Technical Chart Patterns and Perspective

Yesterday we posted a technical piece on gold, which one of our friends down under picked up.   They made us think about how technical analysis is more art than science (just like economics, by the way) and how bull/bear conclusions based on the charts are dependent on biases and perspective,  including time horizon.

We’re reminded of a story that Abraham Lincoln used to tell as a young Illinois circuit court lawyer when trying to convince the jury to render a verdict in his favor.  If you’ve seen Spieberg’s, Lincoln, who was portrayed, brilliantly,  by Daniel Day-Lewis,  you know America’s 16th POTUS loved to tell stories and speak in parables.   Lincoln’s contemporary and political rival,  Stephan Douglas,  said he never feared his arguments but his stories were like a “whack on the back.”

The story goes that Lawyer Lincoln was worried he had not convinced the jury during the closing argument of a civil case against a railroad.   The jurors had gone to lunch to deliberate.  Lincoln followed them and interrupted their dessert with a story about a farmer’s son gripped by panic,

“Pa, Pa, the hired man and sis are in the hay mow and she’s lifting up her skirts and he’s letting down his pants and thy’re afixin’ to pee on the hay.” “Son, you got your facts absolutely right, but you’re drawing the wrong conclusion.”

The jury ruled in Lincoln’s favor.

Similarly, when looking at charts — the facts —  we often draw the wrong conclusion about future direction.

The upshot?  Beware of your biases when looking at “facts.”

So here is our traders version of The Rorschach Test.

Q. 1) Young Lady or Old Hag?

Young Lady or Old Hag

Q. 2)  Identical chart.  Bearish downward channel or bullish cup and handle pattern? 

Jan8_Gold ChartConclusion:  Define your time horizon, know and understand your biases and wait for confirmation.

P.S…We are willing to bet that most who see the young lady also see the bullish chart pattern.   But it’s gold?  Wouldn’t that make the viewer bearish?

(click here if charts are not observable)

Posted in Gold, Technical Analysis | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

The economics (and finance) of a flu epidemic – Reuters

According to the Center for Disease Control this is the earliest regular flu season in past ten years.    Not too late to get that flu shot!

Maybe a little too late to pick up the flu stocks, however.  At least wait for the fever to break.

Diagnostic testing company Quidel Corporation (NASDAQ:QDEL) said on Friday that it expects revenues in the range of USD53m to USD54m in the fourth quarter 2012.

According to CEO Douglas Bryant, the company saw a sudden and early onset to this year’s influenza season. While QuickVue Influenza A+B sales benefited most from the patient visits for influenza-like illness (ILI) in the quarter, Sofia Influenza A+B revenues were a contributor as well, driven by numerous Sofia analyzer placements, exceeding internal projections. Currently, its placements exceed 3,000 Sofia instruments, a high percentage of which are installed and on-line.

The company added that the preliminary results are based on management’s initial analysis of operations for the quarter ended 31 December 2012.

M2 COMMUNICATIONS

Jan7_QDEL(click here if video and chart are not observable)

Posted in General Interest | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Tweet of the Day: Slouching Toward Weimar

Clay Aiken, U.S. musician and American Idol, tweets:

https://twitter.com/clayaiken/status/288456454309040128

The meme is now in the popular culture.   Troubling.

Posted in Monetary Policy | 11 Comments

Silvo Won’t Stand for PM, Wants FinMin

Silvio Berlusconi will not pursue his ambition to return to the office of prime minister. That’s the price of a deal he has finally secured with the Northern League in a bid to strengthen Italy’s centre-right ahead of next months election. The strategy is aimed at destabilising a centre-left government. The former PM revealed in a radio interview he has other aspirations for office.

“If they think that I would be useful for the government, the position that would let me best express all my experience would be the position of Minister of Finance. That would allow me to show once again, that I have no political ambition, and I don’t think of politics as something that gives me advantages.”

http://www.euronews.com/

(click here if video is not observable)

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The Golden Flag

Gold has begun the year thrashing around in its flag chart pattern and off about 1/2 percent YTD.   Along with Apple,  it has been our printing press over the past five years.   Both currently trade like dog dirt.

Yesterday’s low of 1625 is a must hold and will determine the directional move over the next few weeks, in our opinion.

Jan7_Gold1Jan7_Gold2(click here if charts are not observable)

Posted in Gold | Tagged | 2 Comments

Daily Interest Rate Monitor

Interest Rate Monitor

(click here if table is not observable)

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Excess Reserves Declining

Keep this one on your radar.   Excess reserves of depository institutions are beginning to decline,  down $183 billion, or 11.3 percent,  from their peak in November 2011

This is where much of the Fed’s money printing or balance sheet expansion has gone since the beginning of the financial crisis.   The Fed injects liquidity through its asset purchases and the financial institutions deposit the proceeds right back at the Fed in the form of excess reserves, which now pays interest.

We believe if excess reserves are declining,  it may signal the massive liquidity created by the Fed over the past few years is starting bite and beginning to leak into the economy as credit expands.   When the economy begins to accelerate the leak could turn into a flood and that is what, we think,  some at the FOMC fear.  That is, the excess reserves turning into high powered money.

Could be wrong, but at least that’s how we see it.

Jan6_Excess Reserves(click here if chart is not observable)

Posted in Monetary Policy | Tagged , , , | 12 Comments

Equities Overbought, Yen Massively Oversold

The Nikkei’s 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) exceeds 80 and we can’t recall ever seeing anything as short-term oversold — in a hard currency market — as the yen/dollar with its RSI of 10.   The Russell 2000 is the most overbought of the U.S. equity indices with an RSI of 73.   Should set up for an interesting week of consolidating last week’s big gains.

Click chart to enlarge

WIR_Overbought

(click here if chart is not observable)

Posted in Relative Strength Index, RSIs | Tagged , , , | 3 Comments

Global Trend Indicators

WIR_Global TrendWIR_Equity_MA(click here if tables are not observable)

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Week in Review: Markets Scream Overbought

We’ve added Spain’s IBEX, Italy’s MIB, the Russia Market Vectors ETF, the Australian dollar to the list of equity indices and currencies we monitor.   In addition, we have switched to the CRB Continuous Commodity Index, which is less energy heavy as all commodities receive an equal weighting.

WIR_Key LevelsWIR_Equity_WeekWIR_Bond_WeekWIR_Equity_YTDWIR_Bond_YTD(click here if charts are not observable)

Posted in Uncategorized, Week in Review | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments