Quarterly and Monthly charts II

Nearing the quarter close it is an especially good time to remind ourselves of the larger moves and trends by checking quarterly and monthly charts. I covered the USA mains here, included these charts for oil in today's post, and here are some other USA ETFs I like to watch. 

Sum
IBB Q chart 2 bars with RSI 90 - an incredible parabolic move that had to have a dramatic end. This sector probably in a very long consolidation period, but M chart suggests bounce.
SOXX looks good especially above the M 20MA; another reason to hold longs.
XLF congested (between rising and falling MAs on both charts) but still relatively weaker index on many levels; another reason to keep on short candidate list. 
XLE bounced off M 200MA but 10MA still pushing down and looks to me like it could drop back down to form some higher low. 

IBB Q chart here. This had an amazing run and led the rally for years. 2 quarterly closes with RSI above 90! That is a parabolic move and anyone holding without any profit protection plan at that point was just delusional. A very long consolidation is due. 

This might be setting up for a bounce. Small red bar on the lower BB and just above a nicely rising 50MA. But I don't think the quarterly chart will zoom back up to highs anytime soon. 

SOXX Q chart looks pretty good with higher close (at current level) and RSI room to go up.

SOXX M above the 20MA which is another reason to be holding the long positions. 

XLF Q held 20MA but below flat or slightly falling 50MA. Glaring lower high compared to 2007 of course. 

XLF M held rising 50MA but stuck under 10, 20, and 200MAs.

XLE Q chart held the lower BB but under a rising 50MA.

And there is a bounce from a M 200MA with classic RSI and BB divergence too. But 10MA still pushing down and this may have to form some higher low. 

Big levels

The amount of indexes or ETFs that turned from long term levels - by this I mean yearly or half-year pivots - is rather amazing. These weeks are rare. The odds favor more on the bounce, but how far it gets we shall see - and use the shorter term pivots, especially the FebPs which will be in play in about a week - to gauge the strength. Of course all the levels below that broke and recovered by the weekly close will have to hold.

All charts weekly with year and half-year levels only (no quarterly or monthly). Listing comments first, then the charts. If you get confused to which is which, look for the light grey watermark of sorts identifying the index / ETF.

This post has gotten quite long, and I still didn't cover two categories - currencies and commodities namely, oil. I will do another post on that soon, but check the recent blog post on oil that pointed to the key level YS1 a day before the low!

USA mains stock indexes & ETFs
SPX / SPY / ES - all broke YS1s & 1HS1s, but recovered on close (hard to see 1HS1 on chart b/c so close to YS1)

NDX / QQQ / NQ - low on NDX near exact, QQQ disparate structure ie not on YS1, NQ more like ES

INDU / DIA - lows on YS1 & 1HS1 combo

RTY / IWM held YS2 / 1HS2 combo area. (Note: these two charts added on 1/27.)

NYA - recovered YS1, but still a fraction under 1HS1

USA additional stock indexes & ETFs
IBB - weaker bounce off YS1

SOXX - better move up from 1HS1. The Pivotal Perspective prefers SOXX over IBB here.

XLE - also YS1 low and recovery of 1HS1 

XLF - I don't know what to make of pivots this year due to massive 8/24 spike, so not showing here

Safe havens & risk indicators
TYX - just slightly below its YP; recovery would put in back in congestion zone above YP but below 1HP; below YP remains bearish yield and bullish bonds. 

TNX - rebounded from 1HS1

TLT - high on 1HR1 near exact

ZB - high on YR1 / 1HR1 combo, but could be pause and not rejection.

ZN - also high on YR1 / 1HR1 combo, but also perhaps pause and not rejection.

HYG - low on 1HS1

VIX - poked above, but did not close above, the YP for the last 2 weeks. decent reversal from the YP although some may point to closing below the low of last week as confirmation, which hasn't happened yet.

XIV - near test of YS1, no official tag however

GLD - rather awful that GLD could not climb above 1HP in all the turmoil

Global stock ETFs
EWJ - held YS1 and 1HS1

EWG - held YS1 and 1HS1

FXI - holding 1HS1 but not much green 

EEM - similar to FXI

PIN - low on 1HS1 exact

RSX - low on YS1 and decent bounce along with oil

ACWI - global benchmark ETF, also low on YS1 & 1HS1 combo




A turn, but not a big buy

What? I'm writing this post to clear up any confusion from the last two posts. Here, I said best to not be thinking buy, because everything is still below all pivots; and then more recently, pointed to all the YS levels on the turn. I'll admit this sounds contradictory. 

First point: if you are going to try to catch a turn, a day where you see multiple main indexes testing and holding, or breaking and recovering, yearly levels is one of the best ways to try. That said, although quite tempting to catch the bounce if you have money on the sidelines (hence the term, speculative buy), I think there is a better way of using pivots and that is to stay with the larger trend. Here are a few nifty chart examples to drive home this point. 

The first one below is a weekly chart of IBB showing only the yearly, half-year and quarterly pivots. Pivots always in orange on my charts. As you can see, it was above all pivots the vast majority of the time from 2012 all the way to mid 2015. This was one of the best trends in the market. In fact, focusing on biotechs above the other USA sectors would have led to spectacular out-performance. 

But all that changed in 2015 second half when we finally saw not one but 2 weekly bars of decent rejections of the Q3P then a huge break of the 2HP. This was a massive change in the market. The prior 3 years, any touches of the 2HP were perfect buys, if you even saw the level. Often enough the pullbacks were to the QPs, and I'm not showing the MPs here. 

So using this basic identifier - above or below pivots - kept you on the right side of the trend. When the asset is above all pivots, focus should be on locking in some gains when it reaches the R levels, then buying back on pivot support. Or simply holding until a real trend change which was pretty clear in mid 2015. 

Now let's flip it around and put only the R (resistance) levels in red. If you thought biotechs were overvalued and you were trying to short, you would have had 1) daily migraines and 2) missed one of the best uptrends in the market. Sure, you might have caught a few of the pullbacks in September 2012, May 2013, early 2014, then again in 2015. But a lot of false starts, scratches and stop outs too; and the best possible short setups would have paled to the possibility of gains. That is, until we started seeing IBB below pivots in 2015. 

So here is another one with gold. If you focused on the short or at least avoiding GLD below pivots, then it was very easy to stay out of this asset in 2013 and most of 2014-2015 as well. But if you were a gold bug, trying to buy the downtrend on S (support) levels in green, then you have the same situation of trying to short IBB. Here and there you catch something, but the stops and headache factor, not to mention missed chance on shorts, far outweigh any possible gains of buying and catching the short-lived bounces.  

Now let's turn to the more familiar SPY. It had quite a run of above most pivots most of the time from 2012 to mid 2015, but then that changed. No one really knows if this is a 2011 style pullback or 2008 meltdown, or something in between. The point is buying S levels looks great when it is also above most pivots; then looks horrible when it is below. 

In 2008 if trying to buy SPY, then you are buying 1/14 week at YS1 maybe, then definitely 1/21 week at YS2, again 3/17. Now all those could have had some gain. But if you started to think that buying the Supports was the way to go, then you were also buying in August and September right before the meltdown. After a huge drop you finally get a winner in 2009 but you know what? Pivots started partially buying in April 2009 (above Q2P) after being completely out of the market or short from mid June 2008. I'd rather forego the chance of bounce gains against the trend, and focus on making money with the trend, instead of getting caught in the counter-trend game. You just don't know when you are trying to fight 2 years of IBB rally, or buy before a crash. 

I will change my tune if QQQ recovers its YP next week, ie add back. But I'll use that area as a stop and then look for follow through above the NDX YP.