I believe that energy analysts are absolutely delusional to think Crude production will slow significantly, especially with Oil back near the $60 mark. During the recent, lengthy bull market, tens of billions of Dollars were invested in Crude infrastructure, so there is too much at stake to simply shut down operations and walk away. Investors and participants in any industry that has experienced a 15 year bull market won’t change their beliefs overnight – it takes time for sentiment to shift. Most are far too emotionally and financially vested in the industry, so it’s unreasonable to think that a 9 month decline is going to drive an immediate adjustment to the imbalance in supply and demand.
Granted, Oil will see some immediate production cuts, but these will be temporary in nature. They are not long term oil field closures, but rather decreases (or cessations) in the expansion of wells. Once we see some price recovery – as at present – companies will quickly react and start drilling again. Unfortunately, similar to the Gold bear market, I believe that this is the beginning of a long and arduous grind lower over a number of years.
In the short term however, there are positives to report. The fact that Crude barely responded (lower) on Friday to a fairly decent sell-off in Equities suggests that the move higher has further to go. The current Daily Cycle is clearly Right Translated, and there is pent-up demand here after 9 months of massive declines. I expect that the counter-trend action is currently too powerful to end, so Oil should continue to move higher. The next Daily Cycle top might not come until after Day 30, so there could be another 2 weeks of upside ahead.
On the weekly Cycle, the chart is as clear as they come. After a long, savage bear market crash, Crude briefly recovered, only to quickly drop again and suck in as many bears as possible. The subsequent rally, which many are calling a new “bull rally”, should continue higher for some time. But once the Investor Cycle eventually tops, the drops should lead to bulls being slaughtered again.
I believe that the 10 month decline that we witnessed is now over. That move has run its course and a new Yearly Cycle is underway. I don’t necessarily believe that new lows need to occur quickly, but I do believe that the upside should be capped and that, by the end of this Yearly Cycle, we will see Crude back near the $30-$40 level.
Possible Trading Ideas
Longer term traders could pick up positions (Long) looking towards a June high in crude prices. Although in my opinion, the risk/reward is not all that favorable and they would need to be prepared to weather some volatility. Remember that the crude market is still under a new bear market influence.
For the short term trader, the next trade consideration would be to short crude around my price target $60-$62. But you would need to ensure that the Daily Cycle is advanced enough in the timing band for a good Short trade. And now that we’ve seen an upside breakout, making this a Right Translated Daily Cycle, we should wait until a price reversal after Day 30 (currently on Day 23) before considering a Short trade. So it is unlikely we’ll be looking at a trade this week.
The Financial Tap publishes two member reports per week, a weekly premium report and a midweek market update report. The reports cover the movements and trading opportunities of the Gold, S&P, Oil, $USD, US Bond’s, and Natural Gas Cycles. Along with these reports, members enjoy access to two different portfolios and trade alerts. Both portfolios trade on varying time-frames (from days, weeks, to months), there is a portfolio to suit all member preferences.
You’re just 1 minute away from profitable trades! please visit: https://thefinancialtap.com
Feel free to share this post via the below social media avenues.
A Period of Speed
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Midweek Market Update – May 13th
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Turning Points
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Midweek Market Update – May 6th
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Yen Troubles to Continue
/in Public /by Bob LoukasA clear and decisive US Dollar Cycle pattern has emerged, and that’s always good news. We have a Daily Cycle that moved perfectly to both time and price expectations, and price is now poised to turn higher in a new Daily Cycle. With the Dollar at oversold levels not seen in well over a year, it is interesting to note that sentiment has quickly started to turn against the Dollar. From the perspective of a longer time-frame, it’s possible that this is also an Investor Cycle Low in the making. (Glossary of Cycle terms)
Looking at this week’s COT report, we see that US Dollar Longs are at the lowest level since mid-December. Sentiment remains elevated overall, but a marked retreat the past few weeks has moved sentiment back to level that could support a new Investor Cycle rally in a bull market.
Of particular interest is the US Dollar to Yen COT report. It shows traders have entirely retreated from bearish bets against the Yen, and the net Short position is the least bearish since October 2012. Not coincidentally, the COT positioning in the summer of 2012 was the basis from which the Yen began a correction. I believe a good setup is presenting itself at present.
Source: Sentimentrader.com
The structural problems in Japan are too great to ignore, and the Japan Central Bank is compensating for them by engaging in quantitative easing. I do not believe that the JCB thinks that QE is the best policy, but, rather, that it needs to buy its own debt due to a dearth of other buyers. The JCB has openly made it very clear that it will not stop buying debt, and the result of a massive balance sheet expansion can only be a huge realignment in the Yen versus other currencies.
Source: Goldman Sachs
A look at the weekly Yen index (below) shows that it has not rallied despite the Dollar’s falling for 8 weeks into at least a deep Daily Cycle Low (DCL). There has been no demand to push the Yen higher while the Dollar has fallen, unlike the Euro, which has staged a counter-trend move.
In addition, the MACD has been rising since Jan 2015, but the Yen’s price has remained flat. Because the Yen did not respond (higher) as the Dollar fell and as traders increased (COT) Longs and covered Shorts, I can only assume that a new leg lower is approaching. One more thing to note: extremely tight Bollinger Bands tell me that a big move is imminent.
Trade Idea: One could consider taking a Short Yen position at this point. The position could be a full Daily Cycle too early, because the dollar might have another Cycle of retracement before putting in a deeper Investor Cycle turn. But because the Yen did nothing during the last (failed) Dollar Daily Cycle, a short Yen position here should hold above reasonable stops if the trade is a little early. The idea is to capture what I believe is a larger degree Yen fall over a longer time-frame. (3-4 months).
The Financial Tap publishes two member reports per week, a weekly premium report and a midweek market update report. The reports cover the movements and trading opportunities of the Gold, S&P, Oil, $USD, US Bond’s, and Natural Gas Cycles. Along with these reports, members enjoy access to two different portfolios and trade alerts. Both portfolios trade on varying time-frames (from days, weeks, to months), there is a portfolio to suit all member preferences.
You’re just 1 minute away from profitable trades! please visit: https://thefinancialtap.com/landing/try#
Feel free to share this post via the below social media avenues.
Dollar Round Two
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Midweek Market Update – April 29th
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Back to our Regular Programming
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Midweek Market Update – April 22nd
/in Premium /by Bob LoukasYou don’t have access to view this content
Crude Bull Market Hope
/in Public /by Bob LoukasI believe that energy analysts are absolutely delusional to think Crude production will slow significantly, especially with Oil back near the $60 mark. During the recent, lengthy bull market, tens of billions of Dollars were invested in Crude infrastructure, so there is too much at stake to simply shut down operations and walk away. Investors and participants in any industry that has experienced a 15 year bull market won’t change their beliefs overnight – it takes time for sentiment to shift. Most are far too emotionally and financially vested in the industry, so it’s unreasonable to think that a 9 month decline is going to drive an immediate adjustment to the imbalance in supply and demand.
Granted, Oil will see some immediate production cuts, but these will be temporary in nature. They are not long term oil field closures, but rather decreases (or cessations) in the expansion of wells. Once we see some price recovery – as at present – companies will quickly react and start drilling again. Unfortunately, similar to the Gold bear market, I believe that this is the beginning of a long and arduous grind lower over a number of years.
In the short term however, there are positives to report. The fact that Crude barely responded (lower) on Friday to a fairly decent sell-off in Equities suggests that the move higher has further to go. The current Daily Cycle is clearly Right Translated, and there is pent-up demand here after 9 months of massive declines. I expect that the counter-trend action is currently too powerful to end, so Oil should continue to move higher. The next Daily Cycle top might not come until after Day 30, so there could be another 2 weeks of upside ahead.
On the weekly Cycle, the chart is as clear as they come. After a long, savage bear market crash, Crude briefly recovered, only to quickly drop again and suck in as many bears as possible. The subsequent rally, which many are calling a new “bull rally”, should continue higher for some time. But once the Investor Cycle eventually tops, the drops should lead to bulls being slaughtered again.
I believe that the 10 month decline that we witnessed is now over. That move has run its course and a new Yearly Cycle is underway. I don’t necessarily believe that new lows need to occur quickly, but I do believe that the upside should be capped and that, by the end of this Yearly Cycle, we will see Crude back near the $30-$40 level.
Possible Trading Ideas
Longer term traders could pick up positions (Long) looking towards a June high in crude prices. Although in my opinion, the risk/reward is not all that favorable and they would need to be prepared to weather some volatility. Remember that the crude market is still under a new bear market influence.
For the short term trader, the next trade consideration would be to short crude around my price target $60-$62. But you would need to ensure that the Daily Cycle is advanced enough in the timing band for a good Short trade. And now that we’ve seen an upside breakout, making this a Right Translated Daily Cycle, we should wait until a price reversal after Day 30 (currently on Day 23) before considering a Short trade. So it is unlikely we’ll be looking at a trade this week.
The Financial Tap publishes two member reports per week, a weekly premium report and a midweek market update report. The reports cover the movements and trading opportunities of the Gold, S&P, Oil, $USD, US Bond’s, and Natural Gas Cycles. Along with these reports, members enjoy access to two different portfolios and trade alerts. Both portfolios trade on varying time-frames (from days, weeks, to months), there is a portfolio to suit all member preferences.
You’re just 1 minute away from profitable trades! please visit: https://thefinancialtap.com
Feel free to share this post via the below social media avenues.