| In
our last public posting titled "Dollar
Seasonal Trends Dominate Market" we stated that the
dollar's selloff in March was "simply a test of the lows
before the greenback rallies above its January highs."
Below we show the chart of dollar seasonality where we correctly
forecasted a move to 88 in the dollar index before a near term
pullback then final rally to 92 by August 2005 where we plan to
take profits.

As is now
clear, the “No” votes in Europe helped sink the euro, but
more importantly this offers a strong supporting argument to why
we believe the next big move for the stock market is DOWN.
Consider that
the process of integration began in 1946 after World War II when
a number of European leaders became convinced that the only way
to secure a lasting peace between their countries was to unite
them economically and politically. This process began when the
stock market adjusted for inflation was at a nadir. It then
carried upward and onward on the back of a worldwide Bull
Market. In 1957, the Treaty of Rome established the European
Economic Community. Then, in 1967, at the Zenith of the
inflation adjusted Dow, the institutions of the three European
communities were finally merged. From this point on, there was a
single Commission and a single Council of Ministers as well as
the European Parliament.
Little progress
was made during the 1970’s Bear Market, but as the market
began to recover the first direct elections were held in 1979
and the barriers to travel were greatly reduced during the 1980s
until the Single Market was formally completed at the end of
1992 and citizens could travel freely. In 1999, as global stock
markets reached a momentous peak the euro was introduced.
The fact that
two of the original six countries that have strived for more
unification over the past six decades would vote “No”
signifies a major reversal in sentiment from unification to the
breakdown of the confederacy. Mind you, the US Civil War was
ignited after a 30-year bear market convinced the Southern
States that they would be more prosperous on their own. In
similar fashion, the breakdown of deficit targets and now
possibly the euro shows how Bear Markets tear down the icons of
Bull Markets and slow economic progress to a grinding halt.
The following
commentary is from our weekly report on June, 6 2005:
Stock
Focus: For weeks now we have said this countertrend
rally would top around the 1200 mark. As the market chopped
higher we showed you that Fibonacci time relationships called
for a major peak last week, which we said offered an excellent
opportunity to position short if you had not already done so.
Below we have updated the same Elliott Wave count and the
Fibonacci time series we have been talking about.

In the top
chart note that a Fibonacci 21-calendar day turn cycle has been
in effect. Moreover, this lined up perfectly with the March turn
cycle which has marked 4 major tops and 2 major bottoms over the
past six years – none of which have were challenged. Note that
the confluence of price and time targets resulted in a bearish
weekly reversal (orange box) as the market rallied to the
underside of broken trendline support. We recommend adding to
shorts on a break below trendline support (blue line top chart)
next week – risk above March highs.

Bond
Focus: Our bond short was stopped out for a wash, but
we remain even more convinced that bonds have topped. A variety
of sentiment measures that we follow reached highs above 90%
bullish last seen at the February highs when we also made a
strong call for a bond market top.
In the
following chart we show how two separate cycle turn dates
converge this month. Note that each orange bar represents a
9-month cycle turn whereas the blue lines on the top chart
represent a 12-month high-low-high cycle turn date connecting
the 2003 high, 2004 low and this month’s 2005 highs.

The reason we
feel that this cycle turn date will end up being fairly
significant is that two important bond market mavens have turned
from bearish to bullish on bonds (Gross and Roach) which we view
as a capitulation by the last bastions of bond market vigilantes
right when the technicals say sell.
Note that the
five-year note has rallied right into key resistance at 110 just
as two cycle turn windows converge. Moreover, real yields
(yields adjusted for inflation) as determined by yields divided
by the price of gold, just reached a new all time low. Also note
that major bond market tops in our cycle turn windows coincided
with major lows in the yield/gold ratio (as shown with the blue
lines connecting the top and bottom charts).

In the price
action is imbedded intelligence and the sharp bearish daily
reversal after a clear “five wave” pattern higher from the
March lows suggest we should see at least a multi-week pullback
in bonds. But for a move to 111 to occur, key resistance turned
support at 113 will have to first be broken.
A multi-week
rising rate scenario would also lend a hand to our view that
stock prices are about to head sharply lower. In addition,
rising rates would aid the dollar’s newfound friends in the
analyst community that are now talking about interest rates and
not the deficit. Isn’t it fun watching them come out of the
woodwork like the ‘knew’ it all along.
As such, we
expect a dollar peak to occur right as the stock market decline
convinces the market that the Fed has finished its “ninth
inning” of rate hikes. This is why we follow an integrated
approach of stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities to make a
“holistic” forecast on the overall market trends.
Currency
Focus: Our biggest mistake this past week has been
trying to call a top to a “wave III” rally. Yet our two
hedges have not hurt us in the least. Recall that we purchased
EUR/USD at 1.2513 and moved our stops up to here on the rally to
1.2585 before the French referendum vote. We were obviously
stopped out, but put on a hedge in GBP/USD at 1.8210 and then
again at 1.8110 after getting stopped out of that. Sterling
ended the week at 1.8145 and we remain long USD/CHF from 1.1830
and short AUD/USD from 0.7750, which we plan to hold until we
cover our entire dollar long position as these two pairs
represent our “core.”
Below we show
an update of our wave count that has been in effect since
February. As we showed you last week, the euro was sitting right
on key support at 1.25, which marked both channel support and
the Fibonacci 61.8% retracement. We thought this would lead to a
bounce back to the key 1.2750 level before a renewed selloff.
But the French and Dutch “No” votes led to a sharp 400 pip
decline as the vote served as a catalyst to shake out the last
euro bulls.

Note that we
have either finished “wave 3 of C” or will do so in the
coming days with a “wave 4” bounce to give way to the final
selloff in “wave 5” where we will look to close out our
dollar longs. With the 1.25 support level now serving as
resistance we would use any bounce back towards this level as an
ideal opportunity to add to your shorts.
The most
troubling aspect of this dollar rally is that precious metals
have not fallen below their February lows. It has also been
interesting to note the recent surge in copper and silver, while
aluminum remains beaten down. So we are not inclined to back off
our bearish view on gold unless the euro price of gold were to
surge above €350 per ounce. Note that next
week marks the 6-year high-low-high turn cycle in gold priced in
euros. If €350 can hold we expect a
protracted decline in gold. If it breaks it would indicate that
the markets were shunning paper money in favor of hard
currencies and we would turn bullish on gold. Key resistance is
at $438 in gold and $8 in silver.

Getting back to
our FX forecast, below we update for you the same chart from
last week identifying where we felt the dollar rally would
terminate. Note that our “zig zag” formation represents our
expectation for a “wave IV” consolidation move in the near
future before a final decline to 1.17 in the euro.
This level has
a high degree of technical significance and the fact that the
euro’s selloff gathered a lot of bearish momentum from the
“No” votes, we think that a move to 1.17 will likely mark a
crescendo of bearishness necessary to mark the lows.

As such, we are
still expecting a pullback in the dollar in “wave IV” next
week but only looking to short it as a hedge to 1/3 of our
dollar long position. Traders looking to initiate positions
should buy the dollar dips with risk limited to just below the
85.25 mark, as only a move though here would invalidate our
current Elliott Wave count.
Finally, for
fun we update our S&P 500 to Dollar Index
bottoming-formation relationship that we first showed you back
in March and last updated in the May 8 weekly edition.
Below we show
you the same series of charts from the May 8 edition. Note that
we then made a strong call for a rally through 85.25 to target
92 over the coming months. In the middle chart we have updated
the dollar’s progress to date. Finally recall that the bottom
chart is of the S&P 500, which we are using as a guide for
what to expect when a major market breaks a three-year downtrend
line.


© 2005 Jes Black
Editorial Archive
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