Archives for the day Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

11:14 am EDT:  The ES has retreated a bit after it exceeded the monthly pivot of 1094.50 (not 1094.00 as reported in the last post) by three ticks.  Importantly in this case, the monthly pivot in the cash S&P 500 of 1098.64 was missed by ten cents before the retreat.  If the ES can hang around above day-session-only R1 at 1089.75, it has a chance to test the monthly pivot again and possibly break through later in the day.  Otherwise, we would not be surprised to see a move to the lower end of the projected range from 1079.50 to 1080.25.

#eMini Trading Levels

10:36 am EDT:  The ES is breaking to the upside as we write, likely as a result of the schedule Geithner/Volcker testimony of which we warned.  If the monthly pivot of 1094.00 is exceeded, the next upside target is 1099.00, then strong resistance from 1107.25 to 1009.00.

In this post I want to update briefly the previous warning on copper, followed by some observations on the Commitments of Traders (COT) report for the S&P 500 and Dow Industrials. Finally, I want to return to a pattern in the European indices which, according to the previous post, was reflected in China’s Shanghai Composite.

Update on copper

Those who read my previous post warning on copper will know again how accurate this most recent Topfinder warning was. The key is in fitting TB-Fs correctly. When it warned, the indicator was 99.2 percent done and there was some very noteworthy data too on total open interest readings and normalized Commercial net positioning values from the Commitments of Traders report. Copper began its decline the following day and has fallen 8.7 percent to $6,750 a tonne since. The COT report was warning that copper had run well ahead of market fundamentals and we’ve seen similar declines since in other industrial metals such as zinc, lead and aluminium. As ever, however, timing is fundamental and the Topfinder/Bottomfinder’s signals are often astonishingly accurate.

The common view now is that there’s very little technical support for copper falling at least another 8-9 per cent should the downtrend gain momentum. However, Figure 1 is an updated chart of copper showing several displaced Midas support curves, with the heavy magenta curve the expired Topfinder, the blue line the November 09 trendline (broken), and the light red line the 200 day moving average. True, there’s a lot of support here, but that Topfinder and the November trendline were Intermediate trend breaks (the Intermediate trend = 2-9 months), so we should at least expect a contrary Intermediate size move as a result.

copper daily

Figure 1

In the last post on copper, it was suggested that the likely top in copper was probably coinciding with down moves in China’s SE Composite. In fact, Asian equities have been falling consistently over this period, with the MSCI Asia ex-Japan reaching a two month low. China increased its bank ratios as expected and its increasingly tougher stance on monetary policy has shouldered much of the blame for this decline in equities along with the carry unwinding implications of a strengthening US dollar.

The S&P 500 and the Commitments of Traders report

In a couple of posts over the weekend, David drew attention to several volume-based indicators which were warning of heavy distribution and that even though the Intermediate term Topfinder was 83 per cent done, other Midas-based and trendline-based analyses were indicating that the trend could well be over.

In Figures 2 and 3 I’ve included COT report data showing that total open interest in both the Dow and the S&P futures is at its lowest since 2000 levels (just off the chart) when we were last approaching a Secular term top in equities. What’s fascinating about current net positioning data in these two equity index futures markets is that total open interest being virtually at zero (!) is reflected in the net positioning of the Commercials (hedgers) and NonCommercials (large funds and speculators) also having virtually no commitment in this market.

In contexts such as this, especially at an Intermediate term top, we’d expect to see the funds net long and the hedgers net short (take a look, for example, at their positions in early 2008), but the funds have had virtually no long positions in either market since last March and they actually started shorting it during its first significant pullback — a strong indication of how edgy the funds were at this time, even on limited market commitments. This actual level of low-lying risk appetite in the large funds and speculators is in stark contrast to other fundamental indicators such as the VIX and the narrowing credit spreads as a result of the take-up of high yield (junk) bond issuance. At one stage not so long ago the fortunes of the US dollar were also heavily linked to increasing risk appetite in equities. The COT report since March 2009 emphatically shows that large funds were not net long US equities, since there has been virtually no reflection of risk appetite in these futures markets.

Continue reading the rest of this post.

Also, check out David Dawkins’ weekend posts on the S&P here, here and here.

The Precise Take – Equities mounting the first signs of recovery, but shorts are emboldened

Leaders Analysis:  Both gold and the EuroYen rallied throughout yesterday and closed higher than any day of the previous week, with marginal moves up overnight.  30 Year T-Bond futures slid after hitting resistance yesterday and the US Dollar Index has traded down to nearly the weekly pivot overnight.  There is further room for the moves in the Dollar, EuroYen and gold to continue, so the leaders are equities bullish.

Medium Term Analysis:  Yesterday nearly fit one of our two criteria for what would end the selloff, as there was a range day in the ES that nearly closed over daily R1, with a strong rally into the close.  In fact, the ES never traded materially below VWAP.  The bad news for longs is that sentiment has shifted from a buy-the-dips to a sell-the-rally mentality.  Not until 1109 is cleared does the ES have a chance to revisit the higher end of the January range.  The BLS stated in its October Employment Situation report that it would make an annual benchmark adjustment in the February 5 report of minus 824,000 (for the worse).  It’s possible it will find a way to spin or avoid this, but it’s difficult to see how equities will rally this Friday on this relatively unknown news.  If they can, that is indeed very bullish.

Trading Today:  The lower end of the projected range today contains day-session-only S1, the weekly pivot, the combined session pivot and closing VWAP, from 1079.50 to 1080.25.  If this area does not hold, we expect a return to test Friday’s low.  We would also consider a long from…

Continue reading here.


 

Disclaimer: The information presented on this site is for educational purposes only. No personal trade recommendations are being made hereby. Trading futures is highly risky and you can lose a substantial amount of money. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.

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