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SHOW ME THE MONEY
by Dominick
a.k.a."spwaver"
TradingTheCharts.com
April 2, 2007

Surprise, surprise, another volatile week.  The bears got their big selloff, but it was in corn, not in the S&P’s! Corn opened down lock limit as the S&P’s created great trading opportunities for the “unbiased” trader.

As we ended 2006, I promised 2007 would be the year of volatility, and hasn’t that been the truth?! It feels like only yesterday we were grinding up each day point by point. Friday’s closing bell wrapped up March, as well as the first quarter, but investors who were pegged to the S&P are in for a surprise when they receive their quarterly statements.  The S&P closed 2 points from its 2006 close.

I’m sure many traders did better, but I’m also sure many are in the red this year. After all the juicy swings we’ve seen so far, that can only happen by being with the “in crowd” and following the wrong sentiment all over town. In January and February, bulls stayed too long and bears shorted too early. As we fell from the diagonal, Bulls bought back too early and bears stayed too late. Meanwhile, unbiased traders are making money on both ends.

But not only did the bears stay short too long when the market turned back up recently, they’ve been buying puts everyday as the S&P’s retrace a full 75% off the lows. Traders have been playing this broken record for the last 4 years! Isn’t this setup played out by now? Sure, this could be the real one, but why give back 75% when we have no confirmation yet?

Since March 14th, where we saw our SPX 1360 area validated, it’s been a challenge to educate our rapidly growing number of new members. Old members who’ve successfully made the transition from bear to trader are just fine.  Many new members still seem to want to follow the crowd and are having a tough time because the streets are filled with “crash” counts. I can’t really blame them as it’s a hard sentiment to escape from. That said, they are also starting to recognize that going long from 1360’s to 1440 also makes your portfolio grow rapidly. Don’t get me wrong, I’ll be on the bearish side as soon as I see the market grow some fur, but not before that.

A good case in point for the bear camp was the drop in February. Readers all knew that I had an S&P target 1462/1470 and was ready to short it, but not before confirmation. After getting short close to the top, I sensed that a low was being built in March, rather than a trapdoor for continuation of the drop. This week, we might have the same situation, but on a smaller degree. Has the market topped out in a second wave retracement on March 23rd, or are we about to set a huge bear trap to finally get that run to new highs that sets up the classic capitulation?

As we’ve basically nailed these last two swings, we think we have the correct possible patterns and are waiting for a bit more price action to confirm. It might only take another day or two.  I believe we will have a decent move within the next 20 points that we are ready to trade.

Let’s talk a bit about last week. I had stated the following on last week’s update:

“Next week we have some work to do in the short term patterns. We should’ve already seen a pullback, but the market still has a bid from trapped shorts. My short term trend charts have already weakened”

The market wasted no time in dropping a big 13 points in the first hour of the week. Expecting that drop, as a 4th wave pattern, we were able to go long the bottom as it screamed to the upside, escaping another bear trap. From that high, the shorts were able to trap bulls into thinking that a triangle 4th wave was forming and used Bernanke’s speech to execute. I also had that same triangle and unfortunately missed the selloff into the speech but as “traders”, we then got back aboard that low which almost made it back up to another high.

And boy did we trade this week! 10-15 point swings are now almost a sure thing. With the aid of my Proprietary Fibonacci methods, we were able to zone into targets that were 1 tick away of highs and lows of a fast-moving market.  One example was a low target of 1423 on Thursday (actual low was 1423.25) and resistance at 1440 on Friday (actual high was 1439.75). Friday morning’s pre-market post had warned that 1440 was a key area and that stopping there could be a problem. The S&P futures seemed to know that. After a gap up, they reversed to sell off into a low of 1418. Those 2 swings alone totaled 38 points, and prove how much there is to take from a market that closed flat for the day, and the year!

As most traders sold into what looked to be the start of a 3rd of a 3rd of a 3rd, this chart was posted right off the lows showing a simple test of prior break out. Price jumped off that low to close up 11 points away from it.

I hate to sound like I’m making fun of the bearish case as I’m looking forward to trading it as much as the next trader, but so far the bears are losing the fight once again. There still is another day or so to have their way but as one of our seasoned traders posted,

“After the alleged completed wave 2, prices should have declined sharply in clearly impulsive fashion.  THEY DID NOT.  There is no way that one can reasonably count the decline from the 12511.0 high of March 23 as either an initial "five" or even part of one.  For now, the drop from that high appears best counted as a corrective "triple three" to today's low.  As long as last week's high remains intact, however, I agree that this is the best shot the bears have.”

I agree 100% with that statement, and if the bears cant “show me the money” by early next week, we have better plans for the market.

Last week I included a chart that showed an analog that we had been following. Below is the updated chart that has served us well since December. If we get confirmation of a certain pattern early next week, we may put this chart on the back burner and concentrate on a better idea. But in the meantime:

Another statement I made last week was:

"I will simply caution that once we see the market validate our suspected patterns, we’ll be preparing for more violent moves in the future. I will also be cautioning our day traders about going home with positions."

I want to reiterate that statement this week as we are far from calming down. As you saw this week, both volatility and gaps are here to stay, so be careful.  With that said, I’m not  sure if we still need a retest or lower low of Fridays action before turning back up if the bearish case is dead. I would like to see that happen, but also willing to chase it up if I have confirmation. Doesn’t matter anyway, this market is full of points for the “Unbiased” Elliott Wave” trader.  In last weeks update I mentioned we had a possible important date around April 9th. Keep that in mind along with the Island in the S&P that I had showed, in case the bears lose the fight here. If the bearish case has begun, you will know sooner than you think!

Grains.
Earlier I mentioned the lock limit down in corn. We had been waiting for that for some time now as we had a nice setup.

Oil
Crude shot up to its highest levels since December this week.  Remember when the talk was about oil in the $30’s, except for me, who was telling you to expect mid $60’s again?  Well, here we are.  No doubt some buyers were getting in this week on the news coming out of Iran.  While this situation can honestly go either way from here, it’ll probably be awhile before any new escalations, so there’s a good chance oil settles back down a bit.

Have a profitable, and safe week trading, and remember: “Unbiased Elliott Wave works!”

Dominick


© 2007 Dominick A.K.A. "spwaver"
tradingthecharts.com
Editorial Archive

Market analysts are always welcome to contribute to the Forum or newsletter.
Email me @ Dominick@tradingthecharts.com if you have any interest.

Ideas from this update are provided as general information and are not investment recommendations. TTC accepts no liability whatsoever for any losses resulting from action you may take based on the contents of its charts, commentaries, or price data. Each person must do his or her own research to determine the appropriateness of taking a position in any financial or commodity market. If you are uncertain, please check with your licensed financial advisor or broker prior to taking any action. Securities and commodities markets inherently involve risk.

CONTACT INFORMATION
Dominick
A.K.A. "spwaver"
NJ, USA
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