The Puke and the Whimper

Action in gold and the gold shares continues to be brutal. But one thing that has really piqued my interest from a trading perspective was the high volume flushout in GDX back on January 25th. That was the highest volume GDX has done to date and really looked like it was the type of volume that reeked of total fear and emotion taking over and bad decisions being made. If you’ve followed charts for a while you’ll often see huge high volume days right at the bottom, when everyone wants to head for the exits at the same time. It doesn’t necessarily mean the market is ready to rocket higher at that point, but often times it marks bottoms or very close to the bottom since sellers have finally capitulated. It’s really kind of a cool thing to look at because the raw emotion is staring at you right in the face with the big red candle on high fear drenched volume.

I got further intrigued when I noticed a similar pattern in recent action in GDX to what happened back in July 2012, when GDX put in a bottom and started rocketing higher. It’s possible I could come up with a better name for this pattern but for right now I’m going to call it The Puke and The Whimper pattern. The Puke is simply the high volume fear based selling, when shares are literally being puked up by sellers who can’t take the sickness to their stomach anymore. The Whimper is the interesting part as it comes after the sellers are puked out, but they still are moaning and want to make it appear like they are still in pain. But since they have done most of their selling all they can do is utter a mere whimper.

Here’s the chart with The Puke and The Whimper pattern back in July 2012 and the possible second addition of the pattern after the action on February 11th. Notice how each Whimper was a low volume gap down, if you look closely at the chart I don’t think you’ll find lower volume on a gap down than either of those 2 days. In the first edition of the pattern the Whimper came about 6 trading days after the Puke, with the Whimper requiring one additional day after the gap down before it was off to the races. Currently the Whimper is about 10 trading days after the Puke, and it’s possible this Whimper would need a little more time to play out based on the strength of the recent Puke.

What I find intriguing about all of this is the nature of trading and making winning trades. Will the 35+ million shares that were sold on January 25th end up being part of a winning trade? They were sold into a support area, and at the end of a multi-month downleg, within the confines of a long term secular bull market. That sounds more like a fear induced stampede, with the short term as the focus, than well thought out selling with a long term time frame in mind. And at the end of the day is being part of the herd how you win at trading?

Source: Next Big Trade

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