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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Worried Wednesday

It’s time to talk about physics again.

Back in mid-December I wrote an article on Stock Market Physics and we talked about how I like to think about market movements as astronomical events that are governed by the laws of physics, specifically, orbital physics realting to gravity, mass, force and acceleration.

I’m not going to go all over it again but I will probably update it soon as there are many articles since then refining the concept but the key point for today is we have not yet fallen out of the orbital range we established in November, when we broke clearly away from the Dow 10K-11K range we had been in since early 2004.

Today is not a challenge for the bulls, we already expect a disaster.  The Hang Seng and the Nikkei EACH gave up 500 points last night on a combination of the US market melt-down, strong Yen performance and 2.7% inflation in China.  Europe fared no better with 100 point drops across the board (2%) but weighted to the financial sector (it was HBC who started this mess).

So the onus is on the bears to show us what they’ve got today.  The bulls have held the 12,000 line on the Dow since Nov 6th with only the briefest pinprick below it on March 5th.  If the bears can’t take us below 12,000 on a day like today, I think it only PROVES that 12,000 is a real market floor we can count on.  An orbiting body (let’s say the Dow) moves around it’s primary in an elliptical path, the "highest" point of the orbit is called the apoapsis (say 12,800) while the "lowest" part of the orbit is called the periapsis (say 12,000).  Only by observing the highs and lows of the orbiting body can we get a true idea of the exact position of the primary (market neutrality).

 

Unless we get some really good downside follow through, I will be done with my short positions and keeping tight stops on our calls but sitting mainly in cash and looking for some buying opportunities.  To sum it up:  At this point, if we don’t break down, it is very possible we WON"T break down!  Let’s keep an eye on some true bottoms but, like that S&P chart from 2004 I posted yesterday, there is nothing healthier than a good double bottom test to shake out the weak hands – clearing the path for the bulls to run wild.

There is no hurry though, if this is a real bottom we should flatten out a bit and slowly pick up speed as we whip around the primary.  12,800 is far away and we will miss very little by making sure we break 12,300 before we even consider buying more.

Here’s the current levels we’ll be looking for today but up is good, down is bad – simple enough?

 

10 Day

3/5 Low

Danger

Possible

Index

High

Low

Finish

Zone

Recover

Dow 12,786 12,111 12,075 12,000 12,353
Transports 2,983 2,736 2,714 2,700 2,791
S&P 1,460 1,374 1,377 1,360 1,401
NYSE 9,453 8,838 8,926 8,800 9,015
Nasdaq 2,525 2,340 2,350 2,350 2,387
SOX 489 457 471 450 466
Russell 829 760 769 760 775
Hang Seng 20,844 19,137 18,842 18,500 19,520
Nikkei 18,219 16,642 16,676 16,000 16,975
BSE (India) 14,723 12,344 12,529 12,000 12,591
DAX 7,027 6,510 6,497 6,200 6,640
CAC 40 5,771 5,325 5,345 5,250 5,432
FTSE 6,444 6,058 6,057 6,000 6,179

Looks like we need to keep a close eye on the Nasdaq as our weakest canary as it is touching its November low already, perhaps 20 points away from a real breakdown.

We have oil inventories today so that should be very interesting.  Any net build in barrels would be devastating for energy traders, check Zman’s morning commentary and, of course, tune in to comments around 10:30 and we’ll have plays lined up in both directions!

It’s all up to our friend the dollar today as it does battle with the Yen but the weakness in gold below $650 suggests that currency is turning west, not yellow.  It takes time to unwind the carry trade so expect the demand for dollars to build slowly (if it happens at all) but, as I’ve said before, if it breaks out – we could have quite a short squeeze on our hands!

No picks today, let’s manage the ones we have!

 

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