Nice summary tables of various Candlestick patterns.


Hat Tip: @TradingChartsU
Stunning, though not surprising, to hear the POTUS hammer Google today,
We had the big picture correct when we wrote back in April politicians would soon begin to bring the hammer and sickle down on Google,
That brings us to the Google (we are old school and can’t bring ourselves to call it Alphabet) short.
Imagine when a politician has his/her epiphany that all those porn searches they have done over the years on Google are stored somewhere and could be hacked and released to the public? That will ignite a prairie fire of potential legislation, which will spread faster than you can say SNAP.
We would not doubt the mantra of the next presidential campaign will morph from “lock her up” to “shut them down.”
The social media economy is in deep trouble, folks – Global Macro Monitor, April 24th
The stock is down about 1 percent today with the Nasdaq up slightly.
A Note To Readers
We are traders at heart at Global Macro Monitor, often wrong, and dependent on risk management to stay afloat. That is cutting losses quickly and trying to let winners run.
The shorter your time horizon, the more likely most people are going to lose money getting whipped around by the markets.
Moreover, we have found it much harder to make money trading – i.e., generating a daily cash flow — over the past few years. It is increasingly difficult to beat the trading ‘bots.
Morphing Content
You have probably also noticed our content has changed over the years and now focused more on global macro trends and insights (also tricky to make money in global macro these daze) and less on short-term trading. Riding and writing about the Apple and gold trend were great fun.
Long-Term Investors
Long-term investors should do what should do: save, diversify, rarely change allocation, monitor valuations, rarely deviate from their plan, and ignore much of the short-term noise, even most of the stuff we produce, except for its entertainment value and to impress or embarrass yourself at cocktail parties.
There are times, however, when LT investors should lower overall risk in the portfolio. We think the current environment is one of those times.


Even still, we could be wrong and “this time may be different”, and we say that with great trepidation. If investors do change their allocations, they need a plan B in the event they are wrong. That is a price point to get back in.
Also realize that there are only two kinds of people who always sell the tops or buy the bottoms: 1) liars, and 2) big liars.
Some people boast of selling at the top of the market and buying at the bottom – I don’t believe this can be done.
Bernard Baruch
PMs and Hedge Funds
Portfolio managers and hedgies should use us as a sounding board to stress test their market views, and look for alpha ideas. We love living in the tails, that is looking for double σ trades, and by definition will often be wrong.
Traditionally, the generals are shot last.
Untraditional times as markets continue to rise to infinity and beyond, Buzz!

Hat Tip: Tom McClellan @McClellanOsc
Nice chart from Nomura on the event risk timeline.
Why worry about event risk, the market goes up everyday? Now more than ever.

Hat Tip: Chris Weston @ChrisWeston_PS
Took my oldest daughter, 18 year old, to see Paul a few years back and she asked if this was a famous song. Uhhh, yeah!
BTW, he wrote it for John’s son, Julian, to comfort him during his parent’s divorce. Saint Paul!
https://twitter.com/rockwalklondon/status/1033599562886406144?s=21
As another round of tariffs are imposed by both countries in the trade war, the FT takes a look at some key facts and figures, as well as the types of goods affected
Subscribe to FT.com here: http://bit.ly/2GakujT
Another “Potemkin trade deal.”

Nothing there and will not move the needle in bringing back jobs to the U.S., in our analysis.
That is why, we believe, the markets like it — little impact on profit margins and the prospect for the removal of tariffs.
Capital por encima del trabajo
Back of the envelope analysis, the administration got only about one of the six objectives it was seeking. Still working on the analysis.
The new agreement makes it so most parts of an automobile traded without tariffs — taxes imposed on a particular set of items — must be made in factories that pay their workers higher wages. – VOX

Can they now cram it down Justin’s throat and bring in Canada?
Canada has purposefully stayed out of talks for weeks because it wanted the US and Mexico to resolve some of their trade problems. “Once the bilateral issues get resolved, Canada will be joining the talks to work on both bilateral issues and our trilateral issues,” Chrystia Freeland, Canada’s foreign minister, told reporters on Friday. – VOX
It’s now up to “the True North strong and free.”
Band-Aid Is Better Than A Major Trade Disruption
If it fits the Trump administration’s political needs, we will take it.
Could have been worse but we do worry the final chapter in this NAFTA book has yet to be written.
Need For a Proactive Government Trade Policy
Now, maybe, we can start retraining the American workforce for the 21st century global economy instead of the fantasy of #Making America The 1960’s Again.
It peeves us governments almost always are reactionary and never proactive.
The U.S. spends about $600 million per year on Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) to help American workers hurt by free-trade. Pittance.
Then it offers farmers $12 billion to cushion the blow of tariffs. Reductio ad absurdum!
If the U.S.G. had budgeted more for TAA, or some similar program, in the first place, the rust belt would have transformed itself years ago. Goods and services would be flowing more freely, markets for U.S businesses growing,, and real wages skyrocketing.
Wouldn’t that make America Great?
A must view.
Seems to be a structural change or tipping point took place in the 1990’s. Getting hot outside, folks.
What changed? The rise of China and the massive increase in coal fired power plants.
We have crossed the Rubicon on the environment. Pulling for Elon Musk and a technological breakthrough lest we are cooked.
Summary
Commentary: Low volume and we expect the same next week as the entire world is still at the beach. Mr. Market perceived Fed Chairman Powell’s Jackson Hole speech as dovish. WTF? Was Mr. Market ever worried interest rates would rise at an accelerated pace? Mr. Market took a wrong turn on Highway 420 on Friday. Has weed been legalized in Wyoming yet?
Dollar chart looks weak after the blow off gravestone Doji candlestick on August 15, which took the index to 96.984. Nevertheless, we expect 95 to hold and the Dixie to trade in a 95-97 range unless U.S. politics gets real fugly. Not unrealistic, by the way.
Everyone is looking to buy the emerging market sell-off (the chart). As we have posted, EM is oversold and ripe for a decent technical bounce. A fundamental buy is a long way off, however, and the probability of a major market disruption is higher than being discounted. The Fed is still tightening the vice and global liquidity is drying up. The Street needs an EM rally here, or they are looking at year-end bare-bones (as in bonuses).
No handshake with Mexico on NAFTA deal. Maybe next week, maybe not. Can they then cram it down on Canada? Not likely.
Laying low until after Labor Day.
Would you load up on risk after examining the first two charts?
Just askin’.

Hat Tip: @MehulD108
https://twitter.com/OccupyWisdom/status/1033220222499598336




Chart Source: FT Alphaville

