Timing & trends

Two Biggest Trend Reversals We Have Been Waiting For

The two trend reversals everyone has been waiting a year for are about to take place, but they have not yet started.

While I do think 2014 is the year we see gold, silver, miners and many other commodities rally, it is important to follow the trend and wait for a reversal to form before getting overly excited and long commodities.

Each time we see the daily charts form some type of bullish pattern gold market traders become instantly bullish. And each time this happens they get another reality check about their trading technique of trying to pick a bottom.

I just published a book in December which teaches readers how to identify trends and stages in the market – “Technical Trading Mastery – 7 Steps to Win With Logic“. Buying into a bear market rally is not a high probability winning position. Odds favor that sellers will pull the price down and likely to new lows.

This January is one of these times and gold market traders are getting excited and long positions. While the bottom may in for precious metals, buying a bounce in a bear market is tricky and you better have some trading discipline to exit if price starts to sell back down.

Eventually we will see the stock market rollover and breakdown below its support trendline and gold will rally. But keep in mind, some of the largest percentage based moves take place just before a reversal. What does this mean? It means that the stock market could easily go parabolic and rally for a few more weeks, then reverse down sharply. And precious metals would do the opposite, sell off, make new lows, then reverse back up and start a new bull market.

Stock Market VS. Gold – Gold Market Traders Be Aware!

Gold-Stocks

Below are a few more charts showing my big picture trend analysis for silver and gold miners.

SilverBull

 

MinersBull

Gold Market Traders Conclusion:

In short, the precious metals sector is still in a bear market and has not yet reversed to the upside. As you know I don’t pick bottoms or tops which go against the longer term trend. In this case the trend is down for precious metals so I am not trying to pick a bottom.

While I am starting to get excited about the eventual bottom in gold, I am still sitting on the fence with my cash.

You can get my daily gold, silver and gold stock analysis every morning with my gold newsletter and save 50% on your membership by joining today!

Get My Gold & Gold Stock Trading Alerts And Save 50% Today! http://www.thegoldandoilguy.com/signup.php

Chris Vermeulen

 

 

The X Factor Report

Some Things I Am Thinking About

Not a lot has happened in the markets really since the beginning of the year other than a bit of indigestion after last years “binge.”  Primarily, the story is the same with the markets overbought, bullishness remains extreme and “bad news is still good news” as long as it keeps the Fed’s “morphine” drip going. This week is a bit of a smorgasbord of things I am thinking about – a few nuggets that you can sample at your leisure.

Now note that the S&P 500 has recently broken out of a trading range that spans more than a decade.”

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I want to start with a very important snippet that I featured in Friday’s post on the website (5 Things To Ponder This Weekend) regarding a recent speech by Richard Fisher who is the President and CEO of the Dallas Fed (the link to the entire speech is in the post).

“Today, I want to muse aloud about whether QE has indeed put beer goggles on investors and whether we, the Fed, can pass the camel of massive quantitative easing through the eye of the needle of normalizing monetary policy without creating havoc.

When money available to investors is close to free and is widely available, and there is a presumption that the central bank will keep it that way indefinitely, discount rates applied to assessing the value of future cash flows shift downward, making for lower hurdle rates for valuations. A bull market for stocks and other claims on tradable companies ensues; the financial world looks rather comely.

Market operators donning beer goggles and even some sober economists consider analysts like Boockvar party poopers. But I have found myself making arguments similar to his and to those of other skeptics at recent FOMC meetings, pointing to some developments that signal we have made for an intoxicating brew as we have continued pouring liquidity down the economy’s throat.  Among them:

  • Share buybacks financed by debt issuance that after tax treatment and inflation incur minimal, and in some cases negative, cost; this has a most pleasant effect on earnings per share apart from top-line revenue growth.
  • Dividend payouts financed by cheap debt that bolster share prices.
  • The “bull/bear spread” for equities now being higher than in October 2007.
  • Stock market metrics such as price-to-sales ratios and market capitalization as a percentage of gross domestic product at eye-popping levels not seen since the dotcom boom of the late 1990s.
  • Margin debt that is pushing up against all-time records.
  • In the bond market, investment-grade yield spreads over “risk free” government bonds becoming abnormally tight.
  • “Covenant lite” lending becoming robust and the spread between CCC credit and investment-grade credit or the risk-free rate historically narrow.

And then there are the knock-on effects of all of the above. Market operators are once again spending money freely outside of their day jobs. An example: For almost 40 years, I have spent a not insignificant portion of my savings collecting rare, first-edition books.  Like any patient investor in any market, I have learned through several market cycles that you buy when nobody wants something and sell when everyone clamors for more.

>> Download This Weeks Issue Here.

Lance Roberts is the General Partner & CEO of STA Wealth Management, Host of the “Streettalk Live” Daily Radio Show (streamed live at www.streettalklive.com), and Chief Editor of the X-Report and the Daily X-Change Blog.
Follow me on Twitter: @streettalklive

Here are my longer-form articles for your weekend reading pleasure:

• Dropbox and Uber: Worth Billions, But Still Inches From Disaster (Wired)

• Goodnight. Sleep Clean. (NY Timessee also Sleep is more important than you might think (Boston Globe)

• Shivering Cattle Signal Higher McDonald’s Beef Cost (Bloomberg)

• I Spent Two Hours Talking With NSA’s Big Wigs. Here’s What’s Got Them Mad (Wired)

• An Antidote to the Age of Anxiety: Alan Watts on Happiness and How to Live with Presence (Brain Pickings)

• The reluctant patriot: how George Orwell reconciled himself with England (New Statesman)

• Banished for Questioning the Gospel of Guns (NY Times)

• The “Erin Brockovich” of Revenge Porn (XO Jane)

• The Five Worst U.S. Presidents of All Time (The National Interest)

• Dr. V’s Magical Putter (Grantland)

“Powerful Mojo Going On”

 INSTITUTIONAL ADVISORS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 2014

BOB HOYE

 PUBLISHED BY INSTITUTIONAL ADVISORS

The following is part of Pivotal Events that was

published for our subscribers January 8, 2014.

“Powerful Mojo Going On”
 

Signs Of The Times

 

“Global bond sales from emerging markets have defied all odds to hit a record high in 2013.”

– Financial Times, January 2

“Emerging-market stocks fell to a four-month low.”

– Bloomberg, January 3

Looks like a big rotation from stocks to reaching for yield.

“The total debt of local governments in China has soared to nearly $3 trillion on the country’s addiction to credit-fueled growth.”

– The New York Times, December 30

“Faced with a mountain of maturing loans this year, China has given local governments the go-ahead to issue bonds as a way of rolling1 over their debt – to avoid default.”

– Financial Times, January 2

“Another Ice Age?”

“Scientists have found indications of global cooling. There has been a noticeable expansion of the so-called circumpolar vortex.”

– Time, June 24, 1974

“But not only does the cold spell not disprove climate change, it may well be that global warming could be making the occasional bout of extreme cold weather even more likely. Right now much of the U.S. is in the grip of a ‘polar vortex’.”

– Time, January 6, 2014

In the 1980s disaster some wag observed that “a rolling loan gathers no loss” 

In 1974, Time could relate global cooling to, well, global cooling delivered to a neighborhood near you via the polar vortex. In the mid-1970s, Ibn Browning noted that lengthy cooling trends were accompanied by deeper loops in the jet stream. In 2014, Time explains that this cold spell and polar vortex is due to global warming.

In the 1600s, tortured logic and writing was needed to promote the theory that the solar system revolved around the Earth. And now with Global Warming it is still the feature of promoting government science.

During the summer months, US weather stations recorded 2899 record lows and 667 record highs. 

“Excessively high temperatures are already harming public health.”

– President Obama, November 1

A chart of US November to January Temperatures follows.

* * * * *

Stock Markets
 
Our theme has been that the “Springboard Buy” of October 9th suggested the worst of a potentially bad month was in.
 
Sentiment and momentum readings similar to those at cyclical peaks have been accomplished. The next step was to determine when the speculative thrust would likely complete. 
 
Typical seasonal highs can occur with the US Thanksgiving and at the turn-of-the-year. The S&P set a high of 1813 and a Weekly RSI of 74.3 on November 29th. The correction was to 1772 and the rebound has made it to 1849 on December 31st. The RSI reached 73.6 – a modest, but interesting negative divergence.
 
On the bigger picture, we have been noting that the duration of the bull markets out of the great crashes have been remarkably similar. 
 
The rally out of the 1929 Crash ran for 249 weeks from 1932 to 1937. Investors Intelligence sentiment figures don’t exist. The Weekly RSI reached 75. 
 
The one from 2002 ran for 249 weeks and reached a Percent Bulls reading of 62.0. The Weekly RSI reached 70 in 2007. 
 
This one (from 2009) has run for 252 weeks to January 3rd and has reached a Percent Bulls reading of 61.6. The Weekly RSI has reached 74.3. 
 
Rather powerful mojo going on.
 
Within the market, we expected the base metal sector to bottom and rally. Perhaps as a rotation from high flyers to a depressed sector. This seems to be working out with MGA and NFLX rolling over. Base metals (GYX) rallied 10% from the low of 331 at the first of December to 335 last week. Mining stocks (SPTMN) rallied from 703 on December 10th to 792 last week.
 
 

Credit Markets

 

The December 30th ChartWorks “Early Signs Of A Shift In Credit Markets” noted a negative divergence on the stock market – a technical alert.

More toward fundamentals, would be the action in the treasury yield curve. This served in 2007 when we noted that such a boom would run some 12 to 16 months against an inverted curve. Short rates increase faster than long rates. Early in 2007 we counted out that June would be the “Sixteenth Month” and the curve reversed in that fateful May. This was followed in June with credit spreads reversing. At that point even the most massive stimulus was doomed.

Going into the blow-off of March 2000, we just used the record of rising long rates. Typically the boom will run some 12 to 18 months against rising rates. Beginning in January 2000, we frequently noted that March was the “Eighteenth Month”. It was, and it was the “killer”.

On this credit cycle, long rates set their low in July 2011 and December is the “Eighteenth Month”.

Retrospectively, this worked on the very important stock market high in January 1973. Why was it so important – the worst bear since the 1930s followed. Charts are attached. 

Any competent central banker should know this. Should know it well enough not to “fight the tape”. 

As the stock market rolls over so will lower-grade bonds which are in “never-never” land.

 

Commodities
 
In November our theme was that most commodities could bottom and rally. This worked out with the CRB setting its low at 272 on November 19th. The rally made it to 284 a week ago. The 200-day moving average stopped the rally. That was at an RSI that has ended previous rallies. 
 
Base metals (GYX) jumped from 331 at the first of December to 355 a week ago. That was at resistance and the index has declined with this week’s slump marking a break down. 
 
Agricultural prices (GKX) weakened through December and only managed a three-day rally to yesterday. It is down 3.4% from the intra-day high. 
 
This is to new lows at 342 that extends the bear market that began as the drought-scare of 2012 peaked at 533. Perhaps elevated levels of CO2 are enhancing crop production around the world. 
 
On the December rally, crude oil popped from 91.77 to 100.75. The slump to today’s 91.8 is serious. 
 
We had thought that the rebound in basic commodities would make it through January. But one of the features of a post-bubble contraction has been chronically weak commodities and this we have.

This represents weak pricing power in most of industry and commerce. 

This melancholy condition would be confirmed when the CRB takes out the November low of 272.

 

Currencies
 
As part of the general party, the Dollar Index has been weak. The key high was 85 in July and the main decline was to 79 in October. The action since has been tests of support at the 80 level, with the last at the end of December. 
 
The rise to today’s 81.1 has had minor setbacks and is becoming an alert on the financial party. 
 
The Canadian dollar became oversold at 93.39 in early December and bounced to 94.50. Commodities have been falling all year, and this has driven the C$ down to 92.50, which really turns the chart down. 
 
There is support at the 90 level and that was set a way back in 2008.
 

Precious Metals

Our main theme has been that the precious metals sector would trade opposite to the universe of orthodox investments. Lately this has been fully committed to stocks and lower-grade bonds. 

The “opposite” play became evident in September 2012 when Bernanke’s decision to buy bonds was celebrated as a reason to buy gold and silver. This drove the RSI on the silver/gold ratio to 84, which we noted as a measure of “dangerous” speculation. 

Orthodox favourites have soared to equally “dangerous” levels of speculation and as this fails it will set precious metals up as the “go to” sector. 

The opportunity shows in the Monthly RSI, with that for the S&P at 77 and that for the HUI at 29.7. Both are at extremes. 

While the sector is outstanding in prospect, the transition could be choppy. 

Link to January 10, 2014 Bob Hoye interview on TalkDigitalNetwork.com

http://talkdigitalnetwork.com/2014/01/stats-show-us-equity-market-drop-likely/

 

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The boom has run 18 months against rising long rates.

  • The typical duration has been from 12 to 18 months.
  • A number of booms ended at “Month Eighteen”.
  • The 1973 example is shown as it ended in January of that fateful year.

 

BOB HOYE, INSTITUTIONAL ADVISORS

E-MAIL bhoye.institutionaladvisors@telus.net

WEBSITE: www.institutionaladvisors.com

PIVOTAL EVENTS – JANUARY 8, 2014

 

 

(Reuters) – U.S. industrial output rose at its fastest clip in 3-1/2 years in the fourth quarter as factory activity closed out the year on a strong note, a sign of the economy’s brightening prospects.

Manufacturing production rose a stronger-than-expected 0.4 percent in December after an out-sized 1.0 percent increase the prior month, a Federal Reserve report on Friday showed.

That helped push overall output at the nation’s factories, mines and utilities up 0.3 percent. Economists polled by Reuters had expected factory output to rise 0.3 percent, while the gain in overall industrial production matched forecasts.

For the fourth quarter as a whole, industrial production advanced at a 6.8 percent pace, the largest quarterly increase since the second quarter of 2010.

A separate report from the Commerce Department showed groundbreaking for new homes dropped 9.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 999,000-unit pace.

It was the largest percentage decline since April, but housing starts were coming off a multi-year high reached in November and the decline was smaller than economists had expected. In addition, cold weather appeared to be a factor.

For all of 2013, starts increased 18.3 percent to an average of 923,400-units.

“Despite the expected drop in housing construction activity in December, due to the unwind of the unsustainable strength in November and weather effects, the overall tone of this report was quite encouraging suggesting that the sector ended the year on fairly strong footing,” said Millan Mulraine, deputy chief U.S. economist at TD Securities in New York.

Groundbreaking for single-family homes, the largest segment of the market, fell 7.0 percent to a 667,000-unit pace in December. Starts for the volatile multi-family homes segment declined 14.9 percent to a 332,000-unit rate.

Starts in the Midwest, which experienced unseasonably colder weather, tumbled 33.5 percent, suggesting the weather might have weighed on home building in the region last month.

Residential construction has been on the rise after a brief lull last year in the wake of a run-up in mortgage rates.

Increasing household formation and a tight supply of houses has been boosting home building, which in turn is supporting the labor market.

Permits to build homes fell 3.0 percent in December to a 986,000-unit pace. It was the second straight month of declines. They were weighed down by a 4.8 percent drop in permits for single-family homes. Multifamily sector permits were flat.

For all of 2013, permits increased 17.5 percent to an average of 974,700-units.

The report on industrial output showed that industry employed 79.2 percent of its capacity in December – the most since June 2008. Still, capacity use remained 1 percentage point below its long-run average, the Fed said.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Additional reporting by Tim Ahmann; Editing by Paul Simao)