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.

Directional Lines in the Sand (by Springheel Jack)

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Intel beat earnings expectations massively last night, prompting some
flashbacks to the bear wipe-out last July and wails of how it is
happening all over again, and that may be right, but it isn't
demonstrated yet, and there are more earnings than Intel's to come in
the next few days. A quick look around us tells us that we are unlikely
to see record earnings all round this year.

The silliest comment that I saw was that technical analysis was no
longer relevant to this market, which is garbage. Even if the SPX rises
to new highs in the next two years, which seems unlikely, there will
still be important trendlines, channels, patterns and indicators to
light the way and supply good trading entries and exits. Only fools
would think otherwise.

Back on planet earth ES reached rising trendline resistance at 1098.75
after the Intel announcement, and has since fallen back to 1090.5. I
have an immediate target of the centre trendline in my ES rising channel
in the 1086 to 1089 area depending on when it is reached:

100714_ES_60min_Rising_Channel

On the bigger picture the best indication that this rally was the start
of a new bull move would be the main indices breaking above the June
highs, though most have now broken declining resistance from the April
top, including ES which broke it yesterday at 1094.5 ES, albeit that
hasn't been broken on a daily basis yet. There are some other indicators
to consider too though, and they are the reason that I was expecting
this rally, if it is a rally, to fail at yesterday's high. I have
serious doubts about that now as this move up has looked so impulsive,
but let's review them again.

The key one is USD. USD and the main component of the USD index, EURUSD
have been in mirror image wedges. Here's the broadening descending wedge
on EURUSD which has not quite reached target, just as the USD one has
equally fallen slightly short:

100714_EURUSD_Daily_BD_Wedge

EURUSD has a history of forming wedges on big moves, and when broken,
they generally play out to target. It is very important for the bear
case that these wedges don't break, as a bear move down against the tide
of a falling dollar would not be easy.

The second key indicator that I am watching is 30 year treasuries. There
we have a strong rising trendline since April that was tested yesterday
and is still intact and it will help the bear case if that remains the
case:

100714_T30Yr_Daily_Rising_Trendline

On oil I've been considering whether we have a rising channel or a
broken rising wedge. The broken lower trendline of the wedge has been
retested hard yesterday and has not broken, which supports the idea that
it is a wedge. If so, we can expect a move soon below $70:

100714_Oil_Futs_60min_Rising_Wedge_or_Channel

Of the USD currency pairs GBPUSD has now reached my target at the upper
trendline of a declining channel from last October. I am expecting it to
turn down here to a target under 1.40 but if it doesn't reverse, that
will be a major bullish breakout, strengthened by the fact that the
upper declining channel trendline goes back to July 2008:

100714_GBPUSD_Daily_Declining_Channel

I posted a possible IHS on AUDUSD yesterday and I am watching that
very carefully, as a serious break up over the June highs would suggest a
target of 92 to me, and most likely a return to the upper trendline of
the larger broadening formation at 94. I can't see that happening really
unless the recent equities low is to hold for several months at least.
The June high held as resistance yesterday and I'll be keeping an eye on
that today:

100714_AUDUSD_60min_IHS

I still think we may have seen a major interim high on ES yesterday,
though I am aware that is very much a minority view at the moment. If
so, we will most likely consolidate that top over the rest of the week
before the main bear event of the year begins.

If not, USD and bonds will break downwards and I'll outline my alternate
bull scenario with a target at 1400 SPX, but we're not yet at the point
where that needs to be seriously considered.

ES Interim Low Probably In – Good Bounce Plays (by Springheel Jack)

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I was expecting that we would make a low on ES early this week, and I
think we made it overnight at 1003 as a significant declining resistance
trendline was broken after that low:

100706 ES 60min Declining Channel Break

I'm not absolutely certain that the interim low is in, and looking at
EURUSD particularly I had expected to see a bit more downside first, but
looking at quite a few charts this morning I think that most likely
that won't now happen.

I've marked in my expectations for a bounce target on the ES daily chart
and, though I haven't marked it in on this chart, the low point on SPX
was almost exactly at the 38.2% fib retracement of the move up since
March 2009, which was interesting. On the ES daily chart there was a
touch of the RSI 30 oversold level, with some positive divergence on
MACD, and the lower trendline of the (sloppy) declining channel was hit
on Friday:

100706_ES_Daily_Declining_Channel

For promising bounce plays I'd highlight oil and copper, both on the
September futures. Oil on the 60min chart has broken up through a
significant declining resistance trendline and has a good chance of
making it back up to $78 IMO to hit the upper trendline of what appears
to be a broadening descending wedge:

100706_Oil_Sept_60min_BD_Wedge

The copper broken rising wedge that I posted the other day appears to
have been a diagonal slice of a previously unrevealed rising channel.
Both rising and falling wedges frequently develop into channels which is
always something to bear in mind when trading them. Copper also appears
to have formed a small IHS indicating to the $307 area, though my
target is the top of the rising channel in the $315 area:

100706_Copper_Sept_Rising_Channel_and_IHS

I'm expecting a bounce here rather than a longer term bottom, though if
strong declining resistance on ES/SPX and EURUSD is broken that could
still go the other way. At the moment however the SMA 50 & 200 death
cross is being made on the  SPX daily chart, and also the EMA 13 &
34 cross on the weekly chart, both very bearish indicators for the rest
of the summer.

It would be nice to get a hindenburg omen as well of course, but one of
the preconditions for that is that the NYSE ten week simple moving
average must be rising, and that looks unlikely in the near future
without a major bull break up, which would then make it hard to get the
number of new yearly lows required to trigger an omen. Wikipedia have
an excellent page on this indicator for anyone interested in how it
triggers.

Purchase and Storage of Precious Metals (by Marketsniper)

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Due to the recent "increase" in the "price" of gold and silver, I have been receiving numerous questions about them of a practical nature. Where to buy, in what form to buy, how to store, etc

What To Buy

This will be an individual decision. Questions you will need to answer are: 1) Why am I buying precious metals and taking delivery of them and 2) how long will I be keeping them?

IF you're buying the metals as a trading vehicle, do NOT buy the actual physical metals. Trade them in paper form. Plenty of ETFs available to do that. IF you are buying the precious metals as an alternative and a hedge against paper money here are my suggestions. IF you have no precious metals at all, start with silver. In silver, start with sovereign silver coinage. For the United States, that is pre-1965 dimes, quarters and half dollars. These are normally sold by dealers in $1,000 FACE bags and often lesser amounts (1/2, 1/4 bags and even $100 face). For the full face bag, there should be 726 oz of actual silver melt. However, due to worn, circulated coins, the accepted amount is 715 ounces of actual silver per $1,000 face bag. For an actual conversion on a per coin basis, this is very handy for actual melt value.

http://www.coinflation.com/silver_coin_values.html

As with any market, there is the bid price and the offered price. The spread on actual physical metals can be quite wide. What you want to buy is the cheapest metal in readily recognizable form. With silver, you have sovereign coinage. When dealing with bars, whether it be gold or silver, always purchase hallmark bars! These are bars fabricated by well known mints and authority such as Credit Swiss, Swiss Pamp, Johnson-Mathey, Englehardt, etc.

When it comes to gold, also go with the cheapest gold you can buy in readily recognizable form. Do NOT buy into the .9999 fine gold game. The Canadian Gold maple Leaf coin at .9999 fine gold has exactly the same amount of gold as is in the South African Krugerrand. The SA Krugerrand is a bit larger due to a small amount of base metals to make the coin harder.  A word about the Austrian and the Hungarian Corona. They are all dated 1915 and are authorized re-strikes. They actually contain .9802 ounce of gold and can be the best buy due to the least markup over melt on a percentage basis. I have found that the SA Krugerrand is also usually a good buy. The premium charged for the US and Canadian gold coins tend to be higher.

Where To Buy

There really is no substitute for walking into a bullion/coin dealer with cash and walking out with your precious metals. A number of things to keep in mind. Each state is different as to sales tax on your precious metal purchases. In California, for example, the amount was recently raised from $1,000 to $1,500 for sales tax exemption so check with the state where you live on this point. Also, the Patriot Act mandates that the dealer get a piece of paper from you identifying yourself.  I have yet to be asked for actual identification. Do the right thing.

For those where this is impractical due to location, I have had a very long and good working relationship with California Numismatics http://www.golddealer.com/ and Tulving http://www.tulving.com/goldbull.html Both of these firms I have and continue to trust.  Even if the cost is a bit higher at your local dealer, there is nothing more reassuring than to plunk down the cash and walk out the door with your metals purchase

Storage Suggestions

The optimum situation is to be a citizen of one country, live in a second country and keep most of you bullion in a third country. Since for most people this is not really possible, your are faced then with the safe keeping of your precious metals. I highly suggest that you do not keep them in a bank safety deposit box. The bank may be closed when you need to actually have the metals in your possession and there may actually be counter claims against safety deposit boxes should your bank go "out of business."

This last may be just a nasty rumor but the first reason should be enough to keep your metals outside the bank! For the average individual, you might take a look into some ideas for safe storage ideas around your home or apartment. A false electrical outlet box. Who but you would know? How about a false can of shaving cream? For those with a bit more metals than can be stored safely by such methods, short of becoming a midnight gardener and burying it in your back yard, look into private vault storage.

Hopefully, this has been of some help for those wishing to at least partially hedge their downside risks in very uncertain times.

Impact of China News (by Mike Paulenoff)

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News that China will re-value its yuan currency is viewed positively, of course, by world markets as it lowers inflation risk and exudes confidence about China's growth picture. There are several sectors covered this week in regards to how the China situation could and may impact each of those sectors. Today's portion of the charts covers Mike's perspective on copper, gold, and steel.



Originally published on MPTrader.com.

Trading in a Range – Leaning Bullish (by Springheel Jack)

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ES is trading in a tight range. 1102 ES has turned into solid support
since being broken earlier this week and on the upside we have strong
resistance at 1115 ES, a level that took a long time to break through at
the end of 2009. A break in either direction will probably define the
next couple of weeks.

If we do break down through 1102 ES, I'm seeing some weak rising
trendline support at 1096 ES, but if we break down through that, then
the downside looks wide open again:

100618_ES_60min_Range

Some of the USD currency pairs are looking fairly bullish today. AUDUSD
has broken up from a recent ascending triangle with a target of 88:

100618_AUDUSD_60min_Triangle

GBPUSD has broken the neckline of an H&S indicating to the top
of the current broadening ascending wedge in the 1.50 area. The RSI
looks rather overbought though and we may see a retracement first:

100618_GBPUSD_60min_BA_Wedge

One interesting chart showing potential weakness, though
not at all correlated with equities, is the chart for gas, with a rising
wedge that is running out of road now

100618_Gas_60min_Rising_Wedge

Overall the picture looks bullish on balance, but the key in my view is
the range on ES. We'll break out of it one way or the other soon, and
when we do, I'm expecting a big move. 

I've really been enjoying writing these daily market
analyses every day for the last three months, but I've been spending too
much time on it, and less time on reading and trading as a result. I
need to rebalance my time better, and I also have a very busy offline
summer looming, so I'm going to keep posting an interesting chart most
days, but I'm only going to do a serious write-up once or twice a week.