Saturday, January 31, 2009

NFTRH18 out now...

We start off with a look at the way in which the American people and their $Trillions in retirement savings can help bail out Uncle Sam. If it were to come to that, most will go along in a docile manner. The government would 'incentivize' them after all and the people would rely on their well developed adherence to convention and trust in higher powers.

NFTRH18 also looks at the performance of our portfolios and how it has played into some decisions I made this week. They are not pleasing ones because the risk of significant downside in the markets has increased markedly, especially given certain sentiment indicators and the failure of hope this week to break above our critical moving averages. But we have made great gains since October, and they will not be given back. Current gold stock status is updated as well.

If the market does as it is threatening, and breaks down, it will be time to begin looking at downside targets in coming issues and on first look, they will not be pretty. It clings to support, but it is now make or break.

NFTRH18, out now. Check it out.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Peter Schiff responds, etc.

Here is Mr. Schiff's response to Mish: A Response to My Critics

The main thing I take out of this is that I am glad I am a market timer and glad I have the ability to expand and contract my investment and/or trading themes to suit the times. I do not like the idea of being a down and dirty trader just trading the set ups and signals and not caring about anything else, but I absolutely abhor the idea of buy and hold unquestioningly.

My take on the Mish-Schiff heavyweight bout? Schiff was indeed right about a lot of things. A lot of us were. Mish, one of the 'deflationistas', has been VERY right in the last year. Ditto Prechter, ditto Panzner. The market and the economy go in cycles, and with the artificially and centrally managed mess we have today, these cycles are amplified; boom/bust on steroids.

No one way of managing and navigating the markets will do. This is part of why I stopped illustrating every percentage detail of my portfolio 'holdings' in NFTRH (in favor of dialogue detailing what I hold and why, trading activity, cash percentages and current risk stance). I am not that guy; not the guy that just puts together a genius portfolio and lets it sit there in time and space, subject to the cycles. Detailing every minute aspect of the portfolios weekly in NFTRH was causing me to be who I am not. It is no coincidence that the speculative portfolio has doubled since I stopped doing that, while the capital preservation portfolio is well above baseline.

A subscriber told me that his funds have been eviscerated while being managed by a money manager with a popular website known for gold, silver and energy bullishness. This gentleman asked me to personally manage his funds. Others have asked the same thing. But I am just one person already doing too much. That is why I try to write NFTRH in a way that does not compel subscribers to 'sit and wait in passivity until I give you the buy and sell signals'. Nor do I want to sit there like a mother hen subjecting my investment stance to potential major events (and yes, I was personally caught up in just that in October as I incorrectly thought the core of gold miners I held would do relatively okay in the coming deflation impulse as the real price of gold went up). I want to encourage readers to consider how I am going about things, and then ENGAGE. Tell me I am wrong. Tell me I am right. Make their own decisions.

I pump out plenty of information and viewpoints, but I am amazed at the viewpoints of several of the NFTRH subscribers and I coud not be happier about this. Pound for pound, this small but growing list of people has got savvy in spades. I have never been happier with the internet experience because I thought long and hard before starting the newsletter. I was concerned that people would look for a genius to disseminate his thoughts from on high. It has been quite the opposite and I tell you, we just want to be right way more often than not. It takes texture, nuance and the ability to question. I think NFTRH readers 'get' that.

I know this started out as Mish-Schiff and morphed into a self-centered thing. But it is not a promo. It is how I feel.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Mish - Welcome to Biiwii.com

I had Mike (Mish) Shedlock's Global Economic Trend Analysis on an RSS feed reader for several months, but never really had the time to go and read. One day I saw a post with the title Peter Schiff Was Wrong and I said, 'hmmm, Schiffy be a Biiwii.com contributor, let me see what Mish has to say'. What I read was a pounding of the forceful and well publicized Schiff and I felt obligated to ask Mish for permission to publish (in the interest of balance). He gave said permission, will be submitting content and also said it's okay to pull content from his blog as I see fit. I feel like this is a real feather in the website's cap because this man is not given to some dogma. He sees textures and nuance, which is something I value.

Here, in Geithner Discusses Nationalization in $2 Trillion Bailout Proposal, Mish rebuts communists like Barney Frank and illustrates just how foolish - and dangerous - the whole lot of these clowns really are, with our money. Very sad, but along with good old Ron Paul (Stimulus For Who?) and the growing number of aware websites and blogs out there, there is a growing counter voice as the herd is compelled to buy in to the socialization of America.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

HUI

HUI has not followed through well after Friday's thrust and it looks like another failure at what is becoming well defined resistance around 300. It's time for at least the more emotional gold bugs to get their panties all up in a wad again... the fix is in, they're shorting gold stocks and manipulating gold so the 'sheeple' don't see how bad things really are.

Well, actually the HUI is looking very normal (for a small market that never really acts the way we want it to, even during bull trends and bull markets. The ups always seem to go too far and get too lathery and the consolidations (shakeouts) always seem to go a day or two longer than patience has allowed for.

I do not know when the consolidation will end but I do know these things... gold mining companies are improving fundamentally as each month goes by and gold remains in orbit in relation to oil, steel, nickel, copper and those way down in the dumper human hopes for prosperity. Chart resistance, when hammered away at enough times, tends to break eventually. The target remains a minimum of 350 and down the road, after we sort out the next deflation impulse scenario, much higher.

Huey is hammering away at 300 area resistance and providing some okay trading opportunities in a range of 250 to 300, all the while working off market leading over bought conditions. We have doubled since the bottom in October after making a higher low in November while the ship of fools made lower lows and industrial commodities to this day continue to try to pick themselves up off the floor. That is relative strength, and it is indicative of where the real bull move is and where the Memorex ones are.

The dollar chart is a mixed bag, with a bias toward bullish. It has turned down from what should be resistance (the H&S top cluster), but it is not over bought and momentum remains healthy. Also, the buck has not yet broken down from an orderly uptrend. It needs to do so here and now to avoid a continued grind in the gold stocks (and potential decline to support in the 250-275 range). Global markets are up this morning but the SPX and Dow do not look good, with NDX only marginally better.

I am operating under the premise that there is only one bull market out there, and it is not the 'price' of gold as I parrot to you 'gold is not about price, it is about value' (and it is always a good time to hold value). The bull market in 'price' is in gold miners, which are simply companies that dig something out of the ground that has gone nearly parabolic in 'price' related to everything that matters to their bottom line costs. But there are those pesky issues of market perceptions (enter, Uncle Buck) and trader emotions. It's what makes markets fun.

PS: I just edited in the title (the very creative 'HUI') which I forgot, and cleaned up about 20 typos. This is what happens when you stay out late jamming on a Tuesday night and then hear the same song (a new one we hammered out for nearly two hours) over and over in your head while trying to sleep.

Edit (7:35) Adding 60 min. VIX which shows the bulls have indeed broken it down. Good for bulls: This measures to 36, which would imply the market highs of early January can be taken out. Bad for bulls: It's a falling wedge with a hint of divergence by the histo. The sentiment backdrop does not support a strong rally before hope runs out. Speaking of hope, honestly, have you ever seen such a mess as this bailout extravaganza they are cooking up in Washington? Edit (9:56) Adding VIX daily w/ hammer down to, gulp, target. Me no bullish. Edit (10:26) Ah, the old good bank, bad bank trick. I knew that late stage societies could be very scary things, but I never realized just how funny they can be too. Edit (5:15) I had an email exchange with a subscriber today who talked about prints that suddenly get 'fixed' and disappear from price history. He talked about how often this situation ends up being a clue as to where a particular equity is heading as it is often a signal between big boyz. This subscriber is what I would call a big boy in his own right and when these guys talk, I listen. Now, what do I see upon reviewing the VIX a few minutes ago? The impulsive decline is magically modified. The bulls have reeled the VIX back in and this could mean they will extend their rally beyond a day or two. Don't want to pump too hard on bullshit and flame out too quickly, now do they? First they should suck in some innocents. Am I being paranoid? Yeh, but what the hell. Displays like today always have disturbed me, watching Wall Street pump up a lie or pump fiscal insanity (bad bank). Anyway, I have added the magically massaged VIX daily along with the tell-tale 60 minunte that still shows Bobo. I wonder if that one will still be intact in the morning.




Edit (1/29 @ 6:17 AM) Here is this morning's 60 minute VIX, sanitized. Espionage aside, notice that the gap has filled on the VIX and our low target is 36, which is not too far away.



Monday, January 26, 2009

Financial Forecast & Elliott Wave Theorist - 45% off & RECOMMENDED

We all know about Robert Prechter... seemingly wrong for so many years as the previous inflation spurred on the commodity bubble and even dragged along the stock market for a faux bull market. Prechter was not wrong, not on the fundamentals. His timing was the issue. As I have written before, Prechter and EWI were among my major influences - and yes, I am what I guess you might call an 'inflationist', although I am not really sure what that means other than I believe that policy makers will always choose to fight problems with inflationary policy that will eventually manifest itself in ever higher prices and debased currency. I believe EWI are thinking along those lines as well for after the current deflation has run its course.

Preamble aside, I used to read Prechter's Elliott Wave Theorist each month as I was becoming whoever it is that I am now, and always found it of great value. For a short while EWI is offering a 3 month subscription of the Theorist along with the EW Financial Forecast and tri-weekly Short Term Update for 45% off the regular price and throwing in a free copy of Conquer the Crash - which is still extremely applicable to today's environment - as well. If you are going to 'get' Prechter, I think 2009 is the time to do so if you have not done so already.

Edit (1/27 @ 7:45) Filing under 'Blogger puts his money where his mouth is', I just signed up for this because it is a very important 3 month period coming up and if things time out correctly in my ongoing stance, these primary deflation spooks will help as a cross reference as to when it may be time to become defensive, manage risk and/or become outright bearish again. While NFTRH has its own voice and its own unbiased viewpoint, you surely know that it, and any other service worth its salt, does not operate in a vacuum.

Edit (8:37) ...and what do I see upon a brief skim of the Financial Forecast and Short Term Update? Well, I see alignment with what was posted on the blog and detailed in NFTRH; I see Mr. Hochberg tuned in to the same thing that was noted as a primary concern for me. Notably, the 20 day moving average of the Put/Call ratio (he uses the 10 day). If the bulls do not get in gear immediately, another leg down is coming.

60 min. VIX chart updated

Remember our VIX parameters from last week? VIX is at do or die and bulls need to break it down here. It has lost the 60 min. EMA 50 and MACD has declined below zero following bearish divergence . These are good first steps.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

NFTRH17 hot off the press on Saturday...

NFTRH went through the phases. It launched in the market's panic phase and twittled around with things like LIBOR, TED & MZM that really are no fun to be reviewing but, in a deflationary panic, were crucial to the analysis. Then, as noted in November/December, the panic phase began morphing into something more manageable, more normal. TA began working well as did the instinctual rhythms of the markets.

With NFTRH17's theme of change, we look forward to potential relief for commodities and possibly even for the ship of fools; that is to say, the stock market. A continued gold miner rally (for good reason, given the improved fundamentals that started to become actual as opposed to theoretical in October) is expected as well. But 2009 will be a year when investors will need to be prepared because "...the dynamics in the ogoing boom/bust drama are not going to change. They are going to intensify, and convention is going to be punished more intensely than in the past."

I have uploaded a chart of the GDX (as opposed to HUI) for subscriber Gordon, who has requested some looks at this stock index for potential targets and risk. Now, you know I am not one to get lathered up in bullish frenzy and those gaps still reside lower on the GDX chart, but there is some strongly bullish stuff going on here.

You know, corrections (the kind where people begin questioning themselves during an uptrend) are there for a reason and that reason is to cull out the weaklings who are victimized by the noise of the moment. That is what happened recently as the gold miners did nothing more than make a very healthy test of the SMA 50's. In light of that, I put a bullish target on the chart that seems inconceivable in the near term and maybe it is. Then again, maybe it isn't. The corresponding target for HUI is around 480. Hey, if you're gonna call 'em bearish when you see it, it's okay to call 'em bullish too. Balance, even as the changes intensify and the crosscurrents hit in the coming months.

Friday, January 23, 2009

And you thought I go on about gold stocks because?

The hype is going to intensify. People that are selling something are going to add volume to the noise. But you are going to remain calm. You are going to be rational and realize that the fundamentals of these gold mining companies are improving. You are going to decide whether you are a trader or investor and you are going to act accordingly.

If you are a holder of physical gold, you are going to realize you hold enduring value in a world that has come to lose all concept of the meaning of the word.

The market is still pitching for an Obama 'hope' rally. Human financial spirits have been driven down to depths unimaginable just a few months ago and human spirit is likely to rise up here (in a bear flag, sad to say) for a short time.

I had a great day today. You, if you are of a similar orientation, likely did as well. The 'goldies' should be doing what they are doing because they are counter cyclical, remember? Their fundamentals have been improving for months now, said the blogger parrot. The rest of this mess may rise for a bit as hope and Kumbaya type songs see us through for a month or two. Then, you know the drill.

Some random thoughts for a Friday morning...

Kyle at the Trend & Value Report is not part of the herd and in fact, unlike a lot of gold bugs, who think everybody is a 'sheeple' but them, this kid walks the walk. Irritatingly so, as his and my short term viewpoints tend to conflict fairly often. I know this because I receive his daily T&V Report in return for complimentary NFTRH. This morning in TVR Kyle talks about the truly sad performance of commodities over the decades as measured in gold, a macro theme that he and I obviously do agree on as you perhaps got tired of my 'commodity bull mania' screeds over the years. Having worked as a broker, Kyle understands the dynamics at play when some gurus are anointed as leaders (the George Gilders of everything from uranium to copper to pig iron) of a mania. You know who they are... "BUY resource stocks!!! Like those of my advertisers. They are your only hope as the government hyper-inflates!!!". Kyle, aside from looking like one of my [anti] heroes of the past, a young Johnny Rotten, gives a straight view and never claims to have a corner on the market for being right all the time. I perceive value in my Trend & Value letter that waits in my in box each morning.

Gold, silver & Uncle Buck all rising together this morning? That does not compute... that does not compute... that does not compute... Recall this chart of the USD from the post below. Today will be errr, interesting.

Speaking of USD, now that the new admin has settled in, we are back to the currency wars as Tim Geithner warns production Ponzi scheme China that President Obama of consumption Ponzi scheme USA thinks the Chinese are manipulating their currency. Duhhhh. The problem is that the production Ponzi scheme owns a huge chunk of the debt of the already imploding consumers of last resort.

...and speaking of production Ponzi scheme China, well, I do not mention it very often because it is outside the scope of the blog, website and NFTRH, but I have another vocation as some readers may recall. I am a multi-tasker and just love to work and be productive, and in that regard I own a great little American manufacturing firm that is right on the cutting edge of progress and productivity. Ladies and gentlemen who depend on home oxygen therapy, it is with great sadness that I announce to you that the high quality oxygen conservers you depend on to breath properly, having been made in the USA to way over and above standards for the last 9 years will now be made for a fraction of the cost and quality (believe me, much more went into 'over and above' than meets the eye) in... well, you know. We will get through it. We always do. We are Americans after all. Luckily, there remain many medical equipment firms that would not think of trading off quality for labor arbitrage - yet. As for my former customer, they are a leading home health care company that, in the words of the buyer who was our point of contact 'wanted the US operation to fail'. This is of course in light of the fact that many corporations have highly paid people whose very job it is to OUTSOURCE AT ALL COSTS.

My kids love Karate. For discipline and self respect, this ancient art cannot be beat. I sat there in the waiting room last night with a bunch of other parents, plunking away on my laptop. Many of these people are struggling but the value they see their kids receiving would appear to make this a 'not until you send my job to China and pry the last few bucks out of my cold, lifeless hands will you take away my kid's karate' type of thing. Last night my 10 year old daughter did some sparring with a boy in front of the class. The Sensei asked the class "what do think about their styles?" and the response was "Izzy is a charger". Dad was proud. Kind of like when she flattened the boy who was hitting and picking on her on the school bus last year.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Bulls absolutely MUST break the VIX right here

It all comes down to follow through. If the market shows strength today and the VIX is broken below the noted support level, da bullz be in biznizz. We cannot control markets so we do the next best thing; we try to find as many early warning indicators as possible (e.g. the breakdowns of the EMA 20 & SMA 50 on the broad market daily charts) along the road to wherever we are going. There is a big picture, macro plan for sure. But the short term stuff along the way can be a real bear can't it?

So, speaking of short term, the 60 min. chart dials in a clear view.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Not so scary gold stock chart of the day...

Turnabout is fair play. Yesterday I posted a monthly of NEM that really caused concern in the big picture. Today we dredge up the same for KGC with a far different message. Gee, I can't wait to look at the one I actually hold, GG.

It is kind of weird being a conventional gold stock bull right now. The kind that wants to see oil go higher (I added more 'value' there along with Natty yesterday) and wants to see silver outperform gold. Who knows, maybe the markets will even get the bid after all.

Stock market - dangerous point

It would be wise to let the market prove itself here. After those big red candles yesterday, especially on the BKX, this could well be a little suck in. If the SPX gets above the noted resistance, maybe we can begin to think about something productive. Until such time, and considering the non-extreme sentiment, this does not yet look like a good bet.

What do I want to see? Bearish hysteria (climax) and the dollar topping. It has given no such indication as yet. Not what we wanted, but it is what it is. On the plus side, it still says here that if we get a climactic plunge in the broad market - and I am talking about a dive to levels most thought impossible, and if indicators like the EMA 20 on CPC register up near the 1.20 level, it may be time to begin to re-invest in America. But that seems like just a gleam in a horny bull's eye at the moment. Positive caveat: Big tech is not broken... yet. They must hold and SPX must get back above the noted former support. Pronto. Edit (3:13) Adding 60 min. chart showing the support level. A false breakdown here would be kind of cool. Watch VIX too.

Anxiety indicators - mixed bag

We don't want to look at them, the anxiety indicators that is. Frankly, they bum us out in the afterglow of the official inauguration of hope in America. I am not kidding about that either. I am not some cranky libertarian going anti-everything. It is really hard not to like Mr. Obama. I didn't hear his speech until late in the day and when I did, I was impressed. But the market is the market and it is pissed off and demanding action. Of course, remote management of markets and economies in New Deal II will probably fail miserably, but at some point they are likely to get a pump going somewhere. This is a mixed back of fear and misery.




Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Deflation to inflation

Even most of the thoughtful 'deflationistas' are aware that this will eventually resolve with some kind of inflation problem. Steve Hochberg from EWI talked of a post-deflationary hyperinflation on Jim Puplava's radio show last weekend. I believe Mike Shedlock is constructive on gold and gold miners. Just last week I had an email exchange with Michael Panzner (his publisher is sending me his new book, When Giants Fall for review).

Mr. Panzner among other things had this to say: "I hear what you are saying, though I think we are eventually headed to zero on the dollar (and hyperinflation), too."

At issue is how and when do we get where we are going (the next outwardly visible inflation problem) and how severe will it be? The coming months will be the best time in modern market history to be a contrarian and the absolute worst time to be a sheep. Mark my words. Lots of twists and turns ahead and all the while, the major media will be drumming a loud beat as most march in the wrong direction. On that you can bet.

Scary chart of the day for the gold sector

Sometimes I go looking for bad news in an effort to double and triple check myself and my own perceptions and research. Sometimes I find confirmations or affirmations in the form of completely different data points by which to evaluate the current stance. Then there are other times, such as with this monthly chart of major gold producer Newmont (NEM) that just makes my blood run cold.

I am putting this up in conjunction with an email update to subscribers because readers are not going to get what perhaps they (and I) want to hear. Not with this service. We have made great gains off the bottom, and I am not advocating panic. But how can people make right minded decisions without a well rounded picture?

The monthly chart of NEM is the first of what I would expect to be several to come that may not play to our bullish script. There is a theoretical 'C' down to the target. If you don't think it can happen...

Monday, January 19, 2009

"Our errors are not going to be of standing back"

The new uses of current and future TARP funds are coming into view, and it is power to the people! Banks will still be helped with 'bad' or 'aggregator' banks to hold the liabilities of criminals long since retired to the Hamptons, their billions 'earned' through their status of first 'users' of ill conceived munny produced, not from nowhere - it came from somewhere and that somewhere was the previous credit boom compliments of Greenspan. Can a lucid person really take comfort in a society that needs an 'aggregator' bank?

Fair is fair at least. Yes, they will go into credit hyperdrive, but what good has it done thus far saving the banks with not much done for Main Street aside from manipulation of long term treasury rates? Yeh, the day that TLT exploded higher I did two things; 1) refinanced the remainder of our mortgage at a ridiculously low rate and 2) shorted long treasuries via TBT (trade since closed). So, thanks Robin Hood. Now, we have a different flavor of mass welfare and as a home owner and small business owner, I say thank you and struggling 'people' should too. It is galling watching the privileged Paulson employing his one way rescue to those of his pedigree.

But the Obama administration is just going to be a different flavor of socialist. A better one than what the Bushies had become because who really feels for banks as opposed to real people enduring real suffering? Power to the people. At least it feels better to say that than 'power to the big, money grubbing, high wire risk taking, personal coffer enriching pigs'. But this will ultimately fail miserably if you define success as a 'productive economy that is the result of a productive people's innovation, hard work and added value to the world'.


Obama Advisers Say They Will Aim TARP Funds at Widening Credit

By Matthew Benjamin
Jan. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Top advisers to President-elect Barack Obama signaled they will emphasize getting credit to consumers and businesses rather than helping banks as the new administration deploys the second half of the $700 billion rescue fund.
“The focus isn’t going to be on the needs of banks; it’s going to be on the needs of the economy for credit,” Lawrence Summers, the president-elect’s top economic adviser, said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” program yesterday. Obama’s team will manage the Troubled Asset Relief Program “in a much different way,” David Axelrod, Obama’s chief political adviser, said on ABC’s “This Week” program.
Obama’s advisers are considering options for dealing with troubled assets still clogging banks’ balance sheets, according to people familiar with the matter. Among alternatives: Setting up a government-backed “bad” or “aggregator” bank to hold the securities, or leaving the assets on banks’ books and providing a government guarantee.
While Summers and Axelrod didn’t discuss specific proposals, they emphasized they don’t agree with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s decision to commit most of the initial $350 billion of the TARP funds to capital injections in exchange for warrants and preferred equity.
“The point is to get credit flowing again to businesses and families across the country -- that hasn’t happened with the expenditure of the first $350 billion,” Axelrod said.
Swearing-In
Last week’s sell-off in financial stocks and the deepening recession put pressure on Summers and Treasury Secretary- designate Timothy Geithner to unveil a comprehensive program soon after Obama is sworn in tomorrow. Without a radical new effort, soaring credit losses could prolong and deepen a recession that is now more than a year old.
The TARP may be redirected to help prevent foreclosures as well as free up credit for “automobile loans, consumer credits, small business, municipalities,” Summers said. He added banks will be subject to more oversight in their use of the funds.
“There’s going to be a very different level of rigor in the evaluation of institutions, the plans that are designed, and the expectations for institutions,” Summers said. “Institutions that are healthy, that don’t need it just to survive, are going to be expected to lend above their baseline levels as part of this program.”
Geithner and his advisers will be “carefully” monitoring Wall Street bonuses of banks that have participated in the TARP, Summers said.
Bank Mergers
“What’s not going to happen is the funds that could be supporting increased lending are going to be used to finance acquisitions that may serve a bank but don’t serve the country,” Summers said. The new administration will also prevent banks that accept government funds from pursuing acquisitions to the detriment of increased lending, he said.
Summers said he is confident Congress will pass a spending plan, coupled with tax cuts, similar to the $825 billion package that Obama has offered. Such a stimulus has been forecast to create 3 million to 4 million jobs, he said.
“I expect the program will pass within in a month,” Summers said. “He is going to do what is necessary to get us out of this economic hole.”
The U.S. economy showed further signs of buckling, according to reports last week. Consumer prices fell 0.7 percent in December, capping the smallest annual increase since 1954, the Labor Department said. Industrial output shrank 2 percent, and the capacity-utilization rate slid to 73.6 percent, according to the Fed. A private survey showed consumer sentiment was little changed in January.
“There’s almost no question that the economy is going to decline for some time to come,” said Summers, who served as Bill Clinton’s last Treasury secretary. “Our errors are not going to be of standing back.”

Sunday, January 18, 2009

NFTRH16 - Out now

This week Notes From the Rabbit Hole spends a good deal of time analyzing the nature of the would-be stock rally after our moving average tolerance was violated. Hope is trying to spring eternal with the new presidency, but will it? Will hope even spring until spring?

The gold miners are looked at from both daily and weekly perspectives now that our long awaited support zone in the area of the SMA 50 to the 250 lateral support cluster has apparently held. The gold miners, obviously the only sector to which I am fundamentally engaged will be followed very closely going forward.

I believe this is the first leg of a new cyclical bull market for the gold miners (for all the reasons repeated over and over again while others panicked with the commodity bull herd), but there is also significant headwind ahead and in NFTRH16, we begin looking at what might be the challenges to a strongly held long gold miner stance. Hint: The herd can be your friend, but it can also trample you if you get caught in the mania of its ongoing misperceptions. I have identified a visual figure on the chart that represents this dangerous herd and a sketch of what might happen in a few months is coming into play.

This is what I find so interesting, and yes fun, about market analysis; taking a theory or rough plan and honing it as time goes on and events are added into the data input thingamajig.

NFTRH16 also discusses commodities, the dollar and the freshly minted Obama administration along with last week's moves in the portfolios and current portfolio status/composition.

Check it out. Seriously, ya don't like it it's only 26 bucks for a month and you can cancel any time. Most subscribers seem to like it. In fact, some have canceled the monthly subscription in favor of signing on for the yearly. I am not here to pump you with bullish fantasy or depress you with end of the world hysterics. I am here to get this right.

Enjoy the remainder of your weekend dear reader.

PS: Below is a copy of an email update that went out to subscribers on Thursday morning before the HUI reversed off of support. Sometimes it is long winded and sometimes it is short and sweet. But when there is a point to be made in between NFTRH weekly editions, the email updates will make that point.

Okay, now have a good weekend!


Good morning,
The broad market has, as you know, long-since (well, since Monday) violated our short term parameters for the bullish case with the drop below the SMA 50 noted in NFTRH14 two weeks ago. Then, in NFTRH15 the VIX was noted as making an attempt to break out from a 'bullish' falling wedge and the structure of the CBOE put/call ratio ($CPC) EMA 20 was added to the bearish case.
It was noted in an earlier NFTRH that the 850 area on the SPX would be critical, but we used the SMA 50 and EMA 20 as early warnings, as risk tolerance for the broad markets of a world in a downward economic spiral was not something to be complacent about, nor to give the benefit of the doubt to. I would say that the SPX could try to find a 'higher low' (from the November low) in the 800 to 850 range, but again, the structure of the EMA 20 on $CPC is cause for significant concern short term.
The USD, which has nestled itself into our projected topping area with a close just above the SMA 50, is now in the spotlight. As is the Yen, which is quite over bought on a weekly basis but is making known its intention to attempt a blow off FROM over bought levels. The Yen could ultimately crash from this setup, but a lot of damage can be done in the meantime. As for the dollar, the situation is cut and dry; it remains in a daily downtrend from the November high and should reverse soon or the 'B' leg up of an ABC correction stance is invalidated. This scenario can top out in the 86's, but the SMA 50 is favored as a topping area because the longer the USD holds above this moving average, the better the chances of a test of the highs.
This leads us to the gold miners. Fundamentally, I do not weigh the dollar's status as heavily as the herd does. But it is the herd that controls the short term, especially in emotional and traumatized markets. The HUI has dropped to the range of the SMA 50 to 250 lateral support that we have been following for several weeks now. The rising SMA 50 has definitely been a plus as it was in the 220's when we first started watching for a correction and has now risen above 240. I like that.
I also like that the gold miners have maintained a steady pattern of higher highs and higher lows, with the exception of the short term holiday volume pump and second failure just above 300. Overall, this is constructive even as the broad market threatens to break down. One would have to at least consider the idea that the gold stocks are beginning to reflect the reality we have been following all along; that the gold miners are COUNTER-cyclical companies due to the COUNTER-cyclical nature of their product in relation to these companies' cost inputs.
What I do not like is that the herd still holds sway, perceptions about deflation are intact and the gold miners more often than not are moving with the markets, not counter to them. There is also the penchant for the gold bugs, as emotional a group of investors as there is, to make a final and dramatic puke (in this relatively small market) on any correction that comes amid skittish broad market activity.
By the attached chart, HUI is getting toward over sold, right into the noted support areas. We are getting into the window we have been waiting for. USD at the SMA 50, gold miners into the support zone and all of it happening during OP/EX week. Watch closely for the next few days as the story will likely be told shortly. Understand who you are and what you are willing or unwilling to risk.
Regards,
Gary
PS: Keep an eye on the blog, as there are certain updates I make there that dovetail with our weekly NFTRH and email updates.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Uncle Buck behaving?

Could it be? Could USD actually obey the chart guy and fail right here at the SMA 50, the 62% retrace level, RSI & MACD 'resistance' areas and our 'B' leg of an ABC down that mirrors the previous ABC up? The dollar is making such pretense in pre-market as a world full of would-be recovering gambling addicts celebrates another bailout (additional $20 billion for Bank of America plus $118 billion more for 'troubled' - AKA garbage that these supposedly buttoned down institutions enriched their higher ups with while as a collective, destroying the United States through hubris and greed - assets on the books).

There is a lot of trend following going on in the dollar lately. The deflationists are out again everywhere, clubbing people over the head with the obvious fact that the US is imploding. Again, the deflationists have been quite right in many ways as fear drives the herd to seek out and save dollars and pay down debt. But, in the big picture there is something rising out of the wreckage and that thing is likely to be very nasty. They are going to fight deflation tooth and nail because deflation will destroy the trough that a bankrupt political system feeds on.

It is the fighting of deflation that I am interested in. Two huge forces going at each other. Have you looked at LIBOR? TED? Various money supply measures? The deflation masturbators and inflation fornicators can obsess on their ideologies all they want. What we want is to be right because our financial survival depends on being right. The dollar went up... the dollar went down... the dollar went up again. Now, our plan is that it goes down again, far enough for the trend followers to begin trumpeting its demise. Then we'll evaluate further.

But first, we need to confirm weakening momo and get a couple closes below the SMA 50 before we can confirm that our 'B' leg has topped. Yesterday, as the dollar sagged and the various markets began to stabilize, I bought back a bunch of the previously ejected stuff. Let's see how it turns out. The EMA 20 on the $CPC is still not where I would like to see it and the HUI is still within an orderly decline down to support. But considering this stuff was ejected up around HUI 300 and at the broad market SMA 50's, I do not want to get too cute. I always seem to sell a bit too soon and buy a bit too early. But it usually works out with patience.

You do what your MO dictates but for the love of Jesus, tune out the bullhorns and think clearly.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

SRS - At target

I closed my personal trade in the wild man SRS (Ultrashort Real Estate - thanks Larry) a shade under 67 for a nice day trade from 61 and change. But as is typical for me, I did not catch the ultimate target high, nor did I try to.

Today the blog closes its SRS trade with the target of 70 being exceeded, getting over bought and sentiment coming along toward nicely bearish in the markets. This should prove to be a pretty hefty resistance zone in the 70-80 area.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Meanwhile, a check up on our anxiety indicators...

Status quo. Not quite the acute panic of October. I certainly hope this is relevant for the gold miners as their fundamentals have improved, even as the forces that drove their fundy's higher drove the stocks lower during the liquidation. HUI can still come a bit lower (it is now in the middle of the correction target zone), but if I am right - and remember, I am a human sitting here watching this mess just like you - then the absence of panic and what should be some public utterances confirming the fundy's this earnings season, combined with the gold stocks' intact higher lows structure, could just maybe... imply separation from the ship of fools known as the broad stock market? Maybe?


Good news, bad news

Well, mostly bad news.

The bullish plan endured the decline to test the moving averages, X. Then it considered the VIX breakout posture, XX. Strike 3 came in the form of the EMA 20 on the CBOE put/call ratio, XXX.

Now where do we go from here? The bad news is that with the SMA 50 and EMA 20 now in the rear view mirror on most major markets a test of, if not a decline through the November lows comes into view. I do not like the structure of the EMA 20 on the $CPC as it implies no bottom is imminent. The market is running out of time to prove this a false breakdown, goons playing w/ options expiry event.

When that bottom does finally arrive, maybe just maybe we can begin thinking about hammering out the major bottom (over the course of many months) that will usher in a new - and inflation fueled - bull in certain sectors.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

USD proxy UUP

You could hear the drums and bugles? You could hear the flutes? You could hear the gold bug generals leading the charge up the hill? You could hear the sound of machine gun fire from that nest over there populated by evil manipulators and other enemies of the 'gold community'?

No, what you heard was the dollar simply not being finished with its pump, as was speculated would be the case on the USD charts lower on this page.

Here is an intraday USD proxy of the etf UUP. We are just about there. We are just about to the point where the dollar is expected to drop in the next leg down toward an eventual low 70's target (favored scenario) or prove our working plan wrong and make new highs (definitely unfavored scenario).

Keep emotion out of it.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Goldcorp...

Attention shoppers... we would like to call your attention to a premier gold miner that will be on sale shortly in isle 5. This is the leading item of its category, which is why it is being featured. Of course, with the economy the way it is lately, we know your discretionary funds are not what they once were. This is why we try to only call your attention to such items when they are about to go on sale.

Risk is to the lower gap, but GG could well be over sold by then. I may hold out for said gap, but only because GG is my largest holding. Just fyi.

Gold using GLD as a proxy

I mentioned in NFTRH that I did not like the chart of gold. Well, using GLD as a proxy here I am beginning to like it more. If GLD fails to gain support at the channel bottom, it will be what I consider a strong buy at the lateral support noted.

Stance under threat - time to take action

It is now time to consider alternatives as the indicator in the previous post, the VIX, the continued under performance of BKX-SPX ratio and the declining momentum suggest. I cannot personally begin ejecting long positions until they are proved to be broken. One tact is to begin hedging in certain areas.

A new subscriber to NFTRH sent along this suggestion for "capturing the commercial real estate blowup that is coming." This gentleman is the managing partner of a global investment firm and when people like this talk, I listen. He suggested a look at SRS. I looked, I liked.

Edit (10:03) Wouldn't you know it. SRS gaps up. I wait and watch to see if the gap will fill. Downside follow through has indeed triggered some sells here; MSFT for around break even, CSCO for chump change and FTEK for 7.5% gain. I suppose I will go back to watching some of the junior gold producers I mentioned in NFTRH as potential re-buys upon HUI coming down to target range. You could call this a 'mental stop' kicking in as I do not intend to play hero on stuff I do not consider fundamental. (10:33) Add FARO to the list for a loss of 7%. (2:14) SRS was added at 61.42 as it partially retraced the initial thrust. This thing moves like a wildcat. Not a recommendation. The recommendation is that the risk that had been mounting in broad markets is now becoming actualized and thus comfortable cash level would be the recommendation. (2:44) Sell target coming into view for SRS at 70 resistance. This could dovetail with topping dollar, bottoming gold miners and retesting broads. We'll just have to see how things play out. (3:46) Check that... screw the sell target. I'll take the 9% on what was a fairly sizable position. Not getting cute. Will practice what I preach with increased cash levels.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

NFTRH15 out on 1/10

NFTRH15 is all 'meat & potatoes' and goes heavy on the TA as our stance is under threat with breaks of SMA 50 in some major markets (per NFTRH14: "risk will be defined as increasing upon a break and close back below the SMA 50").

Also, reproduced below is an update email that followed for subscribers this morning, along with a detailed put/call ratio chart.

Good morning,
I want to add a couple notes to yesterday's NFTRH15.
I neglected to mention in the Portfolio Notes that I have sold out the short position on long term treasuries (using TBT) for the simple reasons that I am not a bond market expert, the positions produced quick profits and some very powerful policy makers are working diligently against the prospect of rising long term treasury rates. That is certainly not to say rates will not keep rising from here. It is simply to say I am happy with the trade and will move on.
Also, attached is a longer term chart of the CBOE put/call ratio that was presented in NFTRH15. I wanted to go back and compare the current structure (of the EMA 20) vs. that from the bottoming process earlier in the decade with reference to the SPX. I realize this chart is pretty busy, but its implication is that another decline to test the lows could be imminent. This would wipe out the short term game plan that we have been following. But on the plus side, it would make for a more sustainable rally sometime in 2009.
As I often mention, I do not have a crystal ball. Please be open to all possibilities and manage risk accordingly.
I plan to update the blog with this chart and thesis as well.
Regards,
Gary

Friday, January 9, 2009

COMPQ - Just because

I haven't looked at the COMP in a long while, so here is the daily chart marked up with all kinds of stuff that I usually look at. I didn't put in the fib retrace levels because the chart is busy as is. But the favored retrace levels are 38% @ 1750, 50% @ 1890 and 62% @ 2030.

I realize it is getting a bit stale hearing the blogger strike a bullish tone as weeks turn to months with the market seemingly going nowhere amid much public anxiety about jobs, retail, war and DEBT. Biiwii.com was created out of anxiety about the national debt, remember?

So this is not some bull pitch man writing here. I am a guy looking at a chart and this chart, along with the SPX and weaker looking but still intact Dow, tell me (bottom feeder) that the situation is intact. I see bearish articles everywhere - dems bearz is really workin' da crowd, ain't dey? - and am well aware of the precarious status of Relief '09. But the rally is not over until the chart says it is. And as of 7:10 US Eastern time, it does not say that.

Here is an observation; in October we got outright panic, and I will tell you there were a couple times during that month - brand new newsletter to be published each week - that I actually sat here and contemplated my doubts. Wondered if I, and NFTRH were 'going to make it through this?'

Then came repulsion II in November. It was bad and the herd seemed to panic just as badly as the previous month. But if you knew where to look, you found bullish indicators. December showed some improvement and even saw global markets become slightly over bought while pervasive public bearishness still ruled the day. Now in January, we cough up a little bit of a lung to correct. Each month since October has been incrementally better than the acute phase of the panic. Yes, this can end at any time if the wheels fall off of something. But technically, we can rally higher to targets for an extended period and the bears' revulsion would be the fuel.

One bearish caveat comes in the form of the VIX. Bulls do not want to see this thing break the wedge and trigger up by the indicators. If the VIX decides to go up and test its breakdown from the topping pattern, it may be enough to break the market's bullish parameters and shake out non die hards like me. In essence, as noted in NFTRH14, it would be optimal to close this week with the noted moving averages intact on the markets. The market would do well to collect itself here, today, and get its act together or risk will be defined as rising and the COMPQ gap below 1400 would come into play sooner rather than 'later in '09' as currently anticipated. In the market's truly confounding way, this would actually be more bullish longer term then the current preferred scenario.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

I can envision a nasty outcome for honest people...

The president-elect is going to go FDR on steroids. Government perceives this to be the only solution even though it was such government meddling that created the gross distortions in the economy. This b/s is sadly the basis for my bullish stance of the next couple months. It will not work.
I have included a chart of GDX that, while up today, is highly suspect on geopolitical hype after yesterday's bearish damage. Be warned of the downside risk and do not fall for the Middle East conflict angle. This stuff is painfully real, but should have nothing to do with gold. I have taken profits on KGC in both accounts as its chart really looks toppy.

As hope potentially comes front and center compliments of Mr. Obama, the gold sector could complete its correction. I hold many positions still (including increased positions in GG, the gold stock captain), as one prominent scenario calls for gold stocks to finish correcting, stock market and positively correlated stuff to regain footing and then as time wears on, the gold sector to eventually reassert leadership. As noted in the previous post, the dollar could have one last pump up its sleeve before it says 'goodnight Irene'.
By Julianna Goldman
Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- President-elect Barack Obama warned that without immediate steps by the government to revive the economy, family incomes will drop, the unemployment rate could reach “double digits” and the U.S. risks losing a “generation of potential and promise.”
In excerpts of a speech he’s scheduled to give today at 11 a.m. New York time in the Washington suburb of Fairfax, Virginia, Obama says that while the cost of his economic recovery plan will add to a deficit already projected to exceed $1 trillion, he “won’t just throw money at our problems.”
“It is true that we cannot depend on government alone to create jobs or long-term growth,” Obama will say. “But at this particular moment, only government can provide the short-term boost necessary to lift us from a recession this deep and severe.”
Obama’s speech, which aides billed as a “major” economic address, is part of a broader pitch to Congress and the American public as he works on selling his $775 billion, two-year economic stimulus plan to pull the U.S. out of a recession. While the excerpts released by his transition office didn’t provide specifics of the plan, advisers said the full speech would expand on previously reported elements.
He also will again call for using the government’s “full arsenal of tools” to unlock credit markets and “a sweeping effort” to stem home foreclosures. Obama also is promising to overhaul financial-markets regulations and crack down on “reckless greed and risk-taking” on Wall Street to restore confidence in markets.
Quick Action Sought
Obama, who has made getting a stimulus package through Congress his top priority even before he takes office on Jan. 20, is pressing Congress to act quickly on his proposals, which include infrastructure spending aimed at creating or saving 3 million jobs and about $300 billion in tax cuts for individuals and businesses.
Yesterday, Obama said that spending in the stimulus plan would have to be geared toward programs that foster long-term economic growth -- in energy, health care and education.
As part of his effort to gain support from congressional Republicans, some of whom have questioned the price tag on the stimulus, Obama says his plan is “not just another public works program.”
Private Sector Jobs
“The overwhelming majority of the jobs created will be in the private sector, while our plan will save the public sector jobs of teachers, cops, firefighters and others who provide vital services,” he will say.
The cost of the economic recovery package is at the high end of the range the president-elect’s advisers had been promoting and lower than the $1 trillion stimulus that some economists have called for. In the speech, he warns that it will widen the federal budget deficit, which the Congressional Budget Office yesterday forecast would hit $1.18 trillion this year.
“It will certainly add to the budget deficit in the short- term,” Obama will say. “But equally certain are the consequences of doing too little or nothing at all, for that will lead to an even greater deficit of jobs, incomes, and confidence in our economy.”
Obama has spent the bulk of his first full week in Washington since the Nov. 4 election meeting with advisers and congressional leaders to help craft the package and shore up support. He is under pressure from lawmakers in both parties to ensure strong oversight given the price tag.
Oversight
Yesterday he named Nancy Killefer, a director at management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. and formerly an assistant secretary of the Treasury in the Clinton administration, to a new post of chief performance officer. She is charged with making the government more accountable for the money it spends.
In his speech, Obama will say the public will be able to use the Internet to view information about where the stimulus money is being spent and promises to create an economic recovery oversight board. He also will bar lawmakers from inserting pet spending projects, known as earmarks, into the legislation.
“Instead of politicians doling out money behind a veil of secrecy, decisions about where we invest will be made transparently, and informed by independent experts wherever possible,” Obama will say.
Obama’s speech comes as the Labor Department may report tomorrow that employers slashed jobs in December for a 12th consecutive month, putting total job cuts at 2.4 million for 2008, the most since 1945, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
U.S. stocks slid yesterday after ADP Employer Services said employers cut 693,000 jobs in December. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 3 percent to 906.65, cutting its 2009 gain to less than 0.4 percent. The index’s 38 percent decline in 2008 was its worst yearly drop since 1937.
Obama urged Congress to pass the measure, which has yet to be introduced, “as quickly as possible.”
“Every day we wait or point fingers or drag our feet, more Americans will lose their jobs, more families will lose their savings,” Obama will say. “More dreams will be deferred and denied. And our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Julianna Goldman in Washington at jgoldman6@bloomberg.net;
Last Updated: January 8, 2009 06:00 EST

US Dollar analysis again...

Because really, the USD is at the heart of global goings-on right now isn't it? As stated tirelessly over the years, this piece of utterly putrid paper, denominating a nation of spend-o-holics living exponentially beyond its means is just one of many global pieces of putrid paper. Therefore, it's gyrations vs. same are significant to investment and trading analysis until such time as the illusion that the system is actually sound or even functional - an illusion that may hold out longer than many think - finally falls away in favor of honesty.

Here we see Uncle Buck still making bullish pretense and not quite yet up to our target of 84-85. But the near term forces arrayed against him are significant. Recall the fib retrace levels (not shown here), SMA 50 and visual lateral resistance from the H&S topping pattern. Panel indicators have room to inch higher, but I will be surprised - and my analysis will be out the window - if the dollar exceeds and holds above these resistance forces.

What I like best is the inverse symmetry between B up and potential B down. SMA 50 plays a key role here.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Bearish?

This chart says don't be. Again, this is not to say I am some kind of swami that can see the future. I can't. All I can see is a weekly chart of the S&P 500 that gives no reason to be bearish. Bottoming pattern with up triggered MACD and constructive stochastics. A break of the 875 cluster raises a red flag and 850 remains our barometer for exponentially increasing risk.

Daily moving averages were noted for the NDX in NFTRH that need to hold ("risk will be defined as increasing upon a break and close back below the SMA 50"), but they are not under threat as of yet.

So until signals are invalidated, SPX heads for 1060 at a minimum with potential up to the 1200 area.

And the momentum indicators win...

Rolling MACD foretells downside correction, which admit it, is necessary to a healthy longer term advance. Dialing out to a bigger picture weekly, we see a bullish break above the weekly EMA 15 and a Huey who has gotten extended. The downside should include a test of this MA (currently 266 and rising) but our old target of 250 support remains well in play given its 38% retrace confluence.

I personally know several people who may consider this an opportunity. I will as well given that I unloaded a few preferred smaller gold miners after they doubled and tripled with too much momo euphoria.

Looking ahead, there is the potential for an inverted H&S with a target around 460-470, the downward sloping neck line of which dovetails with my sketch of the gold miners taking the hit in a few months as the stock market heads for new lows after da boyz playz da hope cardz to da fullest and da public buyz it. A good indicator to sell gold minaz will be when da gold bugz is screaming 'TO DA MOON!' again.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Gold miners

A casual look at the HUI daily chart shows that upside momentum is waning. This has been a risk for a while now. MACD is threatening to trigger down and we are simply not feeling overwhelmed with passion after the double in a mere two months.

So the risk is significant of continued corrective activity and new downside. But pulling up a 60 min. chart shows another formation that targets the 350-360 range. It is an ascending triangle. I thought I would show this pattern on the KGC chart as it is nearly identical to the HUI situation. Take it for what it's worth. There is a lot of short term risk in the sector, but the bullish objective for KGC is 22 to go along with HUI's 350+ if the triangles express themselves.

Copper - TGB

In NFTRH14 it was noted that I bought TGB just this past Wednesday as a play on copper and the positively correlated 'hope' trade. The buy price was .60 and today, three days later this thing is threatening the buck level so... I must go now. Thank you TGB, I hope you will stop diluting shareholders and I hope this bull rally has a nice durable copper roof. But I must go now because quick fire profits in something I am not fundamentally engaged with will always be taken.

But I think it is going higher as the 'click your heels' dreamers try to whoop up a story. In fact, TGB has potential to double before hope eventually springs a leak. Anyone who may have bought, it is up to you as to your view of the stock. It is up 60% from where it was bought and I have copper exposure elsewhere as you know. Just as I don't give buy rec's, I also do not give sell rec's. Merely showing parameters and telling what I am doing is all.

In other notes, on this morning's dump I added back the GG that was sold last week and also increased my 'bull stock' holdings with another favorite from my past that I may mention in NFTRH15 if indeed it remains worth mentioning after this week is over. I have also been doing the usual balancing and rebalancing. Taking some profits and seeding them into other areas. Sort of trading in a zone, like a hitter really seeing the ball. The dollar may be running out of gas right at our projections. Keep an eye on it.

Finally, a side note to subscriber Aneel P. Did you receive my mails yesterday? Contact me ASAP if not. I sent you the reports from two different email accounts and to both of your accounts. I trust you have gotten them as nothing got kicked back to me. In the event you did not, there must be a problem on your end. Is it possible you are in a country where incoming mail is restricted? Anyway, let me know.