Home—Online trading—Spread betting explained—Spread betting blog—Has the stunning Dow rally peaked?
Jan 30, 2012, 12:29
Posted byJohn C Burford
Comments (2)
I have been focusing on the euro recently, as that market has illustrated several very important trading principles.
Today I want to take a look at the Dow, which is offering some great lessons of its own.
I last covered the Dow on 9 January – and a lot of market action has occurred since then. Let’s take a look.
We need to keep in mind that, for many months now, most asset markets have been trading up and down together – more or less.
This is down to the central bank policy of injecting huge waves of liquidity into the banking system through quantitative easing (QE). With businesses and consumers in no mood to accept even more credit since 2008, the extra funds have been channelled into asset markets – the ‘risk-on’ trade.
In this way, the stock markets are linked to the currency and gold markets in particular. Broadly, the Dow, gold, and the euro are moving up and down together, and should continue to do so for a long time.
OK, on 9 January, I had expected the Dow rally off the October low to top in the 12,400 area, as that was in the area of a major support/resistance line.
But since then, the market punched up through that resistance and last week carried to 12,840 on Thursday – way above 12,400, of course.
Now, though, it has entered an area where previous rally attempts have been savagely turned back.
Here is the current daily chart which shows this clearly. See how the Dow has turned sharply lower at resistance marked by the thick red bar:
(Click on the chart for a larger version)
You can see how the market has moved above my original trendline. Having broken above major resistance, does this mean that the rally will continue?
I suspect not, and today I will show you my reasoning.
My original trendline used the major lows of March and June 2011 as pivot points.
But what if instead of the March point, I use the previous significant low marked by the blue arrow? This is what I find:
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My new line now is raised – with the striking result that the market touched it last week – and now is backing off sharply as I write.
Trader tip: Trendline placements are always subject to modification – nothing is written in stone in real time. Looking back on old charts can be very misleading, as it gives the impression that identifying the correct Elliott waves, tramlines, and even Fibonacci retracements are child’s play. Nothing is further from the truth!
OK, so I now have a new resistance line in the 12,800 area.
But with bearish sentiment still hovering near record lows, this is the ideal set-up for a huge reversal.
Gazing at the chart above, I see the rally off the October low still has the form of a large A-B-C correction as I showed on 9 January.
Meanwhile, the rally off the December low (the above B wave low) also has an A-B-C formation with the market currently in both C waves.
Note also the large potential negative momentum divergences (green arrows). This could spell big trouble for the rally.
So the question is: Has the C wave terminated yet? If it has, we should see a huge move down in a very large third wave with wave 1 the March 2009 low, and wave 2 the May 2011 high.
To get a handle on where we are in this C wave, I need to look at the short-term chart:
This is the four-hour chart and shows a very good five-wave Elliott wave pattern contained between my tramlines.
Note the ‘long and strong’ wave 3, which itself contains a very clear five-wave pattern. The only blemish is the nasty ‘head-fake’ where the market dipped below the lower tramline (blue box).
I confess that one fooled me, as I had placed sell orders there, only to be taken out on the subsequent rally.
If we have indeed completed a five-wave pattern within the C waves, that means the next move is down – and sharply.
This morning, the market has moved down below my lower tramline (again) and is challenging Wednesday’s low at the 12,600 level. Breaking below that would strengthen my case for Thursday’s high at 12,840 as the top.
The key for me is for the market to make a small-scale five-wave Elliott pattern off this high. We are currently part-way there, as this chart shows:
On this 15-minute chart, we see the Thursday high precisely at the meeting-point of the two lines of resistance. Since then, I can count waves 1 and 2. We are currently in wave 3 down, which should draw prices quickly down another 100 pips at least. That is my favoured scenario.
Already, there have been several excellent points I could have taken short positions.
In my 9 January post, I stated: “Naturally, the market could continue its rally, but with investors’ bullish sentiment off the scale, a further push up would rest on very shaky ground”.
And so it seems.
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(31 January 2012, 01:45AM) Complain about this comment
Hi JohnThanks for the articles. I have learnt so much since joining money week and my confidence is growing every time I read one of your commentary's.I have noticed on the 1 day chart that there is a possible Ascending Triangle from the October low. Could this also indicate a potential end to the corrective ABC and a sharp turnaround? I count 3 touches so far and the triangle is nearing the top; which could indicate a possible pull back to the 12,250 area and if it can find support a possible final rally to challenge the 12,840 and maybe a doube top? Could this then complete the 5 touches of the Corrective Ascending Triangle and any fall below the 12,600/12,500 confirm an end of the rally?Thanks
(01 February 2012, 04:53PM) Complain about this comment
With regards this article and the following article of 01/02/12 (URL isn't functioning).I, like many I'm sure, have a rising channel painted for the last months, not just on the Dow, but the Dax, Cable, to name a few. I don't understand why you'd look to short anything until it breaks the support on these rising channels and confirms a breakout. The price on the Dow is coiling into the 12,800 area resistance (from the lower rising tramline), which could break, although I think it unlikely. Until a break below the rising channel occurs, surely the only sensible trade setups are long bounces off the lower support of this channel with close stops of say 50 to 75 pts.I know fib. and ewt are widely used, but the four month rising channel is far more powerful than the shorter term fib. you're using and the curve fitted ewt at present. The pattern in play is still playing for now.
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