We trade 3x ETFs such as TQQQ TNA SOXL LABU using proprietary analysis of volatility. Updates 12:30 AM EST - Monday 7/26/21 Big week coming up The economic calendar for this coming week is full of important events. Mon: New Home Sales Tue: Durable Goods Orders; Case-Shiller Home Price Index Wed: FOMC announcement (2 PM EST) Thu: GDP; Jobless Claims Fri: Employment Cost Index; Personal Income & Outlays The various reports will bring forth data and discussions on two key issues:
Into this mix is the other central question: Will the Delta variant derail the economy by causing shutdown? Earnings: Hotter than July Only 25% of S&P companies have reported so far, but the data has been very impressive: "Overall earnings are now expected to grow 76% year over year for the period, the best growth since 2009." - CNBC However, market participants know that 20201 2nd quarter (Q2) is a historic quarter, and is likely to be peak earnings growth for this year. Still, analysts are projecting 27% rise for 3rd quarter, and 20% rise for 4th quarter (compared to a year earlier). Profit margins have been very impressive so far: 13% for Q1, 12.8% for Q2. But Delta chill is looming Ah yes, that pesky Delta variant. In late August, students will start to head back to school. More activities will move indoor when the cold weather arrives. That's the typical setup for flu season to start, and it will be the setup for the Delta variant to spread even more. However, market participants are not expecting the government to shut down everything like March 2020. Instead, they expect the government to keep pushing vaccination as the key to keeping COVID under control in the long term. What started out as a pandemic will most likely become endemic as time goes on. Inflation, yields and the Fed June’s inflation index jumped 5.4% from a year ago, the highest reading since August 2008. There are certainly many economists who feel that inflation going to get out of control with the Fed too-easy monetary policy. But the bond market so far is disputing that theory. Since mid-March, US10Y and US30Y have both been dropping. They may spike back up a bit, but investors are still piling into bonds with the belief that inflation likely isn’t the biggest problem facing the U.S. and global economy. Instead they are worried that growth will slow again. Interestingly enough, according to WSJ: "One possible consequence of the bond rally is that lower Treasury yields, all else being equal, can help lift stock prices by lowering borrowing costs for businesses and pushing investors to buy riskier assets in search of better returns." In the short term, we think that the economics effect of the Delta variant is still a big enough concern. This will most likely keep the Fed from raising rates, or aggressively tightening the easy money supply any time soon. Market internals: still diverging bearishly Despite the fact that equity has seen record inflow in the first half of 2021, market internals continue to trend bearish. NYSE A/D: Since early June, NYSE cumulative A/D chart have been forming triple top pattern, diverging bearishly with $SPX. This pattern has improved a bit last week. Nasdaq A/D: Since early February, Nasdaq cumulative A/D chart have been forming massive multi-top and lower high pattern, diverging bearishly with $NDX. This pattern has improved a bit last week. Percentage of NYSE stocks above 50 MA: Only 40% on the weekly chart, a huge drop from 85% at the start of the year. Percentage of Nasdaq stocks above 50 MA: 73% on the weekly chart, a big drop from 95% at the start of the year. $VIX $VXN $RVX We show on $VIX $VXN $RVX charts below the levels to expect $VIX $VXN $RVX to reach post FOMC. Charts and projections are available in full post for members. $SPX $NDX IWM Charts and projections are available in full post for members. Signal Trades Click here for Signal Trades spreadsheet. ... Subscribe now to read the rest of this post. Subscribe at our introductory low rate of only $39 per month!
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We trade 3x ETFs such as TQQQ TNA SOXL LABU using proprietary analysis of volatility.
Updates 1:47 PM EST - Monday 7/19/21 Not a crash In the 2:30 AM post, we alerted you that $VIX is going to spike up between today and Wednesday. So is the market crashing? The answer is "No" based on the formation of $VIX chart pattern. Take a look at our explanations for that below. Charts are available in full post for members. Updates 2:30 AM EST - Monday 7/19/21 Key events coming up: earnings and the Fed The economic calendar for this coming week is light. Market participants will be closely monitoring earnings and positioning themselves ahead of FOMC announcement on 7/28. Earnings: very strong On the earnings calendar for this week are big-name stalwarts such as Johnsons & Johnson, Coca-Cola, Verizon, Intel, AT&T, American Express, Honeywell, as well as Netflix. So far earnings season is going very strong. 38 companies that have reported. Of these, 87% are beating earnings estimates by a median of 13%. The projection for S&P stocks is that their earnings will be up more than 66% for this quarter. Chill, baby, chill Some analysts are projecting that this may be a peak earnings quarter for this year. Most economists also agree that the growth surge in the US economy has peaked this past spring. They are still expecting growth, but at a slower rate. According to Morgan Stanley: “We’re past the peak for growth, but that doesn’t mean something more sinister is going on here and that we’re poised to then drop off sharply.” So what we have in terms of economic fundamentals is a pretty strong growth foundation. The fact that growth is expected to moderate a bit is a good thing in the long run. The Worry List: Delta variant, inflation Against this backdrop, we have two looming fears. The Delta variant is spreading quickly, but it seems so far to primarily affect the un-vaccinated population. So the thinking on Wall Street is that instead of a total shutdown, the government will continue to push vaccination as the key in fighting COVID. As we approach the fall and then winter though, we may see more bans in large crowd gatherings. Even indoor dining remains iffy. Both of these will have big effects on the earnings of certain companies. The other huge worry is of course inflation. Powell testified in Congress last week and continued to maintain that inflation is transitory for now. He also assured Congress that the Fed is not planning to taper any time soon. The Fed also released the Beige Book last week. This data is more telling in this report. Most business surveyed expect prices for raw materials to rise in the coming months and feel therefore they have to hike selling prices as well. They are also greatly concerned about finding workers. Rising wages will also lead to rising prices in selling goods and services. "Risk-on" is on but... Equity investors are still strongly in the "risk-on" mode. According to Financial Times, in the first half of 2021, inflows into global equity funds are the largest on record. And according to Bloomberg, ETF inflows are set to smash record in 2021. One could argue that the dumb herd is going to fall off the cliff at this rate, but so far the herd is winning. One thing to keep watching is bond yield. US10Y and US30Y resumed the down trend again. This means that bond prices resumed their up trend. So why are investors piling into Treasury bonds (TLT, IEF), especially the 20y+ ones, when they could be in equities, or if they are worried about inflation? This is where the deflation argument comes back. But for now, no one has the definitive answers. Market internals continue to weaken Despite the fact that equity has seen record inflow in the first half of 2021, market internals continue to trend bearish. NYSE A/D: Since early June, NYSE cumulative A/D chart have been forming triple top pattern, diverging bearishly with $SPX. This pattern dropped sharply last week. Nasdaq A/D: Since early February, Nasdaq cumulative A/D chart have been forming massive multi-top and lower high pattern, diverging bearishly with $NDX. This pattern dropped sharply last week. Percentage of NYSE stocks above 50 MA: Only 35% on the weekly chart, a huge drop from 85% at the start of the year. Percentage of Nasdaq stocks above 50 MA: 69% on the weekly chart, a big drop from 95% at the start of the year. $VIX $VXN $RVX: short-term peak coming up then... Wednesday 7/21 is the expiration date for standard $VIX options. Between now and then, we may see $VIX $VXN $RVX take a small dip, then spike up some more, before peaking around 7/21. After this short-term top forms, $VIX $VXN $RVX will most likely drop to anchor again near their 7/13 low. This will most likely happen right before FOMC. What will happen after FOMC is not something we can project yet, but our hunch is $VIX $VXN $RVX will spike again, this time up to the green lines marked on their charts below. Charts are available in full post for members. Table of Support & Resistance Zones Table is available in full post for members. Signal Trades Click here for Signal Trades spreadsheet. ... Subscribe now to read the rest of this post. Subscribe at our introductory low rate of only $39 per month! We trade 3x ETFs such as TQQQ TNA SOXL LABU using proprietary analysis of volatility.
Updates 1:30 AM EST - Wednesday 7/14/21 $VIX $VXN $RVX All 3 volatility charts are showing the same pattern. $VIX $VXN $RVX are poised to rise from here, and very unlikely to drop below the orange lines at the bottom of the charts. The exact path they will take to spike up to the green lines that we've been highlighting is not easy to predict. However, you can look for their 20-day EMA blue line to rise up, get close to, and eventually cross over the 50-day EMA red line. While this pattern unfolds, the odds of $VIX $VXN $RVX spiking are high. Charts are available in full post for members. $SPX $NDX IWM Market internals continue to deteriorate, especially for Nasdaq stocks. RSI is diverging bearishly from price on all 3 charts. However, the tricky part about trading right now is that $SPX $NDX IWM have been ignoring these bearish messages. We witnessed on Tuesday the intraday price surge, especially for $NDX. For a while it kept going up, up and away. But that is likely to be a bull trap. When $VIX $VXN $RVX really spike, and $SPX $NDX IWM really drop, they are likely to go all the way to their green support zones shown below. Table of Support & Resistance Zones All the green support zones have been updated. Table is available in full post for members. Signal Trades Click here for Signal Trades spreadsheet. ... Subscribe now to read the rest of this post. Subscribe at our introductory low rate of only $39 per month! We trade 3x ETFs such as TQQQ TNA SOXL LABU using proprietary analysis of volatility. For actual trades, click here.
Updates 12 AM EST - Tuesday 7/6/21 Economy: Growing but not overheated yet The following WSJ article summarizes the current state of the economy, and prepares you for what to expect in this coming week, in terms of economic news. Liquidity: Too much of a good thing Wall Street is scrutinizing the current discomforting trend where money market funds and banks are parking a huge amount of cash (near a trillion dollars) each night in the Fed's Reverse Repo facility. The Fed raised the interest rate for repo to 0.05% on 6/16, and since then market participants have been piling in. To some analysts, this is a sign that there is a glut of cash in the system. From WSJ: Ultralow rates and central bank bond buying have kept the yield on the 10-year Treasury note hovering around 1.5%, below the rate of inflation. The three-month Treasury pays less than the reverse repo facility. Too much easy money in the system can lead to unpredictable volatility. Too much easy money in the end led to the housing crash of 2008. And it could eventually bring the current bull market to an end. But it is too soon to jump in front of this bull right now. Keep an eye on it, but don't bet against it yet. Housing: Too hot to handle Average home prices in major metro areas shot up to an annual rate of 14.6% in April, surpassing 13.3% in March. Low mortgage interest rate and a continued shortage of homes for sale contribute to the demand increase and the price jump. Fed officials are starting to discuss scaling back their purchase of mortgage-backed securities in a effort to reduce the froth in the housing market. But "debate" is the operative word here. They have not come to an agreement yet, and it can drag on for quite a while. Meanwhile, memories of 2008 housing crash loom. Risk Appetite: Still on All in all, none of the dark clouds on the horizon seem to faze retail investors. In June, retail investors bought nearly $28 billion of stocks and ETF, an even higher number than the frenzy buy mode of January. So all in all, despite growing dark clouds, conditions remain bullish right now for the stock market. No recession and no market crash any time soon. Market internals are weakening On the surface, the appetite for risk is still on. But under the hood, market internals are weakening. On Friday 7/1, Nasdaq Advance Decline net issues dropped intraday to -1500 before closing at -832 shares. Meanwhile $NDX rose sharply, which is clearly a bearish divergence. $SPX rose sharply too, while NYSE A/D dropped to -700 before closing. Meanwhile on the chart of the CBOE equity put/call ratio, its EMA lines are now anchoring to rise. $VIX $VXN $RVX suggest July topping process ... Subscribe now to read the rest of this post. Subscribe at our introductory low rate of only $39 per month! |
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