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patterns have clearly become bearish, with the TNX heading down
for the next 2-4 weeks minimally. The short-term stochastics had
the %K curl down beneath the %D. A reversal is 2-4 weeks away. The
upper Bollinger bands are developing a ribbon formation, with the
upper 55 MA BB still rising; when it starts to curl down, a bottom
will be in or shortly be put in place. The lower Bollinger bands
are declining, which should see the TNX reach the printed values
in the next while.
Figure 1

The moving
averages are still in a bullish alignment, but a bear cross is
likely to occur in 1-2 months. There will likely be no strength in
the TNX until this occurs. The full stochastics are on a longer
term setting, with the %K well beneath the %D. A crossover to the
upside is generally correlated with a change in the direction.
Figure 2

The weekly TNX is
shown below. The Fibonacci time extensions are shown mid-way
through the chart. The next time point is October 2006. The Fib
retracements of the advance are shown on the right hand side. The
50% level has been a strong support level, so a break below
signals a move to the 61.8% retracement level. The full
stochastics are in a strong decline, with the oscillations
generally taking two years (one year up, one year down). The TNX
could decline into early 2006 if the current pattern is
extrapolated.
Figure 3

The full Elliott
Wave pattern since 2003 for the TNX is shown below. The Degree of
labeling has wave CorY.(B)or(X) is place. The decline is a near
perfect impulse, but will it develop into a zigzag or wave C all
the way down to 30?? (I think a zigzag develops). It should be
noted that wave C could form to complete wave Y.(X), but there is
no certainty in this. The full stochastics and Bollinger bands
will aid in determining a reversal in the current labeling scheme.
An impulsive wave is nearing completion, so expect a 10% to 38.2%
retracement of the decline before another leg down begins.
Figure 4

This basically
translates into no one wanting to buy 10 Year T-bills, because
they see inflation brewing for the short term. Why own longer-term
bonds that pay equal to or less than short-term financial
instruments. What this means is the US government will have to
raise interest rates to attract foreign money to finance their
deficits. Think of a balance in the US. On one side there is the
real estate market that is an incredible bubble. On the other side
there is the government issuance of bonds, T-bills etc. to finance
their deficits. This is and incredible balancing act. What the FED
must do is the following:
-
If
the real estate side gets too heavy, further government debt
must be issued to balance things out (more houses translates
into more imports required for homes).
-
If
the government issues too much debt, the real estate market
gets heavier with credit (more credit being thrown to chase
the market).
-
The
housing market decreases a certain amount and the issuance of
debt is reduced an according amount so things decline
together, not tipping the scale.
I believe point
iii) is what we are witnessing. There will be a controlled rate of
decline in debt, which will lead to a gradual reduction in the US
real estate bubble. Real estate will decline before it has an
absolute crash (2008 is my target), because if the housing market
goes, then the recession in the US will be hit very hard. Auto
production in the US is declining and plants are shutting down,
but China and India, each country is putting 2 million vehicles on
the road each year. North Americans make way too much to make cars
and send them abroad, so they simply are closing down shop in
places that are not profitable. Even though the US is slowing
down, China and India are growing fast. They are starting the
credit card boom, I think the Captain put last year only 22% of
Chinese had credit cards. Asia is parabolically growing their
economies. They will industrialize in a fraction of the time it
took the US to do.
We are off the
gold standard, so this allows money to grow infinitely without
being hitched to a standard. Even though debt is ultimately
deflationary, the immediate effect is inflation, so do not mix up
the aftermath with the present. Energy is getting tighter and
tighter; once people in China have a fridge they are not likely
going to want to give it up (would you?). China is printing to
grow their economy and the US must do so to secure energy reserves
and allow their credit to expand.
Before the US
raises interest rates, I believe they are going to allow their
currency to decline to 72. Oil prices will rise, as will gold.
This will put a hit on all aspects of the global economy, but it
will make the US a cheaper place to do business. At this point,
Europe will be bleeding and many global forces will force China to
revalue their currency (or no oil etc.). China has the Remimbi
pegged to the US dollar, so how ever much the US dollar declines,
China still carries the same competitive advantage. Get out of Wal-Mart
stock while one has the chance, because the revaluation will
translate into a 30-40% decline in their revenue.
This is why more
time is needed (late 2006) before gold is really going to have a
big move ($1200-2000/ounce, not including an expected move to
$500-600 expected in the next year). Whether wave III in the HUI
begins soon or simply a complex running correction with wave II
finishing at a level well above the high of wave I in late 2006
remains to be seen. There is no way of knowing until 8-10 months
from now, but I would not want to be left out of the coming
base/bottoming period the HUI is putting in. Much of the above
process takes time and the following must occur before gold is
going anywhere. Resource stocks are going to go higher, because
their simply is going to be not enough energy to go around and the
large producers are going to have to buy out the smaller ones to
keep their oil reserves up.
Deflation to
follow, but the monetary expansion will continue. I read hedge
funds are going to liquidate positions, which may spill into the
market. The number of people shorting stocks is high, so this will
buffer any decline and short-squeeze the market higher. P.S. The
gold stocks are now basing and the indicators used as above are
accurate at pinpointing the near bottom.
Frame Shift
Analysis Applications in Elliott Wave
If anyone knows
basic biology, DNA sequences are the code for making all proteins,
RNA and tRNA in the body. Each unit consists of 3 bases, T, A, C
and G and are called codons. A sequence such as
ACTGAGGACATADGGATAGATACAGT (ok I added GATA as a joke) can be read
as ACT- GAG-GAC-ATA etc.. However, If one starts reading one base
pair over to C, then the reading frame is CTG-AGG-ACA-TAD etc. A
protein will be read in only one correct reading frame, however,
genetic engineering sometimes has inserted DNA vectors in the
wrong reading frame. Try applying this to reading Elliott Wave
patterns. If a complex wave structure has :3’s and 5’s in an
incohesive pattern, try starting the reading frame of the pattern
from another position and look for 5-3-5, 3-3-5, 3-3-3, 3-3-3-3-3
etc. The patterns should align into an Elliott Wave count that
fits well.

© 2005 David Petch
Editorial Archive
David
Petch
TreasureChests.info
Email
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