"As a technician, I feel that there are few analysts that offer value for me, but you do. Your work on Gold ratios has helped my analysis greatly." --Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT (The Daily Gold) 4.9.10

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Boink & Boink... GDX & HUI Gaps Filled

From an NFTRH email update on November 23:














"Per the attached daily chart, GDX shows a gap above 60 waiting to be filled (HUI equiv. approx. 585) if we get a bottom in and around here.

This gap down was created with decent energy as the volume shows.  This event was not as dynamic as in September when the Euro fear and hype trade began to unwind.  But the current outstanding gap was created on a decent burst of downside energy and if Monday's 'Hammer' candle does indeed prove a precursor to reversal, our target for a rebound would be GDX 60 and HUI 585.

Just a quick FYI."

Here's a chart from today's close showing both GDX and Huey accomplishing their objectives with a big assist to the great and powerful Oz.



















Targets are not stop signs, they are just targets.  But I thought it interesting that these charts were drawn to the gaps like magnets.  What comes from this point on?  Well, it's why we do the work.  The game plan will continue to evolve.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Dear Herd...

Thank you for doing what you do, again and again... I don't like the way this casino functions, but I sure like it better than if I were played at every inflection point.  Best to just grumble, bitch and moan as I do and then go capitalize I guess.

"You do know that the refugees hiding in Uncle Sam's debt are used as fuel, right?  Well, the tank is full."

My only short position is against long term US Treasury bonds.  It is nice to see Santa, even though he - like the gifts he bears - has been manufactured.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

'Current Outlook'

Below are a few items excerpted from NFTRH's handy new 'Current Outlook' table that will appear on page 2 of each letter.  The following is from 11/26/11, in the supposed depths of market despair.  The table will be a good means of distilling the analysis into an easy to read 'probabilities' plan.  Other items regularly reviewed and updated are Broad Global Markets, Broad Commodities, Gold, Silver, Gold-Silver Ratio, Gold Mining and Sentiment.

Broad US Market

Should seek support in the SPX 1120 to 1150 range for Santa Rally.
Emphasis on should, because we never take systemic risks lightly, and the
risks are indeed systemic. Broad US stocks in bear market, regardless.

US Dollar

This is where the frightened herds are flocking, and right on schedule. The
USD has been noted to be bottoming for months now. It is positively
correlated w/ the GSR, and thus sopping up liquidity. USD is toilet paper,
but we are talking about market action & emotional herds in the short term.

Risk (Conventional)

High risk to bears, and reducing risk to broad bulls in short-term only.
Santa rally can be looked at as sell or short opp. on broad market. Bear
market rules apply.

Risk (Systemic)

The risk is that global and US managers will lose control this time, or
simply be constrained by public opinion (i.e. growing discontent with
business as usual policy) world wide. Result? Cessation of functional
markets as liquidity is sucked away in derivative whirlpool.

US Treasury Bonds

Same M.O. as the USD. The ‘safety’ of US T bonds, the DEBT of the Great
Inflator. The deflationary side of the boat is full of huddled masses. Only
brave contrarians dare step to the ‘risk asset’ side.

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http://www.biiwii.com

'It's inflation all the way kid...'

Above quote from my friend Jon, in the deepest depths of the opportunity that was Armageddon '08, is proven out once again by immoral and desperate policy clerks the world over.  The occupiers really should focus their attention right here and now on the real problem, as Central Banks conspire to control their (and our) little worlds.  It will of course fail, but in the short term, they are trying to outlaw deflation, shorting, bearishness and one might say, reality.

Wonderland.

US Futures Extend Gain on Central Bank Action

Edit (10:30) Substance abuser quoted in article:

“I’m in a better mood today than I’ve been in a while,” Burt White, who helps oversee about $315 billion as chief investment officer at LPL Financial Corp. in Boston, said in a telephone interview. “This coordinated effort is a huge one. It is not a European problem, it’s a global problem. If we don’t get Europe solved, it’s going to send pretty big ripples across the globe. We really could see some upside for the market, if this momentum continues.” 

You go girl.  Enjoy your momo and associated giddy feelings.  This is some investment company's CIO?... "If we don't get Europe solved".  Geez Burt, maybe I should just dumb down and get billions to manage too.  Europe is not solved and the ripples are not going away.  The next ripple could be a tsunami, but you don't care about that, right?  After all, we got da momo going. 

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Why do I not tend to trade my core explorers?

Because in the gold sector, one news release can do this where ounces in the ground are concerned.  I do intended to protect gold positions as appropriate however, as this rally gets a little more toward fully baked.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

TLT weekly chart

I have had just about enough of the T bond / Deflation / Doomsday mania and shorted the long bond via TBT near yesterday's close.  Although I believe the risks favor a bear market continuation, I think fear got over baked and over bought lately; for the near term at least.

You do know that the refugees hiding in Uncle Sam's debt are used as fuel, right?  Well, the tank is full.

















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

SPX proxy SPY updated

I know those aggressive US consumer maniacs would lead us to a magnificent Santa rally, but this chart says 'nuh uh, not until the gap, lateral resistance and moving averages are successfully surmounted.  Dat's a lotta congestion up there.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Crude Oil Updated

WTIC rebounded to around the 104 target, and basically a 62% retrace of the decline out of the spring.  If Santa visits for an extended stay, crude could pop back into the channel.  But technically, it has qualified for a significant relief rebound from which a new decline could generate.















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http://www.biiwii.com

Ron Paul's Plan for Monetary Freedom

Monday, November 28, 2011

Canadian Venture updated

The CDNX bounced like a charm where it was 'supposed' to, at the 62% fib of the entire move out of the 2008 disaster.  This came from the kind of over sold levels that could end a bear move.  But we cannot claim that the cyclical bear market that is this fib retrace is over until CDNX successfully clears the 1700 area.

This general speculative resource stock index seems to have more effect on the gold exploration sector than the fundamentals in the general gold sector do.


















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Santa!

Well, the 1160 Triangle breakdown measurement held like a charm and despite all the hysteria, bulls never had to get all white knuckled down to the ultra critical 1120 area.  The only update to this chart is the red resistance zone added at around 1220.  1220 to 1240 looks like a good area to be bearish the broad market, depending on what the desperate price fixers do in the macro.

For now, as NFTRH163's new 'Current Outlook' table noted "the frightened herds are flocking" to the USD and to "the 'safety' of US T bonds, the DEBT of the great inflator.  The deflationary side of the boat is full of huddled masses" and "only brave contrarians dare step to the risk asset side".

If this rally follows a classic course, the huddled masses will come back and chase Santa.  You have got to love the markets.















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http://www.biiwii.com

Shoppers Slouch Towards Bethlehem

Go here http://www.biiwii.com/analysis.htm and read Bill Bonner's thoughts on Debt & the Printing Press, along with some other Monday morning reading.  But especially, read Rick Ackerman's Shoppers Slouch Towards Bethlehem.

I try to keep muted my disgust with this picture of the American 'culture', but long time readers have seen it creep into my work over the years.  It is a view of a significant segment of lazy thinking, slovenly, hubris addled pigs within the population. 

I believe the ad man is leading the way toward a very dangerous place for society and that slowly, critical thinking is being bred out of the culture.  Think about the ad man, how hip he is nowadays.  He's on the job with rap and hip hop, he co-opted the punk rock movement and presented us with that bland new wave crap in the 80's.  He packages and sells a brand of rebellion and 'do your own thing' ethos to today's young people.  And they are doing it too, with the myriad devices and operating systems he sells to them.

Society is being co-opted.  I am a natural curmudgeon and I hate being categorized and massaged over.  Yet, I realize that a lot of this stuff is vital now and indeed I willingly let Google and Apple take me where I need to go.  But it seems that a segment of the population just gets dumber and dumber, and that is scary because I think that ignorance and sloth go hand in hand with societies that eventually become closed off and lose their freedoms.

I mean look at the Presidential candidates; it looks like one dumbass after another pandering to a nation of dumbasses with banal sound bite after banal sound bite cooked up by... yup, the ad man (who happens to have been studying Ron Paul and perhaps even Mises).

Hey thanks Rick!  Get me off topic on a Monday morning when I need to be ready for what the market has to offer.  Which, by the way, appears to be playing to current analysis pretty well.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Sunday, November 27, 2011

NFTRH163 Out Now

Portfolio is now -1% for 2011, which irks me a bit.  Then again, that is how I am supposed to feel at a time of potential opportunity.  So I will manage the impulse.

NFTRH163 is a holiday abbreviated version, and it includes a new table on page 2, to be updated each week for those who would like a summary of the nuts and bolts of the analysis.  Other than that, after consultation with my customers, the NFTRH quality control department listens to feedback and has decided to leave the letter 'as is', complex analysis and all.

I will also try to add in more 'human' touches when appropriate and just move forward.  The markets are very exciting and 'exciting' does not always mean good.  But these are the only markets we have.  Current analysis is firm and it has its parameters.  It's all one can ask for I think.

NFTRH163 out now.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Friday, November 25, 2011

S&P 500 Updated

SPX has come to the measured target area off of the broken Triangle that this blog and every other geek on the planet micro managed into mid November.  Below, we have the previously noted long term support zone in and around 1120.

While I favor the bear market scenario, which good risk managers should keep front and center, there is another scenario in play that it seems nobody in their right mind is currently forecasting.  That would be another Triple Bottom bull cycle into the presidential election.  Could it happen?  Hmmm?

If only I were not held captive to the gold-silver ratio and its implications for liquidity and the US dollar, I could find myself playing bull contrarian wiseguy.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Junk bonds imploding, speculation dying...

The chart from NFTRH159 tells the story.  Junk bonds - a proxy NFTRH uses for the "will to speculate" by casino patrons - failed the breakout and now test the lows, while the 'junk' to 'investment grade' ratio (lower panel) never did break upward.  That was the signal we were looking for to assign any sort of longevity to the bull speculation case, and it just died on the vine.

As NFTRH (and I believe this blog) have been noting since before the 'October (bull) Pivot', any rally that generates would be a BEAR MARKET rally.  It has ended and any relief the market may find into Santa season is simply that.  A bear market relief rally.  Speculation is dying by this bond ratio measure, by the gold-silver ratio, by gold-commodities ratios and so on an so forth.

This is not a nice picture folks, and sensible people should have risk management front and center at all times.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Giving Thanks...

As part of your thanks giving, consider those bright lights out there - few and far between though they appear to be - giving it their all in service to honesty, while trying to provide solutions as opposed to compounding problems by playing to the cheap seats.

I give thanks for my family that I love, and for my teachers who helped raise my consciousness and guide me on a path that I feel good about.  I give thanks for the air I breathe.  Other stuff too, but these are the main ones.  :-)  Have a good one.


















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Understanding Derivatives

Thanks to a subscriber who passed along this cool little analogy:

Understanding Derivatives

(Derivative: a tradable financial product whose value depends on the value of some other asset or combination of assets.)

Heidi is the proprietor of a bar in Detroit.  She realizes that virtually all of her customers are unemployed alcoholics and, as such, can no longer afford to patronize her bar.  To solve this problem, she comes up with a new marketing plan that allows her customers to drink now, but pay later.

Heidi keeps track of the drinks consumed on a ledger (thereby granting the customers loans.)

Word gets around about Heidi's "drink now, pay later" marketing strategy and, as a result, increasing numbers of customers flood into Heidi's bar.  Soon she has the largest sales volume for any bar in Detroit.

By providing her customers freedom from immediate payment demands, Heidi gets no resistance when, at regular intervals, she substantially increases her prices for wine and beer, the most consumed beverages. Consequently, Heidi's gross sales volume increases massively.

A young and dynamic vice-president at the local bank recognizes that these customer debts constitute valuable future assets and increases Heidi's borrowing limit.  He sees no reason for any undue concern, since he has the debts of the unemployed alcoholics as collateral.

At the bank's corporate headquarters, expert traders figure a way to make huge commissions, and transform these customer loans into DRINKBONDS.  These securities then are bundled and traded on international securities markets.

Naive investors don't really understand that the securities being sold to them as AAA secured bonds really are debts of unemployed alcoholics.  Nevertheless, the bond prices continuously climb, and the securities soon become the hottest-selling items for some of the nation's leading brokerage houses.

One day, even though the bond prices still are climbing, a risk manager at the original local bank decides that the time has come to demand payment on the debts incurred by the drinkers at Heidi's bar.  He so informs Heidi.

Heidi then demands payment from her alcoholic patrons, but, being unemployed alcoholics, they cannot pay back their drinking debts.  Since Heidi cannot fulfill her loan obligations she is forced into bankruptcy.  The bar closes and Heidi's 11 employees lose their jobs.

Overnight, DRINKBOND prices drop by 90%.  The collapsed bond asset value destroys the bank's liquidity and prevents it from issuing new loans, thus freezing credit and economic activity in the community.

The suppliers of Heidi's bar had granted her generous payment extensions and had invested their firms' pension funds in the BOND securities.  They find they are now faced with having to write off her bad debt and with losing over 90% of the presumed value of the bonds.  Her wine supplier also claims bankruptcy, closing the doors on a family business that had endured for three generations, and her beer supplier is taken over by a competitor, who immediately closes the local plant and lays off 150 workers.

Fortunately though, the bank, the brokerage houses and their respective executives are saved and bailed out by a multibillion dollar no-strings attached cash infusion from their cronies in government.  The funds required for this bailout are obtained by new taxes levied on employed, middle-class, non-drinkers who have never been in Heidi's bar.

Now do you understand?

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http://www.biiwii.com

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Germany being dragged down

How this country ever got itself tangled up with this lot is beyond me.  This chart from NFTRH159 was originally produced to review the bottoming pattern in DAX and target potential recovery levels.  Since then, the DAX has failed beneath the first resistance level and broken supports like balsa wood, turning them into new resistance in the process. 

Very sad state of affairs over there in Europe.  What is the ratio of productive countries to passenger countries in the union anyway?  This chart now projects a test of the September low.











http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Another view of SPX

Here, let's dial it out a little so you can see the clear support dating back to mid 2010.  That cluster is likely to at least attempt to provide some significant support.
















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

S&P 500 Updated

The downside Triangle measurement is coming into view, but the visual support is nothing to write home about.  If SPX should get down through 1120, we would have a real problematic animal on our hands.
















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

'The Return of the Dollar' - IceCap

Hey, do yourself a favor and go here http://www.biiwii.com/analysis.htm and read the 4th item down, The Return of the Dollar from IceCap Asset Management by way of Zero Hedge.

A good roundup on how and why the US Fed inflates and a good summary of the 'barbaric relic'.

Gold can continue to correct because the Knee Jerks that bought it up to $1900/oz. last summer during the Euro panic were overall unhealthy and purification of the investor base is in progress.  But the value proposition is unchanged to this point, so far as I can see.  It is just coming at a higher assigned 'price'.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

VIX & GSR failed to confirm

The market took a dump this morning, but the VIX (VIXY proxy shown here) failed to confirm by breaking the neckline.  Similarly, silver has been out performing gold all morning implying a speculative burst could be brewing.

Not coincidentally, have you seen the IMF headline?  In essence, it appears that IMF has created a new credit card for countries to use as needed to break the chain of contagion.  Can you say Inflation onDemand?

These pigs will stop at nothing to keep inflating.




















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Status...

Covered all short/bear positions except for the FARO 'fun' trade, which could terminate at any time as well.  Risk, reducing in the precious metals as I believe it is, is now being managed with healthy levels of cash.  Also, I have used the last couple days to improve the 'quality' of the portfolios, adding a higher proportion of gold stocks that I think will correlate to the HUI, which is after all the standard I use for the gold stock sector.  All core items remain held firmly.

Yet, the broad market is in a bear market.  As we head through the holidays, I'll be ready to ramp the risk management as needed, or even try to just capitalize on bear opp's stand alone if the SPX gets back up to any kind of no brainer shorting level.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

SPX 60 min. chart

I suppose this mess can rally all the way to 1250, assuming the 1220 breakdown resistance does not contain it.  But this is a nice topping pattern until proven otherwise.












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http://www.biiwii.com

+.3%

Okay, so .3% is virtually break even for 2011.  For the amount of work I have done this year it is almost a slap in the face as a portfolio return.  But then again, to be successful over long interim periods (between real buying and selling opportunities) sometimes the management of extended periods of chop and grind is necessary to be able to one day be in the right position to capitalize.

It is all about mental toughness, perspective and patience.  .3% in a market full of indexes that are red on the year.  I'll take it.  I know there are bear speculators looking mighty good right now just as there are bull ones during those phases when the markets default to 'melt up' mode.  But I will take my .3% as of yesterday's close, because it shows that I have done what I set out to do, which is to manage risk as needed in service to a long term theme that remains intact.

In 2010, as I watched the bottoming pattern in the gold-silver ratio (among other indicators) for months on end, I kept the NFTRH 'speculation' portfolio within a self-imposed +/- 5% trading range until I could get a read on the risk environment with either a confirmation of the bullish looking GSR pattern or a negation of same.  Well, greed and waste won out in the macro as policy makers panicked into QE2, the GSR was smashed and I was compelled to immediately drop all risk management.  The +/- 5% ranged then ramped to finish 2010 at +42%.  Thank you Ben.  By the way, has anything come in the mail yet?

2011 has been generally in a range of 0% to +10%.  Despite what I still view as a profoundly bullish potential gold miner scenario in a big picture, this has been a year of ongoing management.  Result?  A whole lot of work for virtually no return.  That's show biz ladies and gentlemen.  Herds are in full flight, wise guys are out with the "I told my readers this and that" or talking in hyperbolic and dire tones about the precious metals and broad market corrections, and everything is in motion.  Everything is in [E]motion too.

It is just the markets folks.  It is time to tune down the noise, which does not mean do not listen to the European debt news, the US debt news, the economy news and most of all, the exponential derivatives news.  Because if the wrong things happen, this mess is going to just wheeze and die.  It is already wearing a death mask.  These markets are for speculating and trying to out think black boxes and crack users.

Find real value outside the markets and then go forth and speculate if you wish.  Things are getting interesting now.  But these are just the markets, not real life.  I look to an end to the risk management regime and I hope it comes before year end so I can trumpet at least a double digit percentage gain for 2011 and thank casino patrons once again for acting so predictably over intermediate periods.

In the event however, that the result is ongoing risk management then so be it.  Because you do not dictate to the market.  The market does not owe you anything.  You are tiny and insignificant.  But if you are a survivor, you will capitalize.  It is as simple as that; survive for as long as needed and then...

Brain dump turned screed ends now.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


Monday, November 21, 2011

VIX futures ETF VIXY grappling w/ neckline

Another 'not good' sign if it breaks upward.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

i Gold Stock Booster?

No, and I am not a pom pom waver either.  What I am is a chart obeyer.  For example, when this one tells me my pro gold miner stance is wrong, I will obey it.  Not until.  Now, being bullish does not mean we do not manage interim risk.  Especially since a lot of my holdings are in gold exploration, which is getting relatively hammered.

HUI & SPX from NFTRH162

















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

A trip down memory lane with the S&P 500

The daily EMA 400 generally supported the great secular bull market that ended in 2000.  Then it supported the market routinely during the cyclical bull market ('03 to '07) created of Alan Greenspan's desperation (and a hell of a lot of inflation).  Now, as the law of diminishing returns threatens the inflation fueled construct post 2008, this mess is in danger of losing the EMA 400 for the second time.  QE2 temporarily fixed the first issue.  What now?  Are times not much more shall we say, complex now?

Is the vampire going to get an invite?  Will he respond even if he does?  The blue arrow points to something that must be reversed or else the market is vulnerable to some very nasty - as in potential 2008 variety - downside.  Laugh at Prechter all you want, but this chart is not lying.  A structure held together with debt is coming unglued.  If this is not reversed soon, we are going to look back at SPX 1220 as a kiss goodbye to the post '08 crash party.

Nobody can predict what is going to happen, but this is why I harp on the risk management and capital preservation thing.  The ratio of gold to silver is tool #1 in this regard.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Pom pom waving gold bugs avert your eyes...

Realistic, long term gold bugs it's okay to look.  That is because you have been expecting the post Euro momentum correction to bleed out the casino patrons and crack users.  According to NFTRH162's technical analysis the "best near term target is 1590".  There are others, but that's the one I like best at the moment.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

MFN, etc. (NFTRH email update on Nov. 17)

MFN chart from 11/17/11 NFTRH Update
"For those interested (I have not yet decided, personally) Minefinders has been hammered down toward support compliments of a sell call by mining analyst John Doody, if the scuttlebutt I hear is correct.  I have noted support (roughly 11) on the attached chart for those interested.

Meanwhile, the Gold-Silver ratio looks bullish (bearish for most everything else), but SPX continues to try to hold the triangle and is above the critical 1220 level.  HUI is flailing below 580, but a loss of this level is not yet confirmed.  If it loses 580, the next target is 550.


This is a tough market that delights in not revealing its intentions.  Even my patience is being tested.  Fun stuff.
"

MFN dinged 11 exactly this morning.  I bought it even as I sold a couple other non core items that were holding up well amid an ongoing risk management regimen.   What are the chances that 11 will be the magic number in MFN?  Damned if I know, but I will not bag hold the position much under 11 if the macro keeps falling apart.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Gold-Silver Ratio updated

What is really concerning about the GSR proxy GLD-SLV is that it is not even over bought.  MACD is beautiful and RSI and STO are under control.  If this thing breaks current resistance and gets impulsive to the upside, it will get really nasty out there in the broad markets.




















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Amid the damage...

...and future opportunity, one thing is working.  The short in Faro, an excellent company by the way, is doing what it is supposed to do thus far.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Sunday, November 20, 2011

NFTRH162 Out Now

The previous post shows a glimmer of hope for broad market bulls.  NFTRH162 includes a glimmer of a speculative impulse for precious metals stocks that could be in its infancy.

Yet folks, with markets at critical supports, it is now or never and risk is significant for both bulls and bears.  The US holiday and Super Committee on debt add to the noise and you have got to love this.  I think.

NFTRH162:  23 hard working pages that try to lay it out as best as possible before we celebrate turkey day and hopefully find some resolution coming shortly.






















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http://www.biiwii.com

Friday, November 18, 2011

Small Caps - Big Tech ratio

Just when I wanted to add to bearish positions, I check out the IWM-QQQ ratio and see what looks like a bullish pattern.  I also check IWM-SPY and dat looks good too.  So I back away from the bear button.

IWM-SPY [Edit: IWM-QQQ] has a nice little bottom, bullish divergence by MACD & ROC and a nice MACD push above zero.  As long as the ratio is in a bullish looking handle above support, I'll hold off.  On the negative side, ROC appears to be on a very short term negative divergence.  But overall, this one begs bears not to get too brave too quickly in my opinion.

Small caps usually lead hard into new downside events.


















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Old friend Faro Technologies (FARO)

This is a company that I invested in years ago, buying around 4 bucks and selling at 25.  Not bad.  I even had them out to my business to give a demo before deciding their CMM Arms were not for us.  A good solid outfit.

Also, a nice rising wedge amid MACD and Rate of Change bearish divergence.  I shorted old friend FARO yesterday at 46.49.  I guess it's the kind of thing that a hedged, risk managing player does while biding time waiting for the market to confirm some things.

Since I started the newsletter, I very rarely screw around with fun type trading.  This is an exception and no, it is as always, no recommendation for anyone else what so ever.  I have not even checked the funda's of this company.  Just love the chart in an inverse sort of way.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

SPX daily, blown up view...

A perfect bounce up to the EMA 50 and a very dangerous market. 

This is a technical breakdown, but somehow I do not trust these creeps (desperate and conspiratorial global policy makers) not to meddle, nor this pig (former free market gamed by droids, bots, cyborgs, black boxes and crack heads) not to respond positively. 

All that said, the burden is on the bull side to negate what happened yesterday.  SPX is right smack on 1220, AKA critical support.
















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http://www.biiwii.com

GSR breakout & USD wedge...

Bull relief will try to exert today I guess.  But until the gold-silver ratio is neutered, this will just be counter what may be a new down trend.  Bulls will look to break USD - the anti market - down from a little Rising Wedge.





















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com

Gold & Silver: Stark technical differences...

See if you can detect the technical differences between gold (a monetary precious metal) and silver (a cross dressing commodity/precious metal):

Here's the barbarous relic:














And here's the cross dresser:
















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http://www.biiwii.com

S&P 500 - Current Situation

Better hold that support piggie...















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http://www.biiwii.com

Thursday, November 17, 2011

NFTRH Update sent out Tuesday, pre-market

The attached daily chart once again reviews the critical support levels for HUI and the broad SPX.

The HUI support level of 580, noted in a recent update remains the key.  There is more support at 550 around the EMA 200 as noted in that update, but if the SPX loses critical support at 1220, it could signal much more broad market downside.  Unfortunately, the gold stocks are in a general positive correlation with broad stocks.  HUI can decline all the way to below 500 and still remain on plan and big picture bullish.

Huey did fulfill the first upside objective after all, by filling the 610 gap.  While today looks to be a down open for the broad market, we should also note that the SPX' support is not lost until it is lost.  So the index can take another down day or two and remain within the potentially bullish structure to upside target of 1360.  This would probably see HUI resume a drive to 630 or better.

This is where the NFTRH view that the rally out of the 'October Pivot' is simply a bear market rally comes in.  I for one, do not wish to be caught speculating or trying to milk upside in a doomed rally.  Functionally, what this means is that I will be prepared to reduce the portfolios to critical core gold stocks, increase cash and consider bearish positions to add to the current ones in junk bonds and base metals.

Try not to let the noise of any given day or week tell you what to do.  Noise has driven markets up and down in an impressive whipsaw of late.  SPX 1220 is critical and HUI 580 is important if the gold stocks are to remain short term bullish

Do whatever it is you need to do to be a strong player in this situation.  Ask yourself 'how will I feel about my positioning if these indexes rally to target and how would I feel if they continue to lose momentum and eventually, support?' and then prepare to be in alignment with your answers.  The markets will state their intentions before too long.

As a side note, one of my favorite 'bad cops', Richard Fisher is out this morning with this headline:  Fisher Sees Lower Odds of US Easing.  It makes me think of this blog article written on October 3:  Inviting the Vampire

The European monetary panic did the trick at the 'October Pivot'.  One wonders if the US Fed is saving its bullets for the next downside panic.

"Now we have a different atmosphere - expected by this writer and indicated by the chart above [long term 30 year yield] so many months ago - with deflation and systemic collapse at the forefront of the collective financial and economic mindset.  Austerity?  Please, give me a break.  The Vampire has already received his invitation, but having been scorned so soundly earlier this year, he sits back and lets the call become louder by the week.

The balance of current NFTRH analysis holds that he may await a final capitulation to be sure that the invitation is near unanimous."


Regards,

Gary

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Gold-Silver Ratio updated...

Why do we follow somewhat obscure indicators and ratios in the newsletter (and sometimes here on the blog)?  Why, because we want to put risk management front and center above greed at all times.  That's why.

A theme running through recent NFTRH has been that just because I sat there watching a bottoming pattern in the GSR in 2010 that was blown to bits by Fed QE policy, it does not mean I will not do the same thing this time.  I have watched it like a moth to light every week until resumed uptrend or failure.

The GSR has had a bullish looking 'Flag' for weeks now that bearishly diverged the markets and I continue to pay it respect.















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VIXY

Something of an Inverted H&S on VIX etf VIXY.  MACD constructive.














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SPX Triangle Updated (30 min. chart)


"I Just Shit My Pants"

Thanks to subscriber LL for forwarding this hilarious thing.  Who says Armageddon cannot be funny?



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Global X Silver Miners threatened...

Silver miner ETF SIL would be well advised to reverse this immediately.















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Update on the Gold-Silver Ratio

GSR proxy GLD-SLV, if this breakout holds, is "not gonna be good for anybody" to quote Seinfeld.  That is because another leg up would suck liquidity out of everything.  We have been, and are still... warned.















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SPX Daily...

I mean really, have the black boxes taken over the market so thoroughly that the suspense surrounding the Super Committee on debt (T minus what, 6 days now?) can paint a perfect consolidation within a perfect triangle as the machines await the outcome?

Or are we still screwing around with Europe fears?  Europe is coming unglued, inflationary panic policy or not.

I was somewhat heartened to see bear's bear Tim Knight, caught in the same mental vortex with Triangle Man.  I am now short junk bonds, base metals (against gold positions), silver (against gold positions) and crude oil and feeling good about none of it.  But nor am I feeling great about the broad market's bull chances (SPX 1360) and with the gold miners in tow, I am not overjoyed there either.

So again, I guess that is the whole point of the grinding consolidation before these numb nuts decide what flavor of debt policy a nation hopped up on debt-as-economic-driver is going to adopt; window dressing, constructive or flat out repudiation?

Edit (7:15) Tim Knight also notes how unsatisfying hedging has been as he hedges in the mirror world by buying longs against shorts.  More and more he finds that high cash levels are the way to go for risk management, which is what I have been parroting in NFTRH for months now.  So I by no means think most people should be shorting.  I do it because I have committed to holding my gold stock longs as long as I am compelled by the fundamental backdrop, which I am.


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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

SPX Symmetrical Triangle Updated

These consolidations are supposed to drive us nuts and quite honestly, I am having a really amateurish week of trading trying to out think this mess.  So the unbiased, unemotional guy is having a little spell where he is letting this consolidating mess get him off his game.

I hate this market right now and I guess that is the point.  As for this 30 minute chart, it almost seems a technical thing, where the bottom line was waiting and has now been satisfied.  So what next, a wonder bounce to 1260 tomorrow and Friday?

I have a target at 1360 and a support parameter at 1220.  We are in no man's land and for whatever reason, today I do not feel as though I have the mental makeup to take it in stride.  Let's get ON with it you bloated...

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Gold Prices as an Economic Indicator


WTI Crude nearing target

From NFTRH159 (Oct. 30th):











Here's today's action:
















Close enough to target for me to get bearish.

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Market Big Picture (Edit: Including a Weird, Sponaneous Riff on Gold)


A big picture forward look from NFTRH160 (published on November 6th)  that was unplanned, was triggered by the NDX/Gold chart and is intended for open minds:











But that is the reality; we however, are here for market management. The US leader, the
Nasdaq 100, is actually a laggard to the SPX and Dow in the big picture [relative to its 1999 highs] since the bubble burst. NDX satisfied the 38% bear market Fib retrace in 2007 just before the 2008 crash. Now, it has impressively rebounded, looking for more. If NDX should break to new
recovery highs, it will set its sights above 2600.

The companies in this index sell cool gizmos to the world. Many of them have Chinese
labor screwing them together, customer service people in India answering customer
concerns and as I type, I realize they are making the world a better place for one little
newsletter writer. Several months ago I wondered if maybe Google and Apple – with
their cash hoards – might be the new ‘banks’ of the 21st Century. In light of the European
financial meltdown and the potential still lurking within many US financial institutions, I
still wonder.

Technically NDX is okay, as post-bubble bear markets go. In the past there were a lot of
comparisons of NDX to its post-bubble predecessor, Japan’s Nikkei. I would attribute
the very different post-bubble trends primarily to the US’ ability to leverage its natural,
and thereby financial, resources in a way that the relatively tiny Pacific island has not
been able to do. How much more cement can Japan accommodate?











NDX in a bear market you say?











Yes, NDX in a bear market (looking more like the Nikkei, absent the effects of inflation)
vs. the money alternative that has not been printed onDemand for the last decade. But
while we often hear gold bugs proclaiming how much lower the SPX and Dow have to go
in terms of gold, this chart gives my inner gold bug pause. You know I am susceptible to
the call of big tech, after all. This chart ladies and gentlemen, is a perfect illustration of
why I noted that beyond the current gold miner stance, my potential bullishness then
extends out to the Emerging Markets and big US technology, in that order.

With people in the streets, the nation apparently now rejecting the lazy sloth and greed of
the Greenspan Inflation onDemand era… with gold and silver rapidly entering the public
mindset… with the Great Depression exhumed from history… generally, with the public
now coming up to speed on what we have known since 2002 (well, what I have known;
you may have gotten it sooner), and with quality, cash laden tech stocks now bled back
down to levels in ratio to gold not seen since the mid-90’s, I for one am ready to accept
the potential for a coming era that sees quality equity selection being rewarded over the
long-term.

Strategic emerging markets (like those frequented and analyzed by ‘charter subscriber’
Jonathan) and quality big tech that will serve those and other markets with the tools of
progress are definitely on NFTRH’s radar. So much so that if we are lucky enough to get
one final washout in the financial markets and one final thrust upward in the precious
metals, I could foresee the potential for a major alteration in NFTRH’s plan. This plan
might include relative bearishness in the precious metals and eventually their miners.

Dialing back to the here and now, nothing has changed. The above is a riff that sprung
out of the NDX-Gold chart and I think it fits with the ‘looking ahead’ theme. I am
uncomfortable with the way gold exploded during the Euro crisis last summer. I am
uncomfortable with the ‘channel buster up’ that blew out the then current NFTRH gold
analysis.

I do not think gold suffered a terminal blow off. Not yet. But we who are bullish on gold
are part of a herd you know. And the herd has gotten bigger in the last year. This herd
includes nations and their central banks. My friends and neighbors (and likely yours)
have not yet considered this monetary relic. So all appears fine for now.

Gold has all kinds of upward potential if and when the final blow off arrives. Thousands
of dollars an ounce. But that is crack pipe talk for ‘players’. Gold is only a barometer to
the financial times. The entire developed world is in pain and angst, and politically
things are very tenuous. Wars are on a hair trigger as the US military industrial complex
business grinds on as usual. Inflation’s effects are everywhere as people fall further and
further behind in the simple effort to live and support their families.

It is a great time for gold, just like in the 70’s. Yet the point of this stream of
consciousness is that just like with a bombed out stock, when bottom feeders start
looking for news that can’t get any worse and technical patterns that imply a bottom is in,
I want this newsletter to be on the job over the biggest of pictures gauging the process.

Gold probably still needs some major upside blow off action. But this will not titillate us.
We will be cold and calculating because these are the markets and the herd is never, but
never right. Wow, okay thank you for the brain dump sir; can we now get back to the
market?  [NFTRH160 then reverts back to 'here and now' market analysis...]



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Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Cu-Au Ratio again diverging the broad rally

The 'October Pivot' was expected, and it materialized into a rally to reset negative sentiment as expected.  And now?  Well, if the Gold-Copper ratio is correct again, the rally is doomed.  I hold no bias.  I just hold charts.












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Monday, November 14, 2011

Gold-Silver Ratio refuses to go away...

The GLD-SLV gold-silver ratio proxy continues to consolidate in a bullish flag (60 min. view here) and therefore, a very bearish divergence to broad markets remains in play.  The bulls could party through the holidays if they break GSR down toward the noted green support zone, but thus far no dice on that.

So I am risk averse now, given the liquidity implications, and if the bull rally does resume and GSR is broken down to support, I will probably get so bearish it will make my head spin.  I do not like this market, SPX 1360 or no SPX 1360.  SPX Symmetrical Triangle or no SPX Symmetrical Triangle.











Edit (12:55) Daily view added for perspective.












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Global X Silver miners still above neckline...

...and looking pretty good as long as they stay above the moving average cluster.















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