We had mostly "do nothing" responses again this week but buyers or potential buyers came in close second, many of which said they were waiting for confirmation of the momentum divergence and failed breakdown before taking action.
We only had a few sellers, which is interesting because that's the camp we'd fall into as long as prices remain below support.
One of the main reasons for our bearish bias towards this chart is the fact that it's been in a long-term downtrend and consolidations tend to resolve themselves in the direction of the underlying trend.
In last week's Chart of the Week, we wrote about our bullish outlook on Gold and followed it up with a deep dive on the entire Precious Metals space, which included a number of trade ideas to express our thesis. This week, we have a table that helps provide a different perspective on its recent price action but arrives at the same bullish conclusion.
The shiny metal has gotten a lot of attention lately as it currently sits around its highest level in seven years.
After about a 9% surge off of this month's lows, we'd expect prices to consolidate in the near-term. But after that, we're betting on new all-time highs for Gold in the coming quarters as long as prices are above last year's highs near 1,560. Here's how we see it.
For those new to the exercise, we take a chart of interest and remove the x/y-axes and any other labels that would help identify it. The chart can be any security in any asset class on any timeframe on an absolute or relative basis. Maybe it’s a custom index or inverted, who knows!
We do all this to put aside the biases we have associated with this specific security/the market and come to a conclusion based solely on price.
You can guess what it is if you must, but the real value comes from sharing what you would do right now. Buy, Sell, or Do Nothing?
Let's take a look at what it means and what it's going to take for it to finally sustain new highs.
First, let's start with the Nifty IT Index on an absolute basis. Last week prices pushed above resistance near 16,500 to new all-time highs, but momentum diverged negatively and prices are now confirming a failed breakout...suggesting more time is needed to work through this overhead supply and continue its long-term trend to the upside.
The strongest Equity market in the world has been the US, however, last week prices started to confirm the weakness we were seeing under the surface since January. Today we wrote a brief piece on US market breadth which reinforces our view that defense remains the name of the game.
This follow-up is to make the point that if the strongest market in the world is catching down to weakness in the rest of the world, then India and other countries that have underperformed are likely to continue struggling in the near-term.
In fact, the breadth divergences we highlighted in the US are also playing out in India.
We've made it clear over the last few weeks that we don't want to be long stocks given current conditions and think there's downside risk from a short-term perspective, despite the structural picture remaining largely unscathed.
Given last week's slight downside follow-through in US Stocks, I wanted to share two breadth charts from our Market Internals Chartbook that summarizes current conditions well.
Relative strength is one of our primary tools as Technicians, but we're not talking about the Relative Strength Index.
Instead, we're talking about the relative performance of one security relative to another. By identifying those assets that are outperforming or underperforming, we know which have institutional support and which do not. Institutions are looking for relative strength and momentum
Much like the Relative Strength Index, we utilize this tool as a confirmation tool for price. When relative strength diverges from price, we can identify potential turning points in the trend.
With over 5,000 ETFs trading globally, there have never been more vehicles out there for a market participant to choose from, each with their own spin on a traditional asset.
Today I want to take a look at two WisdomTree ETFs that put what's becoming an ever-more popular spin on the vanilla Emerging Market and China indexes out there.
Although I'll briefly discuss the goal/methodology of these vehicles, our primary goal is to look at them from a Technician's perspective. What does this ETF's construction mean for the underlying holdings and exposure it's providing, and more importantly, its effect on price action?
We had a lot of "do nothing" responses this week, many of which were caveated with the fact that the structural trend is lower, thus anticipating an eventual breakdown but waiting for more data to come in to confirm it first.
We also had a number of responses with conviction to buy the test of support and plenty of others who wanted to sell into it or "look to get short." The majority took a neutral approach, preferring to see how prices react at this key level of interest before choosing a directional bias.
I think that is the most prudent thing to do in this situation as well, so with that as our backdrop let’s take a look at this week’s chart.