Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Current Elliott Wave Count and Japan 1989 Comparison



Well, it looks like it is finally here. The next leg of the biggest bear market in most people's lifetime may finally be upon us. However, for most investors the probabilities are not yet high enough to justify a short position...not yet, anyways...there should be plenty of opportunities.

Attached is the latest wave count I am following. Encroachment into the Flash Crash territory of 2010 killed a lot of the bulls's hope of this being a new bull market up from the March 2009 lows. However, I would like to see a monthly close below $1190 to give even more probability to this count being correct from a longer term perspective. A new low around or below $1100 is needed before I can fully get excited about the new leg down. Once that occurs we should see a big rally back to where we are around now. At that time will be a good spot to get short and close longs. The market will have revealed more cards to us by then.

From a near term perspective I equate August's action to that of January 2008. Both of these months saw "hammer" candlesticks and ended big moves down from multi-year highs in the indices which subsequently rebounded some of that move. They also both occurred 4 months after the respective recent price highs. The first and last weeks of February of 2008 were strongly down with the culmination of that move down occurring March of 2008. If things are playing out similarly, then I expect September to be pretty volatile as well.

Linkable Real Time Chart : http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=$SPX&p=M&yr=5&mn=0&dy=0&id=p72172925866&a=242864511



Finally, I would like to use Japan's last 3 decades as a roadmap to our current situation (some of the reasons I lay out on the chart below). Japan is the only major example of a deflationary environment in recent history and its size, importance, etc mimic the US's situation fairly well with some supporting arguments on the chart.





The key to me in the whole deflationary scenario is the country's currency situation. Just like the United States, Japan's stock market exploded as its currency declined in the 1980's...this makes sense as I have laid out in other postings about the $USD (see list of $USD labels to the right). Also, Japan's market peaked roughly when their currency bottomed. Since then, the market has declined significantly, deflation has taken hold, and its currency recently made new highs near all time stock market lows. Boiling it down to one point, I expect the US dollar to rally for the distant future keeping a lid on stock prices, supporting the deflation and low interest rates argument, and behaving similarly as Japan did the last few decades.

Keep in mind, one days volume on the foreign exchange markets is around $4 trillion...it absolutely trumps the stock market.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Why this "downdraft" can get worse



The put call ratio is a contrarian indicator often used to help mark extremes in sentiment. The thought is that when people buy more puts than usual (and more calls than usual) then sentiment may be at an extreme. Right now a lot of people are looking at the spike up in put buying and concluding that the market's selloff may be extreme. They also may conclude as a result that the selloff will soon be over. However, I have other thoughts.


Im not that concerned about the put call from a bear perspective for a few reasons...

1) We aren't near 2008 panic levels from both an actual and a moving average standpoint. The 75 day Moving Average (blue MA line) is at .71 and it peaked above .8 during 2008 a few times. It stayed above .71 for over a year then. The actual put/call of 1.11 and 1.08 thus far was seen back in 08 and peaked even higher at 1.35, 1.18, 1.16 then in April and December of 2008. Notice the recent spikes were even higher than the Flash Crash telling me this is something worse.
2) The rise of the ratio has been faster than in '08, but our starting point was a lot lower (complacency a lot higher it seems). Also, the fall in stocks over the past month was extremely fast...much faster than the kickoff after 2007's top. The fact that the put/call ratio was so low in the first place were warning signs that bulls were getting too comfortable.
3) Some of the highest put/call ratio readings were actually nearer to the highs than the lows. Maybe this hints at some major smart money bets as some have discussed yesterday/today.
4) Where we are currently from a moving average perspective is mid 2009 as well as all of 2007, so not that high. The point being we may be extreme from a short term perspective because of the quick rise and very low starting point, but it doesn't look so bad to me on a longer term and leads me to think that the Moving Averages of this ratio could stay here (and likely go higher) for quite some time. This would imply a high vix and continued stock sell off.

I would like to see this index come back down below .5 a few times before I would get comfortable being a bull. Notice that in all of 2008 and most of 2009 this index never went below .5...fear was present the whole time.

Good Luck.