world witnessed, causing traders who recently went long to panic and sell their positions. Those who like to short the dollar would have taken a short position, only to see the market reverse and head straight back up again. This pattern has yet to confirm, but through the use of the shorter time frame charts (5 Min, 10 Min, 30 Min), I have a feeling the dollar may continue to rise. However, until the dollar shows considerable strength I am still playing the long equities / long gold side of the equation.

SPY – SP500 ETF Trading Fund

The SP500 made a nice move up last week and we trimmed our position back to lock in more gains as I anticipated this pullback and possible gap fill. As you can see on the chart the moving averages are all heading up and that’s the direction we are still focusing on playing (buying dips).

The morning dip on Wednesday the market sentiment started to shift to become extremely bearish on the short term time frame (10 minute charts). If the market drops down to fill the rest of that gap, I have a feeling the majority of traders will panic out of their position giving us an extreme sentiment buy signal. Also a gap fill will bring the price down to the key moving averages which will act as a support level. I will notify members to add more to my SP500 long position if that happens.

GLD – Gold ETF Trading Fund

Gold has much of the same story as the SP500 but with a couple twists. Gold has huge global demand from banks, investors and traders adding more buying power to this investment than stocks right now. We could see gold hold up above its gap that formed last week. That being said, a pullback to the key moving averages would not only act as a major support level but also fill the gap. We currently have our long positions, but trimmed some profits near the highs and are sitting tight letting the market work it’s self out.

My trading partner J.W. Jones posted a great gold play yesterday which had a nice payout already. Read about his gold options trade here.

Mid-Week ETF Trading Conclusion:

In short, the focus should be kept on trading with the underlying trends until a trend change has been confirmed. So that means short the dollar, long equities, metals and oil.

That being said, because things are starting to look unstable it is crucial to trade smaller position sizes during times of uncertainty like this. Anticipating major market tops is very difficult and generally costly play, just ask everyone who has been trying to pick a top for the past 2 months… Anticipate trend changes, but don’t trade them until the price/volume action confirms the new trend.

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The Casino of Paper Money

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Capitalism is similar to a giant casino where capital, i.e. paper chips, are issued by the house, i.e. banks, as interest-generating loans. The longer the chips remain in play, the more debt is created which accrues to the house as profit.

Most of those in the casino, i.e. workers, producers and savers, must “invest” their savings with professional gamblers, e.g. investment banks, insurance companies, and pension funds, who arbitrage the odds at various tables and are given additional credit by the house in order to do so.

The professional gamblers offer a small return to the workers, producers and savers and pocket the difference between their winnings and the returns offered; and, as long as the velocity and amount of capital bet increases, the house is profitable and can pay what is owed to the professional gamblers who pay what they owe and keep the rest.

Problems happen when the velocity of capital slows and the aggregate amount bet diminishes. This explains the obsessive concern of the house bookkeepers (central bank economists) regarding the velocity of money and the overall money supply.

After 1900, the velocity of money steadily fell until 1913 when America officially became a casino to be managed by the Federal Reserve, i.e. the house. The house fix, however, was temporary and lasted only 5 years. Note what happened to the velocity of money after 1971 when the casino’s chips are no longer backed by gold.

When the historic 1920s US stock market bubble collapsed in 1929, the money supply contracted 25 % by 1933; and, as a consequence, the US made the private ownership of gold illegal that year.

The US confiscation of gold was enforced by the casino to prevent Americans from taking their paper chips off the table to instead buy gold; as gold buying diminishes the overall money supply, i.e. the amount of paper chips in play, and the velocity of capital, i.e. the volume of paper money being bet with the house.

That the US could again confiscate gold is a possibility as America is still operated by the same managers, the Federal Reserve. However, there are differences between the 1930s and today and I discussed this possibility previously on a youtube video, see http://www.youtube.com/user/SchoonWorks#p/u/9/5o36Dj-ukPo.

If the US does outlaw the private ownership of gold, it will erode the ability of Americans to recover after the collapse. The US government, however, is primarily concerned with the ability of the Fed to loan the government money, not the well-being of its citizens. This should be obvious to most Americans. Unfortunately, it isn’t.

Capitalism is similar to a Ponzi-scheme where earnings and winnings must be constantly re-cycled, i.e. “re-invested”, in order to keep the scheme going. This is why the US is so upset with Asian nations with high savings rates-earnings in Asia are not being recycled as quickly as the West requires.

To Asians, savings are a sign of healthy economies and balanced living. To US and Western bankers, high Asian saving rates constitute a “savings glut”, causing the velocity of money and amount bet in the West to slow and threaten its global Ponzi-scheme

This is why China, Japan, Korea, and Middle-Eastern oil-producing nations are pressured to recycle their savings back to the US and/or other Western economies. By so doing, they become captive to the West as their increasingly indebted economies become dependent on the West’s paper driven demand.

In Asia, however, savings are still considered a virtue, not an under-leveraged asset as in the US and Europe. Gold, too, is held in high regard in Asia. Recently, Chinese households have more than doubled the percentage of their savings invested in gold.

The Chinese are investing in gold because in the 1940s the value of Chinese paper money plummeted 1,000-fold in a hyperinflationary collapse and they remember. Europe, too, suffered extreme monetary distress during the early 20th century, and the Europeans likewise understand that gold is the money of last resort; and, after global markets imploded in 2008, it is understandable why the European demand for gold quadrupled.

In America, however, the house is committed to keeping America’s savings invested in paper assets and paper promises, i.e. bonds, in order to keep its Ponzi-scheme alive. How long the house, i.e. the Fed, can do so is now the world’s quadrillion dollar question.

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Glory Days

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

‘Those were the days’ is a well known but now little used catchphrase that is employed in describing ‘better times’, usually heartfelt and sentimental for the individual(s), and usually occurring in better economic times. And at one point or another in a person’s life the concept of better days – perhaps even glory days – as in one’s youth, can be particularly poignant, especially if the economy, even if it’s only yours, hits the skids. Of course in terms of the larger economy these days, better times and glory days are becoming a thing of the past for growing numbers unlike anything we have seen for quite some time unless you are a banker, manufacturing your wealth at an increasing expense to all others, in an unsustainable economic system designed to do one thing and one thing only – maintain the power of the privileged.

Unbeknownst to many of these types however, the world is about to get smaller courtesy of peak oil, and the deleveraging of our aging population that has not even begun yet, so surprises lie in store for increasing numbers, with any hope of more glory days in the future a vestige of a bygone era. When will this become more self evident to all? How about when the cockamamie empire of Brussels’ bureaucrats (Europe), and the experiment better known as the euro, disintegrate due to insolvency, a condition that has already arrived, but is as of yet not being admitted. The meltdown in Ireland may be too much to ignore for much longer however, especially if bond spreads keep widening in spite of the bailout announced over the weekend.

In moving onto technicals in the markets that provide clues in this regard, it should be noted the dollar ($) has now undergone a 38.2% retrace of recent gains and is in a position to rally, making it possible for the euro to turn lower once again. This would of course be in sync with an accelerating currency debasement agenda in the euro-zone, however more than this it would be an indication of sentiment change towards the $, which has become increasingly bullish for some time now. So all we need is for the open interest put / call ratio on UUP to start trending higher and increasingly any hopes of a $ collapse would be quickly dashed, and the second arrival of the credit crunch will have reappeared for the less endowed to see once again. (i.e. not that it ever left.) In this respect, if I understand the situation correctly, once participating speculators in UUP calls think a large enough counter-trend rally has occurred to necessitate covering their bullish bets (which is why the open interest put / call ratio is still down), the sentiment snafu that is keeping pressure on the $ will be removed, and a rally, if this is the ‘true trend’, would then be possible.

So on a more profound level perhaps the best question a speculator looking to catch a meaningful turn is, ‘is this the primary reason the euro is not imploding right now given escalating problems in the region presently?’ And in going further perhaps a better question is, ‘why would the $ rally on top of technical reasons associated with UUP and / or euro-zone problems? I’ve got a good answer for that question in how about an escalating game of chicken between the US and China that collapses the treasury market, which is something you can count on at some point even if it’s not now. Myself, I think it will be a euro collapse that sparks the credit collapse 2 (CC2), the sequel to the first episode witnessed back in 2008, and QE2’s nemesis. These will definitely not be glory days.

Moving onto precious metals now, where we will be going back and forth all the way through today’s commentary due to our goal of attempting to show you why risk in the inflation trade has unfortunately turned untenable, there are those who think it won’t matter what macro-conditions are, and to those people we say – good luck. While it’s true gold is still so under-owned / undervalued it will still go up if not in absolute terms, surely on a relative basis against just about everything that moves. Yes, this may be true, however these gains had better come soon before the head and shoulders pattern in gold to go along with a collapsed open interest put / call ratio on GLD take hold, or the bulls are in for a big surprise. If I had to guess it would be equity bulls (which will include precious metals with sentiment readings like that) are likely going to be surprised next week when the holiday weekend is over – good Christmas sales or not.

Believe it or not, in terms of employing technical analysis in aiding our forecast the Gold / Silver Ratio tells one everything you need to know in one chart, from short-term probabilities, to where we are in the long-term trend. In this regard, and in focusing on the plot we have been using for some time now below, right now, the ratio is telling us that based on the count, important (but shorter-term) support, and a projection off the indicated structure, while the Gold / Silver ratio will probably extend down to 47ish before an intermediate-degree correction ensues; first, there is no guarantee of this because the present intermediate-degree sequence now has a fully counted out five-wave sequence as of last Friday; and second, because down is the impulsive trend, the move to the measure (47) will likely take place.

Of course after the Gold / Silver Ratio does bottom, which will likely be this week based on the totality of supporting technical / sentiment based information we have, an intermediate-term correction higher will ensue, likely lasting several weeks, if not months. You should note this changes our intermediate-term outlook then, as we were looking for extensions of present trends into the first quarter of next year, however you can’t fight the tape. What is happening here, and an understanding that will be discussed further on Thursday, is bearish speculators have run out of gas, which has key US index open index out / call ratios heading lower in earnest now, an unwelcome development for the bulls as the squeeze in the equity complex depends on continued skepticism regarding the health of the bull, cyclical as it may be. (i.e. we noted last week larger degree cyclical influences in the equity complex were topping right now.)

And as suggested above we have more technical evidence to support this hypothesis, where again, while this sentiment measuring ratio (the NDX / Dow Ratio pictured below) still has some work to do on the upside in completing the count, this move will likely take place by week’s end, possibly characterized by a ‘failure’ in equity prices. (i.e. fifth wave failure.) Here, the S&P 500 (SPX) would not make an extension past the October highs (but possibly make a double top in the 1220 – 1230 range), as suggested below in Figure 2, triggering an exact repeat of the sequence witnessed at the top in 2007 – 2008. So now you see why we have grown increasingly concerned regarding the equity complex / inflation trade moving forward, now entertaining the notion the $ may indeed rally from here despite still low open interest put / call ratio readings.

Past this, and as suggested above, if bullish $ speculators in UUP were to start pulling their bets on such a rally, which would lift open interest put / call ratios (meaning sentiment would be getting increasingly bearish as prices were rising), then the possibility of the present lows in the $ being significant would increase considerably, along with the probability CC2 has arrived in full force, meaning a high degree cyclical top in the secular bear market in stocks is being witnessed right here – right now. Again, this hypothesis is supported in that the VIX is close to touching indicated support shown above, which would be the signal one should expect profound cyclical changes in all related markets.

Fast-forward to today and one should note the VIX is now at support.

Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilizing methods believed reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Comments within the text should not be construed as specific recommendations to buy or sell securities. Individuals should consult with their broker and personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities. We are not registered brokers or advisors. Certain statements included herein may constitute “forward-looking statements” with the meaning of certain securities legislative measures. Such forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of the above mentioned companies, and / or industry results, to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Do your own due diligence.

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