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.

Two Days above the Cloud (by Consistently Incredulous)

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Just a quick note: the SPX finally followed the NYSE above
the cloud, ever so slightly… for a whopping 2 days.  That ended today:


SPX_1_081110
 

The cloud range (support & resistance) for the next week
is:


SPX_cloudrange_081110
 

What I find the most interesting is the support &
resistance zone I’ve been watching for a while now.  Going back to July-09, this zone has seen 8
events (4 in support and 4 in resistance), with today being the latest
resistance drop down.  Note: I removed some
of the lines so as not to be the cause of general SoH eye damage:


SPX_2_081110
 

I entered a 40% short position as the cloud + zone ceiling proved
too solid to break through.  I sadly must
report to all of you that now that I have shorted, the market is virtually guaranteed
to have a huge up move, thereby leaving me without beer money for the weekend.

Mole To The Rescue

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Alright, I have seen enough. It's time for someone to step and set the things straight over here at the Slope. Although I can't blame Tim-ay for relenting to bearish exhaustion it's important that we fade emotions and look at all evidence at hand before we get married to the long side. Quite frankly, I almost feel pity for the bulltards – for they have no idea what they're dealing with.

2010-08-04_angry_mole

I said 'almost'…

2010-08-04_SPXA200R 

This chart is something my stainless steel rats are more familiar with. I'll try to explain it this way: What you are seeing is the difference between the 'average' (think moving average) and the 'median'. 

What I have labeled on this chart are instances of when the SPX was in the 1120 – 1130 trading range. Which was a lot more often than I care to recall – we seem to be trapped in this range and I am starting to feel like Bill Murray. Anyway, the yellow marks are periods we spent in this range and the green marks connect to the moving average of the percentage of stocks above the 200-day SMA during that time. So, back in December (yes, half a year ago – the horror!!) we were at roughly 75%. Three months later at number 2 we were at around 65%. In May at number 3 we are at roughly 60%. And now/today we are at – gulp! – 46%.

What does that mean? Do we care? Yes we do. What it means is that there is a distinct and rapid steepening of the lead curve. And by that I mean that there is a greater polarity between the number of stocks in the SPX which are pushing up sharply and the ones which are flat or dropping. That’s the difference between the average and the median.

Jeezzz Mole – what does that mean again?

The average (or mean) is the sum of the values of all the observations, divided by the number of observations. It is the average value. The median is the value at which 50% of the observations lie above, and 50% lie below. Alright, now your head is spinning – let me fix that. Here is an example:

Here is a series of numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5000, 9000, 8700. The median is the one in the middle: 4. To get to the average add them all up and divide by 7 – which is 3244.

Aaaah – I’m sure a light bulb just went on in your head 😉

You can assume that the median for stocks is usually lower than the average close to market tops. In other words again (and now we finally get somewhere), the price on the SPX represents the average, as it is a free-float capitalization-weighted index (please don’t ask me what that means), and the median (sort of – it’s based on the 200-day SMA) is the SPXA200R (which I put an SMA on, just to confuse you further).

Moral of the story: On the median side we can see that an increasing amount of stocks are dropping below the 200-day SMA, despite price claiming that the ‘value’ of the SPX is the same.

And that, boys and girls, is the definition of 'distribution'.

2010-08-04_SPXA50R 

Here is a similar view, this time with a slightly higher 84-day SMA – we want to fade the noise. What I'm seeing is the exact same pattern we saw during the fall 2007 topping process. This actually confirms Karl Denninger's theory that we are going through a similar price fractal right now – maybe someone here can post the link, I can't find it.

2010-08-04_DJI 

Thus my outlook for the rest of the year is pretty clear. We are currently in a zigzag flat correction which may take us close to this year's high of 1219.80 on the SPX – and maybe we will even exceed it but that is by no means guaranteed. I also do not think that the Dow will exceed its high mark of 11,258.01. We may count a new high as an irregular top or we may slap another wave label on it to satisfy our never ending desire to make sense of this woodchipper of a market. Whatever floats your boat – but don't lose sight of the overall picture.

For the market internals are very clear – I have tons of charts in my repertoire (and which I present on a regular basis at my evil den of financial doom) which strongly suggest that this is nothing but a second wave correction in equities. After all – they are known to be brutal and leave most bears on the wayside. 

Remember – the bus always moves fastest when it's empty. 

Medium Term

2010-08-04_count 

Here are my short term musings on my SPX wave chart. That little overlap last week caused me to pull a very rare 'ending diagonal' card, but since it only happened on the SPX I may just choose to ignore it. The third option is to project new highs for the year – as this would mean that we are in a sub-dividing 3rd wave. And as Tim-ay pointed out – it may drive us a lot higher than any self respecting bear would care to imagine. 

2010-08-04_gold_silver 

My gold/silver ratio chart is already bouncing exactly where I suggested it would. Bear in mind that this supporting indicator can dance along that lower line for a while until equities finally relent and drop to the downside.

2010-08-04_copper 

Copper is still pointing to the upside and it's been spot on all year. Which means that we're not turning just yet – give it until mid August, which in my estimate will be the curtain call for Soylent Green (i.e. the green scenario on my SPX wave count chart).

Whatever you do – stay frosty and don't yield to emotion! 

Cheers,

Mole

The Dow Theory Buy Signal (by Springheel Jack)

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Something very interesting happened yesterday, though few people seem to
have noticed. The Dow closed above the highest close made in June, and
the Transports index did the same. We therefore have a new Dow Theory
Buy Signal, one of the most venerable, and reliable, of trend change
confirmations in the indicator universe.

Richard Russell, writing before the close yesterday said:

'If they both close above their June highs, it will be particularly noteworthy, because simultaneous confirmations imply a special power.'

As far as I am concerned, that has all but killed what remained of the
summer bear case, we are just waiting now for long treasuries to break
support and for the 13/34 EMAs to cross back on the weekly chart. 30
year treasuries look as though they may well break support today:

100727_T30Yr_Daily_Rising_Suppport_Trendline

I was researching a weekend post on the 13/34 EMA weekly cross the other
day, and while the post is still on the drawing board, I was very
struck by the points of comparison between the look of recent market
action and the pullback in 1998 during the dotcom bubble. Here's the
chart of 1991 to 2000 with the dotcom bubble highlighted in yellow and
the comparable period in 1998 circled:

100727 SPX Weekly 1991-2000

In 1998, as now, there was a sharp correction on SPX, from 1190 to 923,
and there was a 13/34 EMA weekly cross that then recrossed within a few
weeks for a strong buy signal. The SPX then rose more than 50% within
two years to top out in early 2000.

What relevance does that comparison have now? Plenty. We are in another
bubble now, the dotgov bubble if you will, and there is only one way
that a bubble based on an orgy of government spending is likely to end,
and that is with a bond crisis. That bond crisis is not going to be
about bonds on economic also-rans like Greece, it will be centered on
the US and the likelihood that the US will be able to repay the
ever-escalating tidal wave of debt being generated now.

Until we get that crisis we are in an expanding bubble, and valuations could increase a lot from here.

In the very short term I'm expecting to see a peak and a
pullback within a couple of days and I have a possible rising wedge on
ES indicating back to a retest of 1084.5 ES:

100727_ES_60min_Rising_Wedge

If we should make it back to 1084.5 ES, I will be regarding that as a very good buying opportunity.

Very Long-Term Fan Lines on S&P 500

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Well, it's an eerily quiet day, and I don't have a lot to talk about, so I thought I'd just share a couple of long-term fan studies on the S&P and let this post sit here until the close.

These fan lines are drawn in ProphetCharts on the S&P 500.

One set starts on June 30, 1932 and ends on March 24, 2000.

The other set starts July 8, 1932 and ends on October 11, 2007.

The ability of these lines to act as support and resistance over the decades has been stunning. I also find them to be very valuable on a going-forward basis.

Looking at the chart below, it seems to me a reasonable target before the end of 2011 would be a low somewhat higher than the October 2008 low. If there is a real sea-change in the world's economy, the next major drop could take us into the mid-400s.

0719-fibs