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Nikkei Challenges The Broadening Top

Published 11/16/2014, 02:42 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

VIX Chart

-- VIX made its Master Cycle low beneath its mid-Cycle resistance at 14.31.Coming up next is a Primary Wave [3] which may meet or exceed the Head & Shoulders target listed on the chart.

SPX stalls a second week at its Broadening Top trendline.

S&P 500 Weekly Chart

S&P 500 remains stalled at overhead resistance at the upper trendline of its Orthodox Broadening Top at 2046.00 this week.The new megaphone formation carries a very bearish potential. Unfortunately, most investors will be unaware of this probability.

(MarketWatch) — U.S. stocks ended Friday’s uneven trading session fractionally higher, but still managed to post a fourth-straight weekly gain.

The main benchmarks switched between small gains and losses throughout the trading session, as investor reaction to upbeat economic data, namely retail sales and consumer confidence, was mostly muted.

Both retail sales and consumer sentiment data showed Americans were benefiting from lower gas prices and are prepared to increase their spending during the crucial, holiday-shopping season. That promises to be a boon for the economy as retail sales account for one-third of consumer spending, the main engine of U.S. economic activity.

NDX reaches a new high.

Nasdaq Weekly Chart

NDX continues to make new highs this week.The Orthodox Broadening Top formations in the indexes are bearish reversal patterns that indicate high public participation, peak emotional involvement and no risk control. A decline beneath the October 15 low at 3700.23 completes the pattern and signals a major change in trend is underway. The excitement isn’t over yet.

(ZeroHedge) With Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) at record highs, its market capitalization is now bigger than Russia's entire stock market (the 20th largest market in the world). What's more, as Bloomberg notes, there would be enough money left over after selling Apple and buying Russia to purchase over 190 million contract-free 64Gb iPhone6 Pluses (enough for every Russian).

High Yield is challenging its Ending Diagonal trendline.

High Yield Weekly Chart

The High Yield Index met the lower trendline of its Ending Diagonal formation last week and continues to challenge it this week.Traders often refer to this as the “kiss of death,” since a reversal from an Ending Diagonal usually means a complete retracement of that Diagonal.Now is time topay attention to the Orthodox Broadening Top formationas well.A decline beneath weekly Long-term support at 137.82 and the lower trendline puts MUT in motion toward its first target.

(Forbes) High yield bond volume in the U.S. last week totaled $10.1 billion, the most in a month, as issuers and investors continue to find their footing after October’s nose-dive.

“Issuers are tapping the market for various uses of proceeds, and the mid-October rout seems a distant memory,” writes LCD’s Joy Ferguson, in her weekly wrap-up. “Investors continue to favor high-quality paper, but underwriters are providing attractive concessions on the week’s offerings overall.”

With last week’s activity, the year-to-date total is $286.6 billion, down slightly from the $283.26 billion seen at this point in 2013, according to LCD (HN:LCD).

The Eurobounces.

Euro Weekly Chart

The Euro may have made its low on Friday, November 7, as suggested.We may see a strong bounce, especially since it did not challengethe Lip of a Cup with Handle formation at 122.00.We may see a consolidation lasting one or two weeks with an upside target as high as its mid-Cycle resistance at 132.95.

(Reuters) - The dollar gave up strong early gains and turned lower on Friday after the battered euro pivoted to price gains amid reports of short-covering in the common currency and a drop in U.S. bond yields.

The euro had its first weekly gain in four weeks and on Friday last traded at $1.2523, up 0.40 percent for the day.

During the trading day, the euro struck a low of $1.2399 before climbing.

"The euro's ability to hold above that $1.24 level encouraged some investors to unwind short positions, essentially buying back the euro at these lower levels," said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange in Washington, D.C.

EuroStoxx lingers at “point 7.”

DJ Euro Stoxx Weekly Chart

The DJ Euro Stoxx 50 Index reversed at “point 7” resistance of its Broadening Wedge formation, but continues to find support at its lower trendline. A cross beneath the lower trendline at 3000.00 has the potential to propel Stoxx to its Cycle Bottom trendline at 2415.48. Short-term resistance at 3112.82 continues to turn back attempts to go higher.

(MarketWatch)—European stocks slipped Friday as investors assessed a round of economic growth data from the eurozone, but the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 managed to eke out a minor gain for the week.

Gross domestic product figures from the eurozone confirmed sluggish activity for the 18-member region in the third quarter, growing by 0.2% quarter-on-quarter, according to the European Union’s statistics office. The figure was slightly better than expected.

Germany registered growth of 0.1% in the third quarter, allowing the largest economy in the eurozone to dodge recession, while French GDP expanded 0.3%, coming after a slight contraction in the second quarter. But Italy’s GDP contracted 0.1% in the third quarter. On more upbeat notes, Spain’s GDP grew 0.5% and Greece posted growth of 0.7%, marking an end to its recession.

The yen extends its decline to the lower bearish target.

Yen Weekly Chart

The Yen has declined to the lower range of its bearish target (shown in the chart). The Cycles Model called for a low last Friday but targets include price as well as time. This decline has been quite persistent.

(WSJ) Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has kept tight-lipped about the yen’s further slide in recent weeks, leading many to wonder if he was happy with the move. But a close economic adviser to Mr. Abe suggested that the yen now isn’t so far from levels the government might consider too weak.

“If it goes to 120 yen [to the U.S. dollar], that will make me think,” Etsuro Honda, one of the architects of Abenomics, said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.

“Well, maybe levels around 120 are acceptable, but if it weakens as much as to 125, that would make me a bit nervous, make me stop and think, ‘Is this okay?’” he said.

The Nikkei challenges the Broadening Top.

Nikkei Weekly Chart

The Nikkei challenged the upper trendline of its Orthodox Broadening Top formationin what may be a final exhaustion surge.This is considered the peak of the formation and a decline to mid-Cycle support at 13700.28 may be the next move. The Broadening formations represent a market that is out of control and has a highly emotional public participation. Of course, the bank of Japan is doing more than just cheerleading.

(Reuters) - Investors worldwide pulled $3.8 billion out of Japanese stock funds in the week ended on Wednesday, marking their biggest outflows since May 2010, data from a Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Merrill Lynch Global Research report showed on Friday.

Stock funds overall attracted $7 billion, marking the third straight week of inflows. Exchange-traded funds investing instocks got all of the new cash, with inflows of $12 billion, while $5 billion flowed out of equities mutual funds, according to the report, which also cited data from fund-tracker EPFR Global.

U.S. Dollar may go higher.

USD Weekly Chart

The US Dollar challenged last week’s high at 88.32 by a nominal .04, but with that challenge suggests that it may extend its rally even further.We may now see the dollar continue to rally through the end of November, even as it digests some of the gains it has recently made.

(OfTwoMinds) I have been suggesting for several years that the U.S. Dollar would confound those anticipating its demise by starting a long secular uptrend.In early September I made the case for a rising U.S. dollar, based on the basic supply and demand for dollars stemming from four dynamics:

Demand for dollars as reserves

Other nations devaluing their own currencies to increase exports

“Flight to safety” from periphery currencies to the reserve currencies

Reduced issuance of dollars due to declining U.S. fiscal deficits and the end of QE (quantitative easing)

Since then the dollar has continued its advance, and is now breaking out of a downtrend stretching back to 2005—and by some accounts, to 1985:

US Treasury Bond (NYSE:GOVT) remains in an exhaustion formation.

USD Weekly Chart

The Long Bond cannot seem to leave its exhaustion formation that it made five weeks ago.While it has failed to go higher, the reversal is becoming overdue. This weekend offers a probable reversal date that may take USB to mid-December.The potential target may be weekly Cycle Bottom support at 125.66.

(ZeroHedge) If yesterday's slightly tailing 10 Year auction was a non-event, today's $16 billion 30 Year refunding was one of the uglier long-end auctions in a while, which perhaps is to be expected in a world in which the Fed is, for the time being, no longer monetizing Treasurys and Dealers no longer have the option to turn around and flip the paper back to the Fed on a whim, and with guaranteed profit.

The highlights: printing at a high yield of 3.092%, this was a notable 1.7 bps tail to the 3.075 When Issued, and certainly wider than last month's 3.074% yield. Keep in mind yesterday's 10 Year priced inside of the October 10Y auction

Gold may be retesting resistance.

Gold Weekly Chart

Gold reached its first Cycle low beneath the Lip of its Cup with Handle formation.It is now challenging that long-term support. The rally may last another week as the Cycles Model suggests the decline may soon resume into early December.

(ZeroHedge) Just as China is buying 'cheap' oil with both hands and feet, so Russia, according to the latest data from The World Gold Council (WGC) has been buying gold in huge size. Dwarfing the rest of the world's buying in Q3, Russia added a stunning 55 tonnes to its reserves, as The Telegraph reports, Putin is taking advantage of lower gold prices to pack the vaults of Russia's central bank with bullion as it prepares for the possibility of a long, drawn-out economic war with the West.

Russia bought more gold in Q3 then all other countries combined...

The decline in Crude Oil may be temporarily over.

Crude Oil Weekly Chart

Crude came within 7 ticks of its Head & Shoulders target today, which may qualify it for a Trading cycle and Master cycle low. Should this be the Cyclical low we are looking for, there may be a few weeks of consolidation before it resumes a further decline.

(USAToday) Backers of the Keystone XL pipeline became emboldened recently by the prospect of a Republican-led Congress finally pushing the project through.

But can dropping crude prices punch a hole in the controversial project?

The cost of benchmark West Texas Intermediate oil dropped to $74.42 a barrel on Thursday — a 25% drop from the triple-digit highs it reached this summer. Federal analysts have warned that producers in the Canadian oil sands — slated to be a top consumer of the pipeline — will need oil prices to stay between $65 and $75 a barrel to make production there economically feasible.

China closed above the Broadening Top trendline.

Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index Weekly Chart

The Shanghai Index continued beyond the trendline in point 5 of an Orthodox Broadening Top. This weekend’s Trading Cycle Pivot may turn SSEC down to Point 6 which may go as far as its mid-cycle support at 2157.83 over the next two weeks or so.Soon after, the formation calls for a full retracement to the Cycle Bottom at 1918.58.

(ZeroHedge) Having told the world that it will not be undertaking system-wide rate cuts or stimulus - focusing more on idiosyncratic safety nets - last night's data from China is likely to have the PBOC frowning. Fixed Asset Investment (lowest growth since Dec 2001) and Retail Sales (lowest growth since Feb 2006) missed expectations, but it was the re-slump in Industrial Production (after a small 'huge-credit-injection-driven' bounce in September) that is most worrisome asChina's 2014 output is growing at its slowest since at least 2005. As Michael Pettis previously noted "China will be no different... growth miracles have always been the relatively easy part; it is the subsequent adjustment that has been the tough part."

The Banking Index may have reversed this week.

Bank Index Weekly Chart

--BKX didn’t do as well this week as some of its sister indexes.This week’s reversal may be the beginning of a third wave, which may be quite destructive. The next target (point 8) may be 20% beneath the lower trendline once it declines beneath its Short-term support at 71.18.

(ZeroHedge) While we have noted previously that "a cluster of central banking investors has become major players on world equity markets," and the BoJ has recently tripled its direct manipulative buying of stocks (after buying a record amount in August)... the conspiracy-theorist-dismissers will have to close their eyes and ears as the Swiss National Bank admits in its 2013 annual report that it greatly expanded its share of foreign stocks purchased... most notably small-cap companies.

Maybe it is time to reign in the SNB with the Gold Initiative?

(ZeroHedge) Early in 2014, when the FX rigging scandal was still news, one of the most disturbing developments to emerge was that none other than the venerable Bank of England itself had been engaged in collusion with various manipulating parties, explicitly those participating in "The Bandits Club", "Cartel" and other chatrooms, as described in "Bank Of England Encouraged Currency Manipulation By Banks." As Bloomberg reported at the time:

Bank of England officials told currency traders it wasn’t improper to share impending customer orders with counterparts at other firms, a practice at the heart of a widening probe into alleged market manipulation, according to a person who has seen notes turned over to regulators.

(ZeroHedge) Spot the banana republic:

Nation #1 spends and issues tens of trillions in taxpayer funds and debt, crushing the growth potential of future generations, just to bail out a banking sector full to the brim with criminal "riggers" (as today's settlements once again prove), where bubble mania was so pervasive not a single bank would have survived absent a global central bank bailout, and where bank executives wouldn't bend over for anything less than a million.

Nation #2 just sentenced two senior officials of a bank that collapsed under (a measly by New Normal standards) $1 billion in debt to 15 years in prison each for embezzlement and fraud.

Nation #1 is, of course, the US (or any other western nation). Nation #2 is Afghanistan.

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