The following is a reproduction of the weekend report.
Stocks:
With Friday’s employment report a few
things began to clear up. The first one is the correct cycle count on
the stock market. With the break to new lows it’s now apparent that
April 10th formed either a very stretched, or very short daily cycle. I
tend to lean towards the very short cycle interpretation based on the
the trend line breaks I have illustrated in the chart below.
But
one could make the case for one very long, extremely stretched, daily
cycle driven by LTRO and operation twist. No matter how you interpret
the last two daily cycles it’s now apparent with the break to new lows
that April 10th did in fact form a daily cycle bottom. That puts the
current daily cycle on day 37 and now deep in the timing band for a
daily (30-40 days) and intermediate (20-25 weeks) degree low. As the
intermediate cycle is now on week 34 it’s apparent just how far LTRO and
Operation Twist stretched the stock market cycle.
I suspect sometime next week we are
going to see a narrow range day and a large buying on weakness data
print on the SPY ETF. Then once a swing forms it should mark the bottom
of this intermediate cycle.
I
have mentioned before how news mysteriously seems to coalesce around
intermediate turning points. I suspect this time it’s going to be
another round of quantitative easing by the Fed (although it won’t be
called QE) or a gigantic LTRO in Europe to bail out Spain and Italy, or a
combination of both. Either way it’s now late enough in this daily
cycle that we should expect a bottom very soon (probably early next
week). The fact that this intermediate cycle has stretched extremely
long raises the odds massively that the next daily cycle bottom is also
going to be an intermediate and yearly cycle bottom.
Once we have printed the intermediate
low we should see stocks rally back to at least test the highs. If the
market becomes convinced the next round of money printing is on the way
then this could be an explosive rally as traders have now been
conditioned to expect QE to drive big market rallies.
In the chart below, the first scenario
is the most likely in my opinion and would be what I would expect to
happen if more QE is introduced. The second scenario would play out if
inflation surges high enough and quickly enough to topple the already
weak global economy. In that scenario the stock market would move to
marginal new highs, allowing smart money to offload positions to dumb
money buying into the breakout. What would follow would almost certainly
be a 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 year grinding bear market as the slowly
deteriorating fundamentals fight ever larger infusions of liquidity from
global central banks. Unfortunately liquidity is exactly what would be
driving commodity inflation so central banks would actually be making
the problem worse rather than better.
That
being said stocks, especially tech stocks led the last intermediate
cycle. I doubt hot money is going to jump back into that sector again
right off the bat. No, I expect the stock market will rally fairly
quickly back to the old highs but then run into a brick wall that will
require considerable consolidation before any serious breakout.
This intermediate rally is almost
certainly going to be led by a different sector. As a matter of fact the
new leaders are already starting to show their true colors. (More on
that in the gold section of today’s report.)
Dollar:
An intermediate bottom in stocks (and
commodities) should also correspond with an intermediate top in the
dollar. I suspect the reversal on Fridays employment report is going to
mark not only a daily cycle top, but probably an intermediate, and
possibly even a three year cycle top on the dollar index.
I
say this because the CRB is now due to form a major three year cycle
low, and I don’t see that cycle low forming until the dollar index has
topped. Since this three year cycle has already stretched slightly long
it’s unlikely to stretch for another complete intermediate cycle. All
that means is that the CRB’s three year cycle should bottom along with
the yearly cycle in stocks and gold (which already bottomed slightly
early two weeks ago).
Once
the dollar has topped the CRB will stop falling and begin moving back
up, into what I think will be a parabolic spike much bigger than what
occurred in 2008. That parabolic top should come sometime in late 2014
as the dollar moves down into its next three year cycle low. Or as was
the case with gold in 2011 momentum may carry the parabolic move
slightly past the dollars bottom.
Since
the CRB’s three year cycle is already starting to stretch slightly long
I am confident that bottom is going to occur right now as gold and
stocks all put in their yearly cycle lows. As long as the CRB, gold, and
stocks don’t stretch their yearly cycles any further, and I don’t see
why they should, then the dollar’s rally out of the three year cycle low
is on its last legs.
As I mentioned last week sentiment in
the dollar index has reached levels not seen in the last 12 years. This
is exactly what one would expect to see at a major three year cycle top.
So conditions are now in place for major reversals in stocks, commodities, precious metals (already bottomed), and the dollar.
Gold:
I think it’s safe to say that Friday’s
action took the short cycle scenario off the table (as well as the
D-Wave continuation). Gold not only broke its intermediate trend line,
but it also formed a weekly swing. I think we have all the confirmation
we need at this point to conclude that gold’s intermediate cycle
bottomed two weeks ago.
As
I pointed out in the dollar section above, this should also mark a
yearly cycle low and a B-wave bottom in the gold market. I’m about 99%
positive Friday’s rally was the kickoff of a brand new C-wave advance.
That being said I wouldn’t expect gold to rally straight up to new highs
this summer. It may test $1900 during this new intermediate cycle but I
think gold is still going to have to consolidate for most of this year
before it can breakout to new highs. My best guess is probably next
spring before any sustained move above $1900.
This
means I think the bear market in miners has probably ended. As
everything starts to rally out of its yearly cycle low (and the CRB out
of its three year cycle low) the biggest gains are going to be made in
the sectors hardest hit during this correction. Without a doubt that
was mining stocks. At the lows two weeks ago miners had reached levels
of undervaluation only seen one other time in history. That was at
gold’s eight year cycle low in the fall of 2008.
As you can see in the chart below
miners rallied over 300% as everything came out of that major bottom in
late 2008 and early 2009. I have little doubt we will see something
similar this time as the CRB begins moving up out of its three year
cycle low and gold begins its next C-wave advance. Hot money is going
to start looking for sectors with the potential for big percentage
gains. No sector has that kind of potential more than the mining
stocks. As a matter of fact I expect the gains in this sector to be
absolutely mind blowing over the next 2 1/2 years.
For our purposes all we need to know
right now is that gold is on week two of a brand-new intermediate cycle.
In those two weeks the HUI has already rallied almost 19% from the
trough to yesterday’s close. Keep in mind this occurred while the stock
market was still going down and gold was moving sideways. The
outperformance in mining stocks is a subtle hint for anyone that cares
to take notice, of what is going to lead the market out of this major
bottom. It’s the same hint that was given in late 2008 right before
miners launched into a 300% rally.
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